tv New Day Sunday CNN November 10, 2013 3:00am-4:31am PST
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below minimum wage, i got the minimum wage adjustment which is $67.47. this is one of the hardest jobs i've ever done in my life. yeah. this morning, an unprecedented crisis. from the air, look at this. the destruction from typhoon are haunting. and so are the numbers. officials now tell cnn the death toll could be at 10,000. >> but on the ground, there are incredible stories of survival. we'll take you to the front lines and hear from the filipino president about what his country and others around the world, including the u.s., are doing to get relief to those people so desperate right now.
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and a day after dr. martin macneill is found guilty, his daughter opens up about testifying against him and what's the one thing she would ask him if she had the chance. your "new day" starts right now. good morning, everyone. good to be with you this sunday morning. i'm victor blackwell. >> and i'm christi paul. 6:00 on this sunday, november 10th, you're up early for sunday, but we're so glad to have you with us here on "new day." i want to get started with something we've just been following in the last few hours. a mass shooting this a houston suburb. >> investigators say two people were killed and 22 others wounded when gunfire erupted at a house party. this is in the suburb of cyprus. >> witnesses say this house was filled with a hundred people, mainly young adults.
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one resident says the neighborhood's usually a quiet place. >> this is a very rare thing. this neighborhood is very quiet. as a matter of fact, before the party got started, two females were walking down the street, knocking on all the resident's doors, asking for permission to park their vehicles outside on the curb. highly unusual for this area. this is a pretty quiet, residential area. there's a lot of children here. this is the first time -- i've been here for seven years, this is the first time i've ever seen a party that big. >> probably shook them up, too. the house was so backed, do you see the dent in that garage door, apparently it got there from people trying to push their way out of that chaos. investigators say they're trying to track down two suspects right now. we'll get an update for you from harris county texas sheriff's office in just a bit. now to our other developing story right now. that typhoon tragedy in the philippines. entire villages are just wiped out. we told you yesterday how the death toll would likely rise. well, today, we are waking up to
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some grim numbers. the mayor of the coastal city of talcoban says he he fears at least 10,000 may be dead. right now, 151 people are confirmed dead. now, talcoban is the area that was hit the hardest by this monster storm. we know at this point, food is scare, water is running out, and the damage is so bad, rescue groups and aid groups can't even move in to get supplies there soon enough. the police and military have sent reinforcements to tacloban, because people are desperate for anything to eat. cnn's anderson cooper and his crew rode out that hotel. >> and it was terrifying inside that hotel, but what andrew and his crew saw when they stepped outside, that was even worse.
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>> reporter: it struck with terrifying and deadly force. the aftermath of the city's shattered landscape. this was home to thousands. it was not the wind that did it, it was a storm surge, reports of a five-meter wall of water that engulfed the coastal strip and spread through the city. even where the cnn crew was sheltering, about a kilometer from the shoreline, the surge was waist-deep and powerful. all around us, you hear the sounds of windows breaking and you hear the sounds of large objects falling and crashing to the floor. and underfoot, it is now just a deluge. and if you look behind me, i don't know if you can see it, the staircase behind me is now basically a waterfall. but that didn't compare with what happened here. >> the storm surge was the most destructive past of this typhoon. we're about a hundred meters or so from the water here, and you can see the damage caused.
