neighborhood for a visit from pope francis. she s hoping to ask the pope to bring peace and tran quilt for her family. so prepare for her special guest, her son gave her home a fresh coat of paint and her daughter plans to help her to cook for the pope. she has an open kitchen with a dirt floor and a occur are you you roof. she hopes to share a meal with the pontiff. on the menu a typical soup and tea. we re joke background her food is probably really good and the pope is going to enjoy it. everyone on her block has been pitching in to prepare for the
there and when the tornado hit we had no light in there until a gentleman turned on their camera their cell phones and gave us a little bit of light. it was a standard six-foot-high dirt floor and just what you imagine as a storm cellar would have been. built back in the early 40s and late 30s, and then typical farm style cellar and the to me it was quaint. but listen. siez you hear the sounds first of all-what did the tornado itself sound like, and then did you feel and hear the crashing of the structure around you? yes yes. when the tornado hit two minutes after we closed the door it was like a train rolling right over the top of us. and we got a dust shower. everybody down there got a dust shower, and then it was total silence. and that was the eerie part.
individuals are so sensory deprived. when you look at this report, it says they were deprived of food and heat. one died of hypothermia. after his death the cia officer in charge of his interrogation was given a $2,500 bonus. senior congressional correspondent from the daily beast is here. tim, thank you for joining me from capitol hill. the way you point out details in your piece is why we wanted to have you on. you open the piece saying at the cia s detention site, the lights were never turned on and curtains and painted exterior windows. tell me about the torture that happened there. this is a site where an individual detainee was slapped and punched and dragged across a dirt floor and later stripped, chained to the floor of his cell and found dead the next morning. this is the site where no one would ever turn the lights on where prison guards would only
they ll have to take him as he is. that s coming up in the roundtable. right now a vital cause my colleague laurence o donnell has been championing called k.i.n.d., kids in need of desks over in africa. black africa, an undeveloped largely royal colony in southeast africa. millions of young africans struggle in the classroom every day because they have no place to sit or write on. nothing but sitting on the ground which is often a dirt floor. funds have provided over 221 over a we re of a million kids have desk in the can country through the evers the lawrence o donnell who launched the organization in conjunction with unicef, the great u.n. organization back in 2010 and today she is helped raise $7 million thanks in large part to the generosity of people like yourself, msnbc viewers. they have expanded their mission for young girls, girls hoping to continue their education over there. i m joined by the man behind the effort, the host of the last
welcome back to hardball. tonight we ll talk about the rise and fall of bill cosby, a man whose sonny persona on scream deviated so much from his alleged behavior off screen. watch out, jeb bush says he won t be kissing the ring if that s what you think, of the extreme right if he chooses to run for president. they ll have to take him as he is. that s coming up in the roundtable. right now a vital cause my colleague laurence o donnell has been championing called k.i.n.d., kids in need of desks over in aftrica. black africa, an undeveloped largely royal colony in southeast africa. millions of young africans struggle in the classroom every day because they have no place to sit or write on. nothing but sitting on the ground which is often a dirt floor. funds have provided over 221