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wait until you hear the reaction from the driver who found her. where in the world were the parents? "fox & friends" begins right now. that was me at 3:00 in the morning. >> i don't think that's totally unreasonable. you wake up you get a hankering for a slushy. good morning everyone. we want to start with a fox news alert. we have horrifying new details in the final moments of the doomed germanwings flights that crashed in the alps last week. a lot that we learned initially about the final moments of the flight was wrong. we have a characterization of the cockpit voice recorder and here is some of what it says. >> unbelievable. if you go down the time line as chilling as it progresses. it only happened over a few minutes. the co-pilot coverses with the pilot. he said go to the bathroom. you didn't go to the bathroom at barcelona don't you need to go at some point. the airliner reaches the cruising at constitute of 38,000. the pilots lets another two minutes elapse and he says to lubitz you can take over. >> almost the second the captain leaves the cockpit flight leaves the dissent. the plane is in effect in a steep but controlled dive. they radioed the plane to say what is going on? they received no response. >> apparently andreaéas lubitz was fascinated about this area of the french alps. there's a loud bang on the door sound heimer comes back and yells for god sakes open the door. >> the loud metallic banging is heard again and the jet is at 7,000 feet. >> at this point the passengers are fully aware something is going on. we initially hear their screams were audible at the end but apparently it's not true. the passengers were aware. speculation is the pilot had taken the fire ax, which is on most commercial airplanes to the door trying to knock it down with an ax but it doesn't work. that's at 10:35. the plane is aloft for another five minutes. 90 seconds later there's a warning message ground pull up. it's a recorded message. ear eerily you can hear the breathing of lubitz. he's nothing at all as air traffic controller is trying to reach them. >> at 10:40 the aircraft hits the mountainside with the right wing. at 700 kilometers per hour and 150 people on board instantaneously died. apparently he was fascinated with this region. he wanted to be a pilot. his friends said that over and over again. this region he apparently had gone out there solo on a glider and has become familiar with the area. >> yeah. if anything it adds detail that makes the story sadder and more horrifying. for 11 minutes the plane spun downward. apparently the passengers were award. >> the air traffic controller wondering if there was an oxygen problem. >> we get more information on the killer. may have been imposed with impending blindness. it may have ended his career. amy kellogg is live with more. >> reporter: hi. the french newspaper is reporting that lubitz's condition had declined by 30%. if it happens to be true with the report he had various degrees of psychiatric illness that he was afraid about to lose his pilot's license and his dreams of being a long haul captain for lufthansa would be suffered. the daily mail spoke to a lot of people who knew lubitz including someone an exfiancè. she apparently said she broke up with him because his increasing jekyll and hyde volatile behavior. very controlling behavior. and finally, bill, today as you mention published this of the cockpit voice transcript. it's awful to hear all of that detail. finally here in france according to a couple of german newspapers, not con officialfirmed by anyone but widely reported in germany. the remains of lubitz has been found here. they have been identity. that will be crucial for testing for what, if any, medication he had in the system on the day of the crash. there was various reports he was refusing to take his psychiatric drugs. we'll find out more about that. the prosecutors in drug abuseusseldorf said there will be no comments on medical condition or anything until month. >> amy kellogg, thank you. coming up we'll be talking to the president of forwings consulting talking about the mental illness aspect of this and really, there's no disclosure at all and they very often keep the mental health from their employers and further information we don't get access to. >> should we rely on self-reporting in the name of privacy? we'll talk about that. right now the news headlines. 22 passengers injured after their air canada flight ran off a run way during a hard landing. the plane slid into a power pole. some passengers were with bloodied faces were forced to stand outside up to an hour before being brought inside. injuries were all minor and being treated at the hospital. the accident is being blamed on snowy weather. police are stepping up the search for a college student who vanished after a night out with friends. jennifer poole was last seen leaving a bar near the campus early friday morning. police found her purse three blocks away from the bar. >> amazing sister and friend to all of us. very involved. and she's been such a great friend and sister is all we can say. >> to graduate in the spring. the sorority said they're cooperating with police. overnight a dire warning for benjamin netanyahu on the impending nuclear deal. the prime minister said the framework deal he's seen is worse than israel feared. john kerry cancelling his plan to fly back to the united statesstaying for more talk. pope francis wrapping up his mass for palm sunday in saint peter's square. ♪ ♪ tens of thousands of people gathered overnight to watch the pontiff bless olive branchs on the sunday before easter. keeping with the simple tone pope francis leavesits on a wooden staff instead of one ornate. >> we're looking at the forecast now. can we start the spring planting yet? >> not yet. okay maybe about ten days from now. it's going to warm up a little bit in the east coast. >> all right. finally! >> thanks rick. >> and i qualify it with a big maybe. models start to do that but when we've been seeing different stuff for three months i don't get that hopeful. it's cold this morning. 20s in cleveland, 34 all the way down. 26 in raleigh. we have freeze warns across much of the south. throughout the carolinas, georgia alabama, mississippi tennessee. we'll be watching a few areas with a hard freeze this morning. it will get better tomorrow morning. this is the last of that incredible cold we're dealing with. east coast we had the warm snow area. boston, you're snowiest record january 24th was the start of the snow. another clipper system this morning pulling across the northern plains. it's going spread snow across michigan and upstate new york and a little bit across new england by tomorrow. temperature wise today if you want spring, go to the plains. we've been been saying it for weeks and weeks. it is nice across the plains! in the 60s and 70s and sunny skies. >> lovely. >> they deserve it. nice people there. >> absolutely. thanks, rick. a boston marathon cop involved in the hunt and take down of the brothers. he's been put into a coma while he tries to recover after being shot in the eye. his name is officer john moin han involved in a shooting with a suspect. >> that's the beginning of a story. it's a routine traffic stop. he walks up to the car from the police report and video he didn't have guns drawn. he pulled over angela west, a 41-year-old individual. that's when gunfire erupted shot in the right eye socket and now fighting for his life in a coma at this hour. that is the suspect there who was shot and killed vumt eded as a result. >> and this was on video tape. it's clear from the tape which has been seen not just by police but by people in the community that the officer did not have his gun drawn at the time. it seems like a pretty open and shut case. crazy person shoots cop no obvious reason. a group called black lives smart trying to turn it into a rallying cry very much like ferguson, missouri. this is a tweet sent out by black lives matter. in other words white people not allowed. >> can you imagine if that was reversed. only white people were allowed -- >> the president will be holding a live press conference if it were. >> angela west is a frequent flyer in the criminal justice system. he was a menace to society since a juvenile it appears maybe the group should have looked into the background a bit and got all angles of the story before calling the meeting and comparing it to ferguson and eric garner. >> he was shot and and killed by the other officers on the scene after firing at the police officer and shot him in the face. some of the other twitter reactions might make you sick. i don't know how you pronounce the twitter handle. but as tucker mentioned, some of the members of the naacp were brought to the police department. the police say we want to be as open and transparent. here is what unfolded. see the video. some black leaders saying it looks like an open and shut case. this was what police said it was. and they didn't have guns drawn. >> what a shame that this, you know, is being turned into a political issue. sometimes, you know, crazy people do crazy things and are punished. there's not a racial angle here, it doesn't seem like. to whip people into a frenzy of fear and hatred over this. there's a cost to that. once people feel they're being persecuted it doesn't go away. we have more show coming up on the program more on our top story deemed unfit to fly before the fatal flight. now a veteran captain said pilots are supposed to disclose mental disorders and rarely do. he's never been asked. he's live next. a little girl boards a bus alone at 3:00 in the morning. her reason? he wanted a slushy! where in the world were her parents? janet? cough if you can hear me. don't even think about it. i took mucinex dm for my phlegmy cough. yeah...but what about mike? (cough!) it works on his cough too. mucinex dm relieves wet and dry coughs for 12 hours. let's end this. with the help of comfort keepers, i'm keeping my mom healthy! i'm keeping dad on schedule. i'm keeping my mom happy! comfort keepers in-home professional caregivers can provide meal planning and preparation, health and wellness services and personal care services through custom care plans that can change as needs change, so your aging loved ones can stay happy and healthy in their own home. ♪ expected wait time: 55 minutes. vo: in the nation, we know how it feels when you aren't treated like a priority. we'll take care of it. we put members first. join the nation. thank you. ♪ nationwide is on your side ♪ welcome back. we're learning more about the pilot who was deemed unfit to fly. >> many pilots are rarely vetted possibly according to the international aviation manual because, quote, psychological testing of air crew members is rarely of value -- and more than 3020 years of flying u.s. airline captain john said he's never been asked about mental health. he joins us now. thank you for being with us. thank you for being brave and coming forward. we won't mention your airline, but when you heard the story, did you think, man, something needs changed? >> absolutely. obviously somebody has some information. the flight surgeon the doctor maybe his friends or his girlfriend had a piece of information that at the time there was no way they could have known it was going to produce this accident. in hindsight i think we have a serious issue of trying to integrate that risk management with the aviation position. >> i don't understand how the physicians who treated this guy for chronic depression for over a decade wouldn't feel a moral obligation. >> i think there's some legal issues involved. i think there's some legal issues regardless patient privacy and i think there's some quality assurance issues about what institutes a serious threat. if you got ten psychiatrics you put them in line and they looked at the same patient. would they come out with the same assessment. >> right. >> i think that quality assurance metric is one of the things making the integration of mental health and save yags safety challenging. i think it's a challenge for the mental health professionals themselves. >> we spoke with a doctor yesterday and it's a fine line with hipaa laws. will the erratic behavior rise to the behavior where it could put others at risk. here are the faa requirements. you have an annual physical exam. pilots must disclose medications mental and neuro. in is not going to do it. they're going to throw away they're clear. they're self-reporting. >> there is a certain amount of disincentive to reporting some of these things. obviously the duty is among the pilots to report. most of them do. however, there's incentive if they report something, how do they know they're not going lose their job. that's something that needs to be addressed for legal issues you talked about. we have programs right now in aviation called the aviation safe action program where the faa has come out and said information is more important than judging pilots and we're going to replace any type of punitive action with a corrective action so you can report errors and violations and you are kind of rewarded for self-reporting and taking of the initiative on this. but the faa saying, hey, look, guess what? before you may have given a fine or time off right now we're going to give you a letter and retrain you and make sure you have done that. that type of legal framework needs to start applying to mental health. >> john thank you for joining us. appreciate it. thank you so much. coming up on the show a horrific moment on the racetrack caught on camera. and out of control car plunges into the crowd. one catholic college said out of control government regulations are -- wait until you hear the drastic measure to protect their faith at their school. coming up next on fox and friends. i'd rather do anything else than sit at a dealership. it's a lot of haggling and it takes so long. craig's experience is completely different than mine. yeah. yes, mike has used truecar. at truecar, we'll show you how much others paid for the car you want and how much you should. because i used truecar there was no haggling about the price. they treated me so well, and it was just such a quick, easy experience. get your car, and get back to the life you love. welcome to the future of car-buying. now? 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>> thank you. a move that most american colleges would never even attempt but wyoming catholic college is making a bold statement by opting out of financial aid programs funded by the u.s. government joining us now is mr. roberts. >> good morning to you. >> so i'm sure our viewers are aware but u.s. federal financial aid is enormous to colleges. last year it was about $101 billion. every college pretty much participates in it. you are not. pretty radical step. why? >> well, thanks for the question. our college is eight years old we've received our candidacy status for accreditation making us eligible for those programs. being a party to an hhs mandate lawsuit, looking what is going on with wharton's we read the tea leaves and see a government that would rather interfere than help our students. >> good for you. what are you concerned that the federal government would force you to do against your faith if you continue to take money? >> well, as i said, we're a faithful catholic college, which means we love all people and have charity toward all. we would have problems with admissions and with employment with a transgendered person or someone with the same sex attraction that wanted to be active an activist with that. in spite of what people think the church may be changing in terms of the believes, we believe in order to maintain church teachings on the principles that we ought not have strings attached to the federal money. >> does it mean because you're not going to be taking federal money that you can have any employment standards that you wish? >> well, within reason, right. we're not going to discriminate in other ways, but the church teaching is very clear that if we were to have say, a transgendered student want to apply it's not in line with church teaching. we don't hate the person. we love them. it doesn't square with the college we have founded in wyoming. >> what will it mean for admissions and kids who apply to your school to be told you can't bring with you any kind of federally funded student loan? >> that's right. and so as part of that process over the better part of our year, our board and administration looked as alternatives. our college has been self-funding student loans giving a wide array of need-based aid. we'll continue to do that. we're leaving $700,000 on the table by not participating. >> that's what principle looks like. good for you. >> thank you for having me. how does this happen? a little girl boards a bus alone at 3:00 a.m. why? she wanted a slushy. where were her parents? is she a hero? playing an important role in hollywood. find out which wines pair best with the favorite movie snacks. what wine should you drink with popcorn and milk duds? 