than we have seen all the way along the race until now. mitt romney and rick santorum are really duking it out for this one. in ohio, they are neck and neck in the polls. so rush limbaugh apologizing again for calling law student sandra fluke a slut. we have a 15 and counting. the stations are also starting to yank his show. i ve got to tell you, we found a guy, an editor and publisher who has been following limbaugh for quite a bit of time who said that apology was sincere and he s going to tell us why he thinks so. because the sponsors are bailing. that s not what he said. another story. this is one of those ones that gets you to shake your head because nfl players are admitting they put together big buckets of cash to pay each other to really take out other team members. they re so-called bounties. and it happened to some of the league s biggest names too. and the investigation is going from locker room to locker room. we ll fill you in. i can t wait to see what
i think i m goin-. shhh! we find that we don t need to sleep that much. there s an easier way to save. geico. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more. shepard: this is studio b at the bottom of the hour and time for the top of the news, live from south florida. officials said the suspect in the deadly ohio school shooting will be tried as an adult. the prosecution in chardon, ohio, will decide in the next few hours. the 17-year-old accused of opening fire at breakfast time, killed three students and two others are injured and the family are speaking out. i see my brother walking back and he was in complete shock. couldn t speak.
focus here in the u.s., based in new york city, on expanding international television business of newscorp. that has just crossed the wires moments ago. we re waiting for more background on the larger implications for the company and what it might mean in terms of succession and other issues that may become involved there. bill: in the meantime we re hearing chilling new details in the deadly ohio school shooting, calling hearing calls for help after those deadly shots rang out. everyone is running away. where is the student with the gun? i don t know. i was in the cafeteria and everyone just started running. do you see the shooter? no, i just saw the gun. i m freaking out man.
we re following the breaking news this hour, a tornado outbreak that scraped parts of the midwest this morning, killing at least nine people and injuring more than 100. hardest hit, harrisburg, illinois, where at least six people died, including two children. within the last half hour, we learned the tornado was a category ef-4, with winds, get this, up to 170 miles an hour, and as wide as two football fields. in the last hour, the mayor spoke at a grief-stricken news conference. we have suffered the loss of lives. we ve suffered many injures, and millions of dollars worth of is it damage, but first and foremost the loss of lives breaks my heart today. in neighboring missouri, the governor puts the damage in the tens of millions. there s also damage in kansas and kentucky, where the national guard has been called out. let s get the latest, chad myers is watching what s going on. the heartbreaking to see it, not a whole lot of warning. what s going on now? i think the mo
the governors were in washington for the annual governors association meeting on monday. patti ann: well, the president s health care law could become a stumbling block in his reelection efforts. half of the country likes it but the other half want it is repealed and that s true of half the states as well and pam bondi is attorney general of florida, one of 26 states challenging the law and she s here with us to give us an insight. bill: also remember the keystone oil pipeline blocked by the white house. it looks like a modified version, plan b will happen. the company of that cobehind the project is here live to explain that. path pat what lessons can be learned from the deadly ohio school shooting and what would lead a teenage boy to such tragic violence? we re going to talk with a child psychologist about that. the people that were in the cafeteria, i knew some of them, they were in some of my study halls. they were really like nice. they didn t they just were funny, nice peo