captioning sponsored by macneil/lehrer productions lehrer: good evening. i m jim lehrer. the latest on the mine accident in west virginia and the search for survivors. brown: and i m jeffrey brown. on the newshour tonight: family members cling to what the state s governor called a sliver of hope. we ll talk to frank langfitt of national public radio on the scene. lehrer: then, gwen ifill reports on the political turmoil in the former soviet republic of kyrgyztan site of a u.s. air base that supplies troops in afghanistan. brown: we debate a court decision that could limit future regulation of the internet. lehrer: we have updates on two school systems: john merrow reports on alternatives for troubled teens in new orleans. i ve got 16-year-old seventh graders and 17-year-old eighth graders and 18-year-old ninth graders who are reading at the third or fourth grade reading level. those are tremendous challenges. a lot of them put up walls. brown: and we look
captioning sponsored by macneil/lehrer productions lehrer: good evening. i m jim lehrer. the latest on the mine accident in west virginia and the search for survivors. brown: and i m jeffrey brown. on the newshour tonight: family members cling to what the state s governor called a sliver of hope. we ll talk to frank langfitt of national public radio on the scene. lehrer: then, gwen ifill reports on the political turmoil in the former soviet republic of kyrgyztan site of a u.s. air base that supplies troops in afghanistan. brown: we debate a court decision that could limit future regulation of the internet. lehrer: we have updates on two school systems: john merrow reports on alternatives for troubled teens in new orleans. i ve got 16-year-old seventh graders and 17-year-old eighth graders and 18-year-old ninth graders who are reading at the third or fourth grade reading level. those are tremendous challenges. a lot of them put up walls. brown: and we look
of children with disabilities, some with mental health problems. they all told stories about how they had not been able to get help, and how they were getting help. it was really emotional for me to see. so i will stop talking, so you can answer questions. [applause] thank you very much. it is interesting we have a number of questions, but we also have a large number of questions from the website for the first time, which is great. the first question to both of you is, what is your favorite memory since starting the carter center? . . this village had about 500 people which is about the size of plains, and two-thirds of the population had guinea worm coming out of their bodies and about 20 of them couldn t come out into the square where i was because they couldn t drag their bodies out of the huts. and i visited some of them. and i noticed the beautiful young woman standing there that i thought was holding a newborn baby. and when i walked over to her i saw that she was hol
they had been attacked in the night. the woman who is running and now is that their generation refugee, and she was telling me that, we were just attacked last night. they had been up since midnight because that is when they came in. it was about 9:00 in the morning. dollars the attack? dollars the israelis came in and took four people out and they fired i ask it said woke them up? and she just laughed. but anyway. when i asked, how often does that happen? just three or four times a month now. last month it was happening every day. . also are you going to talk about going to berlin? we will have questions. ok. two other things i want to tell you because one place i went was the international center in bethlehem and the man who runs i think he s a lutheran pastor and he said he always pastor and he said he always hears bad bank so we re going to tell you good things today and he had 15 young people there and he called it training, well, he said i m just training