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[ cheers and applause ] now, the reason i asked you here is because we happen to be in the march to get something done in the middle east and that's hard to do when you, senator, cotton, are is sending letters to the iranian government behind my back. >> yes i did. >> or when you, speaker boehner, are inviting the prime minister of israel to consult congress without me. or when you, mr. cruz call him an extraordinary president. >> that's how i see him. i'm impressed he came to visit considering how much you botched the situation in the middle east. >> i've been in washington three months and i think i understand foreign policy better than you. i heard your final four bracket is totally busted. that's real, by the way. that was footage of facial twitches. this was real. that, by the way, video you'll never see tud cruz or those guys inside the oval office. probably not. welcome back. >> wine and chocolate in just a bit. let's talk about what is making news headlines. fort fie your doors and don't let strangers inside the doors. that's some of the safety. a comes a week after an isis affiliated hacking group posted the personal information of service-members online encouraging lone wolfes to murder them in their homes. and more bizarre twist in a california kidnapping. attorney for the boyfriend said he got an e-mail from her alleged abductors. the attorney didn't explain what the e-mail said but said it is real. erin quinn was tied up and drug drugged which is why he didn't call police until 12 hours later. police have no evidence of a kidnapping and considering criminal charges against the couple. out of bed and wanted a slushy. that's what happens here. a 4-year-old girl sneaks out of her home and boards a city bus alone in philadelphia. >> i was like whoa! you've got to be kidding me. 3:00 in the morning little girl? >> well, the bus driver called police. they tracked down her parents who were sleeping. she walked five blocks to get to the bus stop. parents have since bought a new chained lock for their doors. police are calling it a fluke and say no charges will be filed. wanted a slushy. getting a big scare in the ncaa tournament. they lead the wildcats in the end kentucky survived. notre dame had one last chance but missed. kentucky wins an absolute thriller 68-66. they'll face wisconsin in the final four. the badgers beat arizona in the elite 8 if the second year in a row. the elite wraps up today with louisville against michigan state. i have to say i think the little girl is a hero. >> you think so? >> if you got a police knock at the door and said -- >> you would say good job. >> way to go. >> all right. rick is in the weather center. rick is standing over there. >> 10 feet on the other side of them. all right. let's talk about the weather maps, guys. still cold. take a look what the average is -- what the temps are today versus the average. pittsburgh today you're 46 degrees. greensboro 53 degrees. atlanta get up to 61. still below the average but a little bit better. here is the forecast throughout the day. pretty nice day as temperatures climbing a little bit. by the end of the afternoon we'll see some rain move in. down to the southeast a very chilly start to the morning across much of the georgia and into the carolinas. warm across texas and into oklahoma. pretty nice day there as well. in erm terms northern plains we have a clipper system dropping in. we see rain showers across minnesota and snow into michigan. and rain on the southern side of that. behind that temperatures a little bit cooler. above arch but cooler than they've been. we continue to remain dry and warm temperatures into the southwest. we'll get close to records again. tomorrow a little bit of rain move into the pacific northwest. all right, clayton, to you for morning booze. >> i'm here in the other weather center. we love movies and we like wine. it's time to step up movie night by fairing your favorite movie snacks with wine. this is what our producers came up with at 6:00 in the morning. joining us 1992 a wine enthusist. people think you need to have a sugar beverage. you can have good wine and pair it up with good snacks. >> that's right. we're pairing inging food and wine. >> can you sneak it into a movie theater. you might be able to develop. i don't condone it. >> at home with a big bowl of popcorn. it's a staple of a movie time snack. you do the nice butter covering. the rich butter covering. i think a champagne is great. it it has acidity and the big flavors. it can pair well with a richer butter cover. >> junior mints. anna doesn't start the show without junior mints. >> we have fruitiness from tucson any. it's lively and brisk. it does well with the mint. it doesn't fight with the mint. it's a nice pairing. vermintino. >> sour patch kids. you're scrunching up your face. you need something that can counter act that. >> absolutely. this is a great wine from germany. anyway so it's a german wine. it's very aromatic. it's a little bit of sweetness but lots of acidity. it does well with the sweetness. >> a wine enthusiast i thought you would have the hoity. >> you have chocolate and raceice. it's a red wine but sparkling. it pairs nice with the richness. what about a cheese steak? >> a cheese steak probably, i would go back to the champagne. >> have you been in the movie theaters where people have snuck in crazy food? i sat next to people in the movie theater eating chinese before. >> i've seen sandwiches and these types of things. i didn't tell anybody but all sorts of things. >> wine enthusiast, always check your wine list. can you go online? >> yeah. >> i would say winemac.com. check out our wine and film issue. we have kate hudson, a great interview with her talking about her wine making and collection. and other celebrities as well. >> fantastic. thank you so much. great to meet you. >> thank you very much! coming up on the show he risked his life for the country when the va lost papers provingervice this veteran was forced to wait decades for his service. it's not spring break your parents took. the question is now where are your parents? >> let me ask you are your parents okay with being here? [ expletive ] my parents! these out of control teens missing a moralcompass? boy: once upon a time, there was a nice house that lived with a family. one day, it started to rain and rain. water got inside and ruined everybody's everythings. the house thought she let the family down. but the family just didn't think a flood could ever happen. the reality is floods do happen. protect what matters. call the number on your screen or visit the website to learn more. ...and the wolf was huffing and puffing... kind of like you sometimes, grandpa. well, when you have copd it can be hard to breathe. it can be hard to get air out, which can make it hard to get air in. so i talked to my doctor. she said.. doctor: symbicort could help you breathe better, starting within 5 minutes. symbicort doesn't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden symptoms. symbicort helps provide significant improvement of your lung function. symbicort is for copd, including chronic bronchitis and emphysema. it should not be taken more than twice a day. symbicort contains formoterol. medicines like formoterol increase the risk of death from asthma problems. symbicort may increase your risk of lung infections osteoporosis, and some eye problems. you should tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. grandfather: symbicort could mean a day with better breathing. watch out, piggies! child giggles doctor: symbicort. breathe better starting within 5 minutes. call or go online to learn more about a free prescription offer. if you can't afford your medication, astrazeneca may be able to help. want headlines? look no farther! we've got them. a woman in ireland thought she took a nephew with her woman and sister. after looking closely the woman claims someone or something photobombed the picture. in the background you can see what appears to be a woman sitting with her hands folded on her knees. that's what it is she said it might be a ghost. and snap chat it's worse relationship than you think. a new study finds the app lets you send self-destructive photographs causes more jealously than other social networks. facebook encourages cheating divorce and general unhappiness. anna? all right. our nation's heros fighting a new battle at home. many struggling for benefits due to missing or incomplete va military records. world war ii veteran stanley freedman struggled with ptsd but blocked from benefits for some 67 years when the va lost documents for his service. pro bono lawyers won his case shortly before he dialogued. concerned veterans for america adviser is a combat veteran of the iraq and afghanistan wars and she joins us now. >> good morning. >> when you heard stanley's story, what is going through your mind when you realize he's in his 90 and he's finally getting help after lawyers help him for free. >> stanley's story is so upsetting because to think that our senior veterans some of our world war veterans, some in the last years of their life have to seek out legal actions to get the benefits they deserve and earned is unbelievable. i'm thankful there's these lawyers who will help veterans basically get those benefits that's not the way it should be. and unfortunately, a lot of veterans don't have that options so they're face edd with, you know tackling the va head on in a system that is not very friendly when you don't have the legal help. >> there are so many stories. one of his comrades died in his arms after he watched 2 dozen get blown up in a truck. he had back problems, he had fever from when he was north africa. trying to get help in 1946 and rejected for similar reasons. he couldn't find the documentation. having a hard time proving. what kind of advice do you have for veterans? unfortunately a story of stanley stanley's is more of a norm. a lot of veterans -- a lot of military service men and women are active duty they're not focussing on making sure their records are kept up to date with everything that happened medically. when they prove some of the things they face an unfriendly system. my recommendation is to never ever send something to the va without ensuring you have copies of it. because once it leaves your hands you never know if it's going to get lost in the hands of the va which is a common occurrence. and then also making sure that if you are still active duty. be proactive in making sure everything is documented that is any sort of medical issues you have. >> i thought the backlog was supposed to be getting better. but 200,000 claims ss backlogged as of march 21st this year. is it getting any better? >> well as of march 21st 2,684 that are over the 125-day standard. it has gotten better. it peaked over 600,000 in 2013. so we have seen a gradual reduction but the va promised that the backlog would be eliminated by the end of fiscal year 2015 and that's rapidly approaching and still over 200,000 backlogged claims. it doesn't look like they're going to meet the deadline. >> thank you very much. we reached out to the va and didn't hear back. amber smith we thank you for your time today. coming up on "fox & friends" weekend. a total free fall. that's how one of president obama's own ambassadors is describing the current situation in the middle east. what needs to be done or is it too late? what white house insider -- a white house insider is going to explain next hour. and it's certainly not the spring break your mom and dad took you on. the question now, where are the parents? >> let me ask you something are your parents okay with you being here? [ expletive ] my parents! >> oh! >> these teens out of control. a sign of a missing compass in america? comfort keepers can provide a variety of in-home services for your aging loved ones. we'll assess their needs and create a custom care plan that can change as their needs change. ♪ i am totally blind. and sometimes i struggle to sleep at night, and stay awake during the day. this is called non-24. learn more by calling 844-824-2424. or visit your24info.com. expected wait time: 55 minutes. vo: in the nation, we know how it feels when you aren't treated like a priority. we'll take care of it. we put members first. join the nation. thank you. ♪ nationwide is on your side ♪ like you've never seen it before. >> you've seen guns here? >> hell yes. >> does it scare you? >> no. >> i'm drunk. i've been talking to girls. i made out with girls. >> i saw a girl snort cocaine. >> let me ask you something, are your parents okay with you being here? >> [ expletive ] my parents! >> wow. are the teens out of control? is it a sign of missing moral compass in america? john said yes. he joins us now. we had answerher on yesterday and she said it has gotten worse. >> more than 130 people have been arrested this year. last night unfortunately things turned violent over the weekend. seven people were shot at a panama city beach house party. again, this is the big problem that the sheriff is concerned about. so many young people and so much crime going on, they can't control it. >> let's do the contrary began side of this. are we more aware of it now? we have social media people with the smartphones. we're hyper vigilant? >> i think there's a little bit of both involved there. i mean, look the kids are out there doing all sorts of debash i are. what the kids are doing down there makes the college frat parties look like baptist church picnics. there's a heightened level of outrageousness going on. i think it has to do with the culture at large. >> the kids it's almost like they want to be instant celebrities and they able to do it if they do ridiculous things. people were coming up and flashing the camera and saying who are you with? >> they don't care. and quite frankly if you remember saint patrick's day there was that sort of stuff going on that fifth avenue. this stuff is happening across the country. i think a lot of it has to do with parenting or the lack of parenting. you know yesterday i was in my local market, this 7-year-old was acting a fool and going bonkers yelling and screaming at his mother and she said i think someone needs a pause. i said someone needs a spanking. >> whooping. >> yep. that's right. unfortunately we have parents more interested in being friends with their kids. >> the long-term consequences are significant. if you want a democracy where the majority is control you have to have an impressive majority don't you? >> you certainly do. i made the point during the hannity special. you can imagine 20 years from now -- >> voting. >> that's right voting. this is the future jen race. these are the folks running the country. >> how about that? which ones specifically? >> sweet lord. >> the head band hippie. >> that guy. >> yeah. there you go. >> thank you so much for joining us this morning. >> are you going next year? >> i'm a good -- >> coming up on the show he proudly wore his letter jacket to school every day but his principal told him to take it off because he's on the special needs team. wait until you hear how his classmates are fighting baaing inging back this morning. >> we've heard this argument before. >> we said 7. we said 6:00. the only way i said 6:00 if i said 7:00. let's meet at 7:00 not at 6:00. >> turns out there's a reason couples remember things so differently. how to avoid the fights forever. a segment that will change your life. miss it at your peril. >> do women have worse memories? >> no! good morning friends. today is sunday, the 29th of march, 2015. open the door! a scheming pilot the co-pilot a desperate captain and passengers screaming. the horrifying final moments of the doomed germanwings flight revealed straight from the black box. >> he proudly wore his mom-made letter jacket to school every day until the principal forced this student who has down syndrome to take it off. why? because he's on the special needs team. remember this? who can forget. the two llamas on the loose took the internet by storm. all of america by storm. well, it turns out not everyone thought it was funny. the government stepping in now. a slap on more regulations against lam ma owners. yep. the story you only hear on "fox & friends." "fox & friends" hour two starts right now. just yesterday i was thinking it's a good country but it would be better if we have better llama regulations. >> the pigeons are taking over here. >> good morning everyone welcome to "fox & friends" on this sunday morning. the lovely and talented tucker karlson is here this morning. >> we begin a fox news alert. more details on the final moments of that germanwings flight that plowed into the alps last week. the cockpit recording has been transcribed and news organizations have obtained it. and a number of them are running a summary of what happened in the final 12 minutes that have flight. it's shocking. >> 12 minutes. can you imagine? all of this this unfolds in 12 minutes. put yourselves in seat of the passengers. they have no idea. but air traffic controller is fully aware of what is going on. they immediately come on. once they realize that son sondheimer is conversing with the pilot. go to the bathroom. you probably need to go to the bathroom. >> the flight was flying from barcelona to dusseldorf germany. after leaving barcelona the co-pilot lubitz said why don't you go to the bathroom now. was it planned after he left then he decided to do it. we know what happened at 10:27. the airliner reaches the cruising altitude. he said lubitz you can take over. >> i'm going to go to the bathroom now. you turn off the inflight seat belt alarm usually and get up and move around the cabin. >> the second the pilot goes into the bathroom literally within a minute the plane takes a radical trajectory now. it shows the plane dissenting quickly. air traffic control calls the plane and get no response. >> shortly afterwards there's a loud bang and you hear the co-pilot coming back banging on the door open the door! apparently he may have grabbed an ax. >> there's a loud metallic banging against the cockpit door. it could be the fire ax that the main pilot grabbed to try to get inside. and as heard again and the jet at 7,000 feet at that point. 