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these houses, these were all rough-built houses, completely flattened along the foreshore. thousands of people live along a stretch of several kilometers and you can see behind me, just how bad it must have been. authorities had pleaded with people to leave. many did, but many stayed. this man was searching for his father, his brothers, and his uncles, somewhere, he thinks, under this rubble. we all tried to leave, but it was too late. i got separated when the water started rising. i don't know what happened to them, he tells me. the devastation across the entire city of 200,000 people is widespread. winds upward of 250 kilometers an hour leaving a trail of destruction. this is now a city on edge. no power, food and water running out, and medical supplies almost
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gone. st. paul's hospital, we're told, is the only functioning medical facility in the city. they can't admit anymore patients. there's no room. just first aid, in the most difficult of conditions. >> help! help! >> translator: we hardly have anything left to help people, the doctor tells me. we have to get supplies in immediately. just a block away from the hospital, the increasingly desperate search for food and water leads to looting. this is one of few stores that is left open and the crowds have been storming around these stores, taking anything they can. food is a priority at the moment, but air-conditioning units, plastic toys, everything is coming out of these stores. and another straightaway, people are climbing out the lamppost to get to the second floor of a department store to get anything they can. it took a full day before help arrived, and even though the storm was predicted days in advance, the response so far has
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not been nearly enough. this was nature at its most frightening. a display of force that has smashed the lives of so many people. and this is just one city. there are countless towns up and down the coast where authorities are still waiting to hear word from. >> cnn's andrew stevens joins us now from tacloban. andrew, we saw that people are breaking into the stores to get some food, to get some medical supplies. the philippine red cross says it's going to take them maybe a day and a half by boat to get there, because the airport is shut down, the roads are demolished. is there enough that's salvageable for people to eat, for people to access until the red cross gets there? >> reporter: that's a really good question, victor. at this stage, i've asked that question a couple of times, and the answer has been, we will be able to forage, we will be able to survive for one or two days. but that's maximum. they have to get help.
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and they've got to get it now. it's interesting, what you said, they're running out of food, they're running out of water, medical supplies are critical as well, and the power is still down. take a look at this. we look at the scene behind me with headlights of the car we're using. this is just another typical street, quite a ways away from the storm surge. but all the way down, about a half mile down to the central business district, it's impossible to get through. you've got to get those rescue crews and relief crews getting in, getting to distribution points, and helping people. we've seen choppers coming in. they don't carry enough. what we have heard in the last few hours, that the road to the airport is now open. that's critical, because the airport is still the only way, air supplies is the only way of getting relief into this place. the rest of the city is totally cut off by downed trees and et cetera. the u.s. are speaking to the philippines president today and he confirmed that the u.s. is going to be sending in choppers. he needs as much lift as they can possibly get.
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there's a huge, huge job ahead of them. >> we see the aftermath, obviously, of this storm, but you rode out the storm there at a hotel. tell us more about that. i mean, put this into perspective. some of us have been through hurricanes or tornadoes, but this, a supertyphoon, no one, i'm sure, has ever lived through something like this. >> reporter: well, i'll give you a comparison. we met a storm chaser in the hotel we were staying at. he's spent 21 years chasing atlantic storms. this was the first time he's been across the pacific chasing a storm, and he said he had never seen anything like the ferocity of this storm. in fact, i made a really interesting point. i said the wind speeds at the eye wall, which is the most powerful part of the storm, which passed probably about ten miles south of where i'm standing now, the wind speeds there were sustained at 195 miles an hour. that's an extraordinary number. that, if there was a number, would make it a category 6 hurricane. that gives you an idea. where we were, we were in a big,
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solid, substantial, old hotel. we'd been doing live shots on the roof on the fourth floor. we got out pretty much just in time. that roof was pretty much demolished. the building lost the roof, the ceiling, all the windows popped out. that was in addition to the top of the building. so it didn't affect the floors down below. that's where we were. and it just went -- it went for about five hours. it wasn't -- i never felt that this was, you know, we weren't going to get through this, but just the sheer intensity of that wind, just howling through. and it's like a white haze. when you could peek out of a window, and you had to be very, very careful about getting anywhere near a window, it's just a white haze and these flashes of black would come past, which is flying debris, and then a storm surge hit us. we were a long way back, as i said in my report, and that storm surge came up and came up to pretty much the first floor. that was getting frightening. we were thinking, how high is
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this going to go? it came up very quickly and went back very quickly. so we were incredibly lucky, obviously. we were, just to let you know, we were at a hotel right on the beach. and we had seen the storm chasers, by chance, there, and they said, we've been looking at the satellite pictures, we cannot believe the intensity of this, we're pulling back, so we pulled back too. so the cnn crew pulled back as well and joined them at their hotel. that hotel did survive. but i was speaking to people who stayed there and they were hanging off their ceiling as the water rose. sounds absolutely terrifying. >> we're glad you made it through. andrew stevens, thanks so much for joining us this morning. hopefully help arrives soon. thank you. >> glad everybody's okay. coming up on "new day," a rare interview with tiger woods as he pushes through the final rounds of the turkish airline open. but first, thousands of unmanned drones are flying in u.s. airspace. and the fear of midair collisions with passenger
