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tracking down that missing teen. but we begin with the investigation into a vicious attack in america's heartland. the suspect in the beheading of the former co-worker and stabbing of another woman at a food processing plant in oklahoma is now awake in the hospital and undergoing questioning. authorities are digging into his background to see if the attack is possibly linked to terrorism. brian has the latest from our new york city newsroom. brian? >> leland, that's right. alton sponolen may face federal charges. he was shot by mark vaughan, who is also a deputy. he stopped the terror in the food processing plant. nolen had just been fired when he beheaded colleen. as he began to stab traci johnson, the ceo shot him. >> yeah, we're trying. >> okay. can you hear that in the background? >> yeah. it sounds like he's running around out here. and that's a gunshot. >> the other stabbing victim survived thanks to vaughan. leland? >> we've done a little bit of search into his background. what are they saying about the possible ties to islam and things like that? >> law enforcement says they have found no ties to terrorism. the motive is undetermined but the fbi is being looking into nolen ties into islam because, one, he chose to behead someone and co-workers said he was recently trying to convert them to islam. his facebook photos show the world trade center buildings burning and there are references to jihad, multiple photos of terrorists and a photo from march that depicting a beheading. the islamic society of greater oklahoma society described him as low key, quiet, and odd. leaders of the mosque condemn nolen saying, "mr. nolen does not represent islam. he no way shape or form has followed the law of islam. we stand for justice. we ask for justice". he served time in prison for cocaine possession and for assaulting a police officer. brian? >> we're going to talk to an fbi director about this later. thank you. >> leland, authorities say a deadly crash involving a bus carrying a softball college team is being investigated as a homicide with both drivers set to undergo toxicology tests. the collision left four women dead and injured more than 15 others. it happened last night about 70 miles south of oklahoma city, reportedly as the team was driving back from a scrimmage. the four women were all students at north central texas college. police in pennsylvania believe they are getting warmer in this search for a suspected cop killer and they say that that suspect may have slipped up. he apparently made a quick phone call to his family. investigators say they traced the signal from those phone calls to their current search area in the pocono mountains in northeastern pennsylvania. they also believe that eric frein spent years planning the attack. he apparently even researched how to avoid a police manhunt. one of america's long-time allies joining in the fight against isis as the british send warplanes into iraq. they took off from cypress and will take off once targets are identified. molly has the latest from washington. molly? >> the jets are ready to attack islamic state, isis whenever appropriate targets are identified. the measure was approved yesterday and taking on isis. and today those tornado jets took off from cypress for their first combat mission over iraq. the white house said it welcomed the british to this operation. >> the united states and the united kingdom have a special relationship and we're pleased to see the strong support from members of parliament for members of the british military working alongside u.s. servicemen and women in pursuit of this goal that benefits countries all around the globe. >> while britain, denmark, belgium and other nations agree to fight against isis, they are not taking part of the battle in syria. that continues to be the mission of the u.s. and allies. there were air strikes against isl islamic states kobani and turkey. a according to a lawmaker back home, air strikes won't be able to finish the job. >> we've done a couple hundred air strikes but in the last war in eye being iraq, it was 40,00. absolutely, sooner or later, somebody has to go on the ground and mop it up. >> president obama says he will not send traditional u.s. combat troops into iraq or syria, although he has sent hundreds of service members to train and advise. iraqi kurdish and syrian fighters. arthel? >> molly, thank you very much. and now the air strikes molly was talking about are just a small piece of the fight against islamic terrorism. president obama has asked congress and got millions of dollars to arm and train the syrian rebels. so how exactly is that going to work and what role will our partners have? let's ask rick former ambassador to the united nations. start with this, the fact that you have belgium and the british that have signed up for the air strikes. does that help build this coalition or is it just sort of more of a question about the obama administration policies? >> well, look, i think it helps inside iraq to a limited extent. what we really need inside iraq is specific intelligence, intelligence that's immediate. if you remember, leland, we had this problem when we tried to rescue the hostages. american military forces went in and they found the specific place where we thought the hostages were, only to discover that they had already left. and what that specifically tells us is that