to have to live a very long time for that, which i hope do you. i hope i do, too. i m happy to report that sharon is still in tiptop shape. there s another story i want to tell you about, one that i ll never forget. back in august i was witness to a slow motion disaster. a real famine washing over somalia. people have known for months and months this was coming. 30,000 people, as you heard, died over the last three months. even after you get to one of these camps, there s still not enough food here, not enough water, plenty of infectious diseases. today the situation is marginally better. the u.n. says the number of somalis at risk is 250,000. some scaled back operations in refugee camps because of explosions which were directed at the police. more than heavy a million somalis living in overcrowded refugee camps and there s no
the head but survives. she was exceedingly lucky, right? when i saw the trajectory of where one hole was and the other hole was, i was like oh, my gosh. however because it was so far apart. it wasn t a little thing it went through a lot. three and a half months later the first public steps in the congresswoman s remarkable recovery. in 2011, i tried to put a spotlight on big hits in the brain finding growing evidence that football puts young people at serious risk and professional players as well. in february former chicago bears safety david duerson committed suicide. he left his brain to research. when it came back it had telltale signs of injury. when stories like this rolled in, the nfl put in new rules to try to protect its players. that was march. i witnessed the aftermath in japan. right here in the middle of the street our first hours on the ground were just scary. so we are going to move at this point. there was no tsunami. we were saved. more t
campaign event for congresswoman gabrielle giffords. eight people are killed. was anybody injured? did you say gabrielle giffords was hit? she s hit. she still has a pulse. reporter: the congresswoman was shot in the head but survives. she was lucky. when i saw the trajectory of where one hole was and the other was, i was like, my gosh. reporter: because it was so far apart? yeah. it went through a lot. reporter: three and a half months later, the first public steps in the congresswoman s remarkable recovery. in 2011 i tried to put a spotlight on big hits on the brain. trying to find evidence that football puts young people at risk and professional players as well. in february, david deweson committed suicide, and he left his brain to scientific research. when the findings came back, his brain had tell tale signs of chronic injury. as stories like this rolled in, the nfl tried to put in new rules to protect players. ah! reporter: then it was march. i witness