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for a body in motion. here's what happened overnight. a mass shooting in the houston suburb of cyprus. investigators say two people were killed, 22 were hurt. this happened when a birthday party erupted in chaos. police say about a hundred people were at this thing. mostly teens and young adults between the ages of 15 and 20. we want to bring in christina garza, from the harris county sheriff's department, the spokesperson for them. miss garza, thank you for being with us. first of all, you are still currently looking for two
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suspects. do you have any leads? >> reporte >> well, that is correct. this is still a very active scene. we're still looking for one or two individuals. we have not been able to talk to a lot of the witnesses, because of the nature of their injuries. but we don't have any shooters in custody. however, we are actively looking for them. and for any information that could lead us to those individuals. >> all right. so what duno you know about the2 people who were injured in terms of their conditions and their injuries? >> well, they were all transported to area hospitals. we have two people that did die. one died at the scene, another died at an area hospital. as you can imagine, this was chaos in a residential neighborhood. this was a private home where they were hosting a house party. and we have feasibly over a dozen, over 15 people who were transported to various hospitals. we still don't know all of their
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conditions. you can only imagine what that's going to be like. but we can only confirm that two are dead and we're still trying to work more information as we get it. >> do you know how many were actually shot? >> we believe that all of our victims that are in the hospital, and again, it's very hard to give you a number right now, as information continues the to trickle through, but we had easily over 15 who were taken to area hospitals. we believe that they all were shot by the gunfire that erupted at that house party. >> i just wanted to clarify that. because we knew 22 hurt. we didn't know how many were actually shot. was anybody -- you said this was between ages of 15 to 20. was there a parent at the house or somebody who owns the house, were they home at the time? >> there was at least one adult, one parent at the house when this happened. you know, again, the age range
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varied. there were just so many people in this house, it's really hard to tell. but we believe the age range varies from teenagers to people in their early 20s. again, we're still trying to gather information to see exactly who were there. i can tell you that there were easily over 50 individuals. again, numbers are very hard to pinpoint at the time, but it was a massive house party. unfortunately, this erupted shortly after 11:30 houston time and we're after 5:00 in the morning here, so we're still processing the scene. it's just so information that needs to come, and we're still actively looking for that information. so if someone could provide that to us, that would be very appreciated. >> you just heard from christina garza there, thank you very much. we appreciate the information. anybody who was there and has any information to give them, please do so. and we kept running that video you saw, it was so chaotic. there is a dent in the garage door where people allegedly were
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trying to get out amidst all that chaos. it was the weight of those people that was able to actually do that, victor. so two looking for this morning. unmanned drones have been widely used to target terrorists, particularly in pakistan and yemen. you may not realize it, but the government also flies drones here at home. and that's raising some safety concerns in crowded skies. cnn's renee marsh tells us that's now prompted new rules from the faa. >> reporter: april, 2006, an unmanned aircraft patrolling the mexican border loses contact with its ground-based pilot. it goes on an uncommanded joy ride, flying 30 miles until it crashes close to an arizona home. it's that kind of scenario or even worse, a mid-air collision, that the federal aviation administration is trying to avoid as it looks to open air space to thousands of drones. >> we must ensure that safety
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and efficiency of the entire air space, including all aircraft, all people and property. >> reporter: in the next five years, drone use by businesses and governments is expected to soar. the faa estimates as many as 7,500 drones could be flying in the u.s. airspace at any given time. thursday, the agency released a blueprint of steps necessary to make it happen, requiring drones have sensors enabling it to avoid crashing into another aircraft. standardized training for operators and identifying safe distances drones should keep from other planes. the faa is working on rules for small drones like this one to even larger ones, with a wingspan of a 737, capable of flying up to 60,000 feet. but some commercial pilots fear sharing the skies could mean disaster. >> i think most pilots,
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commercial aviators across the country, are deeply troubled with the accident rate of drones at this time. i think the number, the last report that i saw was 9.31 accidents per hundred thousand hours flight. that's three times the amount of any aircraft category. >> reporter: well, right now the faa approves unmanned aircraft on a case-by-case basis, usually for reasons like law enforcement, border security, or scientific research. next, the agency will pick six sites throughout the country to test the ability of manned and unmanned systems to fly safely in the sky. christie? victor? >> thank you so much. still to come on "new day," it wasn't exactly the prettiest thing in the world, but tiger woods was able to remain in the hunt at the turkish open. and cnn goes one on one with him, next. ok at it. so indulgent. did i tell you i am on the... [ both ] chicken pot pie diet! me too!