our intelligence is bad. we're not having accurate and immediate intelligence. imagine that now with isis. they are smart enough. they are on twitter. they know exactly where to go. they are moving their military equipment very quickly. so when we think that it's in one spot and we vomit, it actually was already moved and it was moved maybe a couple of days previously. so what we really need when people are talking about boots on the ground, what we need are specific americans looking for the targets who then can call up and say, here is where those hard military equipment, you know, the tanks and the leaders and other forces, here is where they are exactly. go get them now and we don't have that. so that's part of your first question. i would also answer that we're having the same problem inside syria. we need mortar gets and help to get to those targets and there's much to do and we see an obama administration playing politics with this by not sending in enough people to where to figure out where the specific targets are. >> the obama administration says essentially the united states and its coalition partners are going to be the air force and rely on the iraqi army inside of iraq. they have given up a number of times. the kurdish, peshmerga, is the other part that they are going to rely on and then in syria they rely on the free syrian army. interesting back and forth between jen griffen and the secretary of defense about the free syrian army and our potential partners. i want you to listen to that. >> what is the moderate rebels that you are planning to train? >> well, first of all, we're in the process of setting up the vetting system for those that we will begin training moderate opposition syrian fighters. >> who is the head of it? >> we don't have a head of it. >> that's secretary hagel saying we don't have a head to talk to. how do you count on an organization that you don't even know who the head of it? >> you can't. that's been a problem all along. look, we have an obama administration that has put politics before national security. none of these decisions are making sense. we don't have boots on the ground specifically because president obama told the liberal base he was going to end a are wa. the simple fact is that we need boots on the ground to get rid of the threat. if you remember, in the address that president obama made to the u.n., he said, he specifically told us this week that isis and the other terrorists only understand force. that's what he said. well, if that's true, if they only understand force, we better give them force. >> hard to do. hard to give them anything when you don't know who to call who are your partners in it. r rick, thanks for joining us. >> rick and leland, thank you. a disappearance of a college student suspect is back in virginia today. he was captured in texas. he was last seen with missing hannah graham, who has not been seen since that night two weeks ago. elizabeth pran has more from washington. >> reporter: almost two weeks to the day after 18-year-old hannah graham went missing, authorities indicted jesse matthew friday evening. this video shows him being escorted from texas to virginia. he's the lone suspect in graham's disappearance. reports are that he's refusing to speak with investigators about what he could possibly know about graham's whereabouts. he was seen with her at 1:00 in the morning around wntown mall. meanwhile, the several for graham, a uva sophomore, continues. the police chief says the investigation is ongoing and he's asking for patience. >> this is a complicated investigation. first and foremost, because we don't know where hannah graham is and we have to find her. the other reason is, we're still in the process of gathering evidence, talking to witnesses, trying to find additional video. >> reporter: the charges against matthew are abduction with intent to defile. the charlottesville police chief has made emotional pleas asking the public to help in finding her. officials and canine units have extended the search to outside the college town of 40,000. graham's friends and family describe her as an accomplished athlete and student and musician. authorities are offering a $100,000 reward for information leading to her safe return. arthel, back to you. >> thanks, elizabeth. the national institute of health says it's getting ready to emit a patient who has been exposed to ebola. the patient is being described as an american doctor who is helping fight the disease in west africa. he'll be kept in isolation at bethesda, maryland. just because someone is exposed to the virus does not necessarily mean they are or will be infected. four other usa workers have been treated for ebola at hospitals. the epidemic is believed to have killed more than 3,000 people. bill and hillary clinton can now add a new job title to their resumes. grandparents. the clintons releasing this picture. look at this. of them holding their granddaughter. that's a great photo. their daughter chelsea just gave birth to the baby girl last night. the clintons saying, we are blessed, grateful, and so happy to be the grandparents of a beautiful girl, charlotte clinton mezvinsky. >> i can't believe, first of all, that chelsea is a mom. >> a very big congratulations. a group of u.s. governors are getting out of town for a bit. they hopped a military plane for the other side of the world. if we showed you a picture while they were there, you would know. also, putting a patriotic spin on history. they are protesting their school board and their idea for history class. e. his long day of doing it himself starts with back pain... and a choice. take 4 advil in a day or just 2 aleve for all day relief. honey, you did it! baby laughs! could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. everybody knows that. well, did you know you that former pro football player ickey woods will celebrate almost anything? unh-uh. number 44... whoooo! forty-four, that's me! get some cold cuts... get some cold cuts... get some cold cuts! whooo! gimme some! geico. