and children in southern afghanistan. he is staff sergeant robert bales, the military reported that 16 afghan civilians died in the shooting spree early this month but today officials charged the soldier with 17 counts of premeditated murder and have not revealed many details how the number went up. the suspect faces six counts of attempted murder and six counts of aggravated assault and remains in custody at maximum security prison in for the kansas prison. he could face the death penalty but this is unlikely. jennifer, describe the situation at for the leavenworth. >>reporter: a jag officer entered his sale and read him the charges not long ago at for the leavenworth and we now have a press release the charge have been read. a formality. a a -- a prelude to the military laying out case. >> he is still in shock. he did not know the nature of the specific allegations when we met and i didn't go through it. we just spent 11 hours getting to know each other talking about his service in iraq and afghanistan. what he has gone through which very difficult for me to listen to. >>reporter: the 17th victim the shooting spree was an afghan male. there was a discrepancy the first 24 hours. we heard there were 16 victims and now we have learned from the military there were 17 and the 17th was an afghan male. premeditated murder if proven could result in the death penalty and carries a mandatory minimum sentence of life in prison o with eligible for parole. >>trace: the lawyer we heard from has indicated this is no forensic evidence, right? >>reporter: that is what he says. he has been very vocal, john henry browne, and he is questioning whether there is any forensic evidence. in fact, there have already been contra decisionses from the village, the 16 versus 17 victims. and for two weeks we were led to believe this were only 16 victims. the lawyer says his client cannot remember much. >> he has some memories what happened best alleged events and some memories after the alleged events. and windows here and there but he really doesn't have any memory. my meetings indicate that he has memory problems going back long before that. >>reporter: there were five afghans wounded and we understand they could, in fact, be brought to the united states to bear witness in this case. trace? >>trace: jennifer griffin, thank you from the pentagon. and now our legal panel, former prosecutor jeffrey gold and criminal defense attorney drew, and, drew, we heard the last sound bite building the case saying his client does not remember what happened. he remembers what happened before the shooting and what happened after, but, really, nothing, drew, during what happened. >>guest: it likes like a two-fold approach and you cannot blame him. you have to hold the government, the military, their feet to the fire with regard to forensicked and proving the case. he laid the foundation for what we know, whether we are a former prosecutor or defense attorney, it will be an issue of mental health, whether he was able to distinguish right from wrong, it would seem consistent with that being someone in the military we will see post traumatic stress disorder come into play and evaluation after evaluation after evaluation in this case. >>trace: what do you make of this? it looks as if john henry browne is saying he didn't do it because this is no forensic evidence and if he did he was mentally unstable. if you prosecute this case, do you have enough forensic evidence in your estimation to make this stick? >>guest: the defense lawyer is doing the right thing. everything he said is on target for this stage of the case. we don't know the facts. the facts have come out only a little bit of what the defendant said right away. and we know a little bit more but we don't know all the facts. we know what the horrendous result was and a little bit about the beginning. all the facts have not come out yet. >>trace: what do you think? we talk of the possibility of a death penalty here, drew they have not executed a soldier since 1961, do you believe it is in play here? >>guest: well, there is always the issue of what you call the residual innocence and in this case it would be different, residual is when you thing they didn't prove it. here you will be in the case in chief most likely when all is said and done i predict you will talk about the mental health of this soldier in the complete global analysis of the mental health of all the soldiers and what was his condition from being involved year after year and being subject to so were violence both --. >>guest: drew, drew, drew, drew, drew, look, you cannot say "all soldiers." that is an insult to the 10,000, 50,000 troops that have had four tours of duty, to say that --. >>guest: well, what i say that i mean when you are next to the gentleman right next to you, is injured and the toll it takes. you think of the soldiers and what they have gone through, have they received the mental health treatment? we read that on the front pages of the newspapers all time. >>trace: gentleman we will hear a lot more about case, drew and jeffrey, a great debate, thank you both. presidential candidate rick santorum taking political heat for comments he made yesterday suggesting the country could be better off with president obama than with fellow republican mitt romney. listen to what he said. >> we win by giving people the choice. we win by giving the people the opportunity to see a different vision for our country not someone who is just going to be a little different than the person in there. then we could just stay with what we have, not the etch a sketch candidate of future. >>trace: romney said he was disappointed with santorum's comments and newt gingrich had this