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tv   CBS News Sunday Morning  CBS  February 25, 2024 7:00am-8:31am PST

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"overflowing with ideas and energy." that's the san francisco chronicle endorsing democrat katie porter for senate over all other options. porter is "easily the most impressive candidate." "known for her grilling of corporate executives." with "deep policy knowledge." katie porter's housing plan has "bipartisan-friendly ideas to bring homebuilding costs down." and the chronicle praises "her ideas to end soft corruption in politics." let's shake up the senate. with democrat katie porter. i'm katie porter and i approve this message. ♪ cbs celebrates black history month. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
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good morning. jane pauley is off this weekend. i'm mo rocca, and this is "sunday morning." question. are you happy with your paycheck? how you and millions of other americans answer that question could play an important role in determining who wins the white house this november. by most measures, the economy is strong, but too many workers just don't think they are getting their fair share. one recent victory has given wage earners across the country hope. back in november, the united auto workers union won an historic new contract, including a big boost in pay. this morning robert costa catches up with the man front and center in the fight for workers' rights. united auto workers president shawn fain. >> unions! >> thousands of workers in
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fields from health care to manufacturing hit the picket lines last year, making 2023 the year of the strike. >> working-class people have to realize we have the power. >> reporter: united auto workers president shawn fain led his union to success. >> the billionaires can build all the plants they want. >> reporter: coming up on "sunday morning." shawn fain walking the union line. rod stewart is a rock legend who seems to have done it all. but for his new album, mark phillips tells us he is trying something completely different. ♪ >> reporter: when rod stewart and big band leader jools holland decided to collaborate on a new album of jazzy swing era classic, they had more in common than just the music. they promoted it in a train station, and this is why. >> trains, trains.
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>> reporter: what do you think you bring to this swing album that wasn't there before? >> [ bleep ] really. >> reporter: hear the real answer ahead on "sunday morning." ♪ after decades in hollywood, billy dee williams has plenty of stories to tell. and this morning he'll be sharing them with our ben mankiwicz. >> i first came out here -- >> reporter: at age 86, billy dee williams spent half a century acting. he is comfortable on stage and on set. he is less comfortable seeing the final product. have you seen the "rise of skywalker"? >> i took a glimpse. >> reporter: you've got to see it. you are out of your mind. when is the last time you saw "brian's song"? >> years ago. i don't like watching myself. >> reporter: how do i get you past that? >> you won't. >> reporter: billy dee williams later on "sunday morning." >> hold on, chewy! also this morning, i'll take a closer look at the life and times of our eighth president,
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the man they called old kinderhook, martin van buren. david martin recalls a horrific chapter in american military history and how justice is finally being served. jane pauley will catch up with former senator and nba champion bill bradley, now looking back in his own one-man show. plus, wardrobe tips from author david he is dare ace. a story from steve hartman and more. this "sunday morning" for the 25th of february, 2024. we'll be back after this. ♪ ♪
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what do i see in peter dixon? i see my husband... the father of our girls. i see a public servant. a man who served under secretary clinton in the state department... where he took on the epidemic of violence against women in the congo. i see a fighter, a tenacious problem-solver... who will go to congress and protect abortion rights and our democracy. because he sees a better future for all of us. i'm peter dixon and i approved this message.
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the first labor union in the united states for cobblers and leather workers indicates back to 1794. centuries later, workers are still fighting for what they believe is their fair share. and one man is leading the charge. robert costa catches up with united auto workers leader shawn fain. >> reporter: earlier this month, president joe biden paid a visit to the critical battleground state of michigan. he came to detroit, motor city,
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to court union voters. >> you know what the hell is going to happen if this man is not president? we sewn what happened. labor went backwards. >> reporter: biden had won the united auto workers endorsement and he was eager to share the spotlight with united auto workers president shawn fain. >> you bring me to the dance. and i never left you. i never left you. >> mr. president, shawn fain tells me that he wants to ramp up his fight, not just with a companies, but with corporate leaders nationwide over unions and workers' rights. are you with him? >> absolutely positively. look, i don't have anything against corporations. just got to pay their fair share. the idea we have 1,000 billionaires paying 8.2% in federal tax, come on, man. >> wall street didn't built the country. >> reporter: last september biden was the first sitting president to walk a union picket
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line. showing his support for the unprecedented six-week walkout at all of the big three carmakers. >> general motors reached a tentative agreement -- >> reporter: the united auto workers went on to win historic contracts for 150,000 of its members, making shawn fain the standard bearer for the labor movement's come back in 2023. >> this is what happens when workers get power, they were able to elect their top leadership for the first time in history and we saw massive change in a short amount of time. >> reporter: they elected you. you have shaken up out place. >> that's what they elected me for. >> reporter: fain the first uaw pres president-elected directly by membership. and within months he led shutdowns on assembly lines at ford, gm, and chrysler jeep parent company stellantis. >> we keep following the offers back here. we will keep filling that thing up until they want get serious. >> reporter: he broke with tradition by broadcasting updates via facebook to union members and the world at large.