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. as someone would call them, the kings of college football, not everybody, of course, alabama cemented its status as the team to beat this evening. >> the crimson tide keeps rolling. jeff here this morning with the bleacher report. good morning. >> i think they've earned that title. back-to-back national titles. nick saban allows for zero margin of error. alabama wore down a tough lsu team saturday night. the tigers looked like they just might pull off the upset. this guy in the crowd, internet sensation for doing a dinosaur dance. captain webb watching in the crowd threw three touchdowns and tide keeps on rolling. right behind alabama, florida state and college football's freshman phenom famous. qualify for the acc title game. winston still in the heisman
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hunt set a new conference record for freshman touchdown pass. if alabama and florida state keep rolling and winning, looks like they'll play for the national title. and tiger woods is playing through the pain of hitting a tree at the turkish airlines open. he started the day's final round in third place, six strokes behind the leader. through 12 holes, he's still six week. earlier this week, tiger sat down with cnn's rachel nichols for an exclusive interview. >> i have to ask you about your girlfriend, lindsey vonn. i believe when someone asks to describe you, they asked her, and she said, he's funny and a little bit dorky. is that fair? >> i guess so. my teammates used to call me urkel. >> that's quite a confession, to admit that. duo that. back in college at stanford, he was teased as urkel. i don't know if he can do the urkel dance. >> that's the question. >> jeff fischel, thank you.
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saturday night. you might be just finishing up saturday night before you start sunday morning. >> you might still be up, for all we know. i'm christi paul. >> i'm victor blackwell. here are five things you need to know for your new day. number one. they survived the massive typhoon that ravaged much of the philippines, flattening entire villages, but now thousands of people are desperate for the basics. food, water, shelter, communication. the mayor of one city that's been almost completely destroyed says it's possible. as many as 10,000 people died in supertyphoon hiaiyan and the surge that followed. and police looking for two suspects after a gunfire erupted at a house party. a spokeswoman told me a short time ago that at least two people were killed. at least 15 shot and taken to hospitals, was there were at least 100 people that jammed into that house. up next, oregon officials say an employee was killed at an animal sanctuary after she was attacked by a wildcat.
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it happened just outside of portland. rescuers had a hard time getting to the worker, because there are several cats loose within the park. the facility's website describes it as a no-kill, last-hope sanctuary for wildcats in need. it's not open to the public. number four. after three intense days of negotiations, dploeiplomats fai to reach a deal that could prevent iran from making a nuclear weapon. secretary of state john kerry and officials from the european union were in geneva negotiating with iranian leaders. the agreement would have eased the economic sanctions on iran, but israel's prime minister was never on board, calling it a, quote, bad deal. and number five, good news, people of earth, the sky is not falling. well, yet. in less than 48 hours, a two-ton european space satellite is expected to plunge toward earth. we're serious, here. it ran out of juice last month. and get this, nobody knows exactly when or where this thing will fall. okay, back to some good news. it's being tracked online and there's a good chance it will
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just fall into an ocean. >> well, our own alexandra steel is joining us now with the latest on this falling satellite. what have you been able to dig up, alexandra. >> i know where it is. would you like to see it? >> yes! >> all right, come to my office. there it is. it's a satellite the size of a chevy suburban and you can see it right there, over africa. and since 2009, it's been orbiting the earth every eight minutes. this is just a great site. we'll put it online, it's like tracking santa. remember tracking santa? similar scenario. you can watch it and it really moves quite quickly. it's kind of cool. what really is happening, it's kind of coasting like a hang glider down to earth. that's what's happening. it's not whizzing. it's slowly -- we're trying to find a four to five-hour window in the next day or two, and that window is when we'll precisely be able to monitor where it is. we know where it is, but where it will fall will be key. so it's falling from space, as we told you. the time period of it landing is today into tomorrow.