90 seconds later there's a new warning message "ground. pull up!" it's horrifying. about eight minutes before the plane plows into the mountain, screams are heard from the body of the plane from the passengers who apparently are aware. we heard earlier that the passengers didn't know what was going on until the end. it turns out to be unfortunately knew. the pitch of the plane was like that going down. they were wondering if there was an oxygen issue on board. now we know they could hear lubitz's breathing into the microphone in the cockpit but he says nothing at all. >> that's so -- >> bent on murdering 149 people and saying nothing. >> and then two minutes later the aircraft hit the mountainside with the right wing and when it hit it unbelievable speed of 700 kilometers per hour and the co-pilot and 149 other passengers -- >> why did he do this? it was an intentional act. a suicide and murder. what about lubitz drove him to do this? he was under psychiatric for more than a decade. apparently dealing with deep depression. at one point he had to leave pilot training. we know he had other health problems. >> he had vision problems to the point he may have lost up to 30% of his overall vision. we know his fiancè broke up with him a day earlier. all the issues raising red flags what information needs to be handed to your employer and can they under certain laws international laws -- a capetain with the u.s. airline talks about how tricky it is. listen to him earlier. >> obviously the duties is among the pilots to report these things and most of them do. however, there is an incentive that if they report something how do they know they're not going to lose their job? that is something that probably needs to be addressed. the faa has said information is more important than judgeing pilots and we're going to replace punitive action with a corrective action. you can report errors and violations and you are kind of rewarded for self-reporting and taking the initiative on this. that type of legal framework needs to start applying to mental health. >> it seems like there ought to be a different protocol. investigators found a cache of depression medications in lubitz's apartment. and doctors saying he was unfit to fly. why isn't there something the doctor would get online and e-mail the airline and tell them this guy is a danger before he kills 149 people. >> it's called the tort bar. they can be sued for that. it's against the law to reveal any health information to anyone but the patient himself but there's a higher requirement. a ethical and moral requirement. the physician knows a person is because of the mental state endangered others he has a moral obligation to share the information. apparently they didn't. >> they knew six years ago in phoenix that he was unfit to fly. they knew this. how the information was translated, how he wasn't able to be grounded at some point. he would go on these burnouts sabbaticals he would take two and three months off. all his friends knew about it. his coworkers knew about it. the airline is saying they didn't know. >> he was retrained and then deemed fit to fly again. it sounds like his career has been like this. your thoughts on this should self-report being in place? overnight 22 passengers injured after their air canada flight ran off a halifax runway during a hard land the plane slid into a power line knocking out the airport's electric as freezing passengers some reportedly with bloody faces were forced to stand in the cold for up to an hour. 138 passengers and crew were on board. the injuries are minor and being treated at the hospital. the accident being blamed on snowy weather. a hero cop clings to his life in boston after being shot during a routine traffic stop. in a sick reaction, some people are rallying behind the suspect even comparing the incident to ferguson, the death of eric garner. police are saying 41-year-old angela west shot officer john moin han at point-blank rank.ge. west had completed probation for opening fire at officers in 2001. after his attack on the officer within , he was killed by police sparking outrage from some who don't get it. one tweeted this. rnc chairman priebus said after learning hillary clinton's private server was wiped clean. clinton's attorney told the house benghazi committee all of her e-mails have been permanently deleted. the committee subpoenaed clinton to turn over the server but her attorney said it's not going to happen. the president went florida this weekend to play golf. the white house blocking media coverage just as president obama was about to tee off at floridian national golf club. the president golfed along a sports caster and nba player. reporters sent the afternoon in a maintenance shed waiting for the tround wrap up rounds to wrap up. >> sounds like caddy shack. >> it's probably a pretty decent shed. >> air-conditioning, probably. >> when go to arizona it's not a maintenance shed. >> and they have catering. >> right. >> theall right. so the same story we've been talking about. warm in the west. really warm. and chilly. phoenix 97. the heat is brewing across the southwest. breaking records actually precipitation wise not too much going on. we have the snow across the northeast yesterday. boston another bout of snow. you're over 111 inches for the season. in is the next clipper system moving through. not a ton of precipitation but a little bit of a nuisance throughout the day. it will spread some snow toward began and eventually toward upstate new york and pennsylvania. philly and new york city again for tomorrow morning. maybe a few snow flakes. that moves out. another clipper system dives in. maybe a little bit more snow and rain to get rid of that. we have more storms to be dealing with. temperature wise really warm plains and wednesday and thursday are going to be really warm and by wednesday 90 degrees in amarillo, texas. >> the heat is on. >> thanks. let's go to kansas from texas to kansas this morning. a story that is tearing up the internet. have you heard about the sweet young boy. his name is michael kelley. he's in love with basketball at east high school in wichita kansas. so much so his mom sewed a varsity letter on his school jacket to show support for the school, his love of the game. he has down syndrome. he's on the special needs team. until the principal put a foot down decided to take off the varsity letter saying he's not on the varsity basketball team. >> saying he didn't earn it. even though you come to practice every day. you're happy to be here. you're inspiring to your teammates. you're u inspiring the student body. you have to take it off. here is what the principal said. and he said teachers told the parents they would prefer he not wear the letter on the jacket. we have considered it and our decision was no. we decided it is not appropriate in our situation because it is not a varsity-level competition. >> who complained? exactly. that's exactly. >> can you imagine the person that complained about that? i'm not for every kid getting a trophy. it's not like you should get a super bowl ring. in this case, a kid with down syndrome such a sweet looking kid. who was offended by that? >> one parent -- a parent of a varsity player. so a varsity parent saying look my kid worked tough really hard every day. double practices out there on the basketball court playing basketball. my son earned that varsity letter. your son with down syndrome -- >> well we're in the news business. what was the name of the parent? i want the name on the screen. >> the principal said parents. how many? other parents say it was one. students are outraged now. they set up social media accounts. libby hastings who started a petition who is a student she's going to be on the show at 8:20. she said it was one parent. all the students are rallying around michael kelley and the story. >> thousands of students have signed the mepetition to wear the jacket. >> what do you think? do you support the one parent or michael kelley. let us know your thoughts. we'll talk to libby later on in the show. go to facebook and you can weigh in. >> have you ever been around child with down syndrome? sweetest kids. the mom adopted him. she choice him. jolinda kelley. when it comes to the mideast even the president's former ambassador to iraq calls his foreign policy a total free fall. what needs to be done or is it too late? the white house insider explains next. and a wardrobe malfunction caught live on the air. >> i'm sorry. >> a kink in your neck. >> is that a hanger? >> how do you put a shirt on with a hanger? and the forthorrifying moment the weatherman could have predicted. 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>> well we got here actually because the region has been consistently dysfunctional and unstable for many decades. it's gotten worse in the last few years. largely because of the arab spring and the dissin gracious of the nation state system. the obama administration has not responded well to these crises that have been bursting out all over and we have not seen as predictable. we're not seen as close to our allies. we're not seen as willing to use military forces necessary. those are the three basic principles that both presidents such as president bush 43 have applied to the middle east for decades to deal with it. >> i'm struck again and again no one can anticipate and you learn a low by seeing how people respond those. the arab spring the white house's first response this was great. we helped abitet the killing of gadhafi in libya. how did we get it wrong? ? >> we all got it wrong. but basically again, even in a state particularly in a state of conflict and crisis and uncertainty, you've got to maintain these basic principles. people have to fear and respect you not just like you. you have to stay close to your traditional friends. you can't abandon them. you have to be to one or another degree predictable and basically you have to be seen as caring deeply about stability in that region and the prersservation states in the face of the threats. >> that seems like a wise framework. to be specific the president described yemen our ally in the war against al qaeda and chaos. the government is overthrown and america did almost nothing to keep it power. be. >> we saw it as an ally against the al qaeda element. the few threats from al qaeda come from that group. it didn't see it as an ally against in other states. that's the problem. >> and the arab league said this morning not just by saudi arabia but the collective arab league they're going to respond in the wake of our lack of response. ambassador james jeffrey. it's great to see you this morning. >> thank you. coming up how does this happen? a little girl boards a bus alone at 3:00 a.m. the reason? she wanted a slushie. will she be a united states senator? we'll debate it next. and the argument before. watch. >> we said 7:00. >> we said 6:00. >> the only way i said 6:00 if i said the sentence "let's meet at 7:00 not at 6:00!" >> oh, yes. it turns out there's a reason rooted in science that couples tend to remember things completely differently. if you want to avoid the fights stick around if our next guest. miss it at your peril! we'll be right back. you get sick you can't breathe through your nose... suddenly... you're a mouthbreather. well, put on a breathe right strip and instantly open your nose up to 38% more than cold medicines alone so you can breathe and sleep shut your mouth and sleep right. breathe right. now with the xfinity tv go app, you can watch live tv anytime. it's never been easier with so many networks all in one place. get live tv whenever you want. the xfinity tv go app. now with live tv on the go. enjoy over wifi or on verizon wireless 4g lte. plus enjoy special savings when you purchase any new verizon wireless smartphone or tablet from comcast. visit comcast.com/wireless to learn more. good morning. 3:00 a.m. that's what time it was when a 4-year-old girl searching for a slushie boarded a philadelphia bus alone. the child snuck out of her home. the driver called police. and she's now okay. april 13th that's when florida senator marco rubio is expected to announce his presidential candidacy. we could learn more about his rumored plans when he sits down with the 5:00 p.m. eastern tomorrow. $46 million. that's how much a bell air mansion once owned by kenny rogers sold for. the estate comes fully furnished with 17 bathrooms, a movie room, ballroom, and 11 bedrooms. >> why does he need that many bathrooms? welch had the arguments with the significant other that go something like this. >> we said we would meet at the coffee house at 6:00. >> we said 7:00. >> we said 6:00. >> the only way i said 6:00 was would be if i said the sentence let's meet at 7:00 not at 6:00! why do men and women remember things totally differently from time to time? is there any way to prevent these memory mishaps? memory mishaps. what a great euphemism. joining us is mark merle. great to see you this morning. >> good morning mark. >> good morning! great hanging out with you guys. >> so this is real. anyone that has been married for more than 20 or 30 minutes experienced this. it's not a figment of the imagination. men and women perceive things differently. >> men and women are different. it's not a fox news alert. i think people know that. it has to do with we process things differently. we perceive things differently. women think more with feelings and think more with facts. neither one is necessarily right. >> women think with feelings men think with facts and you don't think one of those is better? >> no. one really isn't better. it's not that one is right or one is not right. this is what scientific studies show on a regular basis. women do think with facts but there's more feelings involved as well. >> yeah. i'm the first to admit i've said something and thought i said something completely different because i was thinking it and feeling it. oh, yeah. >> no question about it. >> feelings are shading the facts. what is more important being right or the relationship. how do we handle this? >> we have to ask that. when we get in a discussion or disagreement about he said she said. what did you remember what did the other person remember. what is more important being right or the relationship. you can be right and lose the relationship. we want to be careful of not planting a stake in the ground on this issue. >> the skills you might need to build a suspension bridges are different than those to keep your marriage happy. >> no question about it. >> you said give each other your full attention. that's important. we're staring down at the smart phones. put them down and focus. >> yeah. one of the reasons why we might remember something differently has to do with the process and perception. that's not going to change. we can change how we remember things and we can come to more of an agreement if we would listen to one another. when we listen we not only need to listen with the ears but we also need to listen with our eyes as well. we need to give our spouse our full attention instead of like you said, looking down at the smartphone or texting or doing something else. >> bottom line why are women's memoryies worse than men? >> hey! [ laughter ] >> they never forget relisha.forget i will say that. >> you have incredible memories but, anna, you trump them all. >> i've only heard three versions to a story. his version, her version, somewhere in the middle. >> words of wisdom. >> thank you. >> great to be with you. a poll on facebook right now. we'll have the interns do it. do we have any interns no. we'll hire some interns. >> they're getting coffee. >> i can't remember. go to facebook. who has a better memory. men or women in your relationship? it will be an unscientific poll but later in the show we'll reveal it. once responsible for bombing the new york city police station. now found a new career. he's a teacher. remember this? took the internet by storm. not everyone thought it was too funny. the government is using it as an excuse to slap on more regulations expected wait time: 55 minutes. vo: in the nation, we know how it feels when you aren't treated like a priority. we'll take care of it. we put members first. join the nation. thank you. ♪ nationwide is on your side ♪ . with the help of comfort keepers, i'm keeping my mom healthy! i'm keeping dad on schedule. i'm keeping my mom happy! comfort keepers in-home professional caregivers can provide meal planning and preparation, health and wellness services and personal care services through custom care plans that can change as needs change, so your aging loved ones can stay happy and healthy in their own home. ♪ sir, we're going to need you on the runway later don't let a severe cold hold you back. get theraflu. it has the power of three medicines to take on your worst pain and fever, cough and nasal congestion. theraflu breaks you free from your toughest cold and flu symptoms. so you never miss a day. theraflu. serious power. lam malamas on the loose! for three hours or something. it captivated america. they ran a local llama farm. they were thurp therapeutic. llamas. everyone was laughing about this. there were twitter hashtags that popped up for the llamas that captivated america. we were tired of the bad news. the usda is banning own frers llama appearances. they're saying it was part of our retirement. it's going to kill us. the llama's owner said this opens up a can of worms where everybody across the country is shut down doing this bringing llamas in for therapy. that's unfair. they totally destroyed everything i planned for my retirement. we have taken them to schools before. now they're telling me i can't do anything. even, like, a photo shoot. >> the owners will be on the program tomorrow at ten minutes before 7:00. if you want to hear from them. >> i don't know, i mean -- >> you should have to obey the law. >> america has a huge problem with unlicensed llamas. if you talk to anybody from a foreign country from the united states the first they'll say is you have a lot of regulations. >> and a lot of llamas. they're everywhere! but i think it's a challenge for us in the news business. something bad happens and what is the first thing you heard tv on say congress ought to check into this! random things happen. llamas get out, acts of god occur. you can't legislate everything. people think you can. do you think we should have a llama regulation? we're going to hear from the llama owners tomorrow on the show. other stories making headlines on your sunday. the title of the isis propaganda video featuring children. it begins with the islamics parading their victims in orange jump suits then you see a boy standing be behind the hostages and another child handing out knives before the execution. the terror group identifies the victims as captured assad soldiers in syria. and he was responsible for the bombing of a new york city police station, but this weather underground member found a new career as a teacher for special needs children. he was never caught and never paid for his heinous acts. you're paying for him now to live with a $40,000-a year pension from teaching gig. indiana bans seattle's mayor's from prohibiting city workers to going to the state on business because of the controversial new religious freedom law. it allows businesses to refuse service for faith-based. state lawmakers will introduce the new bill clarifying the law in the coming days. one local meteorologist forecast comes with a chance an embarrassing. >> the chill is letting up but the chill is not completely gone. i'm sorry. >> and the chill has a kink in your neck? >> i got -- forget it i just -- i thought it was just never mind. can we just go to the weather! >> that has to be fake. >> i'm calling fake! >> i don't believe that. >> that's meteorologist steve fraser in minneapolis who seems to be hung up on the weather making the rounds online. >> rick has worn the wrong colored pants with the wrong color coat on the air. you have never worn a shirt with a hanger. >> i don't think thinks in way you can get away with it. i had gray plaid pants and a blue top like jacket for like two and a half hours. i went to the bathroom in the middle of the day and i was like i'm wearing two different suits and nobody said anything! it's the camera guy. i said why didn't you tell me? he said i thought you meant to do that. >> i had a dress on backwards before. not on the show. >> it's the early morning man. take a look at the weather maps. where is spring? have you ever been to court side, arizona. a little town of about 3,000 people. in the winter blooms to about a million people. all the people take the rvs and go out there and spend the winter in the beautiful condition. 