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>> all three companies wanted concessions on profit sharing. we said hell no. >> reporter: why bring people into the process when usually these negotiations happen behind closed doors? >> it was important to us to be open and transparent with the membership not just in bargaining, but everything we are doing. >> reporter: the union's new contracts not only make up for pay cuts workers took more than 15 years ago during the great recession. they provide a foothold for the union in detroit's electric vehicle future. ford's ceo jim farley recently warned the contracts will have, quote, a business impact on the automaker. fain says impact is what he is all about. >> my grandfather talked about the 110 day strike at chrysler in 1950 to get pensions. >> reporter: a native of kokomo, indiana, the 55-year-old came up the ranks as an electrician and still carries his grandfather's union pay stub in his pocket. >> you ask me in high school, are you going to be an electrician, are you kidding me?
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i went on unemployment. when my daughter was born we were getting wic. it was a humbling experience. experiences like that laid a groundwork for me for what was important in life and why things mattered and why wages mattered, why having good jobs matters, good benefits mattered. >> reporter: afrom hollywood actors and writers to hotel and hospital workers, even neighborhood baristas, last years's protests were like a dam bursting. from 2021 to 2023, the big three automakers took in over $100 billion in profits. while average auto worker pay has fallen nearly 20% from pre-recession levels. >> what gave us power at the bargaining table the company saw how eager members were to go out on strike. plants who got called were disappointed. it was a matter of when and how long it was going to take because i knew the members had the resolve to make happen. this was our generation's defining moment. >> if unions don't run the kinds
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of campaigns that force employers to come to the table and bargain because the cost is greater than the cost of bargaining with them, they won't be able to build power and organize more workers. workers aren't stupid. they know that companies weren't going girlfriend them that bunk. >> reporter: a professor at cornell university school of industrial and labor relations, she says the public sided with striking auto workers. >> they had given huge concessions in 2007. now the companies were making money and weren't sharing it, risked their lives during covid, and so he did a very good job of getting the public to see those issues. this was about something that was fair and this was just, and we are living in a time where corporations are taking too much. >> reporter: do you think some of these corporate leaders misunderstand you, your mild-mannered, professional, you have glasses on, nice guy, but
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you also rail against the billionaire class and you wear t-shirts at times that say eat the rich. >> i don't think billionaires should exist. no one needs that much money. i think it's inhumane. pick any city, walk around. people starving, without basic necessities. there is no excuse for that. it's not because people are lazy or don't want to work. the billionaires keep amassing more wealth to build rocketships. that does nothing for humanity. >> reporter: your critics say that's class warfare. >> that has been going on for the last 40 years. the billionaire class is taking everything and leaving the working class with nothing. >> reporter: you want the war? >> whenever working-class people step up and say this is wrong, we want it to stop, oh, it's class warfare, the end of the world. >> reporter: if there is a labor war being waged in america. the front lines are here. >> is it right for chattanooga -- >> reporter: in the non-union factories of the u.s. and south. >> without a union!
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>> reporter: volkswagen plant in chattanooga, tennessee, builds their latest electric cars and it's a top target of uaw organizers. >> when a company uses fear, we will come back with facts. and these are the facts. volkswagen made $78 billion since 2020 in profit. they paid out $24 billion in dividends to corporate executives and shareholders. the ceo of volkswagen makes $12 million a year. >> reporter: the uaw has tried twice before in the past decade to organize here. what's changed since then after the uaw's recent victories, non-union automakers, honda, toyota, hyundai and vw offered raises, too. >> i respect what you are doing. >> reporter: but the extra pay came without the union's benefits or job protections. >> you just had the strike with the big three. why not take it down a notch? why come into this tough territory in the south? >> we don't ever rest.
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workers deserve justice. >> take the letter -- >> reporter: we were there in december when workers tried to petition management for a meeting with organizers. volkswagen tells "sunday morning" they respect workers' democratic right to determine who should represent their interests. >> the unions -- >> reporter: but volkswagen worker shaun lawler says skepticism of the uaw runs deep in the community. how does your family see unions? >> they don't see it as a good opportunity. they see layoffs. >> reporter: what do they call unions? >> communists. >> reporter: communists? >> yes. >> reporter: volkswagen works the same way. after the uaw's success last year, 13 year volkswagen employee vicky holloway says the union's time has come. >> i really think we have a chance this time. unless your eyes are just closed and your ears and you don't hear anything, then you realize that we do need a union. >> reporter: the uaw now says a
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union vote in chattanooga is approaching. it will be another defining moment for shawn fain and for the american labor movement. >> organized labor led the way for the american dream. and that's falling by the wayside the last 40 years. it's our obligation to humanity to change that. >> reporter: you are not going to give up on that? >> not at all. that's the mission. i'll be honest. by the end of the day, my floors...yeesh. but who has the time to clean? that's why i love my swiffer wetjet. it's a quick and easy way to get my floors clean. wetjet absorbs and locks grime deep inside. look at that! swiffer wetjet. voices of people with cidp: cidp disrupts. cidp derails. let's be honest... all: cidp sucks! voices of people with cidp: but living with cidp
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not so much, until now. >> reporter: in new york's hudson valley, in the village of kinderhook, sits a lovely estate called lindenwald. once home to martin van buren. and if you don't know what into is, you are in good company. what is something you know about martin van buren if anything? >> he was a president. >> reporter: he was a president. >> thank you. >> the united states. >> reporter: eighth president. >> 1840, i think. >> 1837. >> reporter: yes, martin van buren was our eighth president and the first to be born an american citizen, which is more than guide zach anderson knew when he applied for a job here. >> i had to admit to my boss that i was 85% certain i was even a president. it was not my proudest moment. >> reporter: ranger zach as sing become an expert on the man nicknamed old kinderhook. >> the only president who? >> who spoke dutch as his first