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and it's dropping about three quarters of a mile an hour. and it is the most likely to hit the ocean, 70% of our world is ocean, right? and of that 30% left, not a lot of it's inhabited. so it's not just the only one, though. there are about a thousand satellites in space, but there's actually about 20,000 objects, kind of the size of your hand, that are just kind of up there floating, maybe items that have collided and gotten pushed into bits. but the good news is, space debris has never been reported to hit anybody. so there it is. it's about the size of a chevy suburban. and so pieces -- it most likely will break into about 30 to 40 pieces, maybe about 200 pounds, that's about as big as the pieces would be. so we'll monitor it and we'll watch it and it's coming down today or tomorrow. >> all righty. what about weather? anything in the weather we should keep an eye on? >> you may be able to see it anywhere, because look at all these sunny skies. high pressure over the entire
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country for the most part, beautiful conditions. it was kind of cold on the east coast yesterday. temperatures warming up today. so, 60 degrees to 70 degrees in atlanta and charlotte and nashville. so milder than it's been. so we've got a nice sunday in store for really most all of us. >> nice! alexandra steel, thank you for that delivery. we appreciate it. >> you're welcome. coming up, a cnn exclusive. >> the daughter of dr. martin macneill opening up the day after her father was convicted of murdering her mother. hear what she had to say to the jury. get paid to do something you really love, what would you do?" ♪ [ woman ] i'd be a writer. [ man ] i'd be a baker. [ woman ] i wanna be a pie maker. [ man ] i wanna be a pilot. [ woman ] i'd be an architect. what if i told you someone could pay you and what if that person were you? ♪ when you think about it, isn't that what retirement should be, paying ourselves to do what we love? ♪
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she's so pretty in the morning. live look downtown as the sun comes up. you can see the ferris wheel there just below the westin, the lights, the sun coming up on the horizon. going to be a nice day in atlanta. the daughter of now convicted murderer, dr. martin macneill, she had some really critical things to say about her father. >> she's not mincing words about it. macneill was found guilty yesterday of murdering his wife but drugging her and drowning her in a bathtub. the trial moved to the sentencing stage in january, but cnn's jean casarez sat down for an exclusive interview with macneill's daughter, alexis summers, in provo, utah. jean? >> reporter: christie and victor, mac macneill's daughter refused to believe that her mores death was natural. even within investigators turned away, she went to them, i know my father killed mid mother. one of the bases for the defense, though, was that alexis
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was father. that she was so angry at her father for cheating on her mother that she would do anything to get back at him. the jury has now spoken, but i sat down with alexis to set the record straight. >> as to count one, murder, guilty. as to count two, obstruction of justice, guilty. >> what was going through you before that verdict was read? >> i was just shaking, i was trembling, i was so scared and nervous. we knew the verdict was going to be coming at any moment and the culmination of so many years, fighting for this. >> your father's reaction when the verdict was read, he was nonemotional. just stood there. there seemed to be an acknowledgement at the end. you know him better than all of us, what does that say to you? >> i thought i knew him. now we've really come to understand who he really is and he's a calculated, cold, murderer.