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. whoo! forty-four ladies, that's me! whoo...gonna get some cold cuts today! four u.s. governors are making a surprise trip to afghanistan. andrew cuomo and the three others are traveling on a defense trip. they are going to mingle with troops stationed there. well, students near denver walking out of classes as critics accuse the district of trying to, quote, whitewash american history. some school board members want to downplay civil unrest. they say the students are being used by pawns over pay. >> i'm not talking about censoring anything. we shouldn't encourage our kids to obey the law. our kids are being encouraged to walk out of the schools. >> our political panel is here to talk about this. tammy and steve, senior adviser at the global strategy group. tammy, first of all, does that teacher in the sound bite have a point? the students are being used as pawns and being forced to protest? i mean -- >> well, they've got a school board here now that was a divisionary election where you have conservatives who got elected. some believe that the acrimony involving that election hasn't gone away but they were elected for a reason. the truth of the matter is, what they are advocating in their new rules is the inclusion of more information and that's, i think, what's important. the other rule was not to condone or encourage in the programming, their curriculum, the encouragement of social strife or i can braing tbreakin. it you had should be conveying information and facts and that's what the arguments have been. >> help me out, steve, that's not making sense to me. tammy is saying the students or teachers want to make sure that the students are not encouraged to break the law while you have some people saying, listen, the problem here is that the material should -- they are saying that the history material should promote positive aspects and social strife or regard for history. it happens. >> that's exactly right. the school board is saying they don't want any teaching that teaches about civil disorder or social strife or disregard of the law. well, that's the boston tea party, the american revolution, the lunch counter sit-ins. it's going to be pretty hard to teach u.s. history without teaching about civil disorder. look, this is -- the father of political conservativism said, if those who don't know history are destined to repeat it. all these kids are trying to do is actually learn their history, the good, the bad, and the ugly and the school board has decided to censor it. >> that's not true. they are not advocating for the removal of something. they want a balance. we have to think about what the curriculum is at that point. they are saying there's a one-sided aspect of what is being taught and want other elements to come in as well. >> help me understand your argument. i'm not following you. >> well, let me finish and i'll get to that point. i'm an activist. i'm a social community organizer. i know about civil disobedience and there's a big dins between breaking the law and civil disobedience. there's a big difference between disobedience and protesting the law. big difference. i think what has happened is you've got a curriculum that people don't realize how much positive american history has been removed and this is an argument by the school board to make sure that the positive aspects are placed in so that there's context and a balance. >> that's fine. >> neas whthat's what they are . >> they want to remove what they find objectionable. >> no, they don't. >> it directs this community to come back with anything that is objectionable. that's one step from book burning. >> excuse me. the next conversation is going to happen. >> what conversation? >> the teachers are saying that this is going them even more leway in what it is they can explore in the classroom. >> good. >> the teachers in that schoolroom say that this is giving them more information, more opportunities and more leeway with what to say to their children. that's the goal. >> please, the protesters are protesting, too. the teachers and the students are protesting this move from the school board. this saying, if it walks like a duck, quacks like a duck -- >> maybe they should just -- >> excuse me. maybe they should extend the curriculum because what happened, happened. i understand and you can't erase that. like it or not. to tammy's point -- >> they are not going to erase things. >> i understand to your point, tammy, you want to make sure they include positive aspects of history as well. you can't cut out what happened. >> you need the good, bad, and ugly. they are on school boards all over the country, as are liberals. the problem is what the school board is doing and what the school board is doing in this case is trying to censor american