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language. one of only two presidents to never serve in the military or attend college. >> reporter: who is the other? >> grover cleveland. he holds the record for tied for second shortest american president. i know. tied. he stands at 5'6" with monroe and then madison takes the crown for being short at f5'4". >> reporter: in the facial hair department, martin van buren is second to no one. >> this is actually martin van buren's shaping stand. it is original. he has some of the wildest facial hair so grace the white house. >> reporter: at lindenwald they called him not mutton chops, but martin chops. let's talk about those sideburns, doesn't do it justice. they defy gravity? >> right. they are remarkable. they stretch out. if he couldn't claim vertical space, he is claiming some horizontal space. >> reporter: historian ted widmer wrote a biography of martin van buren. >> i was attracted to the idea of trying to make an obscure president a little bit less
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obscure. i think i succeeded in that very small goal. i don't think i made him famous. in fact, it's 15 years since i wrote the book and you are the first people to have found me. >> reporter: that's what we're here for. that's our beat. >> there i am. >> reporter: van buren did enjoy a brief moment in the pop culture spotlight on "seinfeld." >> i'm taking on the entire van buren boys. >> van buren boys? is a street gang named after president martin van buren? >> yeah, they are just as mean as he was. >> the secret sign briefly, that's the eight fingers for the eighth president. >> what does that mean? >> he was a former van b boy. >> i am not allowed to talk about it. it's a secretive society. >> reporter: but he says in office van buren was more than a punchline. >> van buren deserves credit for inventing our two-party system, which is nowhere in the founding documents. the founders said it would be a terrible thing if we had
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parties. and van buren comes along and says, no, these are a positive good. when one party gets too powerful, it's good to have the other party start to rise up again. >> reporter: although he may have seemed to the manor born, van buren was actually the son of a tavern keeper. a striver, he rose quickly through the ranks. senator, secretary of state, and then vice president to the original populist president andrew jackson. >> their personalities, their images could not be more different. >> that's right. van buren is short and sort of stout. jackson is tall and emaciated and kind of a clint eastwood sort of tough guy. van buren is much more of a politician and he knows everybody in washington in a way that andrew jackson does not. so van buren was better at going out and talking over politics and getting the jacksonian program through congress, which is a part of being a successful president. >> reporter: so why is martin
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van buren considered such a mediocre president? well, you might say it was the economy stupid. just weeks after taking the oath of office, the panic of 1837 set in. a financial crisis that triggered a six-year depression. >> it's incredible how fast he fell given how high he had climbed up. >> reporter: it was during his administration that van buren purchased his lavish for the time home, with one of the very first and certainly most attractive presidential flush toilets. >> that toilet bowl is gorgeous. >> it is. it's very unique. >> reporter: this was considered very fancy? >> definitely. indoor plumbing was almost unheard of. >> reporter: mateybe it should ward martin-a-lago. a hand-painted toilet bowl. >> it did not set well with the
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american people. maybe his nail in the coffin. >> reporter: martin van buren returned home to per entertain hold court in his capacious dining room. >> the only original wallpaper on the walls. >> reporter: that is not something it breeze past. >> definitely not. >> reporter: wallpaper up for 180 years. >> for sure. >> reporter: fyi, if you want your home to look like martin van buren's, this wallpaper is still available from zuber, the manufacturer. wait until you log on to get your own. >> yes. >> reporter: van buren would run for the white house two more times. both times unsuccessfully. he would travel extensively in europe, write his autobiography and enjoy farming, fishing and his family. in 1862, at age 79, martin van buren died. by most accounts, content. >> i thought he made a good point, which is that you can
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how you doing? so good to see you. >> he seems very friendly. >> yes. very friendly. >> what are you doing here? >> as smooth operator lando calrissian in the "star wars" franchise, billy dee williams made movie history. but that's just one of his standout roles. this morning he is looking back at life on screen and off with our man in hollywood, ben mankiwicz. >> thank you. >> reporter: valentine's day at the historic schomburg center in harlem served as the perfect back trop fire billy dee williams fans to show their love. >> you became our sex symbol, right? >> reporter: williams, now 86, helped define the modern romantic leading man on the big
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screen. first in 1972 opposite diana ross in "lady sings the blues." then again three years later in "mahogany." >> success is nothing without someone you love to share it with. >> i decided to become a romantic figure on the screen. >> reporter: that was a literal decision? >> yeah, yeah. i have always wanted to be. i used to tell my mom, i want to be like rudolph valentino. >> reporter: billy dee williams didn't stop at rudolph valentino. he added a little errol flynn, a suave swashbuckler in a cape in the "empire strikes back." >> hello, what have we here? >> reporter: that line became the title of his new memoir. it details his public and personal life, his close friendship with james baldwin, backstage conversations with laurence olivier, his love of being in love.
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the way you wrote about it, a weakness when it came to love and romance, the first moment of eye contact, a glance indicating interest, a mischievous smile, a sexy walk, playful touch. that was my song. >> that's all very true. >> reporter: yet, for all that charm and sex appeal, williams convinced me he is shy. >> i am really very insecure. i >> reporter: it's strange considering what you do. you get in front of a camera with all these people watching, become someone else. you emote, you cry, you get angry. >> maybe that's why i become someone else, because i'm really insecure. >> reporter: easier to be someone else than be billy dee williams? >> yeah, i don't like to talk about myself. i like to keep it to to myself. >> reporter: still he has written a revealing memoir, discussing his relationships, his children, his three marriages. did that contribute, you think, to some relationships not working out long-term, your unwillingness to open up? >> no, i'm just a philanderer.