to say. >> to suggest that a romney presidency would not be dramatically better for any conservative than an obama presidency is plain wrong. >>trace: rick santorum said "he would never vote for president obama over any republican and do suggest identification is preposterous," but he went on to say "if this election is about obama versus the obama-lite candidate we have a tough time rallying the nation." romney has won more states and delegates than any other candidate including rick santorum but the polls show rick santorum has the lead in louisiana ahead of the primary there. and the chief political correspondent, carl cameron is live in new orleans. how important is the louisiana vote? >>carl: well, it is because it gives rick santorum an opportunity to keep going and say he can continue to beat romney in pockets of the country like the state. he has a big lead in the polls and is expected to lead. romney expects to pick up delegates and newt gingrich who is well back in third says he, too, could pick up some of the 20 delegates tomorrow. and newt gingrich rained on santorum's parade saying his victory would be short-lived because in his estimate nation no one but romney has a shot. listen to this. >> this is either going to be romney or an open convention. santorum is not going to get 1,044. i will not get to 1,044 and nor will ron paul. >>carl: that is the number needed to clinch the nomination. newt gingrich today has been asked a couple times about suggestions from the romney campaign the only reason he is staying in is to be a spoiler and on some level, rick santorum has been challenged for the possibility what he is really doing is trying to feather his nest for the 2016 race by running as the romney conservative alternative this time around in anticipation of romney's defeat for obama positioning himself down the road. >>trace: yet, rick santorum says there is a way he can win. >>carl: absolutely. even if newt gingrich won the next few races and sweep the table for the rest of the country newt gingrich could pull it off but he has to win tomorrow and everything after and rick santorum does not have that steep a hill. having said that, rick santorum today was not just marking the louisiana primary tomorrow, but, also, all candidates talking about today is the second anniversary of affordable health care act and rick santorum believes part of the reason he can win is marrying romney to health care refollow. >> a disasterous bill that is patterned after another disasterous bill which is why we need a candidate who is not for government run medicine or free, taxpayer-funded abortions of the isn't for, you know, imposing government will on free people and their decision whether to, and what health care to buy. >>carl: santorum was asked about planning for a 2016 rerun and compared himself to ronald reagan who ran in the 70's and lost and came back in the 80's and won. trace? >>trace: thank you from new orleans, carl. rick santorum will be on "your world," coming up at 4:00 p.m. eastern right here on fox news. president obama is headed to the demilitarize zone and the white house says this will send a message to north korea but is there any way to get the country to give up its nuclear weapons program? we will get into that next. if terrorism investigators get information from your computer searches or from anything else for that matter, they can now keep it for years. that is even if you have no connection with with terrorism, at all. the controversial new rules on that ahead. hea, gas or bloating? get ahead of it! one phillips' colon health probiotic cap a day helps defend against digestive issues with three strains of good bacteria. hit me! [ female announcer ] live the regular life. phillips'. only hertz gives you a carfirmation. hey, this is challenger. i'll be waiting for you in stall 5. it confirms your reservation and the location your car is in, the moment you land. it's just another way you'll be traveling at the speed of hertz. do about medicare and social security... security. that's what matters to me... me? i've been paying in all these years... years washington's been talking at us, but they never really listen... listen...it's not just some line item on a budget; it's what i'll have to live on... i live on branson street, and i have something to say... [ male announcer ] aarp is bringing the conversation on medicare and social security out from behind closed doors in washington. because you've earned a say. >>trace: president obama preparing to visit the demilitarizeed zone tonight. the president is set to meet with other world leaders in seoul to discuss how to keep nuclear weapons out of the hands of terrorists. and the white house says the dmz visit will send a strong message to north korea possibly pushing that country back to the bargaining table over their nuclear program. you will recall that north korea last agreed last month to suspend missile tests and uranium enrichment in exchange for food aid but officials later said they plan to launch a rocket in honor of their new "dear leader," kim the younger. we bring in a former senior advisor for north korea in the clinton administration and met with the late kim jong-il. you talk of the president's visit, how important is that visit? >>guest: well, very important. the president is in korea for two reasons, nuclear experts and policymakers alike say the greatest threat to national security is the possibility that a nuclear weapon material could fall into the hands of a terrorist network and we have two million kill kilograms, 200,000 nuclear weapons and you cannot throw it away. north korea has some of that nuclear teleand this is what president obama is in south korea