history. >> hang on. let steve finish. >> because they don't like what it conveys politically. >> no. if you look -- >> tammy, i'm going to give you the last word. let steve finish. >> there's a natural extension which means they can not teach things like civil disobedience and breaking the law. the boston tea party broke the law. >> tammy is going to get the last word on this. give me 20 seconds. >> as a supporter on the modern tea party, the balance of the information is the right thing. the left is afraid of materials being turned to the classroom without the positive aspect of this country and that's why there are protests now because they realize all of the information is in the classroom and they don't like that necessarily. so it's obviously a good thing. >> please. >> no, they don't. >> oh, man, tammy bruce, steve, tammy, i need to get you back when i'm on this side. >> thank you. >> thank you, guys. >> longest 20 seconds of my life. >> i was trying to be fair, you know, give tammy -- and time to make her point. there you go. >> why a number of seemingly healthy children are suddenly coming down with paralysis and whether a rare virus could be to blame. plus, authorities are treating the beheading in oklahoma as workplace violence but that distinction could fall by the wayside. i got this. 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[ male announcer ] ship a pak via fedex express saver® for as low as $7.50. detention center overpowering a guard and taking his keys. police say they have recaptured all but one of the teens. in colorado, doctors are investigating nine children who have been stricken with muscle weakness or even paralysis. they want to determine if it's being caused by a virus. it's responsible for severe respiratory illnesses across the country. and former ohio rep james traficant has died. he became the second person to be expelled from congress since the civil war after convicted of bribery and other charges. he was 73 years old. and now back to our top story, the fbi and local authorities are investigating a beheading of a former co-worker and the stabbing of another woman at a food processing plant in oklahoma. the man had tried to convert several employees to islam. authorities are looking into a connection with terrorism from alton nolen. we want to start with this, sir. take us through what the fbi is doing right now to try and determine whether this goes in the terrorism category or the workplace violence category. >> surely. what they are doing right now is looking at his computers, they are interviewing people and looking at his telephone records and looking at anything that he might have done. the recruitment process, if he tried to recruit people, to join islam. they will be trying to determine what is his degree of involvement if he's involved with terrorism. the initial thing, you know, we get a little blurry here when we talk about workplace violence. it's a great thing to be charged with workplace violence, in this case, murder in the workplace, in order to put him in jail, just keep him there until the rest of the investigation can unfold and see what really has transpired so they will be being looking at anything to see any connection with jihad. if in fact they determine that to be true, there will be an indictment and they will try him on the terrorism side. >> when you look at his facebook page, brian has been doing great reporteri reporting on this, he posts photos of islamic and references to them as his brothers. he says sharia law is coming to the united states. at some level, how do you separate folks who are violent and angry from the people who have some time of terrorist inclination? >> i would suggest that a person like this who gathers this kind of information, the photo that you show and the information that he has on his website, i would suggest that's pointing towards the person who is involved as a terrorist versus somebody who is just dab belling and looking at photos and is just an evil person. this is where you're going to see the real fact that he's been looking at different things throughout the world and i wouldn't somebody surprised if they could see that he has contacted jihadists overseas to -- prior to this act being committed. >> i guess that's what people call self-radicalization. is this in some ways the worst nightmare because there's no way to track this guy because he's here, he's at home, is self-radicalized, and there you go. >> you're absolutely right. and if he has an american passport and does that. that's some of the things that they are going to want to see. has he been out of the country and where has he been out of the country? that's self-radicalization if he started that way and then reached out to further his would-be education of terrorism, then they are going to look at that and see where he has been. it's a very difficult proposition. but with him committed with the murder, it gives federal authorities and local authorities time to tease out all of these facts and put them together for an indictment for terrorism if, in fact, they have enough. >> we'll see if the facebook photos and what he happens to say, he's been woken up now and whether investigators can talk to him. bill gavin, former assistant with the fbi, thank you. this is the beginning of this case and we have a long way to go. >> thank you. meanwhile, long lines today in chicago. thousands of travelers are still trying to get to their destinations. this is more than 24 hours after an faa stop of all manies causing problems all around the country. this is from our west coast newsroom. >> no sign of the disruption ending any time soon, certainly not by the end of the day or indeed by the weekend. the latest figures that we have from the aviation authorities is that there were 767 flights today that got canceled. 