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>> reporter: was it a big change moving out here? >> yeah, absolutely. are you kidding? >> reporter: williams moved to los angeles in 1970, but he is a new yorker. he grew up across the street from central park. his parents called him sonny. his dad worked three jobs. his mother had a beautiful singing voice. she is the one who wanted to be in show biz. >> i never really looked to be an actor. >> reporter: he set out to be a painter. he was good, too. landed a scholarship at the national academy of design. then a chance meeting with a cbs casting agent led to an acting gig. the roles just kept coming. >> i find myself going that direction. i always said every time i wanted to go right, something would say, no, no, billy go left. >> here you go. >> reporter: he went left and then cut back right in 1971, landing a part that change ds
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h life, playing chicago bears running back gale sayers in the tv movie "brian's song." >> that was an act of love. >> reporter: "brian's song" the true story of the relationship between sayres and a teammate, brian piccolo, played by james caan. they became friends and the first interracial roommates in the nfl. then came piccolo's terminal cancer diagnosis. >> i love brian piccolo. and i like all of you to love him, too. >> reporter: 55 million americans tuned in to say it had an impact is an understatement. you have had people come up to you and say, i never thought i could connect with a black guy like that? >> it was a gentleman that i ran into who was a bigot, who would not socialize with black folks. he was so deeply touched. it changed his whole perspective on things.
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>> reporter: perspectives in hollywood, though, change slowly. after his success in the early '70s, williams expected job offers to pour in. after all, he'd earned the nickname the black clark gable. but it wasn't true because you lacked something that clark gable had, right? which was opportunity. >> it is frustrating. there is no question about it. you take a negative and you try to see what you can do with it, and maybe turn it around in some kind of an interesting fashion. >> reporter: williams did more than turn the situation around. he just kept looking for compelling characters to play. >> i wanted to do the full spectrum of colors. that's how i see myself. >> reporter: he found such a character when george lucas called with an offer to work in a galaxy far, far away as lando calrissian in the "empire strikes back." >> someone's up there. >> reporter: the first black character in the "star wars" universe. williams, though, saw him as something else.
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how did you think of lando? >> well, when i heard the name calrissian, i said, whoa, let me see what i can do with this. then i got the cape and i thought, whoa, errol flynn. >> reporter: by the end of the movie, lando is clearly a good guy. but millions of "star wars" fans still saw him as the villain who handed hans solo to darth vader. >> i had no choice. they arrived before you did. sorry. >> i picked my daughter up from school. kids running up to me, you betrayed hans solo! i go on an airplane and have a flight attendant. you betrayed hans solo. it was crazy. >> reporter: crazier still is that this talented actor with a 60 plus year career might be best known to a certain generation, my generation, for a string of beer commercials in the 1980s. >> there are two rules to remember if you want to have a good time. number one -- >> never run out of colt .45.
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number two, don't forget rule number one. i remember that. >> the other one is, it works every time. >> reporter: you still got it. he still had it at 77 on "dancing with the stars." and at 82, returning to fly the millennial falcon as lando calrissian. for a shy and insecure man, billy dee williams sure has plenty to say. in a sense, i'm surprised you wrote the book. >> i said, okay, you know, you are getting on in years. i started thinking legacy. i want to leave some, something for the grandkids and the kids that come after that. >> reporter: right. that they understand who billy dee williams was? >> yeah. and i want people to know that i didn't approach life feeling
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♪ ♪ ♪ today while the blossoms still cling to the vine ♪ ♪ i'll taste your strawberries, i'll drink your sweet wine ♪ ♪ a million tomorrows shall all pass away ♪ ♪ i forget all the joy that is democrats agree. conservative republican steve garvey is the wrong choice for the senate.