66 degrees as you were getting ready to wake up. getting to 98 degrees today. the heat is on across parts of the southwest. keep sending me the pictures on twitter. or put them on facebook. a chilly day across the northeast today and across the southeast finally sunshine and beginning to warm up from where you've been the last couple of days. back to you inside. >> thank you. father john just walked in with a giant palm. today the pope leading today's palm service mass with millions around the world. the last sunday of lent and the first day of the holy week leading into easter. >> what is palm sunday about and why do we celebrate? here to explain is father john. >> he just walked in which is keeping with history. >> it is. it's a serious palm branch we have here. it reminds us -- it looks very real. it reminds us of what happened on this day that we celebrate and that is that jesus decided to go into the city of jerusalem on a donkey and people said here is our king. this is the one who is going to free us from the romans and we're going to appraise him as king. he said you're right i'm a king. i'm the king who is going to be able to free you from your sins and reunite you with god. and as they were waiving the palms as a sign of worship and adoration he accepted it knowing he was going to his death. saying i'm going die for you so you can have life eternal. that's the beginning. >> what is holy week and how should christians celebrate it? >> holy week is the week leading up to easterner which we celebrate the events of the passion and the death of jesus, and, you know, i was trying to think of an analogy of what we're celebrating and imagine if all of the banks with all of the mortgage and all the mortgage companies, all the credit card companies decided we're going to give everybody a pass. we're going to free you from your debt. man the lines outside the banks to sign up. to say, you know we're going to start again. we're going to begin our relationship again. that's what we celebrate. the god was saying to us all the sins all the personal sins the time you rejected me and others selfishly, we're going to begin again. >> sometimes people don't want to go to church because they feel like the guilt is going to be so much of a burden on their shoulders. but that's what this is all about, right? that can be lifted. >> and as i walked in with someone who hasn't been to church in a long time he was joking the roof is going to fall down in this place! it's just the opposite. it's for people like that, like us, that we walk into the church and that roof holds up. the grace of god and pour it is upon us. what an incredible week we celebrate we're sad because of the events. we celebrate the end story. >> happy president obama sunday. >> thank you very much. their job is to protect and serve more -- now cities don't require them to be u.s. citizens. come check it out. these folks thought it was a great time to take a selfie. and there's more. you're here to buy a car. what would help is simply being able to recognize a fair price. truecar has pricing data on every make and model so all you have to do is search for the car you want there it is. now you're an expert in less than a minute. this is truecar. taxi. vo: after years of being treated like she was invisible it occurred to mindy she might actually be invisible. ♪♪ but mindy was actually not invisible. ooh, what are you doing? can you see me? she had just always been treated that way. yeah. you don't have to look at me like that. there are worst things than an attractive woman touching your body. i'll go. join the nation that sees you as a priority. ♪ nationwide is on your side ♪ search crews are looking to find two people in the new york city village. some people say it's the perfect place for a selfie. people on twitter and instagram posting photographs themselves grinning in front of the destruction the place where people died. this woman apparently a communications director for the iowa democratic party. she never passed the bar 45-year-old kimberly kitchen alleged used documents to impose as a lawyer for a decade and nobody noticed which said a lot. police departments across the united states are now hiring noncitizens to fill their ranks as long as applicants have green cards or they've applied for citizenship. well, they can wear badges and carry guns to police our streets. what risks does this pose? let's ask our fox news contributor. good morning, katie. >> how does this happen? >> there seems to be three kind of general types of hiring processes across the u.s. and when it comes to police departments hiring immigrants. they require you be a u.s. citizens. the second they require you have a citizens application on file with the federal government, and the third in cities like chicago they just simply require you have a work permit to be able to become a police officer. now police departments across the country are arguing that as communities become more diverse and as positions in rural areas become harder to fill, they want to take the 20000 legal immigrants who are serving in the military and try to recruit them to serve as police officers and their departments. >> right. some are saying oh and the others are saying they can serve in the military but not our streets. one said this is about people who have gone through criminal background checks and who only want to serve and protect their communities. what is wrong with that? >> well, that's the big question. a lot of these people maybe have gone through a criminal background check system. because the obama administration and immigration policy has been such a disaster over the past even decades i would argue, it's hard to tell how these people will be vetted. and if they came here in the first place illegally, it's hard to believe we would allow them to turn around and enforce the laws when they got here in the first place was not by following the law. and so it's going to come down to how did they get here, what is their work permit process like, and are they going to require having a citizenship application on file. i think having a citizenship application on file is a fair point to make. especially if they take people out of the military and ask them to serve in the police department. i think it's important in the united states to understand how our legal system works, especially when you become a police officer to enforce the laws. >> and when you weigh the pros and cons is it a good idea? you mentioned in the rural communities some have a hard time filling the positions. >> immigrants obviously serving as police officers especially in the military is a bad idea. thing is a question there about what the requirement will be in terms of applying for one of these positions at the police department. you cannot just have anyone with a work permit considering the administration. dhs has been handing them out without doing the background checks or checking their background to see how they got there. you have lots of people 20,000 immigrants serving in the military who are qualified. it would give them an opportunity to fill the positions and have good people in the positions. i think it comes down what is the basic requirements for these people when they want to apply for the citizenships. >> we love to hear from our viewers. go to facebook and weigh in on the story. thank you. >> thank you. coming up republican leaders now compare hillary clinton's e-mail scandal to watergate. is she getting special treatment from the main stream media. i'm a little distracted. i'm smelling bacon. >> i'm hearing it. the sound of your favorite foods they make you want to eat more. listen. listen. >> do you hear that? it's snaps and pops! and crackles! >> and crackles. a new study is out bacon's crunchy sound is the, you can't get enough. janet? cough if you can hear me. don't even think about it. i took mucinex dm for my phlegmy cough. yeah...but what about mike? (cough!) it works on his cough too. mucinex dm relieves wet and dry coughs for 12 hours. let's end this. boy: once upon a time, there was a nice house that lived with a family. one day, it started to rain and rain. water got inside and ruined everybody's everythings. the house thought she let the family down. but the family just didn't think a flood could ever happen. the reality is floods do happen. protect what matters. get flood insurance. visit floodsmart.gov/flood to learn more. >> us? >> hear that! it's snap and pops. >> and crackle. >> for years companies have used sound to sell their foods. now a new study claims the sound of food makes a difference when it comes to our eating experience. >> here to explain is practicing physician dr. nina rat cliff. >> it sounds good. the sounds of our food want to make us eat more and more. >> absolutely. like snap, crackle pop. we are confirmation when we chew bite, our drink a bench perceives the way we flavor. >> what about at a restaurant and the waiter or wait es is describing the specials and all of a sudden your mouth starts watering. can adjectives say the same thing? >> the sound of the food. background music does affect our desire for food. flavor is not just the way something tastes or smells or looks. it's also the way we hear it. >> okay. obviously you want to lose weight wear ear plugs. >> with bacon they did an interesting study where the crispiness of bacon. they looked at the perfect blt. it was not the flavor or the smell. it was not the taste. it was actually how crispy it was that made it the most perfect blt sandwich. >> i'm down here with the vegetables. i'm going to come to the other end of the table. this is one of my favorites the french press. the frothing of color fee. the sound of cream is interesting. >> what happens is the bubbles you can hear in your brain you may not even hear it out loud. your brain can detect it. this affects the way our brain perceives sound. when you have coffee with cream, it can be more flavorful. who can forget for example, whipped cream. >> there it is! the sound of it. >> the sound of the nitrous oxide. >> the everyfizzy soda. they do extremely well. >> the sound then. >> yeah. we know what that sound is. >> totally. >> and they did a study where they show and they compared flat soda versus one that is poured for example, it is more desirable. >> you hear that america. >> throw some mentos in there. >> what about the soda that is good for you. carrots. exactly. crunch. the sounds that are important are crispy, crunchy, crackly, carbonated. >> what is the evolutionary biology. >> that's interesting. when you look at fruit and vegetables. when something is fresh they have a nice crunchy sound. a rotten apple would be soft and moldy. you wouldn't have the same crunch. that's what the evolution of that is. >> to the other junk foods. >> doritos the crunchiness of chips. and pickles, by the way too. >> right. than did a study that showed one of the marketing campaigns they're one of the crunchiness chips on the face of the earth. that's why they do that. >> thank you, doctor. that was interesting. >> thank you so much. coming up a horrific moment on the racetrack caught on camera. an out-of-control car flies into the crowd. hear what happens next. and one of the most valuable football players taking a daredevil risk by flying off a cliff. tom brady, a man taking risks. expected wait time: 55 minutes. vo: in the nation, we know how it feels when you aren't treated like a priority. we'll take care of it. we put members first. join the nation. thank you. ♪ nationwide is on your side ♪ [blowing] wow! cars. they've always captured our imagination. what they look like, how they move... and the places they take us. ♪ and because you've always loved them, you deserve to love the experience of buying them. ♪ ...and the wolf was huffing and puffing... kind of like you sometimes, grandpa. well, when you have copd it can be hard to breathe. it can be hard to get air out, which can make it hard to get air in. so i talked to my doctor. she said.. doctor: symbicort could help you breathe better, starting within 5 minutes. symbicort doesn't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden symptoms. symbicort helps provide significant improvement of your lung function. symbicort is for copd, including chronic bronchitis and emphysema. it should not be taken more than twice a day. symbicort contains formoterol. medicines like formoterol increase the risk of death from asthma problems. symbicort may increase your risk of lung infections osteoporosis, and some eye problems. you should tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. grandfather: symbicort could mean a day with better breathing. watch out, piggies! child giggles doctor: symbicort. breathe better starting within 5 minutes. call or go online to learn more about a free prescription offer. if you can't afford your medication, astrazeneca may be able to help. good morning everyone. the 29th of march, 2015. a fox news alert. open the door! a scheming co-pilot, a desperate captain, and screaming passengers. the horrifying final moments that doomed germanwings flight revealed from the black box. how did this happen? look at the video a little girl is four years old and boarded a bus at 7:00 a.m. in northeastern philadelphia. why? because she's looking for a late-night snack. you'll hear from her father and explain what happened. >> and probably wore his mom-made letter jacket to school every day. that is until a principal forced the student with down syndrome to take it off. why? because he's on the special needs team and one parent complained about it. "fox & friends" hour three starts right now. hey everybody. welcome to "fox & friends" weekend. >> our show starts at 6:00 a.m. when you think should i flip on telebbies? no. flip on "fox & friends." we had wine and junk food. have no fear there are two more hours to go! we start with a fox news alert. new details amid the horrifying final moments of aboard the germanwings flight that plowed into the alps. after the co-pilot went rogue and decided to kill himself and 149 others. >> the time line is creepy. it spans about 12 minutes. listen to this. sondheimer, the other pilot they left barcelona. he hasn't gone to the bathroom. andreas lubitz was aware of him not going to the bathroom. he encouraged him to take a break and go to the bathroom. the airline reaches at cruising altitude at 38,000 at 10:27. the pilot lets another two minutes or so go by and said you can take over lubitz. he leaves himself. >> and almost a second he does, the plane begins its dissent pretty steep at a pretty radical pitch. air traffic controllers notice the plane is not going where it's going. they are nervous. they plane, can you hear us? repeatedly they call. they get no response. >> meanwhile put yourself in the seats of the passengers. now at this time you can imagine those sitting up in the front part of the plane start to become aware of what is unfolding that something has gone wrong. the door is blocked to the cockpit. you hear the long bang sondheimer calls for god sakes open the door. >> imagine the 149 passengers on board start realizing what is going on or something is going terribly wrong. >> a parents with a couple of infants on board. we heard early in the story in the development that the passengers apparently weren't aware of the peril of the situation until the final second before impact. now we have a rough transcript of the inflight recorder that records all the sound on the plane we know unfortunately that's not true. they did know for about eight minutes before impact. apparently the pilot took, we think an ax a fire ax and tried to smash in the door but couldn't. >> that was about 7,000 feet. air traffic control trying to radio inside the cockpit. 