Covid19. E. 14,000 peo narrator and what can be done to minimize their risk . The Trump Administration could do this now. Under the osha law the ssfederal government can i an emergency regulation. They can do that tomorrow, saying employers must protect workers from covid19. Narrator now on frontlinen it doesfeel like were essential, it feels like weresl es. Narrator covids hidden toll. Frontline is made possible by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. Thank you. And by the corporation for major support is provi the john d. And catherine t. Macarthur foundation, committed to building a more just, verdant and peeful world. At the ford foun working with visionaries on the frontlines of social change worldwide. Additional support is provided by the abrams foundation,te commto excellence in journalism. The park foundation,te dedicated to heing Public Awareness of critical issues. The john and Helen Glessner family trust. T supportistworthy journalism that informs and in
President ial candidate in a new letter and beijing roll out and new salvos in the streaming war this time from apple and netflix. It is friday, november 1 Worldwide Exchange begins right now. Good morning, your chart of the day has to be pintrest shares start to sink much more on that stock coming up check out that move off by about 20 at this stage. Stock futures open up and the dow jones by about 40. Nasdaq up by about 20 as well. The s p is trying to bounce back from its worse day since october 22 all of this after that key purchasing data. The 10year note yield 1. 69 twoyear note 1. 53 as well. Reaction out of china. Nikkei off by. 3 china rose in the fastest pace in europe, we are seeing some of that positivity as well. The german dax up. 4 . Cac up about. 3 back home, investor attention should be on the october jobs report three and hey half hours to go economists are looking for a gain of 90,000 new jobs down from 136,000 in the month of september. Unemployment rate should tick
mother. she was the most amazing woman i had ever met in my life. and then, suddenly, one day, she was gone poisoned by carbon monoxide. he was like i couldn t get a pulse, i couldn t get a pulse. her husband blamed of faulty water heater, police blamed him. you don t think this is an accident? no. there was one problem, and it was a big one, no one could figure out exactly how he might have done it. he s an expert in gases, he s analyses urologist. murder or an accident. did you kill your wife? hello, and welcome to dateline, hundreds of americans die every year from accidental carbon monoxide poisoning, but according to police in ohio, one of those deaths wasn t an accident, it was murder, and they say if anyone would know how to use a deadly gas to murder someone, it was their prime suspects. here is kate snow with deadly exposure. reporter: he s come back to where it all began, to the town, the streets he knew so well, remembering the old times
some smart people to break down the big stories. today we re asking, as the u.s. begins striking back for the drone attack that killed three american soldiers, are we on the brink of a wider war in the middle east? then, that s dope. democrats in congress pushing the white house for an historic change that could have more people smoking pot. and is apple s new product a vision of the future or just another high-tech toy. the panel is here and ready to go. so sit back, relax, and let s talk about it. up first, u.s. retaliation in the middle east. friday we saw the first of what s expected to be a series of air strikes in coming days against multiple targets that are linked to iran. this marks a new stage in the spiraling tensions. many fear it could pull the u.s. into another all-out war. the u.s. hitting dozens of key targets in the middle east, the strikes retaliation for that drone attack that killed three american soldiers at a base in jordan, which the u.s. blames o
o er the ramparts we watched were so gallantly streaming and the rockets red glare the bombs bursting in air gave proof through the night that our flag was still there o say does that star spangled banner yet wave o er the land of the free and the home of the brave [cheers and applause] will: nice job, america. welcome to fox and friends on saturday morning, your national anthem and your photos. i was informed it would be inappropriate for me to begin ranking your photos but i will say the second best photo in that montage i think was the baby with the massive smile. rachel: we love babies on this show. pete: let s be honest, number 2 or even number one is herb. 110 years old, fox and friends view or from amherst junction, wisconsin. 110 years old, found that a trucking company in 1935. you are wisconsin. rachel: i know a lot of people like herb, hard-working good people who start companies and employ people in their communities, the w