788, i should say. the faa plans to release its operations schedule for the weekend and also into next week, airlines, really, are struggling to know what they will be putting on until they actually have that coming from the faa, no came of when that will be out. of course, that means more inconvenience for thousands of passengers. >> we're not going to make it there. i'm very disappointed. >> i wanted to be with my granddaughter and family. >> we might not make it. >> while those people are looking at where they might end up and when, the investigation goes on into precisely what happened early friday morning when police say 36-year-old brian howard of naperville set fire in the basement of the air control center in aurora, illinois. he took gasoline with him and a lighter. that's when the fire started. when paramedics got to him, he suffered burns as well as having slit his own throat. why he did this, he left a message on facebook which was a suicide note and how he had been disgruntled from a move from chicago to hawaii, which he was told he was going to have to make. it will be a while before we know the whole story. >> there's a great deal of things that need to be done and interviews and other co-workers. it will take a while before the investigation. >> there are no indications of terrorists. there's no reason to believe that anyone else is involved at this time. >> due to the extent of howard's injuries, it could be some time before he's able to talk to detectives. he will make a court appearance. back to you. in case you haven't heard, there's a job opportunity in president obama's cabinet after eric holder announced his resignation. but this could be a political mine field. and george clooney tied the knot. we're going to take you to his we hadding in a moment. 3rd and 3. 58 seconds on the clock, what am i thinking about? 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marry a smart, beautiful woman? >> absolutely. what's going on back there? nothing? congratulations, george clooney. in the wake of this week's resignation announcement from attorney general eric holder, a number of questions remain and will president obama nominate a successor during the lame duck session of congress? susan is a professor of law and political science at usc and a fox news contributor. great to see you. >> great to see you. we could do an entire segment on why attractive and intelligent men don't marry attractive and intelligent women. >> but de. >> what is your theory? what does this all mean for the american justice system in terms of perspective when making the decision on various cases that reach the attorney general's desk? >> well, the thing to remember, as i was driving over here that i was thinking, back in 1960, '61, john kennedy, the then president elect, stepped out of his georgetownhouse where he was announcing his cabinet and very quietly said to the minimum number of reporters present, it's bob dby, meaning he was appointing his brother as attorney general. the sort of forklore is, if you want to have one person in your cabinet who you can trust, investigate you and lock you up. so great care goes into the choice of attorney general. i've been waiting for my phone to ring. tammy said to me, isn't your phone ringing? i said, tammy, it must be because the ringer is off. but i think the truth is, eric holder has been at the center of controversy for the last six years. he has said that he wants to leave by the end of the year. who replaces him, i think, will depend in very large part on how well the democrats do in the november election, how strong the president's hand, whether he wants to get through the lame duck congress. >> let's get back to mr. holder. aside from being the first african-american to serve as the nation's top law enforcement official, he was in support of same-sex marriage. he fought successfully against voter rights discrimination. no one walks away with a perfect record. what else will the history books say about attorney general eric holder? >> well, first of all, obamacare, just to add. he had major cases where the central initiative of this administration, the obamacare, his justice department took to the supreme court and survived it. i think many people feel that obama and eric holder had a very special relationship. not obama are their wives the closest of friend but here are two african-american men of great stature and standing. one, the president attempting to walk a line that kept race out of most issues. and the other, an attorney general, like him or not, tough give him credit for honestly and rightly confronting issues in the justice department. i think he will be remembered very well and very positively, myself i think, for having taken on hard issues. he stood for clear positions, agree with him or not. he was in some sense, obama's conscience. >> okay. well, thank you for that. you mentioned tammy bruce. if she's still there, tell her we still stand together with her in girl power even though i disagreed with her in the prior