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...our republican opponent here on this stage has voted for donald trump twice. mr. garvey, you voted for him twice... as your own man, what is your decision? garvey is wrong for california. but garvey's surging in the polls. fox news says garvey would be a boost to republican control of the senate. stop garvey. adam schiff for senate. i'm adam schiff, and i approve this message. "overflowing with ideas and energy." that's the san francisco chronicle endorsing democrat katie porter for senate
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over all other options. porter is "easily the most impressive candidate." "known for her grilling of corporate executives." with "deep policy knowledge." katie porter's housing plan has "bipartisan-friendly ideas to bring homebuilding costs down." and the chronicle praises "her ideas to end soft corruption in politics." let's shake up the senate. with democrat katie porter. i'm katie porter and i approve this message. more than 100 years ago, a shameful and deadly chapter in american military history played out in a texas courtroom. national security correspondent david martin reports on making
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amends for justice denied. >> reporter: the veterans cemetery at fort sam houston in san antonio, texas, looks like many others. headstones with name, rank, dates of birth and death, and wars fought. >> these all tell a story. >> reporter: until you reach this row. >> ours don't have a story. they just have name and date of death. >> my cousin william c. nesbit. >> reporter: charles anderson's cousin and angela holder's great uncle, corporal jesse moore, memorialized by the date, december 11, 1917. >> the first time i came here and touched the headstone, and i said, oh, man, this should not have happened to you, but i am going to do something about that. >> reporter: she first heard what happened to jesse moore from her great aunt lovie. >> she had a photograph of him in her home and i was a 6-year-old kid running through
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the house. on this particular day it caught my attention. i asked my aunt, who is that? why do you have his picture? >> reporter: what were you told? >> that that was her brother who had been killed by the army. >> reporter: killed in the largest mass execution in the history of the army. 13 black soldiers convicted of mutiny and murder and hanged with no chance of appeal. six more hangings would follow. >> my great uncle, to think that he was standing on a trapdoor that was going to fall out from under him, and his body weight snaps his neck. that really gets to me. >> the post engineers worked all night erecting the scaffold with a fairy unique design. it was a large single trapdoor for a simultaneous hanging. >> reporter: john hayman a former soldier turned historian. >> before sunrise, they were
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hanged. once the execution was over, their bodies were each placed in plain pine coffins. >> reporter: the gallows were erected on what is today the fort sam houston golf course. the bodies buried a short distance away. for 20 years, their graves marked only by a number. >> whie they were being buried, the engineers began dismantling the scaffold. and by noon, there was no sign that there had been anything that happened. >> reporter: the all black 24th infanry regiment which served mexico and the philippineser philippines. >> that's t.c. hawkins. >> reporter: private first plas thomas coleman-hawkins his great uncle. >> t.c. hawkins, a friend of his. bravado that's associated with being a military man, you can see it's in full effect in that picture. >> reporter: was he proud of
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being in the army? >> he was. in 1917, one of the things that you could do to make your family proud and to make your community proud was to join the army. >> reporter: after america entered world war i, troops from the 24th infantry were sent to houston to guard a training camp for soldiers being sent to the front in europe. >> i felt as though they should have never been sent there to begin with. >> reporter: never been sent to houston? >> yes, sir. >> reporter: why? >> jim crow and racism. >> there is a phrase that i came across during my research, houston could be called jim crow's hometown. >> reporter: wearing the uniform doesn't give a black soldier any immunity from jim crow? >> not in the least. especially not in texas- >> they were never called soldiers. they would call them the "n" word. >> reporter: a series of run-ins with white police and a false rumor that the black soldiers were about to be attacked set off a race riot.
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>> all of a sudden someone shouted, get your guns, boys, there is a mob coming. and instantly pandemonium breaks out. >> this was the first race riot in which you have more white people than black people killed. >> reporter: the soldiers of the 24th were placed under arrest and marched out of town. when t.c. hawkins' mother asked the army about her son, the reply said only he was present serving with his organization. >> they don't mention any of the things that happened. they don't mention that he is about to be on trial. >> reporter: about to be on trial for his life? >> for a capital crime. >> reporter: the first and largest of three courts martial held here. 63 soldiers charged with mutiny and murder. >> 63 men is the largest murder trial not only in the u.s. army's history, the largest murder trial in american history. >> reporter: those who would decide the case were all white. that man sitting by himself, major harry grier, the lone
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defense counsel and he was not even an attorney. >> if you say that one person who is not even a lawyer defended 63 people at one time on its face it's a miscarriage of justice. >> he was allowed only ten days to prepare his case for the defense. >> reporter: 13 were condemned to death, but the commanding general, john ruckman, kept that verdict secret from them until 12 hours before their execution. >> when this letter reaches you, i will be beyond the veil of sorrow. >> reporter: that night, t.c. hawkins wrote his family a final letter, which has been passed down through the generations. >> i was sentenced to be hanged for the trouble that took place in houston, texas, although i am not guilty of the crime that i am accused. one day a box showed up at the house, and in the box were his
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personal effects, the charge sheet, and his last letter. that's how the family found out. >> reporter: angela holder and charles anderson finally got a chance last month to see the room where their ancestors waited for the hang man. >> they were all in here. >> yeah, 13. >> i could only imagine. >> 13 to condemned men. >> yes. >> to be brought up out of a hole like this in the basement. >> this space. this is all you got. and the next small space is your grave, your coffin. but they were soldiers to the end. they didn't bend. didn't cry. >> reporter: dramatized in the television show "roots: the next generations." ♪ ♪ >> they would have preferred a firing squad over hanging. >> reporter: because? >> it's more dignified.
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>> reporter: so they wouldn't even give them that? >> no. >> reporter: it became a lifelong cause for charles anderson, angela holder and jason holt. when did the idea of overturning the convictions become the goal? >> well, it was always the goal. >> reporter: more than a century after the trials, the army took up the case. >> we reviewed the entire record for all 110 soldiers court martialed and made the determination that all 110 should be overturned. >> reporter: under secretary of the army gage camarillo says a case-by-case review found that none of the defendants had received a fair trial. >> very few witnesses were called. there was little opportunity for cross-examination. >> reporter: was race the deciding factor here? >> i think race was very much a factor, both in the circumstances leading to the events of august of 1917, and certainly in the conduct of the trial. >> reporter: even by the jim crow standards of 1917, justice
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had been denied. >> those first 13 individuals that were convicted and executed did not even receive the opportunity to appeal or review their case. >> reporter: what about all of the other soldiers who were convicted but not sentenced to death? what happened to them? >> many of them continued to serve prison sentences. some died while they were serving prison sentences. >> reporter: can the army really right a wrong like this? >> it's never too late to correct an injustice. >> private joseph williams jr. private david wilson. private ernest wilson. >> reporter: in a ceremony at the buffalo soldiers national museum in houston, all the wrongly convicted soldiers of the 24th infantry were given honorable discharges. >> good morning, everyone. >> reporter: angela holder and jason holt were there.