for, to talk about how to reduce and eliminate the threat. as we said at the top of the segment the second reason is to show solidarity with south korea. north korea wants to divide, separate, the united states from south korea and the purpose of the visit is to show how strong, how democrat, and how close the united states and south korea is. to convey that to north korea and to south korea to say that any united states policy toward north korea has to have the partnership and support of south korea. >>trace: and back to the rocket north korea will launch in honor of kim the younger, we know north korea has nuclear weapons but the question has been do they have a system to be able to carry the nuclear weapons, and the theory seems to be they are getting close to that. >>guest: i wouldn't say they "getting close." this is serious, the possibility of the test is serious but to put it in perspective they have had he tests and each of those has failed. and, again, when the united states tested our technology we had 40 tests. there is no question this test, if it happens, north korea will gain valuable technical information, will help them look the road at some point over a number of years to mate a nuclear weapons warhead with a delivery system. >>trace: we sign add deal with them last month and now they are thumbing our nose at us. >>guest: two issues the one is process. how do we move forward? i'm not sure whether it is north korea that is trying to be cute by half, or whether this is a miscommunication. my understanding is the nuclear negotiators on the united states side specifically told north korea that the missile test and launch satellite was included and they agreed to it and, yet, three weeks later they decided they would not do this. is it north korea being disingenuous which is possible? or a disconnect? is there the leadership, is it different than the negotiators? if that is the case it is an issue. the short-term we have to stop the test if we can. >>trace: that is the problem. thank you, sir. >>trace: scientists say they is solved the miss friday of the booming sounds in wisconsin town. they chalk it up to mini >>eric: like 1.5 earthquakes. and the guy who did not want to talk to the news crew. >>trace: we are getting more horrifying news concerning the massacre in afghanistan, we are told by the department that, in fact, the 17th male, the 17th victim was a male but more importantly they are saying it appears the murderer targets children and give a breakdown saying of the 17 killed, four were men, four were women. nine were children. and of the wounded? one man. one woman. four children. which means if you look at the numbers, 13 of the 23 people in afghanistan who are targeted were children. we will have much more as it comes out of the pentagon. >> tense moments for a tv news reporter in arkansas yesterday when a man she was questioning went over to his car and pulled out a gun. the (c) -- cbs affiliate was investigating a death in the area. >> not now. >> just trying to find out what is going on. that's all. >> everyone is lying. >> don't touch the camera, man. >> you really --. >> okay. okay. we're leaving. >> we are toll the guy holding the gun drove away but he turned himself in to police and he now faces assault charges. cops had arrested his brother in connection with the case that the reporter was investigating. >> it appears officials may have solved the case of the mysterious "booms," in a city of wisconsin. the series of small earthquakes caused the rumble insurance. people have been reported loud noises like explosions, boom, billion, boom, in the middle of the night and there are all sorts of theories from gas drilling, to aliens. but, some people claim they have been hearing the noises for months. and they are not buying the city's new explanation. and now, live in clintonville, why do people say they have been hearing the sounds for months >>guest: the city administrator says there is a plant here in town that makes noise and it could be responsible for the long term noise but as far as the boom boom people have heard last week, the seismologist blame that all, now, on a swarm of microquakes. >> it sounded like a "boom," in the middle of the street. just "boom," and it vibrated the house. that is all i can say, it woke me up. >> big "boom," and the walls shook. and she said the door opened in the front. it was all right. cool. i liked it. >> the catch is only one of the earthquakes was proven by the equipment and you have to assume the rest the bombing events were part of the microquakes, earthquakes so small you do not notice. >>trace: in california that is like brushing up against someone a 1.5 earthquake. how are people now reacting? >>guest: the state farm agent behind me he is now selling earthquake insurance, he told 40 policies. for cheap. >> it is earthquake. 1.5. not like a 7. or a 9-point whatever. that is why it is affordable. >> and still too mystery boomers last night and we left our camera rolling all night long and we did not hear anything more than a legal of -- level of noise of a car door closing. >>trace: president obama weighs in on the killing of a young unarmed man in florida. i look at her, and i just want to give her everything. yeah, you -- you know, everything can cost upwards of...