list. why not put all this out there? reporter: they say that s part of the investigation, don. they did talk about all the checks they re doing on that particular piece of cargo, where it was picked, who packed it, who transported it to the airport, who loaded it on the aircraft, all these sorts of things. just going back to that air traffic control conversation that hasn t been released as well, i talked to a former malaysian airlines pilot here. he told me if you look at malaysia, take the east and the west of the country. on either side you ll have radio buffs recording flight frequencies, air traffic control frequencies. at 12:42 air traffic control told the pilot and first officer to go to frequency 132.6 for the rest of their flight. this former pilot tells me,
barbara says, isn t co-pilot s all right, good night consistent with his lax attitude towards regs such as having ladies in the cockpit? first off, i guess i m the guest that s going to disagree with richard. i think this transcript is very significant, and i m looking down only because i m looking at the transcript. the bottom line here is, at the time of the firsthandoff when they took off from the tower to the kuala lumpur radar atc, the co-pilot repeated the frequency, 132.6. as you move down the line, we get into what i believe to be the accident sequence. at 1:07, acars did the last report. we have the navigation change. what are you saying there? i m saying at the time of the next handoff, it was all right, good night without a repeat of the frequency. in other words, at that moment,
ladies in the cockpit? first off, i guess i m the guest that s going to disagree with richard. i think this transcript is very significant, and i m looking down only because i m looking at the transcript. the bottom line here is, at the time of the first handoff when they took off from the tower to the kuala lumpur radar atc, the co-pilot repeated the frequency, 132.6. as you move down the line, we get into what i believe to be the accident sequence. at 1:07, acars did the last report. we have the navigation change. what are you saying there? i m saying at the time of the next handoff, it was all right, good night without a repeat of the frequency. in other words, at that moment, this accident sequence was in process. it seems to me that the co-pilot
today s list of number ones. first, the roaring housing comeback. some cities are seeing a bigger resurgen resurgence. bank rate.com has compiled a list of where home sales are soaring. number three, reno, nevada, where home values last quarter shot up 32.1%. san francisco is second a 32.6% spike, and just a tenth of a percent better at number one, akron, ohio, where the median home rate is just over $108,000. now, some baby talk. so cute. or rather talk about babies. just ahead of mother s day the social security administration releasing its annual list of the most popular baby names. top three names for girls. isabella, emma is second, sofia tops that list. for boys it s ethan in third place followed by mason and for the 14th year in a row, jacob is the most popular name. and the name justin bieber only
to president bush for putting fannie and freddie in conservatorship. this was essential to break the model that helped produce the crisis. without that action, this is important to recognize, house prices would have fallen further. and the recession would have been dramatically worse. government agencies now guarantee 90% of all mortgages proposal on how to change that won t come until january. no consensus on what to do, but top officials concede the government footprint in housing must be smaller. bret: thank you. housing market got a tiny boost from construction last month. housing construction rose 1.7%, led by 32.6 surge in partner of condominium construction. wholesale prices were up .2 of a point. stocks rebounded today. the dow gained 104. the s&p 500 finished ahead 13. the nasdaq is up 27.5.