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>> what price are you willing to pay to hold on to your honor? >> when our mother received the box with jesse's coat, bible, goodbye letter and a dollar, it devastated her. >> reporter: and new headstones engraved for the men who were hanged. >> we will have information on these headstones that reflect the service that they rendered to their country just like the rest of the stones here. >> reporter: when that happens, when they get a proper headstone, will you feel like this is over? >> yes. i have some completion. some peace. >> we ask for forgiveness to our nation and to our army. we are thankful for our nation that can change, that can adjust and make amends. >> reporter: this past thursday, at fort sam houston, angela holder stood watch as proper headstones for her great uncle and the other unjustly executed soldiers were unveiled. now their story is told.
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(truck beeps) bye. - [announcer] call 1-800-got-junk. ♪ ♪ ♪ it's "sunday morning" on cbs and here again is mo rocca. that's one of the many hits that put rod stewart in the rock and roll hall of fame twice. now he is exploring another musical genre that has him with the help of a friend back in the swing. here's mark phillips. >> here we go. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> reporter: it's a rare and beautiful thing when two passions shared by two people come together so happily. >> look at that. chicago.
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detroit. new york. >> reporter: and when the results produce two kinds of fun. ♪ ♪ >> reporter: rod stewart, rock star legend, and model train enthusiast jools holland, big band leader and model train enthusiast. >> the bigger the room, the more happy it will make you. >> reporter: how much of this have you actually built? >> well, i'd say 75%. nearly all the buildings. >> reporter: anyway, it turns out rod called jools a while back to talk about trains and maybe arrange a play date and this happened. ♪ ♪ >> reporter: rod and jools decided to get together to make
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an album of old swing-era jazz classics from the '30s and '40s. ♪ ♪ >> reporter: the old rocker meets the oldies-but-goodies and this little video of a london train station. naturally -- ♪ ain't misbehaving ♪ >> we were very aware of each other's love of railroads. don't you laugh, people. >> yeah. >> we talk about music, it's always trains first. what's happening with your layout? i'm building this. okay. you dow down to the music. >> keep this on track. i am getting a signal from over there. >> reporter: it also turned out that when they finally got to
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the music, they were, yes, on the same track. >> actually, i think maybe the first one was old marie, actually. it's like jerry lewis. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> yeah. the connection between '50s rock and roll and swing is very, very close. they merge into each other. there is a couple of tracks on the album, tracks! >> great. they are rock and roll. ♪ ♪ >> reporter: and rod should know. ♪ oh, maggie i couldnt have tried anymore ♪ >> reporter: since his breakthrough hit maggie may in 1971, rod has sold more than 120 million records. ♪ tonight's the night ♪
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>> reporter: and a career that spanned six decades and is still going. he is not only a survivor from the age of rock. he a knight of the realm, sir rod. ♪ if you want my body and you think i'm sexy come on sugar let me know ♪ >> reporter: that distinctive look and sound somehow hasn't grown old. ♪ young hearts beat free tonight ♪ >> reporter: or too old. ♪ you're in my heart ♪ >> reporter: the spiky hair, the raspy i've been out all night voice, they were choices he made. >> i worked on it. i wanted to sound like sam cooke and all the great r&b singers. this is how it came out. it wasn't for sam cooke, there wouldn't be a rod stewart maybe. >> reporter: so you worked on that kind of raspy almost horsey -- >> no, i didn't go -- try to make it really raspy. it's just the way it came out. it's something to do with my
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nose and my throat and it's just a big accident. in fact, i have got a broken nose here that i did when i was 19 playing football. recently, a doctor said, if we straighten this out, let me give you a straight nose, you may lose your voice. don't touch it. mate, i'll do with a bent nose. >> reporter: the point was not to look and sound like everybody else. ♪ ♪ i am sailing ♪ ♪ home again ♪ ♪ cross the sea ♪ >> reporter: yet the rod stewart act that now seems so iconic was not in the beginning an easy sell. >> oh, blimey, yeah. the first time i went to a record company it was decca records way back, i was 19. they said you are far too rough and you look really odd, the hair and the nose. you know, they were all after pretty boys, pretty little boys,
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you know, singers. >> reporter: you were the antithesis of the pretty boy rocker? >> me? >> reporter: you were the opposite? >> yeah, yeah. >> reporter: but deliberately? >> yeah. well, look at this poise face. what else could i have been but a rock singer? >> reporter: for decades led a legendary rock and roll life. it may be eight children from five different mothers later and he may be 79 years old, but don't ask him if he is slowing down. are you speeding up? >> i am not speeding up. i'm just, i mean, i've got 60 odd calls this year. no time for the pipe and slipper club yet, you know? >> reporter: everybody seems to hit a point, all right, enough's enough. it's been fun. >> no, not at all. it's a drug. it's addictive in a way to get up and sing in front of, you know, five, ten, 20,000 people every night. send them home happy, smiling.