[ whistles ] i did not want to think about that. relax, relax, relax. look at me, look at me. three words, dad -- e-trade financial consultants. so i can just go talk to 'em? just walk right in and talk to 'em. dude, those guys are pros. they'll hook you up with a solid plan. they'll -- wa-- wa-- wait a minute. bobby? bobby! what are you doing, man? i'm speed dating! [ male announcer ] get investing advice for your family at e-trade. and i thought "i can't do this, it's just too hard." then there was a moment. when i decided to find a way to keep going. go for olympic gold and go to college too. [ male announcer ] every day we help students earn their bachelor's or master's degree for tomorrow's careers. this is your moment. let nothing stand in your way. devry university, proud to support the education of our u.s. olympic team. two of the most important are energy security aneconomic growth. north america actually has one of the largest oil reserves in the world. a large part of that is oil sands. this resource has the ability to create hundreds of thousands of jobs. at our kearl project icanada, we'll be able to produce these oil sands with the same emissions as many other oils and that's a huge breakthrough. that's good for oucountry's energy security and our economy. cannot be contained. [ clang ] the all-new 2013 lexus gs. there's no going back. see your lexus dealer. >>trace: this is "studio b" at the bottom of the her. time for the top of the news. >> if i had a son he would look like trayvon. and ... i think they are right to expect that all of us as americans are going do take this with the seriousness it deserves and we will get to the bottom of exactly what happened. >>trace: president obama weighing in on the killing of trayvon martin, the 17-year-old kid walking home great a convenience store when a self appointed neighborhood watchman shot and killed him. police have not arrested the shooter, george zimmerman who says he kill the unarmed team in self-defense. the case has scheduled national outrage and local and federal investigations. the g.o.p. candidates echoing president obama's call for a full investigation. phil is like from south florida. how is the family responding today? phil: the family issue add statement this afternoon calling the president's comments humbling and they say "the president's personal comments made us wonder if his son locked like trayvon and wore a hood difficult would he be suspicious, too? we are all working together to not only get justice for trayvon but also to ensure that this kind of senseless tragedy doesn't happen to another child, something commented by the governor yesterday as he appointed a special prosecutor to come down from jacksonville, the state attorney's office there, sending down a long veteran of 30 years to investigate this investigation by the sanford police department and, also, to is a special task force sets up by the lt. governor to assess this "stand your ground" law in florida is considered the most liberal in all of the laws if the police believe your story, that you felt like your life was threatened, well you are justified in killing somebody. >>trace: and public rallies and the protests are expanding across the country. phil: in fact, morallies today, one happening in st. louis and one in chicago and one in washington, dc. there was going to be one in tallahassee but there is one this weekend. there were ten school walk outs in the miami area, alone, today, and trayvon martin attended a miami garden while and one of schools they actually marched out to the we we high school football field forming a big "tm," for trayvon martin on the field and last night 5,000 people including several bus loads that came in from georgia, all rallied for justice led by reverend al sharpton who called for george zimmerman the shooter to finally be arrested. >> you cannot defend yourself over skittles and ice tea. don't talk to us like we're stupid or that we are ignorant. we love our children like you love yours. now come on. lock him up. >> police chief stepped aside yesterday and the city manager putting two other cops now in charge of the department for now, and, this afternoon, the city manager will be meeting with that state attorney, the now special prosecutor on this case. trace and phil, thank you from south florida. and now to former prosecutor jeffrey gold and drew findling, both of you, this is from george zimmerman, and i will play this and ask you a question concerning the "stand your ground" law. >> we had some break ins and there is a suspicious guy, he looks like he's up to no good or on drugs or something. >> are you following him? >> yeah. >> we don't need you to do that. >>trace: the last thing he said, jeffrey, he is "running," and people have said the "stand your ground" law does not apply because zimmerman was pursuing the kid but the sanford police say george zimmerman when he lost sight of trayvon mar ten he gave up the chase and walking back to the truck and zimmerman claims he was then attacked by trayvon martin. is that stand your ground law? >>guest: no, it doesn't. zimmerman sounds like he is full of baloney, where the objective of the 9-1-1 tape it reminds you of rodney king, if he did not have a videotape no one would be up in arms but because this is the evidence to dispute everything that zimmerman said we will know that it is a crock. >>trace: but zimmerman had a bloody nose and blood on his head and seven neighbors called 9-1-1 during the confrontation and no one actually saw this. so, highway does that look if you are the prosecutor in court trying to defend this in court? >>guest: well, set aside the emotional issues which are clearly critical and anyone would be upset by what took place. look at it from a criminal justice standpoint. the "stand your ground" law has nothing to do with casting away the forensic development that took place in the country. i have personally been involved with the justice department putting together a book that dictates that law enforcement preserve the integrity of every crime scene and you must remember a crime seen also