there was a flood in fort wayne. people were down there desperately filling sandbags. air force one stopped, reagan took a motorcade down to the flooded area. he took off his jacket. my guess is he filled three sandbags and said hello to everyone and got back in the car and got back on the plane. but that night, wet fill the eric what filled the airwaves was re in filling sandbags with his shirt off. it talk about the legacy of ronald wagon. ronald reagan. they discuss the american dream. and astronauts are awarded the congressional gold medal. for the entire thanksgiving day schedule, go to c-span.org. president obama promoter of his jobs bill earlier at central high school in manchester new hampshire. at the beginning of his remarks, the president is interrupted by a group of protesters. new hampshire will hold its first primary on january 10, 2012. this is 40 minutes. [applause] orix hello, new hampshire. it is good to be here today. it is good to be back in new
tomorrow morning on washington journal, a look at the republican presidential debate focused on national security. we speak to general wesley clark. then fill kerpen joins us. he talks about the failure of the committee to reach an agreement by this week s deadline. and then jake tapper joins us to talk about the mad about unit. washington journal, each morning at 7:00 a.m. eastern, here on c- span. president obama was speaking in manchester, new hampshire. president obama was interrupted by protesters during a speech on jobs. this is 40 minutes. hello, new hampshire. it is good to be here today. it is good to be back in new hampshire. although, i have to say i feel a little winter coming on around here. [laughter] that is what happens when you fly north. it is wonderful to be here. i had a chance to see backstage principal mayott and he reminded me what i said to him almost four years ago to the day that i was here. surprisingly enough, there was a snowstorm in new hamps
tonight thewell-liked vintn is missing. he was headed for his home town of tracy with you a single engine plane never made it. radar shows the plane made a rough and rapid descent toward lake tahoe. now the search is on. kimberly joins us from tracy. he had a great passion for his winery. reporter: that s absolutely right. a winery that was inspired by his wife who died of breast cancer and part of proceeds from that winery to go fighting breast cancer. now the family says this man knew the route from nevada to tracy because he s thrown it hundred of times. the plan was to land in tracy and then take off for baja with a friend, but as we know now, he never made it. what scares me the most is that he is alive and incapacitated and he can t do anything. is he under the snow? is he under a tree? reporter: 78-year-old robert owbr tk brown took off from menden, nevada, headed for this private air strip on the family s property in tracy. the deral aviation administration said
transportation secretary, ray lahood, visited the explosion site in san bruno today with a pledge to the public. safety is the number one priority at d.o.t. reporter: he also toured pg&e pipeline work in progress in san francisco. crews are replacing pipeline from the 1940s with new line that can be more easily monitor had. congresswoman jackie spears says it s not enough. to the credit of pg&e, and i will give them credit when they deserve it and not give them credit when they don t deserve it. will be up for much higher civil penalties. reporting live in san francisco, marianne favro, nbc bay area news. plenty of champagne celebrations in the bay area tonight. a local ipo has the tech world buzzing. a lot of new manage millionaires. a company stirring up memories of the dot-com boom. linked in. business and tech reporter scott budman joins us from linked in headquarters in mountain view. scott, pretty close in mountain view to google literally speaking, correct? tak
crime, a carjacking, with a shotgun, and this person is driving in an area that he thinks, you know, nobody s going to recognize him or think twice about it, and yet here s this license plate reader that comes along and basically solves the crime for them. reporter: the $30,000 infrared devices allow investigators to run thousands of plates a night compared to just a handful. the cameras have helped recover countless stolen cars. they ve even helped track down killers. if it helps solve crimes and bring kids back under amber alerts and is successful in just one, then it s absolutely worth the money. reporter: but not everyone is thrilled with the technology. some feel rolling cameras on every car that drives by is an invasion of privacy. if i m driving down the highway and they come up behind me and take pictures of my license plate and me, no, that s not good. reporter: advocates say if you have nothing to hide, there s no reason to worry. officers say without the