90 seconds later you hear ground. pull up. pull up. that came from inside the cockpit. >> at 10:38 the breathing of andreas lubitz can be heard in the cockpit. he's not saying anything. at 10:40 the aircraft hiltds the sound of the mountain with the right wing. everybody on border riches as it smacks into the mountain at 700 classroomties. >> it's more horrifying. >> the idea about the doors in the united states if the door if one person leaves the cockpit that somebody on the air air crew will replace the pilot while the other person is in the bathroom. that's not the case of what happened in germany. >> the reinforced doors post 9/11. and there's other ideas that somehow the pilot should be able to get back in -- >> how did it happen? what was the motive behind the horrible crime? >> yeah. brand new this morning. details about the killer co-pilot's medical state. as we learn he may have been diagnosed with an impending blindness. a condition that could have ended his flying career forever. >> amy kellogg is on this. she's live with the latest. good morning, amy. >> reporter: hi, anna. in another twist to all of us a newspaper in germany is reporting that the exfiancè was pregnant and had told her student -- she was a math and english teacher that she was pregnant. according to the reports the two met seven years ago when they were working at burger king. it is the latest out of germany. it could add another angle to the story. in terms of the blindness issue. that's coming -- in terms of specifics today saying his vision may have declined 30%. lufthansa selling stern publication it knew nothing of mental or floridaphysical. thank you. >> we appreciate it. it might not even have been real blindness. amazing. some other stories we're following at this hour. we'll get to the headlines. middle east arab league countries. this announced a short time ago at a summit in egypt. saudi arabia has launched four nights of air strikes against the rebels. arab leaders say the air strikes will continue until they surrender and leave. over night 22 passengers injured after the air canada flight ran off the halifax runway after a hard land. the plane slid into a power line knocking out the power. passengers were forced to stand outside in the cold for up to an hour being brought inside. 138 passengers and crew were on board. the injuries are minor, they say, are being treated at the hospital. the accident being blamed on snowy weather. more bizarre twist in the real life gone girl case. a california woman and her boyfriend say she was kidnapped. the attorney doctor denise's boyfriend said he got an e-mail from the alleged abductor. the attorney didn't explain what the e-mail said but insists it is real. aaron was drugged and tied up. police say they have no evidence of the kidnapping and are considering criminal charges against the couple. they didn't comment on the supposed e-mail. undefeated kentucky getting a scare. notre dame lead the wildcats for most of the second half. in the end kentucky survived thanks to late free throws. notre dame has one last chance but missed. kentucky wins an absolute thriller thriller 68-66. they face wyoming-- wisconsin in the final four. the elite eight wraps up today. this morning who is furious because the groundhogs appears to have been correct. >> seriously correct. but, you know, obviously it's been a broken record. especially across the east. we're frustrated with being cold. the west is baking and we're saying it might be nice but they need rain. you don't want to see the farms areas in the plains have temperatures in the 70s and 80s this time of year without any rain. that causes problem fors summer. california where we get so much produce no rain at all this winter. there are big problems on tap with that. so, you know, we're complaining on the east about the cold but they're complaining just as much on the west about the problems that come from the warmth. cold air across the south. freeze issuewarnings. it will be better tomorrow. this morning for a couple more hours a chilly one. it warmth i'm talking about. take a look what happens the next few days. go to north plat, nebraska. you should be around 56. by tuesday 83 degrees! that's like mid summer temperatures. go up into billings, montana. 79 on tuesday. it's been really windy here. we had a lot of wind damage yesterday in montana and wyoming with winds up to 70 miles per hour causing big problems there. windy and warm across the west. east coach much drier. snow yesterday in boston. that's gone. now we want a watch a little bit of a clipper system move into here. bringing snow across parts of michigan and upstate new york and pennsylvania. temperature wise today warm air across the planes. this is the persistent trough we're dealing in the northeast. that sticks with us tomorrow. it warms up even more on monday. across the plains on tuesday even more on wednesday. temperatures into the 90s in western kansas. 90s in western kansas and still in march. >> i have a question for you. i don't mean to throw you under the bus. how cold was it last night at 3:00 a.m. in philadelphia. >> really? you think i know that? >> because -- >> i mean it was probably below freezing. see the video of a 4-year-old little girl in philadelphia last night at 3:00 a.m. stumbles on to a bus -- by the way, she put her coat on. she has her coat on. her parents are nowhere to be seen. zbhets on a bus at 3:00 in the morning because she wanted a slushie. >> she apparently can tie her own shoes. pretty impressive. walking several blocks to the bus stop and gets on board. the bus driver calls the cops to say i don't know what is going on but something is wrong. let's hear from the bus driver. >> i was like you've got to be kidding me! not this time of the night. 3:00 in the morning. she left without waking anybody up. she was going to go to the store and no one was going to stop her. >> that was anna bell's father. they didn't know, apparently she unlocked the door to the house and walked out. what an amazing little kid. i know, people are upset about this but here is the lesson i take from it. everything is fine. america is actually filled with super nice people who helped her. it's probably less dangerous than we think. how carriage courageous. >> philadelphia, are you kidding me? >> they had murder after murder. >> she's brave. i think we underrate the value of i think it's one of the most important qualities in in a person. if one of my girls did this i would never let her leave the house again. but i would admire her. >> i think she's going to be a big time figure. >> what would do you for a slushie. >> that's the other question! how did she get out of the house, unlock the door put on her coat and shoes, and make her way to the bus stop. it is a scary place. philadelphia is a city of broerllybroerl ly brotherly love. fortunately the people called the police. >> the bus driver what a great guy. we would never know a what a good guy the bus driver is. it reveals the deep goodness of america. >> what would your wife say? >> it can go on -- >> it's true. i want to encourage my kids bravery bravery, independence, you know, self-possession. i think this girl has it. she's an american hero. >> i think you're right. when i get home i'm going bring my 2-year-old and 4-year-old to the subway and say figure out how to get home. >> the wall street journal, a can of beer, a subway card. >> she did it on her own. they're helicopter parents. she did it by herself. can you imagine -- >> wow! >> i'm sorry. that's impressive. she could have gotten hit but she didn't. because america is a nicer place than she didn't. >> we're glad she's okay. >> well coming up next. worse than you thought overnight an israeli prime minister dire warning for the u.s. for the iran nuclear deal. where negotiations headed? we'll ask chris wallace. talk about a creamy filter. a did a ghost photobomb this selfie. take closer look at this photograph straight ahead. i accept that i'm not 21. i accept i'm not the sprinter i was back in college. i even accept that i live with a higher risk of stroke due to afib, a type of irregular heartbeat, not caused by a heart valve problem. but i won't accept giving it less than my best. so if i can go for something better than warfarin ...i will. eliquis. eliquis... reduced the risk of stroke better than warfarin plus it had less major bleeding than warfarin... eliquis had both. that really mattered to me. don't stop taking eliquis unless your doctor tells you to, as stopping increases your risk of having a stroke. eliquis can cause serious and in rare cases fatal bleeding. don't take eliquis if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. while taking eliquis you may bruise more easily and it may take longer than usual for any bleeding to stop. seek immediate medical care for sudden signs of bleeding like unusual bruising. eliquis may increase your bleeding risk if you take certain medicines. tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures. i accept that i'm not as fast, but i'm still going for my personal best... and for eliquis. reduced risk of stroke... plus less major bleeding. ask your doctor... if eliquis is right for you. next. ♪♪ expected wait time: 55 minutes. your call is important to us. thank you for your patience. waiter! vo: in the nation, we know how it feels when you aren't treated like a priority. we do things differently. we'll take care of it. vo: we put members first... join the nation. thank you. ♪ nationwide is on your side ♪ whether you need a warm up before the big race... or a healthy start before the big meeting there's a choice hotel that's waiting for you. this spring, choose choice twice, get a night at no price at 1,500 hotels. book now at choicehotels.com you get sick you can't breathe through your nose... suddenly... you're a mouthbreather. well, put on a breathe right strip and instantly open your nose up to 38% more than cold medicines alone so you can breathe and sleep shut your mouth and sleep right. breathe right. good morning. the deadline for striking a nuclear deal with iran is two days away. overnight israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu saying the deal that is shaping up is even worse than he thought. >> this is chaos from yemen to iraq spirals out of control. with iran at the center of it all is it a good time to be negotiating? >> joining us now to weigh in fox news sunday chris wallace. good morning. do you think it will happen, this deal? >> i have to tell you. i think it's very much up in the air and, you know, it will be interesting to see whether they hold to the tuesday deadline the end of march. i will tell you i talked to a top white house official about a week and a half ago who bet there won't be a deal. there was too much difference and pointed out it isn't just the u.s. and iran but there are five other countries involved and particularly france seems to have taken a hard line. it's not just the u.s. in a bilateral negotiation with iran. you have to satisfy the allies particularly the europeans who may take harder line than president obama. >> what happens if there is no deal. what will we see? >> clearly what will happen is the u.s. and the west will reimpose the tougher sanctions they had and you might see a move. we certainly heard about this and congress imposed even tougher sanctions then the becomes what will iran do. stay just short several months less than a year short of breakout having the material they need for a nuclear bomb or race to create a weapon in which case that really will create a crisis around the world and the question will be whether or not israel or the united states is prepared to take military action. >> okay. you'll be talking about this of course on the big show starting in a little while. you'll be speaking with lieutenant general michael flynn. what are you talking about with him? >> he was until august the head of the defense intelligence agency. he was basically the chief spy master inside the pentagon and we'll talk about, obviously, the nuclear deal. we'll talk about as you mention at the top the fact that the mideast at large is descend into chaos. you have iran with proxies in syria in iraq lebanon, and yemen. you have the sunni arabs lead by the saudi arabia and egypt striking back particularly in yemen. what is weird the u.s. is on the side of the sunnis against the iranian factions in yemen but we're fighting alongside the iranians against the sunnis in iraq. we're kind of on both sides. we're trying to negotiate a deal. and some people have questioned whether or not because of the president's desire to get a deal perhaps we haven't stood up as strongly as we could have and should have to iran across the region over the last few years. >> sounds right. we will be watching. >> you bet. thank you. >> thank you. coming up on the show he proudly wore his mom-made letter jaktd to school every day until the principal forced this student with down syndrome to take it off because he's on the special needs team. one student fighting back. we'll hear from her next. and marco rubio of florida dropped a big hint recently about whether he's in for 2016. we have details on the event he's planning and what it may mean. stay tuned for that. we'll be right back. not to be judgmental, but from where i'm sitting... it's your gas that's out of order in this court. the pressure. the bloating. get gas-x. it relieves all those symptoms in minutes. that's why it's the #1 gas relief brand. at old dominion, we ship everything you can imagine. and everything we ship has something in common. whether it's expedited overnight... ...or shipped around the globe ...it's handled by od employees who know that delivering freight... ...means delivering promises. od. helping the world keep promises. good morning friends. some headlines from d.c. even nixon did the story -- that's what rnc chairman said after learning his hillary clinton's private was wiped clean. clinton's lawyer said she won't turn over the server. is marco rubio getting red did toy run -- ready to run. he reserved the freedom tower for an undiscloes dsed reason. i bet it will be addressed tomorrow when he appears on the five. join us at 5:00 p.m. michael kelley has down syndrome, plays on his high school special needs basketball team. he loves it. his mother decided i'm going to buy him a letter jacket to show his participation a varsity letter. when kelley wore the jacket his mom said he was forced to remove it. one student is rallying behind michael and all special needs students to earn a varsity letter. the petition almost reached 40,000 signature. libby hastings joins us with her incredible story. nice to see you this morning. welcome to the show. >> hi thank you so much for this opportunity. >> absolutely. you started this. you didn't even know michael. you weren't aware of this. you reached out to his mom. is it how it unfolded? how you became involved? >> i first became involved after i saw the article on a local kansas news show, and that's when i decided to start the petition, and originally i had hoped for at least and maybe 250 signatures, but i think i have a little more than that now. >> 40,000. just over 40,000. unbelievable. >> yes. >> i have to ask you, when you first read the article, it hit you in some kind of way. what did you think when you were reading that article about a student at your school fortsed are move a varsity letter with down syndrome? >> at first, i was a little disappointed, to be honest. but i have learned some facts about it. in fact, he was not forced to take off his jacket but one of the main things that kelley's mom and i want to focus on not so much the jacket issue, but the fact there is no district wide policy for special needs students to have the opportunity to earn a varsity letter. and that's -- it's also confirmed by his mother and a teacher from east that they didn't want michael to wear the jacket because he didn't earn the varsity letter, and -- >> right. >> that's one of the main reasons i started the petition is because i feel like these kids deserve it as much as any other student at east to earn a varsity letter. >> students have rallied around michael. they say what a support he is to their team. here is what the principal had to say, quote, teachers told the parents they would prefer he not wear the letter on his jacket. we have considered it and our decision was no. so we decided it was not appropriate in our situation because it's not a varsity-level competition. so other parents apparently arguing -- some parents saying my son earned it. he worked hard for the team. he got the varsity letter. michael didn't earn it. he doesn't deserve to wear the letter. letter. >> right. and i don't see the problem with special needs kids having the opportunity to earn a varsity letter. i will be a four-year varsity letter winner for soccer and i'm a cocaptain on the variousty soccer team. it's taking nothing away from me. these kids represent east. they wear jerseys that east on them just like any other varsity sport, and they put in blood sweat, and tears into the sport just as we do. they love it just as much as we do. >> and we should mention your soccer cohorts decided i'm going to donate my letter if they need to. saying i'll take it off my jacket. >> there is one girl she's earned a varsity letters in other activities and she said she was willing to donate letters if no policy change is being made. and i know there are others in my school as well who are willing to do that. >> we'll link up the petition on our website we were showing the spring break stories earlier worrying about our compasses and we have guests like you who reaffirm we have good kids out there. thank you so much for joining us. >> thank you very much. >> thank you so much. coming up on the show a horrific moment on the racetrack caught on camera. an out of control car flies right into the crowd. and he captured historic moments like the aftermath of the bombing attack on u.s. marines. now the story behind the pulitzer prize winning journal journalist journalistjournal journalist. you don't want to miss this. taxi. vo: after years of being treated like she was invisible it occurred to mindy she might actually be invisible. ♪♪ but mindy was actually not invisible. ooh, what are you doing? can you see me? she had just always been treated that way. yeah. you don't have to look at me like that. there are worst things than an attractive woman touching your body. i'll go. join the nation that sees you as a priority. ♪ nationwide is on your side ♪ introducing new flonase allergy relief nasal spray. this changes everything. new flonase outperforms the #1 allergy pill so you will inhale life. when we breathe in allergens our bodies react by over-producing six key inflammatory substances that cause our symptoms. the leading allergy pill only controls one, flonase controls six. and 6 is greater than 1. so roll down your windows, hug your pet dust off some memories, make new ones. new flonase. 