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>> it's so ironic, in a sense, that this trial begins and you bring new life into this world. you've just had twins. what will you tell them about their grandma? >> just tell them the stories, the stories that my mom loved us. she loved all of her children. >> what will you tell your children about their grandfather? >> i don't know. i don't want -- i don't know if i want to tell them about him. he doesn't deserve to be a person in their lives. >> do you have any regrets at all? >> i definitely have regrets. i wish -- i wish i hadn't left to go back to school. i wish i had been there to protect my mom. >> did you get to meet the jurors? >> we did. it was actually very, a very amazing experience to be able to
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hug each of the jurors and thank them. >> if you could ask him one question right now, that you could get an ans on, what would that be? >> i would just ask him, i don't know, maybe why? why would you take her away from us? but i know why. he didn't care. he had a plan. he didn't care about my mom. >> alexis knows this is not over yet. another emotional experience in january. it will be the sentencing hearing for her father. according to utah law, victims can stand and make victim impact statements before the court. dr. martin macneill will also be allowed to speak. christie and victor, back to
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you. >> it will be interesting to see if he does say anything there. still to come on "new day," before you even think about making a friendly wager on one of today's football games, you need to sthee this. >> are you videoing? >> yes. >> you got to -- >> how one couple's high-risk bet ended with an arrest and a really angry wife. >> you know, veterans day coming up, and that's one of the times that we say thank you to all of you who serve our country, and service members aren't the only ones who work really hard on the battle field. for a lot of people in the military, service dogs are a key part of daily operations. and as this week's veterans in focus show us, returning home is a whole lot sweeter when you're with your best friend. >> reporter: 8-year-old diego doesn't say much. in fact, he never barks. this yellow lab spent the better part of his life talking with his nose and helping his country
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in the process. now retired, this former military bomb-sniffing dog has a new home. but it's within an old friend. >> oh, it feels fantastic. i've been waiting for this for a really long time. >> reporter: 34-year-old logan black worked as a bomb specialist and trained diego. the two served together on more than 40 missions in iraq, sniffing out everything from hidden weapons to large homemade bombs. logan says diego saved his life and many others more times than he can count. >> he comes up and starts sniffing a lot right next to where i'm standing, and then gives me a full indication that, hey, dad, something's here. and it turned out that there were two roadside bombs that had been buried, to deep for metal detectors to find. >> reporter: and logan wanted to return the favor. for years, he'd been searching for his old partner, even on facebook, wanting to adopt him after his service was over. >> no doubt diego would have found a happy home somewhere. but a home with me is totally
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different than a home with a new stranger. >> reporter: tuesday, the air force officially retired the dog and allowed black to adopt him. >> he was my best friend, my partner in iraq. no matter how bad things got in iraq, i always had something that loved me unconditionally. >> reporter: the rest of diego's life, logan will be returning that love. mine was earned orbiting the moon in 1971. afghanistan in 2009. on the u.s.s. saratoga in 1982. [ male announcer ] once it's earned, usaa auto insurance is often handed down from generation to generation because it offers a superior level of protection and because usaa's commitment to serve current and former military members and their families is without equal. begin your legacy.
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we want to get to more now about the effect of typhoon haiyan on the philippines, where this storm has really ripped parts of this country apart. there are growing fears this morning that the death toll is much higher than those initial estimates. >> the mayor of tacloban city says 10,000 people are confirmed dead, and we have 101 confirmed. paula, i understand you just spoke with the philippines' president, president aquino. what did he tell you? >> reporter: that's right, yes, christie and victor. there was a fair bit of anger from some of the people who were coming here to the airstrip, to the devastated airport, trying to get food and water, because they were complaining that the food and water is not getting to the area where it's needed. thener of the city is about ten miles away, but it's very
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difficult to access. only today have the roads actually been made accessible. people are trying to come here to get the food. i spoke to one filipino american woman, and she said that the storm surge and the typhoon were like a living hell. in fact, she said it was worse than hell. and when the president came to have a look around the area, she went straight up to him and showed him her anger, saying the philippines cannot do this on their own, they need help. so when i spoke to president aquino, i asked him why there was such a slow response. there's also a breakdown, the first responders, too many of them were also affected and did not report to work. that also contributed to the slow delivery. so we will be in coordination with the local government, the national government will be taking over on a temporary basis. and we will be putting in more people to fill up the positions that were vacated with the