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it's wonderful. watch out. i don't want to give it up. ♪ ♪ ♪ every time it rains, it rains to ♪ ♪ >> reporter: not give it up, but mellow it out maybe. swing with the times. how has life changed for you? >> how do you mean? my sex life? i have been happily married now for, how many years? 2007. i work it out. i have been happily married. i have a wonderful woman, wonderful children. i slowed down if that respect if you know a what i mean. i played four and a half pounds. >> reporter: four and a half million pounds? >> they are going for 7 and 8 million. >> reporter: rod now lives on his english country estate with his family, his ferrari and his lamborghini. >> spend that money on a car, it's a great investment. it's like buying a house that
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moves. >> reporter: when you buy a car, it's like buying a house. the rest of us buy a car, it's a car. >> i am very lucky. i have an amazing talent. >> reporter: that's right. >> take it away! ♪ ♪ >> reporter: an amazing talent that still is rolling along, like his trains. ♪ ♪ >> bye, everybody! thank you for coming. bye! coffee? (vo) with the wells fargo active cash card — you earn 2% cash back on what you want. like coffee. ping-pong. a movie. karaoke. and... 2% cash back on what you need. (man) no no no, just my shoe. (vo) like maybe shoes without laces. (man) just my shoe folks. (vo) the wells fargo active cash card. that's real life ready.
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"overflowing with ideas and energy." that's the san francisco chronicle endorsing democrat katie porter for senate over all other options. porter is "easily the most impressive candidate." "known for her grilling of corporate executives." with "deep policy knowledge." katie porter's housing plan has "bipartisan-friendly ideas to bring homebuilding costs down." and the chronicle praises "her ideas to end soft corruption in politics." let's shake up the senate. with democrat katie porter. i'm katie porter and i approve this message.
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steve hartman this morning has a story of grief and forgiveness that is truly beyond words. >> hey! >> reporter: nikia cherry in the black and staci green green in the bright. they may look like besties from way back, but this is a bond born from bitterness. >> i love you so much, miss staci. >> thank you. >> reporter: four years earlier, staci's mom rosy was killed in a car crash. the other driver, nikia cherry. she was doing 73 in a 45. atlanta area police charged her with vehicular homicide and staci was glad to see her suffer. >> yes. i was consumed. >> reporter: but which? >> anger. sadness. loss. >> reporter: staci was furious. attorneys jeb butler and tom
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giannotti represented staci in the civil trial and made sure to keep the parties in the case apart. >> i was worried that if they got together, the result would be incendiary. i was very pleasantly wrong. >> reporter: instead, last october staci went up to nikia in this courthouse. she thought of what her minister mother would say. and then told nikia, i forgive you. >> i went up, forgave her. it was like i was reborn again. >> reporter: you make it sound like a miracle. >> nothing short. >> reporter: it was an extraordinary step. but only the first step. from then to now, staci has gone so far beyond the words "i forgive you" to the actions of "i love you." >> she is like a god mama to me. i talk to her every day. >> reporter: nikia lost everything after the crash.
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she now lives in a motel. >> so i'm committed to her life getting better. >> reporter: like how? >> so i helped her with money for food. >> reporter: you have given her money? >> yes. rent. i was her daughter's secret santa. i booked a trip for her to go to miami for her 40th birthday. >> reporter: her attorneys say they have never heard of anything like it. >> she is remarkable. remarkable person. >> all that's great. that separates conversation from conviction. >> staci didn't have to do that. >> i am going to cry. >> reporter: actually, staci says she did have to do all of that or she could have never forgiven herself. >> we got to make the best out of this situation. [storms sound] whatever weather comes your way [wind and snow sounds] weathertech has you covered. [bird chirping] [laughing]
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bill bradley. >> i got one here. >> reporter: it's hardly an even matchup. one of us recently had shoulder surgery. >> here we are. shoot it up. >> reporter: and the other one is me. >> the next one is in. the next one's in. yay! here we are. >> reporter: swish. >> you like that sound? >> reporter: it never gets old. bill bradley grew up in a small town on the mississippi river. >> 35 miles south of st. louis with one stoplight. >> reporter: with a basketball and a goal. >> well, i spent a lot of time practicing, three or four hours every day. five days a week. five hours on saturday and sunday, nine months a year. 25 from over there. 25 in a row from there. 25 in a row from there. 25 in a row from here. 25 in a row from here. if you got 23 and you miss the 24th, start over.
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>> reporter: and after high school, he left little crystal city, missouri, with 75 college offers and a new goal. he chose princeton, but not for basketball. >> princeton had more rhodes scholars then than any other university. >> reporter: still, in 1965 -- >> bradley with a jumper. it's good. >> reporter: he led princeton to the ncaa final four. >> bradley. >> lost to michigan in the semifinals, and then they had a third place game and i scored 58 points. >> reporter: what were your stats? >> she is asking my stats. of the game 50 years ago? let's see. what were the stats. 22 out of 29 from the field. >> here bill bradley -- >> 14 out of 15 from the free throw line. 12 rebounds. >> reporter: and tournament mvp. bill bradley was already a sensation, and more than a basketball star.