6 is greater than 1. this changes everything. welcome back to "fox & friends." tom brady is shocking people. not just because he won the super bowl. he put himself in harm's way putting himself in a dangerous situation. he jumped off a cliff. watch this! ♪ ♪ >> tom brady leaping off a huge cliff in costa rica. he posted the video on facebook. it got 150,000 likes. some fans said wait until you retire to do this stuff. he wrote back quote saying, never doing that again. what a hero! anybody else can risk life and limb by jumping off a coast in cliff. for a guy making a living in football good for him. >> that can be very, very dangerous. seriously. if it's a little bit shallower in a certain area than you think. >> that's the point! that's why a it's a meaningful act. he has so much to lose. >> good for you, tom brady. >> 4 years olds at buses in the morning -- >> i love it! >> you need to go back to bed. >> all right. the stories making headlines to tell you about on this sunday morning. the moment a super car flies off a track in germany. >> tucker wants people to do this, too. >> yeah. it flew into a crowd of spectators. it had an unfortunate ending killing one and injuring two others. nissan and race organizers are investigating what went wrong. don't let strangers inside your home. those are some of the safety guidelines the army is issuing military families this morning. these recommendations coming a week after an isis affiliated hacking group. you remember the post in the personal information of 100 service-members encouraging lone wolves to murder them inside their homes. the army also warning families not to post anything personal on social media. earlier pope francis ushered in holy week with a president obama sunday service in saint peter's square. ♪ ♪ tens of thousands of people gathered to watch the pontiff bless palms and olive branchs. earlier father jonathan explained the significance. >> jesus decided to go into the city of jerusalem on a donkey. they were waiving the palms as a shine of adoration. he accepted it knowing it he was going to his death. saying i'm going to die for you so you can have life eternal. that's what is so great today. the pope paid tribute to those killed for their faith and denounced isis militants. take a look at this. a selfie taken with a creepy filter. a woman in ireland thought she took a photograph with her nephew and sister. but after taking a closer look, the woman claims someone or something photobombed the picture. in the background there you can see what appears to be a woman sitting with her hands foltded on her knees and she thinks it may be a ghost. our resident ghost hunter clayton morris on the case. >> what else could it be? i mean, may be part of a dress. that looks like hands doesn't it? >> that's definitely hands and skirt over the knees. >> definitely. it is definitely. >> that is amazing. >> lock at that. we go to the par normal expert in the weather realm. rick, do you have an answer? >> i don't. i was trying to figure it out. what could it be? >> we're not using film anymore. you don't have any double exposure. it. >> it's got to be a ghost. >> the only explanation. must be it. check it out. if you bring a sign you get on the air. mac, nice job! >> thank you. >> it's your eighth birthday? >> yeah. >> first trip to new york city? >> yes. >> what do you think? good? >> good. yes. are you here by yourself? >> they brought you. the grandpas. nice. happy birthday. enjoy yourself. take a look at the weather picture. take a look at the picture out of san marcos, texas. between san antonio and austin. i believe those are bluebonnets. that's what you're famous for there. you can tweet me and let me know if i'm wrong. 54 as the sun comes up. you get to 83 today. a spectacular one. keep sending me your pictures. we'll share them here. a chilly day across the northeast but at least we'll see sunshine today a little bit more rain coming in overnight tonight and into tomorrow. down to the south a beautiful day as well. breezy and warm across much of texas. to the northern plains windy conditions as well as a clipper system coming through. tomorrow you warm up even more. across the west we have tons of sunshine and breaking record temperatures high temperatures. thanks, mac. >> thank you. >> bye guys. >> bring a sign and you get on tv. good rules. from egyptian president last moments to the heartbreaking aftermath to the bombing of the u.s. marine corps.. the iconic photographs have left their mark on history. >> they can be seen together at a brand new exhibit in indiana. he joins us now to share the stories behind the amazing pictures. >> the picture i'll never forget it was on the front page of every paper. when was that? right before his assassination? >> minutes before he died. why you were there fur the shooting? >> it was pretty intense. we didn't know it was going to happen. i walked around and i was going to photograph the tanks coming down the runway sort of with the diplomats, and then all of a sudden i turn around and i didn't know if it was part of the script or not. obviously it wasn't. i run back to photograph the aftermath and all chaos and of course the security people start looking at the foreigners. i was taking my cameras because i don't want to think -- >> of course. >> among the other famous sfrafs on display at the exhibit, you were, of course, photographed nelson mandela which landed on the front cover of time magazine. the horrible massacre at the refugee camps in beirut. that's the one the photographs that won the pulitzer prize for you. we look at the images now. how difficult is it as a photojournalist to not become part of the story. you're looking through the lens and chaos is erupts around you. >> you're recording what you're seeing. becoming part of the story i don't know how you mean becoming part of the story. you know, in journalist we're telling the story. you try to remain, you know, away from it. it's not about me. it's about the people i'm photographing. >> as you're in there in the elements trying to take the photographs, you're looking for that one photograph that tells the complete story. >> right. >> how do you do that? how frustrating is it to only tell the story with one photograph? >> you know, it's what we do. this is how we do it. we look at the world and one frame and figure out what way to make that picture work for everybody. >> what is the most afraid you've ever been. >> most afraid? well, i guess when being strip searched was pretty scary. >> where were you? >> beirut. >> we're in an era of digital photography now. you can look at hundreds of photographs and pick from them. you take a look the photographs you don't know what they look like until you get back to the darkroom. what does the anxiety feel like you're in the darkroom and you got the shot. >> even in the film world we knew what we had even though you didn't. you can look at the camera and say it's perfect. you knew if you've been doing it for a certain amount of time you knew you had it. i pretty much nudeknew when you had it. then you go back to the darkroom. i've made mistakes of course i'm human. >> this is -- it's an honor to have you here with us. >> thank you, sir. >> thank you for explaining it. >> and the exhibit, we should mention is called "art meets news" it runs from yesterday the 28th through july 19th at where exactly? >> the indiana state museum in indianapolis, indiana. >> national treasure. bill, thank you very much. coming up on "fox & friends" weekend a jetblue pilot kicked off a plane after suffering a midair melt down. now he is suing the airline for millions for not recognizing his mental issues. but does he have a case? we debate it next. and bill oh rilly's best seller comes to television. who is jesus? he's a muslim. we'll talk to the film's powerful stars next. janet? cough if you can hear me. don't even think about it. i took mucinex dm for my phlegmy cough. yeah...but what about mike? (cough!) it works on his cough too. mucinex dm relieves wet and dry coughs for 12 hours. let's end this. if you're running a business legalzoom has your back. over the last 10 years we've helped one million business owners get started. visit legalzoom today for the legal help you need to start and run your business. legalzoom. legal help is here. now? can i at least put my shoes on? if your bladder is calling the shots ... you may have a medical condition called overactive bladder ... ...or oab you've got to be kidding me. i've had enough! it's time to talk to the doctor. ask your doctor how myrbetriq may help treat... ...oab symptoms of urgency frequency, and leakage. which may mean fewer trips to the bathroom. myrbetriq (mirabegron) may increase your blood pressure. myrbetriq may increase your chances... ...of not being able to empty your bladder. tell your doctor right away if you have... ...trouble emptying your bladder or have a weak urine stream. myrbetriq may affect... ...or be affected by other medications... ...so tell your doctor about all the medicines you take. before taking myrbetriq, tell your doctor if you have liver or kidney problems. common side effects include increased blood pressure, common cold symptoms, urinary tract infection, and headache. take charge by talking to your doctor about your oab symptoms and myrbetriq. find out if you can get your first prescription at no cost by visiting myrbetriq.com three years a jetblue employee horrifyied passengers on a. he went so bananas that the passengers tackled him. his name is clayton os bun is suing the airline saying the airline failed to recognize his mental illness. he was found not guilty by reason of insanity. does he have a case? joining me now attorney ken roth well and doctor segal. >> does the man have a case? >> i don't know the legal aspect as well as our attorney there i will say this he's saying he had a complex partial seizure which is pretty rare. it can cause tucker, the abhorrent behavior. it can cause him to become psychotic. the problem is it can be easily missed. you don't necessarily find a seizure that easily. he was saying he was disoriented. he was talking slow. but did anybody see that? the faa wants us physicians when we review pilots and co-pilots to look at things like appearance, memory behavior how we're they're interacting. we don't know if he had those problems when he was undergoing an medical examination. >> it's amazing a guy like this made it into the cockpit in the first place. >> that's true. with regard to the lawsuit, it depends when jet blew actually knew. if they knew he had some type of organic brain problem and didn't tell anybody and let him pilot the plane would be a valid lawsuit. i think it's a tough case because it seems to me that all of these problems occurred edred or at least jetblue knew about the problems in terms of the organic brain problem after the freakout in midair. >> doctor, if a doctor learnst an airline pilot or someone in the sensitive job like that has a profound mental illness, doesn't he have an obligation to alert the airline hipaa laws be damned? >> if he feels that mental behavior will interfere with piloting a plane. it's a good time to point out with the attention on pilots that most of our pilots are putting thousands of hours in the air and doing an incredible job are not impaired. i don't want the public to say, oh, what about my pilot? well, your pilot is probably an incredible shape. if there's evidence of a mental inflection that is interfeerning with performance, yes, then rules be damned they have to report it. >> as a lawyer here we have a guy who frequents out. he's the pilot putting the airplane at risk. and he's suing. ludicrous no? >> unless the airline knew about it. what he's saying, you know, i had this problem, this brain problem, the seizure problem and the airline should have known about it and they should have kept me on the ground and not in the pilot seat. it's a little bit of a crazy lawsuit from the aspect, tucker. he's suing for, like, $15 million which is an exorbitant sum of money. i think he'll have a tough time winning the lawsuit. we'll see whaps when discovery comes out. >> we'll be following. thank you for joining us. thank you. coming up gop leaders now comparing hillary clinton's e-mail scandal to watergate. is she getting special treatment from the press? where are they in this? and bill o'rileyyeileyo'riley's book is coming to the screen. we'll talk to the stars next. now with the xfinity tv go app, you can watch live tv anytime. it's never been easier with so many networks all in one place. get live tv whenever you want. the xfinity tv go app. now with live tv on the go. enjoy over wifi or on verizon wireless 4g lte. plus enjoy special savings when you purchase any new verizon wireless smartphone or tablet from comcast. visit comcast.com/wireless to learn more. three hour docudrama based on the book. i'm joined by two from the movie. good morning, thank you for being with us. >> good morning. thank you for having us. >> well i'll start with you jesus, are you ever called jesus christ in this film? i remember christ is never used following the word jesus. >> that's actually interesting. i never actually thought about that. have i ever been called jesus christ? there's a scene where simon peter has that moment where he says that and that is probably the only moment where that is really revealed and explained in that way for the first time which is really great because in the first time its that discovery. it's that journey into divinity. >> and owen the book and the movie completely based on history, right? and they made sure to do so. how is it this film can be kept fresh? it's a story we heard time and time again. >> i think religion is always kept fresh because people experience it for the first time a lot of times because generations grow. what's important is it allows you to be with your own sense of why you believe religion and what you believe in jesus and just the point of view of his teachings and of just the man of the time himself. that's why it's different. this is what happened. this is who he is and you can decide yourself how much you want to believe in that. >> what kind of pressure is there associated with playing somebody like jesus? especially your background. you're muslim. >> yeah. i was raised muslim. in that sense it was incredibly amazing and profound and like my whole family they can't believe it until now and they're so proud so as somebody raised muslim jesus is mentioned more than mohammed because he comes before mohammed in many ways so it's beyond an honor is the least i can say about it and it was a lot of pressure because i was -- first of all, i mean, how often do you get to play such a role and important figure in history. probably the most famous figure in history and then where do you begin and can you do it? can you not? trusting yourself but in the process really what he stood for and his teachings really helped me go through the whole experience and it was one of the best things i've ever done in this. >> it was incredible in terms of how he played it which is so representative of it. i grew up a catholic. it was so powerful in terms of how he portrayed this person. that was the moment i went okay. >> i just had a lot of caffeine that day. >> an extra jolt there. thank you so much for your time. it's going to be a hit. killing jesus premieres on the national geographic channel tonight, march 29th 8:00. and coming up on fox and friends weekend after a hero cop is shot in the face in an unprovoked attack, people are now rallying behind the suspect. more on the twisted war against police next. and a college christian group kicked off campus. the offense it wants it's leaders to be christian too. now students are taking a stand. the chapter president will be joining us live with her plan to fight back next hour. next. ♪♪ expected wait time: 55 minutes. your call is important to us. thank you for your patience. waiter! vo: in the nation, we know how it feels when you aren't treated like a priority. we do things differently. we'll take care of it. vo: we put members first... join the nation. thank you. ♪ nationwide is on your side ♪ when heartburn comes creeping up on you... fight back with relief so smooth... ...it's fast. tums smoothies starts dissolving the instant it touches your tongue ...and neutralizes stomach acid at the source. ♪ tum, tum tum tum...