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people who were depending upon to implement all of the processes and programs. >> reporter: so those first responders that they would be relying on did turn out to be the victims here. christie and victor, back to you. >> paula hancocks, thank you so much for bringing us the latest. stay safe there. and we'll just obviously keep you informed as to what happens, because it's just an almost hour-by-hour process of learning new information. >> those numbers are going up and we'll continue to follow the search for the people who survived and this fight to get resources to all those who need it. >> absolutely. now, if you're looking ahead at your week and you think you've got a rough one, try being the president. >> president obama may need to brace himself. cnn's erin mcpike is in washington. erin? >> reporter: christie and victor, president obama's approval rating hit a new all-time low this week, 39% in gallup's polling. but as tough as the going's been for the president in recent weeks because of obama care,
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it's about to get even rockier. >> reporter: president obama taking a break on the gulf course in florida, before what promises to be the most embarrassing week since the botched rollout of his signature la law. due out in the next few days are the actual enrollment members, americans who actually been able to sign up, due to the early problems with the obama care website. >> i can tell you our early enrollment numbers are going to be very low. >> if you like your health care plan, you can keep your health care plan. >> reporter: hasn't exactly turned out to be the case. on wednesday, house republicans will vote to ensure that americans with health care plans they like really won't have to switch. house speaker john boehner taunted him on twitter. president obama says he's sorry, but he owes americans more than that. he ought to keep the promise. mr. obama has promised his team will find a solution, telling nbc news -- >> obviously, we didn't get a good enough jobs in terms of how
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we crafted the law and that's something that i regret. that's something that we're going to do everything we can to get fixed. >> but no fix announced yet. and as of saturday afternoon, even the white house website was still saying, if you like your plan, you can keep it, and you don't have to change a thing due to the health care law. >> reporter: and democratic senators who are up for re-election next fall are getting nervous about all of this, sto tho they met with pret obama this last week to express their concerns, but republicans are keeping up the pressure. one of the president's thorniest critics, darrell issa, has subpoenaed the chief technology officer, todd park, to testify about the problems with the obama care website at a hearing this week. now, so far, the white house says he's too busy fixing the website issues to fix it. christie and victor? >> erin, thank you. also ahead on cnn's state of the union, host candy crowley talks with south carolina senator
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lindsey graham. also, republican party elder statesman bob dole about the gop transition. "state of the union," 9:00 eastern, only on cnn. and, guys, rule number one about being a good husband, do not taze your wife. >> bad idea. >> are you videoing? >> yes! >> no! >> she sounds like she's laughing, but stick around for me on one couple who took their bets over monday night's bears/packers game call the way to jail. your watching "new day."
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that's great. but before you go out to a sports bar today, you need to see this first. >> are you videoing? >> yes! >> okay, that's a husband tasing his wife. >> bad idea! >> mm-hmm. >> after she lost a bet over monday night's bears/packers game. seriously, he was doing that -- now, she was laughing, at the time, but by the third time, apparently it ticked her off and she got revenge. she called the cop and she sent him to jail. i know you want to know more about that. here's terry sater. >> reporter: this is the small town wisconsin tavern where a bears/packers romance between a husband and wife got flagged after monday night football. >> they had a bet between the two of them. the loser was supposed to get tased by the winner. >> reporter: and the bear, john grant, won, so his wife lost. >> reporter: the criminal
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complaint says at some point, the couple stepped outside the bar here to smoke cigarettes. they ended up in the alley and the wife told police, that's when the husband used the taser to shock her twice on her ba backside and once on the thigh. >> they kind of laughed it off, but then the wife got tased one more time and she got mad. >> i had no inkling whatsoever that they would end up in an altercation at the end of the night. >> christopher mcneil is the police chief. >> the taser he had was a skin contact type of taser, which actually, if you use it enough times or in a certain spot, can leave burn marks. >> the husband went to jail on a charge of possessing a electric weapon. >> now the bears fan is behind bars. >> which is always a good thing, you know. >> terry sater from wisn, thanks for that. bet dinner or taking out the trash or a week of dinner. that's enough. >> i think they know that now.
