are there any o reilly fans around here. here? here? right here? oh, oh oh oh. there is one guy on the west coast who is in hollywood that loves you and it s me. all righty then. is that you driving that porsche. i was so nervous i didn t take it over 40. bill: how much a car like that cost? i think that s 110. the souped up one in the show rooms 190. bill: 190 grand. that s right. bill: i wonder what the insurance is on that. you have a bejan tie on. $950. here is the deal though. it comes with a pocket square. bill: of course. i didn t use the pocket square tonight you told me if i did you would burn it on the set. bill: exactly. it s not a pocket square program. hume gets away with it and goldberg but not you. why? bill: you are a a man of the people pocket squares do not go.
there s been a mixed reaction to your research. every time physics is brought into the discussion of social dynamics, there is effervescence. you wouldn t say controversy, because i haven t seen it. reporter: this high school swimming coach says perseverance is more important. we ve had incredible success over the years with a lot of different types of guys. some that could barically swim when they first got here. and over the years of working hard, we ve been fairly successful. reporter: colin black nearly drowned as a child. but went on to help set a world record in 2008. bejan acknowledges the exceptions but says science shows the general trend. that goes without saying. individuals are individuals because they have the talent to
deviate from the pack. the law of physics is about the group. it is about the evolution of the populati population. reporter: which means even phelps and bolt are likely to see their own records broken by somebody else. bejan predicts that eventually track and swimming events will be divided by height, much like different classes for weightlifting. we re all checking our belly buttons right now. wordplay is coming up next. and it s elena kagan related. appraiser: well you rarely see them in this good of shape. appraiser: for example the fingers are perfect. appraiser: the bird is in mint condition. appraiser: and i would say if this were to go to auction today, appraiser: conservatively it would be worth 2 in the bush. woman: really? appraiser: it s just beautiful, thank you so much for bringing it in. woman: unbelievable
opened a small mosque near ft. lauderdale. in the late 90s, he worked several odd jobs including selling used cars. his family says that s how he played for courses at this small college in south florida. he even took classes to speak better english. a few years later, his english professor remembered videotaping him at one of those classes and turned over the tape to the fbi. the fbi says that professor s actions proved crucial to their investigation some six years later. on a hunch, leblanc asked agents in new york to show that video to would-be bomber zazi. he was able to make an identification. reporter: the fbi has a more detailed profile of him, in part from 9/11 mastermind mohammed.
he would be equated with a chief of operations. reporter: investigators have revealed to cnn they believe he is now directing al qaeda s overseas operations. how dangerous is he? he may not be somebody that s going to come into the united states to conduct the attack. but what makes him more dangerous is that he is out there plotting the attacks and recruiting people to actively do that. reporter: the breakthrough came when brian leblanc linked him to the thwarted subway suicide mission last fall, the biggest post-9/11 terror investigation. prosecutors say it was him who called the shots probably from somewhere along the afghan/pakistani border. ahe convinced them to come