♪ smoothies! only from tums. today is sunday the 29th of march, 2015. a fox news alert. for god sake open the door. a co-pilot's plot unveiled. how he got the captain out of the cockpit. the horrifying final moments of the doomed flight revealed straight from the black box. that's next. >> just another number to them. that's the reaction on twitter after a cop is shot in the face in boston in a completely unprovoked attack. what has people rallying behind the man that did it? more on the war on cops straight ahead. >> a college christian group kicked off campus. the offense, it wants it's leaders to be christian as well. the chapter president joins us live this hour with her plan to fight back. that's coming up. fox and friends hour four starts right now. come on in and stay awhile. >> good morning. >> you smell that, that's fresh news this hour. >> welcome in to fox and friends. glad to have you. fox news alert this hour. new details in the time line of the final moment of the german wings airplane revealed. the co-pilot urging him out of the cockpit. go to the bathroom. maybe now is a good time. >> nudging him out. as we're hearing all of the exact timing of this for this time line we're realizing the passengers on board had a better idea of what was going on sooner than we thought. the main pilot was conversing with the co-pilot and initially they had a nice conversation and it went downhill after he told him to go to the bathroom and then at 10:27 the airliner reaches it's cruising altitude. the pilot let about two minutes lapse and he says all right you can take over. >> this information comes from the cockpit voice recorder and we heard characterizations of what was on it in the last week but this morning we have a pretty precise description of the exchanges between the two pilots and apparently what the marijuanas were thinking. the pilot goes to the bathroom at 10:29 and starts a deep descent. air traffic controllers look at their screens and realize something is wrong with the aircraft. they try to attempt to get the pilots on the radio. there's no response at all. >> in the united states when someone leaves the cockpit someone else steps in the cockpit to make sure there's not a problem. that didn't happen over there. the door was locked. shortly after that he starts yelling for god's sake open the door slamming on the door. >> then at 10:35 there's a loud metallic banging against the cockpit door. it's heard again and the jet is at 7,000 feet at that point and it's presumed the main pilot grabbed a fire ax and was trying to get through the door at anyway he could. >> this was earlier than we thought. the passengers had no idea what was happening until the very end. now we're learning 8 minutes to go before the plane crashed into a mountain in the alps they were aware and screaming as the captain was trying to smash through the door. there was an audible warning ground, pull up pull up but the plane did not. >> and to your point air traffic controllers weren't sure what was unfolding at this point. did someone pass out at the cockpit. why can't we have communication with the pilot. something must be wrong within the craft but at 10:38 you can hear audible breathing of him into the microphone but he's not saying anything. quite just breathing. >> and at 10:40 a.m. aircraft hits the mountainside with it's right wing and it crashed in an incredible speed of 700 kilometers per hour and everybody died instantly. >> we know it was intentional. the co-pilot that had fewer than 700 hours of flight experience sitting in that seat looking down at the mountain before they hit. the question is why did this happen. we're getting more details this morning. but first we interviewed a man that's a long time commercial aircraft pilot and consultant in the united states. he gave this. >> there is a disincentive that if they report something how do they know they won't lose their job. the faa has come out and said information is more important than judging pilots and we're going to replace any punitive action with a corrective action so that you can report errors and violations and you are kind of rewarded for self-reporting and taking the initiative on this. that type of legal frame work needs to start applying to the mental health profession. >> so how difficult it must be. we spoke to justin green yesterday. he said look screening, there needs to be certain screening elements in place. it's very difficult, though but you're basically asking pilots to come forward and put their jobs on the line saying i've got this particular problem and health issue and i'm going to be out of a job. >> where are doctors in all of this. in this specific case, mental illness among pilots is rare but it does happen. this guy was on treatment for over ten years and no doctor ever told the airline this guy is really trouble. >> yet his friends knew about it. his friends were aware of it that he would take long periods of time off for burn out syndrome. two months off because he was burned out. >> he did have to retrain so he could fly again but you wonder in this instance when investigators go to his apartment and they're searching high and low forand they find multiple doctors notes ripped up saying that he was not fit to fly you wonder why there's not some protocol in place where the doctor would have to call the airline immediately before 149 innocent people lose their lives at the hands of someone else. we're also learning this morning he may have had a vision problem whether it's was psycho hesee real but that would have him losing his job as well. >> other stories making headlines at this hour, developing right now in the middle east arab league countries agreed to create a joint military force in the chaos in yemen. this announced a short time ago at a summit in egypt. saudi arabia launched air strikes against the houthi rebels. they will continue until they surrender and leave. >> 22 passengers injured after their air canada flight ran off the runway during a hard landing. it slid into a power line knocking out electricity as freezing passenger with bloody faces were forced to stand in the cold for up to an hour before being brought inside. air canada says there were 138 passengers and crew on board. the injuries are minor and being treated at the hospital. the accident being blamed on snowy weather. >> police are stepping up the desperate search for a college student that vanished after a night out with friends. she is a sorority sister at the university of minnesota. she was last seen leaving a bar near the campus early friday morning. police found her purse three blocks away from the bar. >> she is an amazing sister and friend to all of us. she he is very involved and been such a great friend and sister is all we can say. >> she is set to graduate in the spring. the sorority says they are cooperating with police. >> big drama for america he's favorite llamas. these two when they escaped last month sent arizona police on a televised craze but not everybody thought it was too funny but now the usda say they can't make appearances or take pictures without proper licensing. the llama's owner said they tried to comply but the feds won't return their calls. they'll hear from the owners tomorrow right here on fox and friends. and this llama drama has all of you talking this morning. >> that's right. we got a lot of emails about it. the government doesn't care about the millions of illegals running the streets of america but they're clamping down on llamas. give us a break. >> joe says this government is out of control. it wasn't a man eating llama that escaped. they escaped accidentally. they do spit by the way. >> we need a llama law about as much as we need a national health care law. >> i disagree. we need it more. register your llama. it's the least you can do. >> get an rfid chip in your llama so we can track them. rick is standing by. >> you know it was in arizona my home state. all the good stories. >> arizona is the new florida, right? >> the new florida. that's totally right. arizona incredibly warm this weekend. not the case this morning as you're waking up cold across much of the northeast. below freezing for everybody and even down across parts of the southeast but look at the high temperatures in the next few days here in the planes. news, nebraska, 83 degrees. billings, montana pushing 83 degrees and we're still in march. it's incredible warmth and we need rain out across parts of the west. we have a lot of rain across the ohio valley. the west california, nothing going again. arizona nothing and oregon getting a little bit of rain. oregon is starting to see that drought creep into that area as well. they could use it. across the east nothing going on today. we do have the clipper system moving now across parts of minnesota and wisconsin stretching down toward missouri. but we'll see snow and freezing rain this morning across parts of wisconsin. so be careful if you're heading out across the roads. temperature wise enjoy the nice warm temperatures across the plains. you don't want the high temperatures but they feel good. >> they definitely do. >> need some good news up in boston. did you hear this story? a lot of controversy this morning over the boston marathon hero cop who was involved in the shoot out with the tsarnaev brothers. he was shot in the fake at point blank range after a routine traffic stop and now the internet has lit up and there is all kind of racist allegations as it relates to the shoot out that he did during a routine traffic stop. >> he was shot by a 41-year-old man with a long rap sheet who was later killed by police. now this seems a pretty cut and dry case. it was on video and that video has been released to the public and it seems pretty clear the cop didn't have his gun drawn. there was nothing to provoke this. the man just shot him. >> he emptied his gun. >> right. >> but that has not stopped activist groups on twitter on the hard left from comparing this to the ferguson shooting and making the killer into some kind of hero. >> so here's what black lives matter said, they said update tomorrow's community meeting will be a people of color only space. thank you for respecting wishes of community and angelo's family. that may be their wishes but can you imagine if this was reversed and it was white people only can be at this meeting? >> are you kidding? we would see the attorney general of the united states down in boston. the president would hold a primetime press conference to announce it. silence from the white house of course. >> and here's another tweet just another statistic. another number to them. modern day institutional racism makes me sick. now meanwhile the boston police department invited black leaders to the precinct to take a look at the video and black leaders and naacp has come out and said pretty cut and dry. the video shows police officers didn't even pull out a weapon and this guy unloads it into the face of the police officer. nothing to see here and the other police officers shoot him dead. now he's in a coma this morning. >> fighting for his life. yet somehow there's this social media campaign, this mob mentality that's basically assaulting our men and women who are police officers. how about blue lives matter. this is terrible. >> i do not defend everything the police do. hardly. on the other hand to make every exchange between the police and citizens into a race case is devicive. it's bad for the country. if you convince people that there's a racial sub text to everything you divide us. especially when in this case there doesn't seem to have any role at all -- i don't think the cops shot this guy because he was black. they shot him because he shot a cop in the face. >> people still say hands up don't shoot even though the department of justice report came out that wasn't true. it's a false narrative that gets pushed and sometimes it gets picked up. >> but if you wind up with those politics that can be okay. if we disagree over ethnic division that never goes away. that's a big deal. stoking this stuff is dangerous. they should stop. the white house does it and they should stop it. >> he was once responsible for the bombing of a new york city police station and now he found a new career. >> and gop leaders compare hilary clinton's e-mail scandal to watergate but is he 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(cough!) it works on his cough too. mucinex dm relieves wet and dry coughs for 12 hours. let's end this. well members of congress are getting increasingly frustrated with hilary clinton. the frustration has grown in light of revelations that she cleared her hard drive after the state department requested her to release her e-mails. >> as the scandal continues some are comparing clinton's actions to those of richard nixon during watergate. great to see you this morning. >> great to see you too. >> so this -- this is the kind of thing -- i can't control myself. if hilary clinton were a former republican secretary of state wouldn't she have news crews outside of her house. >> we have no idea what he was up to and then he deleted 30,000 plus e-mails and now has wiped his server clean? the media would be all over him. in fact they would be saying he is disqualified to run for president because in this country we need to have transparency. we need to know what our politicians are up to for a variety of very important reasons. >> the comparisons to nixon are interesting. both claimed the info was personal and both handed over edited versions of it by advisors. both were missing data of course famously the gap of 17 minutes of audio tapes. here we don't have record of the e-mails on the personal server. >> exactly. it's incredible that nixon was forced out of office facing impeachment yet hilary clinton is getting away with deleting over 30,000 e-mails. now she has wiped her server clean and this is despite the fact that there's an on going congressional investigation with benghazi and despite the fact that there are subpoenas for that information and multiple requests even from the ap. so it's incredible to me how she is getting away with this and i caution the american people you know, is this who you want to be president? if she is going to hide information and her work product can she be trusted? will we ever know the truth from her? >> we'll know the truth if congress steps up. just to put it in a context here, if she went to jp morgan and she was asked to come up with her e-mails she would have 48 hours to do it and if she didn't she would have federal agents breathing down her throat. >> they absolutely should. you know we have a right to know whether or not she shared classified information with the wrong people. whether she exposed our country for security risks. hackers could have gotten access to that information and i don't know how she is able to shield herself from it. if she had nothing to hide she would have handed over her e-mails and server. but the fact that she wiped it clean creates a serious suspicion that she had something to hide. >> she left a personal server to keep things personal. why do you need to wipe it clean if you're not worried about other people reading it. >> exactly. >> thank you for joining us this morning. >> great to be with you. >> coming up turns out there's a scientific reason that couples tend to remember things very differently. >> we need 7:00. >> we said 6:00. >> the only way that i said 6:00 would be if i said the sentence let's meet at 7:00, not at 6:00. >> turns out there's a way to avoid these fights. we gave you tips and you have burned up our twitter account with them. we'll tell you what they are. >> a college christian group booted off campus because it wants it's leaders to be christian also but is that really discrimination? an outraged student is next. let's pin 'em to the wall. kick 'em around. kick 'em around, see what happens. because we're in the how-do-i-get-this-startup- off-the-ground business. the taking-your-business- global-business. we're in the problem-solving business. 400,000 people - ready to help you solve problems while they're still called opportunities. from figuring it out to getting it done we're here to help. you're here to buy a car. what would help is simply being able to recognize a fair price. truecar has pricing data on every make and model so all you have to do is search for the car you want there it is. now you're an expert in less than a minute. this is truecar. not to be judgmental, but from where i'm sitting... it's your gas that's out of order in this court. the pressure. the bloating. get gas-x. it relieves all those symptoms in minutes. that's why it's the #1 gas relief brand. welcome back. obamacare forcing colleges and yufr universities to drop out of the health insurance business. some say it will save money. >> christians around the world are marking palm sunday and the start of holy week. in jerusalem thousands wave palms as they make their way to the traditional site of jesus's crucifixion and resurrection. >> christian student group kia alpha kicked off campus for violating the school's discrimination policy. the group's offense requiring it's leaders to also be christian. so is it actually the university that's doing the discrimination? joining us now is the president of kai alpha chapter at cal state bianca davis. thank you for being here. >> thank you for having me. >> how could somebody be an effective leader of a christian group on campus if they're not christian. don't you study scripture and go over bible quotes. it is religion based isn't it? >> yes. yes. absolutely. we are leading bible studies. we lead worship services and prayer and i don't see how anyone could effectively lead the group if they don't follow those believes. for instance, how could someone lead you into a prayer to a god that they don't even believe in and that's why we feel like this is so unfair and how it doesn't make sense how anyone could try to lead a group that they don't believe their mission. >> do you see this rule as being flawed from all angles? i don't understand how a man from a female sorority or an f. student could be the leader of an honor society of some sort on campus. do you see this as discrimination against christianity as a whole? this is part of the war on christianity? >> i feel like we're treated unfairly. just religious groups in general on campus. this whole idea to bring diversity on college campus going about it this way is actually driving religious groups out and diminishing the diversity on our campus and i don't feel like that attending a college university should cost me my faith. >> especially on this palm sunday it's really resinating with a lot of our viewers. >> what they cannot be is faith based where someone has to have a profession of faith to be that leader. it's allowed for its own standards for how leaders are are to be selected as long as it's nondiscriminatory. so you're trying to work with the university. do you feel like they're budging on this at all? >> i don't think they're budging at all. we had meetings after meeting, after meeting with them and they refuse to put anything in writing and at one point they told us that they're done playing games with us and they no longer want to work with us about this so i feel like we have done everything that we can and i just want to be a part of the campus community again. we have lost so many opportunities to reach our campus and be a part of the campus community and be a part of the school that we love in general. >> yeah. it doesn't seem like you're playing games. you're talking about your faith here. it's the university missing out. you had to cancel 15 previously approved events including graduation. so the entire university is missing out on this. not just people in your club. thank you for standing up for your faith this morning and thanks for coming on fox and friends. >> thank you for having me. >> 28 minutes after the hour this sunday morning. coming up on fox and friends they say black lives matter but apparently it doesn't apply to cops in ferguson. >> oh boy it just gets uglier from there. up ahead the police chief's message to the protestors you have got to hear. >> if you're starting your spring