To death in oaklands upper rock ridge neighborhood. Thats a shock this stuff thats happened. Tonight friends and family are mourning the death of the man who was well known in his neighborhood. Officers received a call just after 11 30 to the harm on margarido drive. When they arrived they found an 80yearold man suffering from head trauma. Ktvus rob malcolm joins us live with more on what were learning about that man, rob . Were learning the victim, earnest clark, was erness clark was said ernesh clark was one of the nice e ernest clark was one of the nicest men in the neighborhood. His son is charged with the murder. Reporter full of activity as police investigated a homicide. Early saturday morning neighbors exchanged hugs, overcome with what happened. How does a neighborhood recover from this . . Reporter according to oakland police, 80yearold clark was beaten to death in his home and suffered blunt force trau that ma to the trauma to the head. His middleaged daughter was also injur
states that fall, but truman still won the election. there was a lot of commentary this week about mark sanford s surprise victory over elizabeth colbert busch, that sanford won tuesday s special election by nine points, we ve been told swb a credit to his savvy as a campaigner or to the public s increased willingness to look beyond personal scandal. but the reason he won and won so handedly is a lot schismer than any of that. it s nothing more than the story about how race and politics have played out in the south since that 48 dixey accurate walkout. the story is this, white southerners, in the deep south especially, almost always vote republican. it can be hard to fath thom now, was from the end of reconstruction through world war ii, white southerners voted almost universally for democrats. 1936, fdr racked up more than 98% of the vote in south carolina. 98%! in the south in those days, the republican party was at best a
0 problem at the same time, we have a gnash structural issue. sharing the stories of moms bringing them forward is a powerful political impact. i guess when i think of the let s take issue of guns in particular. we re at this moment now where the background checks bill failed last month in the senate, but it doesn t seem dead. it seems like it could come back and be enacted and if that happens, then this mobilization of moms is going to be a big part of that. i guess what i m wondering is, politically, celinda talks about women, mothers who have sat out over the last decade coming back. is it about mobilizing them and making them a part of the process, or is it more the idea, there s a particular power of mothers to shame public officials, to generate whether it s sympathy, whatever, to sort of move wider public opinion, because they re mothers. sort of the status of mothers. so, there is. and i think it s a very powerful symbol, right? i wish my children would see this powerfull