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he was just famous. >> comes with certain things. i found a strange woman in my bed. said, hi! i called the campus police. remember, i was evangelical. >> reporter: after graduation, turning down an offer from the new york knicks, he went to england. a rhodes scholar. and a church going christian, until a sermon preaching apartheid in racially segregated row autodish a. >> i walked out and never return to that church. >> reporter: when bradley finally appeared in madison square garden, knicks fans were delirious. >> my first game every time i touched the ball in warmups, eight 18500 people roared, right? i was their savior supposedly. >> reporter: but not for long. >> god turned on me. booing me, throwing coins at me, accosting me in the street,
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bradley, you overpaid bum. i was failing. and it hurt. >> reporter: and yet today his jersey hangs in madison square garden alongside his teammates the storied knicks of the '70s. >> we have a new nba champion. >> reporter: two-time world champions in 1970 and '73. >> we were not the best players in the league. but we were the best team. for two years, we were the best team in the world. >> reporter: what does it feel like for you now to come to madison square garden after all these years? >> well, it's still home. >> beautiful teamwork. >> i really believe it was the first time in my life that i felt i belonged. >> reporter: even back in crystal city, a factory town, most dads worked the pittsburg plate and glass, but bill bradley was the banker's son, the only child of warren and suzy bradley, she was a doting
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mother, high in expectations, but strikingly low on praise. >> the only compliment that i ever got from her was on her death bed when she looked up at me and said, bill, you have been a good boy. i was 52. my mother always wanted me to be a success. my father always wanted me to be a gentleman. neither one of them ever wanted me to be a basketball player or a politician. >> reporter: and so pivoting directly to politics, at 35 bill bradley of new jersey was the youngest member of the united states senate. >> the place for leadership is here. >> reporter: a seat he occupied for 18 years. >> thank you very much. >> reporter: but the white house, people always said that was bill bradley's destiny. >> the next president of the united states, senator bill bradley. >> reporter: and the 1999, he took a shot.
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and missed. the former senator was very direct during his concession sp speech in new york. >> he won. i lost. >> reporter: and his marriage of 33 years was ending. without a goal, without a job, he felt lost. until he found himself in a new yet familiar place these last 23 years. investment banking. >> finally becoming my father's banker's son. >> reporter: and now an improbable coda to a remarkable career, bradley reflects on a life of wins and losses. >> reminded me that you weren't stuck where you were in this town or anywhere because you could always wet on a raft like mark twain's huck and jim and go to a new place. >> reporter: rolling along streaming on max is an oral memoir. >> remember, i came from the
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midwest, missouri. the land of the flat o-r, as new york, please pass the fark. new jersey, the land of coffee and chocolate. >> reporter: it's a different bill bradley. >> i discovered a rich inner life that allowed me to never be alone. a kind of home. >> reporter: a gentleman and a success. bill bradley at 80 rolling along. >> if you can have an openness and joy about life that allows you to experience other people, nature, feeling the sun on your arms or whatever, every day you are going to have a full life, whatever you do. nothing comes close to this place in the morning. i'm so glad i can still come here. you see, i was diagnosed with obstructive hcm. and there were some days i was so short of breath. i thought i'd have to settle for never
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ameriprise financial. advice worth talking about. if you are headed to the theater anytime soon, author and contributor david sedaris has a few sartorial tips. >> i went to a play the other night and thought, wait, is this a broadway theater or a home depot? an honest mistake as my fellow audience members were dressed to harvest crops and drain septic tanks. was there a sign on the door demanding people wear shirts or just a coincidence that no one was bare chested? i mean, cargo shorts and flip-flops to the theater. i know we're living in a different age. who are you to tell me how to dress for a night out? if this wasn't a special occasion, what was? making an effort shows respect to the performers and to your fellow audience members. i attended a murder trial in arizona once where the mother of the accused took the stand in
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cutoff shorts and a "ghostbusters" t-shirt. and again you really couldn't find anything better in your closet? if in the past i was going somewhere special i'd put on a tie, but my ideas of evening wear have changed over the years. those look comfortable. people tell me wincing at the culottes i paired with knee socks in cold weather. you do know that you can just say nothing, right? wouldn't that become a compliment? the mark of an adult used to be that you could be mildly uncomfortable for a vast stretch of time. you'd put on a suit and a real pair of shoes and somehow manage to work for eight hours. then maybe you'd hang into something even more restricting and go out to dinner. now we need to be comfortable all the time and for every occasion, except, oddly, when we're dead. go to an open casket funeral and the corpse is pretty much always the best dressed person in the room.
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often it will be the first time the person has ever worn a suit or the first time in ages beautiful dresses, hair done just so. if i ran a broadway theater, that's what i would deto manned of the audience. dress like you're about to be buried. or reduced to ashes in a kiln. and, of course, turn off your phones. ♪♪ stay ahead of your moderate—to-vere eczema, and show off clearer skin and less itch with dupixent. the number one prescribed biologic by dermatologists and allergists, that helps heal your skin from within. serious allergic reactions can occur that can be severe. tell your doctor about new or worsening eye problems such as eye pain or vision changes including blurred vision, joint aches and pain, or a parasitic infection. don't change or stop asthma medicines without talking to your doctor. ask your eczema specialist about dupixent. from the #1 rated brand in cordless outdoor power,
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my name's cody archie. and i'm erica. cody: and we're first generation ranchers from central texas. erica: and because of tiktok, we're able to show people from all over the world where their food and fiber come from. cody: we have dorper sheep and we have beef cattle for the sole purpose of going into the food chain. we use tiktok as a tool to inform people of what we do and why we do it. there's just a plethora of knowledge and of information swapping going on there. tiktok is helping us protect this way of life for future generations. we leave you this sunday at the snowy reinstein woods nature preserve in depew, new york.
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i'm mo rocca. please join jane pauley when our trumpet sounds again next "sunday morning." ♪ . i'm margaret brennan in washington. and this week on "face the nation" -- donald trump trounces nikki haley in south carolina and an interview with israeli prime minister benjamin ne the former president played for the cameras and the conservatives at a washington gathering before polls closed yesterday. sharpening his l

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