have seen him look forward to what his post-presidency plans will be and chicago will provide a good laboratory for looking at all of these issues which are complex, which have to do with race, which have to do with class. nia mallika henderson, thank you so much. thank you. that event ongoing right now with president obama speaking at georgetown university. we re following breaking news this morning. we ll continue to follow that throughout the day. nepal rocked by another powerful earthquake less than three weeks after it was already hit by a big one. we re going to be following that news coming up. thank you all for joining us at this hour . legal view with ashleigh banfield starts after a quick break. pretty good? i know i have a 798 fico score, anks to the tools and help on experian.com. kaboom. well, i just have a few other questions. chuck, the only other question you need to ask is, what else can you do for me?
helicopters to fly over the town you were just talking about, and we know that people from an everest committee were trying to get communications out with nemche which is homeland of the sherpas that do those exhibitions up mt. everest. this was the biggest challenge after april 25th, after that much bigger earthquake hit and it s a repeat challenge that will face the country now trying to figure out the extent of the damage out in the far flung villages where people have to walk at times to try to reach civilization after this terrible natural disaster. ivan watson, thank you so much as always. we ll check back in with you. ivan is talking about its insult to injury for all of these folks. all of the victims in nepal. let s get a firsthand look of what victims and those who are trying to bring aid to the country of nepal are facing
well, not anymore. introducing heinz new better tasting yellow mustard. mmm! nepal. welcome back. we were listening to president obama speaking at an event at georgetown university. when we left off he was speaking about poverty, issues surrounding poverty saying that the government we as americans can do more. he s expected and believed that he s going to speak more in depth about the issue of race. something he s been speaking
who is in nepal right now. welcome. thank you. tell us what it s like on the ground there. i am now in the field, about two miles from the epicenter, and people here are in shock, and here at the hospital it has been rough, a lot of injured people coming in all the time. we have a lot of patients today. the buildings have collapsed, the building people are afraid and scared. they have no place to go and so we have people camping outside the hospital. we have peoplethatere.
there are search and rescue teams from the u.s., from other countries still on the ground able to mobilize with the nepalese workers, indian air force helicopters out medevacking people and so it was better in some ways prepared for this than it was when the first earthquake hit a little bit more than two weeks ago. kate and john? to a certain extent the first we hear from are the people in kathmandu but damage could be much greater outside the city. the epicenter, the town known for trekkers pass through that town on their way to everest. how much longer do you think before we will know whether some of these outlying areas suffer devastation? reporter: already the nepalese military has made announcement that they think that one district much closer to kathmandu but to the east of it may have born the brunt of this? we know that the indian air force sent one of its