includes a scene where there is an allegation of self-defense, because a pathologist will call "self-defense," homicide. this was in preservation of the crime scene and that, no pun intended was completely criminal by law enforcement. >>trace: but you have a key witness, trayvon was on the phone with a 16-year-old girl and he was saying i am being chased and the phone went dead before the gunshot rang out. that is a key witness in this. >>guest: absolutely. this is being used as an excuse for murder. ridiculous. and criminal. >>guest: the outside looking in having been involved in the cases, it is what it is, it clearly is racist. we all know that. okay? and there is absolutely no doubt, to doubt whatever, that if this young man had been white, this incident would never have taken place and there was nothing suggestive that he did anything consistent with being suspicious and for the case not to be investigated, it was not investigated, for one reason and one reason only and that is because the decease enwas african-american. that is the only reason. >>trace: i agree drew. >>guest: i agree. this is about race. that is not what this is about that is being used as an excuse. >>trace: thank you, gentleman, both. >>trace: rebel fighters say they are running out of ammunition. more than a year after the bloody uprising against president assad began, look at this. as amateur video shows part of a tank exploding amid a barrage of gunfire in a central city you can hear cheering in the background and fox news cannot indepedently verify this video but the "washington post" newspaper reports that rebel leaders say they have crossed syria's northern border seeking money to buy arms and ammunition before they run out entirely. the united nations reports the syrian government assault has killed more than 8,000 men, women, and children in the last year, and, now, european union officials say they have agreed to tough new penalties on president assad's wife and other close relatives. the fox report chief correspondent jonathan hunt live in the newsroom. explain the new penalties from the e.u. >>jonathan: the ones aimed at mrs. assad restrict her, now, traveling to europe, and they freeze all her assets held by european banks. that may not sound like much but remember she was born in britain, very glamorous, spend as lot of time attending a lot of glamorous events across europe and a last time as we now know from leaked family e-mails shopping online for things such as crystal encrusted high heels that are 6". so this will put pressure on her and the state department has welcomed the move by the european union. listen. >> here's the kind of moves we would call on all countries to have concerns about the brutality of the regime to consider. we are also looking at what more we can do but certainly this is a very good step and sends a strong message that those close to assad, himself, will also face the pressure. >>jonathan: having said that and knowing that it will put pressure on mrs. assad, no one is under any allusion, trace, this is going to change the situation for the tens of thousands of syrian civilians who are being affected by the violence perpetrated against them by president assad. >>trace: as if the horror needs to be increased there is growing concerns over the number of children affected by violence. >>jonathan: the part of the united nations that focuses on the fate of children tells us they believe some 500 children have been killed in this ongoing crackdown. that goes along with the thousands of adult killed, and those displayed. and the former u.n. secretary-general is headed to capitals of russia and china to try to get those two governments on board with tougher u.n. security council against syria russia and china are allies of president assad and have prevented real diplomatic pressure from being allied. >>trace: jonathan, thank you from new york. the white house and republicans trading jabs again over president obama's health care overhaul. the president signed that bill two years ago, today, but the g.o.p. says the administration has done little to recognize it. the top republican in the senate even joked he was surprised there wasn't a birthday cake today in the white house. a live report on that ahead. whee! whee! wheeeeeeeee! ah heads up. wheeeeeeeeeeee! everything you love about geico, now mobile. download the new geico app today. >> breaking news from south florida, a sheriff's helicopter, and we know this is west palm beach sheriff's office has encountered a hard landing, now live pictures from other fox affiliate and what happened they tried to come in they went on the side, and you can see a rotor got caught. you can see the two sheriff officers and the two sheriffs walked away without injury and the sheriff office say this was much more of a hard landing than a crash landing. things appear fine in west delray beach involved in that hard landing. a. >> two year ago president obama signed into law the health care overall law. but republicans are marking the day by calling for a repeal of the law. and some g.o.p. lawmakers are not holding back on capitol hill. >> this law is a mess. the single worse piece of legislation passed since i've been in here. look what is going on in europe where it is patterned. >> president is trying to make the 100 year quest a reality. and we are focused on implementing that bill. >>trace: as the supreme court gets ready to hear three days of arguments on the constitutionalness of the health care law. chris i was looking over the numbers and the one that struck the most was the "washington post" weapon -- "washington post" poll, 67 percent want the law struck down. carney says the spot proud but he is not