bill: impact segment segment. as you know, yale university is an ivy league stalwart, very procedures institution. now, two controversy that may harm yale. first, the university is taking john calhoun s name off of one of the residential colleges. he served in the tenant for many years before the civil war. he was an ardent proponent of slavery. however, john f. kennedy named calhoun one of the greatest senators in history. i disagree with that assessment. also, the yale daily news come the student paper, is backing at printed that says the african-american cultural center at yale will honor the black panther party as part of black history month. joining us now from new haven, connecticut, gabby cudjoe-wilkes, a yale graduate student, and here in the studio, coyote tierney, a senior at yal. john calhoun, he was associated with the yale way back, gave them a lot of money, had a college named after him, right? but no more. no, sir. bill: what happened?
bill: impact segment segment. as you know, yale university is an ivy league stalwart, very prestigious institution. now, two controversies that may harm yale. first, the university is taking john calhoun s name off of one of the residential colleges. he served for many years before the civil war. he was an ardent proponent of slavery.y. however, john f. kennedy named calhoun one of the greatest senators in history. i disagree with that assessment. also, the yale daily news, the student paper, is backing away from the story it printed that says the african-american cultural center at yale will honor the black panther party as part of black history month. joining us now from new haven, connecticut, gabby cudjoe-wilkes, a yale graduate student, and here in the studio, kyle tierney, a senior at yale. so john calhoun, he was associated with yale way back, gave them a lot of money, had a college named after him, right? but no more. no, sir. bill: what happened? it started about t
me to say it from my perspective. tucker: we always do. i did research on it today and you are a free-speech fundamentalist, who believe free-speech should be open and did not shouldul be curbed at ay point. tucker: i m an american, but i m trying to get to the core of your argument. my argument was suppressed, a want to be able to say it. tucker: let s make this really simple for our viewers who don t know the back story. your op-ed you wrote for the paper, you suggest that republicans at nyu should be sanctioned at some way for daring to have gavin mcginnis on campus and your justification for that is his views are so beyond the pale yonder our democratic values that we shouldn t be allowed to hear them. what i don t want to do is do with the student paper at nyu did which is put words in my mouth and change my words. let me tell my own story. is that okay? tucker: with haste. so one of the sentences that was taken out was the question,
clinton. but so quick final word to you, jackie. at liberty university, jerry falwell jr., he s the chancellor, i m going to say that wrong, a group of students were revolting because they were angry about the trump endorsement. they wrote a letter and it was actually pulled from the student paper. to your point, this is happening not only in north carolina but across the country with young evangelicals who won t accept this. all right. thanks to all. next, a former attorney general who worked for george w. bush on why james comey is wrong. michael mukasey is my next guest. plus who is huma abedin? and should hillary clinton part ways with her? there s nothing more important than your health. or the freedom to choose what doctor you want to see. so if you re on medicare, consider an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan, insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company.
body president who weighed in on the situation here for us yesterday. it s a true inclusivity issue and true respect issue where these students feel pushed to the margins every single day on this campus. so i ve heard so many of those stories, continued to hear them this semester, and i just i really think that they all connect together. reporter: so that walkout was described as peaceful, and there was stressed multiple times it should not be violent. we have reached out to the administration here at ithaca, to the chief diversity officer, board of trustees and student government. we re waiting to hear back from a lot of those folks. we are speaking to the editor of the student paper later today. we can tell you votes have been lodged for the students and the faculty. those student votes are due at the end of the month. but of course the ultimate decision as to whether or not the president maintains his job is up to the board of trustees. jose? erica hill, thank you very much.