segment. >> i didn't agree with her either. >> oh, my lord. she was driving me crazy. >> we love her. >> absolutely. we love her. >> thank you, susan. >> have a great day. >> you, too. you can reach her in syndicated newspapers across the country every wednesday and friday. sometimes, of course, it's hard to eat healthy and checking the labels, as we know, can help. but what exactly are we looking fo consumer reports helps us figure it out, next. when i had my first migraine, i was lucky. that sounds crazy, i know. but my mom got migraines, so she knew this would help. excedrin migraine starts to relieve my pain in 30 minutes. plus, sensitivity to light and sound, even nausea. excedrin migraine works. whenwork with equity experts who work with regional experts that's when expertise happens. mfs. because there is no expertise without collaboration. that corporate trial by fire when every slacker gets his due. and yet, there's someone around the office who hasn't had a performance review in a while. someone whose poor performance is slowing down the entire organization. i'm looking at you phone company dsl. go to comcastbusiness.com/ checkyourspeed. if we can't offer faster speeds or save you money we'll give you $150. comcast business built for business. look who is here, deputy editor sue perry is here. first of all, hi susan. >> hi. >> what does it mean to look for clean food or labels? >> it means you're looking for the shorter simpler ingredients. >> your goal is you want to have a shorter list versus what is going in with the preservatives? >> yes. stuff overly processed foods . >> the good news is, you can find more clean labels. >> this looks like you went into my pantry so i get an a for eating the right stuff. >> you do. >> so you came here with the newman's olive oil and dressing. >> we went aisle by aisle. you have to pick up brands and salad dressings. look at the labels and see which one has the shorter, simpler list. >> now, i actually used the light balsamic. is that okay? >> yes. it has fewer additives and preservatives. you want to hit the refrigerator case or buy organic because they will have fewer preservatives than the less stable ones. >> we don't want that. a triscuit, a taskel -- >> this is the cracker aisle. this is just wheat, oil, and salt. and the idea is, when you're at the cracker aisle, look for the whole grain. that's the first ingredient. and don't get -- if you see something with a long ingredient list, that's not necessarily a bad thing because the more grains in it, seeds and nuts, that's lengthening the list in a good way. what you want to watch out for on the cracker aisle is hydrogenated oils. we found them in ritz crackers and a bunch of others. >> put tuna fish out of the can and put tobasco on there. >> that's food. >> these tend to be overly processed foods. you want to look for a good example because it's a simpler mix of grains, chicken, and vegetables. and even though there are 25 ingredients, they were individual whole grains, individual vegetables and then chicken. it didn't have a lot of thicker ins or flavoring added. >> not too bad? >> not bad at all. >> most stores carry it? >> most stores carry it. >> you've got 20 seconds to tell me about why this is good to be in my fridge. >> again, this has one ingredient. it doesn't get cleaner than that. >> thank you very much. that does it for us. nyquil cold and flu liquid gels don't unstuff your nose. really? alka-seltzer plus night rushes relief to eight symptoms of a full blown cold including your stuffy nose. .... .... ... ... ... clearedouncer] healthful. flavorful. beneful. ... ... ... the lightest or nothing. the smartest or nothing. the quietest or nothing. the sleekest... ...sexiest, ...baddest, ...safest, ...tightest, ...quickest, ...harshest... ...or nothing. at mercedes-benz, we do things one way or we don't do them at all. introducing the all-new c-class. the best or nothing. rethink. reimagine. because right here, right now. it's time to take a closer look at botox® cosmetic, the only fda approved treatment for the temporary improvement of both moderate to severe frown lines and crow's feet. see what real results can really look like. so talk to your doctor about botox® cosmetic. and make it part of what you do for you. the effects of botox® cosmetic, may spread hours to weeks after injection, causing serious symptoms. alert your doctor right away, as difficulty swallowing, speaking, breathing, eye problems, or muscle weakness can be a sign of a life-threathening condition. do not take botox® cosmetic if you have a skin infection. side effects may include allergic reactions, injection site pain, eyelid drooping and swelling. tell your doctor about your medical history, muscle or nerve conditions and medications including botulinum toxins, as these may increase the risk of serious side effects. look me... in the eyes... and see what's possible... botox® cosmetic. it's time to take a closer look. >> i am gile bandaras. this is the fox report. new details about the chicago nightmare that backed up flights all over the country. a contractor set fire to the center in aurora, illinois and then tried to commit suicide. clean up crews have been on the scene and technicians trying to determine when they would restore full service and we know moments before the fire was set, the suspect turned to facebook to say good by and

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