talking about it. >>chris: you are right. and, trace, all you have to do with politicians, do not watch what they say watch what they do. it is the second anniversary, the bill is about to come up before the supreme court for an extraordinary three-day hearing starting monday, and does presbyterian do anything to mark it in person? no. you saw the republicans holding news conferences and republican candidates are out on the trail talking about repealing obamacare and the president talked about a bunch of other things. talked about trayvon martin. he talked about the appoint of someone to the world bank. but nothing, in public event on the obamacare. that indicates that they think this is a political problem for him. and don't want him too closely identified but with the name obamacare it has his name on it. >>trace: if the supreme court does strike this down or strikes part of this down, what is the political price for that? >>chris: from the president's point of view i argue there is more of a political price if they don't strike it down. you could argue if they strike down part or all of it, the president spent a year of his cap dallas and the country's time doing something that the republicans will say turned out to be unconstitutional but, on the other hand, if they were to uphold everything taking away the constitutional argument, then republicans could make the argument in the fall and the general election. the only way if you want to stop obamacare, is to elect a republican president and a republican congress to repeal it, that provides a big political issue to go with the president on. >>trace: interesting. thank you, chris wallace, great to see you. don't miss an action packed fox news sunday this weekend and chris will go one-on-one with the senior advisor to president obama and congressman paul reason of wisconsin. that is this sunday right here on fox news. check your local listings and times. we have breaking news coming from kentucky. these are brand new pictures. these are live pictures. a possible tornado has touched down now. in fern creek, kentucky, outside of louisville, kentucky, and we will get to the weather center on this with reports the tornado has, in fact, towned down. more breaking news ahead. >>trace: united states intelligence officials can keep information on citizens longer than they used to even if the citizens have no known ties to terrorism. under new rules the government can store data it gathers for up from the current legal of six months. drew findling is back with us, and director of transnational security council under president clinton and george bush. and i guess, lee, if i read this right, the rules have changed on how long they can keep what they gather but not on what they can actually gather. is that a fair assessment? >>guest: that is right. this is another prudent step the president is taking to keep the country safe and battling appropriately civil liberties and you are right, this does not impact the type of information that federal agencies may collect and keep on americans and united states persons but how long the data is kept and, perhaps, the type of analysis it is subjected to. >>trace: you believe this is way too much big brother? drew: and i do. i cite a couple of things. this is not a time to forget since 2008 there has been 90 percent conviction or guilty plea on suspected terrorists that were indicted in federal court. it is not like the system is not working in the apprehension on our soil of terror suspects. we are taking what is ordinarily controversial that one would get by traditional notions or probable cause and search warrants and taking it and storing information for as much as we --. >>trace: why do we care how long we store this stuff? drew: sorry? this is the private, the essence of our country is privacy. the essence of our country is, we relish our privacy. and that's what our founding fathers stood for and to have the private information of our citizens stored for half a decade has been excessive and there is no part of that which affects everyone on every day basis. >>trace: and now, we have given up a great deal of privacy for safety, right? >>guest: sure. but, again, this information is not going to be new information that is being stored in federal agencies. take travel information. this goes to what we believe we have a reasonable expectation of privacy in post 9/11 time. when i leave the country i don't expect that to remain private. i pass by department of homeland security officials and, frankly, it is prudent for that information to be stored. that is similar types of information including web pages. >>trace: got to go, lee and drew, thank you. good stuff. have a great weekend. i'm trace gallagher and that is it for "studio b" with jon scott here for the fox report at 7:00 eastern. "your world," with nevada is -- with neil cavuto is coming up next. houston? well, welcome to savingsville. did you pay $25 for that bag fee? -yeah. -you did? with all the money i saved on progressive car insurance, i'll take care of that bag fee. you're so kind thank you! you guys just landed in savingsville. [laughs] yes, we did! you made my day. do you want to pay our college tuition, too? [ speaking in japanese ] yeah, do you have anything for a headache... like excedrin, ohhh, bayer aspirin... ohh, no no no. i'm not having a heart attack, it's my head. no, bayer advanced aspirin, this is made for pain. [ male announcer ] bayer advanced aspirin has microparticles, enters the bloodstream fast, and safely rushes extra strength relief to the sight of your tough pain. feel better? yeah...thanks for the tip! [ male announcer ] for fast powerful pain relief, use bayer advanced aspirin.