cleaning, how about making some money off that dirty work. up next the tips you need to turn your old clutter into cash. ♪ before i had the shooting, burning, pins-and-needles of diabetic nerve pain, these feet grew up in a family of boys... married my high school sweetheart... and pursued a degree in education. but i couldn't bear my diabetic nerve pain any longer. so i talked to my doctor and she prescribed lyrica. nerve damage from diabetes causes diabetic nerve pain. lyrica is fda-approved to treat this pain. lyrica may cause serious allergic reactions or suicidal thoughts or actions. tell your doctor right away if you have these, new, or worsening depression or unusual changes in mood or behavior. or swelling, trouble breathing rash, hives, blisters, muscle pain with fever, tired feeling, or blurry vision. common side effects are dizziness, sleepiness, weight gain and swelling of hands, legs and feet. don't drink alcohol while taking lyrica. don't drive or use machinery until you know how lyrica affects you. those who have had a drug or alcohol problem may be more likely to misuse lyrica. now i have less diabetic nerve pain. and i love helping first graders put their best foot forward. ask your doctor about lyrica. we said we would meet at the coffee house at 6:00. >> we said 7:00. >> we said 6:00. >> the only way that i said 6:00 is if i said let's meet at 7:00. not at 6:00. >> have you ever been there before? of course you have. why is it couple's remember things differently. >> women forget things a lot more than men. >> that's not true. >> isn't that part of the study? i thought that was the study. >> he dove into the science extracted it. men tend to think in facts and women tend to think in feelings. >> right so women tend to shade the facts with feelings so men are probably way more accurate. >> right. listen to mark. he is an expert. >> when we get in a discussion or disagreement about the he said she said what did you remember? what did the other person remember? we had to ask ourselves what is more important? being right or the relationship? well you can be right and lose the relationship. we want to be careful on this issue. we can change how we remember things and we can come to more of an agreement if we would just listen to one another. when we listen, we not only need to listen with our ears but we also need to listen with our eyes as well. we need to give our spouse our full attention. >> men are not better than women at remembering things. >> he was quick to point out thinking with facts and thinking with feelings. who is to say what's better? at nasa a lot of the engineers say i'm going to calculate this with feelings. >> right. >> well there's differences in relationship things. >> who cares who is right. you want to get along. kevin writes on facebook. i can't remember if i ate lunch yesterday. >> i remember the facts. thus i'm right. my husband remembers my new details that add interest to the story. we get along just fine. >> and terri says we remember what we place importance on. my husband can remember every football stat but can't remember to change a light bulb burned out that he walks by every morning for a month. he says what light bulb. not only can he not remember he doesn't notice things either. >> it's not that he can't remember. he just doesn't think it's important. >> if you want to vent your marital frustrations you have our e-mail address. how thoughtless is your husband? tell us more. >> 35 minutes after the hour stories making headlines to tell you about now. he was there to keep the piece. instead a black cop in ferguson was targegeted by protestors. the officer was called to a mcdonald's and was immediately surrounded. someone even threw a water bottle at it. the city's police chief completely disgusted by what happened. >> why are they still saying these are peaceful protests when anybody that watches that tape can see this is not a peaceful protest. we have a lot of outside forces still coming to ferguson. they're trying to tear the community apart. >> african american officers in ferguson have been targeted since the death of michael brown. he robbed a new york city police station in 1970 but this underground member found a new career as a teacher for special need's children. now retired ronald fliegelman never paid for his terror acts but you're tellingpaying him to live with his pension. he was just unmasked in a new book. >> and a student with special needs no longer allowed to wear the letter jacket his mother bought him. his mother says his school made him take it off because he didn't play an official varsity sport. now people across the country are rallying behind michael and all special needs athletes as a whole. >> it's taking nothing away from me. these kids represent east and wear jerseys that say east on them like any other varsity sport and they put in blood sweat tears into the sport just as we do and they love it just as much as we do. >> libby started a petition which already collected almost 40,000 signatures and also she says some of the varsity athletes are offering to give away their varsity letters to special need student athletes. clayton over to you. >> looking for a wedding dress? >> no, got it. >> i've got one here for you. millions of americans gearing up for spring cleaning, but this year don't toss away your unwanted goods. you can sell them and make cash. andrea joins us now. how to turn your clutter into cash. nice to see you. >> thank you for having me. >> we have stuff all over the place. it's not one type of item. you can sell anything. >> while you're doing your cleaning this spring, clearing out the clutter you can make a lot of cash. if you have a wedding dress nging in your closet or bridesmaid dresses sell them. chances are you'll never wear them again. >> you hope. >> and that's a lot of money that you can make off of those. if you go to preowned wedding dress.com you can enter the manufacturing, the style the brand the size to see what the value is and then you can go to sites like bravobride.com and you can list that dress and make almost 50% back what you paid. >> thanks for bringing us a wedding dress this morning. if you miss any of the websites they'll all be on our website. if you're making pancakes don't worry about burning something. gadgets. >> electronic manufacturers are constantly releasing new models of popular gadgets. if you bought a new iphone 6, maybe you have the old iphone 5 laying at home. you can get up to $170 for that old iphone. even broken iphones like this one, i broke that, i can sell that and get up to $40 for that iphone. >> i have so many old games i bought. like playstation 2 games. you can go to game spots. >> you can go where they'll buy laptops and video games and go to target and amazon and trade those for gift cards which you could use for more necessary purchases. >> you get those gift cards but what about unwanted gift cards. i see signs on telephone poles all the time. >> americans waste nearly $300 worth of gift cards because they lose them and forget they have them in a sock drawer or kitchen drawer. so instead of just letting it go to waste, go to sights like gift card granny.com where you can sell them for up to 92% of the value. even daily deal vouchers. if you bought something on impulse and you're going knot going to use that spa package you can go sell those to other people that might be using them. >> that's grandma. >> college students spend $1,200 a year on textbooks. it's important to get the most back. now they won't give you that great of a value. so i recommend going to cash4books.com or bookscouter.com and barnes & noble has a book buy back program. >> you could get money for your old toys. plenty of those laying around. >> exactly and considering kids grow out of them quickly. go to amazon marketplace. it's such a great place where you can sell gently used kids toys. you can sell small appliances. also at swap.com you can sell kid's clothing and other kids toys there as well. >> even small appliances. >> yes. >> how do you figure out the price. >> when it comes to pricing, start looking to see what the price was brand new and then go to sites like ebay to see what other consumers are selling it for and what auctions closed at to determine the value. also know that if it's a pop withdrew lar ular item it will sell quicker so you might be able to increase that selling price. >> and list it during primetime. >> yes, when you're listing and using ebay, you want to make sure that the auction closes during primetime. so that's from 9:00 to 11:00 p.m. eastern. if it closes in the middle of the night or early in the morning you might miss out on a large number of shoppers looking for that item and make sure that you take great pictures of all the used items. make sure it's not cluttered and the shoppers can see what the product is and that it's in good condition. >> spring cleaning. it's a good time to get revitalized. >> make money for your summer vacation. >> wonderful. we appreciate you joining us. >> thank you for having me. >> coming up on the show can't find a job. you may be looking in the wrong place. maria is here to explain the one skill your next boss wants to see. she is coming into the studio. plus meet this military photographer of the year. he's here with the story behind his photos. you have to hear. well, a mortgage shouldn't be a problem your credit is in pretty good shape. >>pretty good? i know i have a 798 fico scoreks to the tools and help on experian.com. kaboom... well, i just have a few other questions. >>chuck, the only other question you need to ask is, "what else can you do for me?" i'll just take a water... get your credit swagger on. become a member of experian credit tracker and find out your fico score powered by experian. fico scores are used in 90% of credit decisions. right when you feel a cold sore, abreva can heal it in as few as two and a half days test test test. penetrates deep and starts to work immediately to block the virus and protect healthy cells. you could heal your cold sore, fast, as fast as two and a half days when used at the first sign. learn how abreva starts to work immediately at abreva.com don't tough it out knock it out, fast. with abreva. i'd rather do anything else than sit at a dealership. it's a lot of haggling and it takes so long. craig's experience is completely different than mine. yeah. yes, mike has used truecar. at truecar, we'll show you how much others paid for the car you want and how much you should. because i used truecar there was no haggling about the price. they treated me so well, and it was just such a quick, easy experience. get your car, and get back to the life you love. welcome to the future of car-buying. >> business experts claim one field might be the future of all jobs. here is the host of sunday morning futures. >> good morning to you. >> people looking for jobs may be looking in the wrong place. >> every time i speak with ceo's about jobs and opportunities they tell me the same thing. they cannot find the people that they need to hire to actually fulfill the jobs that they have. there are jobs out there. it's just that they require certain skill sets. coding is one of those things. reading software. because of the data explosion that we have seen and technology changing so many industries, coding is seeing more and more opportunities. we spoke with larry sommers on the show a couple of weeks ago at harvard and he told me at harvard coding is the most popular course to take. >> do they pay. >> they do pay. they pay higher levels than other jobs and the reason is because these require certain skill sets and training. so they are actually higher paying jobs. >> you have zach simms on the show today. i long pushed it here on the show. we have the battle about should we get rid of cursive in school. >> right now there are shcountries in europe putting coding as a required study within the curriculum and we are seeing other countries outside of america recognizing that coding is a language that young people he have to understand in order to get the jobs of tomorrow. so we're going to talk about that next hour on sunday morning futures because i have zach simms coming in and also john, the governor of ohio talking about the potential to solutions to the budget impasse. he of course closed the budget shortfall and has a great economic record to speak of and we'll talk about his potential plans for 2016. >> is he running do you think? >> i think he is running. he has not announced yet. obviously we're going to hear from marco rubio tomorrow but i think you'll hear from john soon too. >> do you know how to code yet? >> i don't. i'm interested in this segment because i want to understand better where the job opportunities are and what is so important about coding and the reason is is because there's so much data out there and it needs to be organized and that comes under the umbrella of coding. >> you just need to know 1s and 0s. >> science and math needs to be put on a higher level of importance early on. >> absolutely. and don't forget about all the cyber threats. so there's that. coding continues to command high salaries. >> maria, you can catch her weekdays on the fox business network. to find it in your area log on to fox business.com/channel finder. her show starts in 12 minutes. don't change the channel. >> have a good sunday. meet the military photographer of the year. he's here with the stories behind the amazing photos you have to hear. ♪ whether you need a warm up before the big race... or a healthy start before the big meeting there's a choice hotel that's waiting for you. this spring, choose choice twice, get a night at no price at 1,500 hotels. book now at choicehotels.com boy: once upon a time, there was a nice house that lived with a family. one day, it started to rain and rain. water got inside and ruined everybody's everythings. the house thought she let the family down. but the family just didn't think a flood could ever happen. the reality is floods do happen. protect what matters. call the number on your screen or visit the website to learn more. looking for headlines? you came to the right place. two people still missing after last week's building explosion in manhattan. those people think it's the best place for a selfie. this woman seen grinning in front of the wreckage apparently is a communications director for the democratic party of iowa. good job. kenny rogers is selling his house in los angeles. sells for $46 million. knows when to fold it. ♪ >> yep. he knows when to walk away, when to run. the buyers get the house fully furnished. massive tennis courts 11 bedrooms and drum roll please, 17 bathrooms. >> you need those. >> that would be nice. well they are the best of the best. military's top photos of 2014. >> images like this. an air force sergeant on guard providing security on m 117 helicopter. an mi. >> a photographer behind the camera has been selected military photographer of the year. he's a satisfy sergeant in the air force and joins us live. >> thanks for having me sir. >> how did you pick these photographs? how were they chosen? why these? >> these particular photographs were selected from a group of mentors and group of friends that i had to go through. they were picked based on the amount of impact. telling the story with visual variety. >> i love this first -- let me go back to that. we see a helmet with mud splatters on it. tell us about. >> that particular image was eod technician. dis disposal technician. eod techs have a unique mission. i wanted to capture how muddy the environment was that they operate in. >> the next we want to show viewers is packaged with a teddy bear beside it. you tell a story even one as basic as this. what are you telling here? >> the story with the teddy bear attached to the meals. we were over sinjar iraq. we were able to drop meals for displaced citizens. a that teddy bear was a tech sergeant that wanted to give her best to those on the ground displaced. that image to me was powerful because, you know it shows we care about the people we support. >> yeah. >> amazing. what's your favorite? >> my favorite photograph is actually a series of photographs. it was a life changing series of photographs for me. it's on satisfy starting shantel tebow. i had the opportunity to capture her story. it was very emotional. it was life changing for me. we shared a lot of tears and laughter. those photographs were actually selected because -- in sequence -- because it told her story. >> we see the harder pictures and lightest with the teddy bear. what's the hardest you had to photograph? >> the hardest i had to photograph was -- i'd have to say the breast cancer story and the afghan funeral. >> why was that so difficult? >> those were difficult because of the emotional impact. you know we always think about life and death and everything in between you know. when you get an opportunity to capture it, it puts life into a different perspective. >> i see that you had a lot of as talent as a kid, talented musician, artist and all that. your faith led you to photography after a lot of prayer. probably helped you through these times as well. thanks so much. >> congratulations. >> thank you. >> thanks for coming on. >> impressive photos. for fox and friends coming up. >> just moments from now. you get sick you can't breathe through your nose... suddenly... you're a mouthbreather. well, put on a breathe right strip and instantly open your nose up to 38% more than cold medicines alone so you can breathe and sleep shut your mouth and sleep right. breathe right. what you going to do with all that time. >> forcing lava owners to get licenses. regulation nation. they're going to share their story. >> have you licensed your llama. >> go to fox and friends.com. thank you for watching. good morning. a unified call for peace in yemen. hi everyone. i'm maria bartimo. calling for rebels to put down their weapons and leave the country. a four star general on involvement in the and impact with new talks with iran. ohio governor fighting while answering questions. we'll talk to him about the 2016 race. some of the most sought after jobs in

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