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>> they do now. we're so glad you've been with us this morning. >> we've got a lot more ahead on the next hour of your "new day." starts right now. good morning, good morning. the weekend is half hour, but we're going to start fresh this sunday morning. i'm victor blackwell. >> and i'm christi paul. 7:00 on the east coast, 4:00 on the west. they haven't even been to bed, i'm quite certain of it. this is "new day," sunday. >> we want to bring you the latest from the devastation in the philippines, from that monster typhoon. it's destroyed almost everything in its path. cnn has team coverage on the disaster. our andrew stevens is in hard-hit tacloban city. ivan watson is in manilla, just after taking an aerial tour of the typhoon devastation. we're going to go to them in just a moment. but first, there are fears that the death toll could soar to 10,000. hundreds of thousands of people have been driven out of their
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ho homes. >> andrew stevens and his crew rode out that vicious storm on a beach. >> and storm chaser james reynolds, he was there too. he has this dramatic report on the really scary moments when that storm hit. >> reporter: during the height of this storm, you know, the scream of the wind was just deafening. we could hear just thunderous, crashes of debris flying through the air. you know, at some point, you could feel the whole hotel, which is made of solid concrete, shaking as some unknown object was just repeatedly crashing into the side of the hotel. >> well, we have storm surge starting to flood the ground floor of the hotel. residents are evacuating up to the second floor. >> reporter: we had residents staying at the hotel on the ground floor, as you can see in the video, who were trapped. they were smashing windows in
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sheer desperation to try to get out of those hotel rooms, in total fear of their lives. >> here! >> reporter: i was riding out the storm with the cnn crew, andrew stevens and tim schwartz, and it was really, put the cameras down, we've got to get out there and help these people. otherwise, they could drown. >> we're good! everyone? >> reporter: it was a life-threatening situation for those people, and it was an incredibly dangerous situation. people are running the streets just dazed and confused. i just hope this gets -- it's hard to describe in words, but i hope this can give the viewers an understanding of what the situation is like there. it's desperate. >> we're covering the typhoon and its aftermath from all angles. i want to start with andrew stevens in that hard-hit city of tacloban. >> andrew, we know it's just about 8:00 p.m. there in tacloban city. the daytime, i'm sure, is
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devastating, was it must be so much worse at night without food and water and shelter and electricity. >> reporter: absolutely. i mean, where we're standing, victor, if you look behind me, we've lit up with the car lights, just a bit of debris. just 10, 20 yards down the road. but that goes right back for another half mile to the commercial center, which has been the scene of most of the looting, understandably, over shops there. a lot of looting going on, particularly yesterday. there's not so much to take anymore. most of the stuff has now been gone. i've been hearing reports that houses have been entered by gangs, looking for food, for whatever. i haven't been able to confirm that. and certainly yesterday when we were there, we were walking around and saw a lot of looting. we were speaking to a lot of people. there was never a sense of tension, never a sense of people turning on each other, but as you say, nightfall has no power here whatsoever. and this you've got a generator. you look behind me, see a couple of car lights down there and that's about it. even if you got a generator, you
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probably won't have any gas for it. that gives you an idea of the situation here. there is some food here. i saw a family today who had a great big bag of peanuts and sitting on the side of the road just eating peanuts. that will probably sustain them for the next couple of days. the next two days is critical to get the supplies in, to get enough supplies to feed this city. this is a city of 200,000, 250,000, everyone's been affected in some way or the other. there is very little food about, very little water about. that's critical as well. there are village pumps that are pumping out some, but getting the stuff here, next two days, it's going to be absolutely critical to start feeding these people. if it doesn't happen, then it can turn really, really nasty. >> we know that providence, devastated. 4.3 million affected across the 36 providences. let's turn now to ivan watson,
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live from the capital city of manilla. >> we know that the road to the airport, i think, to tacloban has now been opened. is that changing things? because as we understand it, there were a lot of groups in manila trying to get to tacloban. have they been able to do so now? >> reporter: well, we were able to fly there, krchristi. we basically, today, by jet, a small plane, followed the trail of the typhoon, starting with tacloban and from the air, it really is a shattered city. i saw a freighter ship washed up on to the shore of the city. it looked like a giant hand had come down and smooshed that town. and i was traveling with the head of the civil aviation authority, the equivalent of the faa, who's trying to reopen airports. he said three of their workers were killed at tacloban airport. that airport, of course, pretty much destroyed by the storm surge that went through there. now, we traveled west from
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tacloban, from the scenes of devastation that andrew was describing, and stopped, at least two other airports, where there was damage, where the airports had been shut. there was no power. cell phones not working, but they predict that the airports will reopen by monday. there were lines of people already at those airports. many of them tourists, eager to get out of the storm-affected area. but thankfully, though there was damage in these other towns that we visited, calibo and buswanga, it was nowhere near the scenes of real catastrophe there in the first population center that was hit by this supertyphoon on friday, that provincial capital of tacloban. back to you. >> all righty, ivan watson, thank you so much, for letting us see your perspective there. we appreciate it. >> we'll take a quick break, was right after the break, we'll talk with the representative of the philippines red cross to
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give an idea of all the help that's on the way and the struggle to get it to the people who need it. stay with us on "new day" sunday. the recent increase in cafeteria prices is not cool. when you vote for flo, we'll have discounts. ice-cream discounts. multi-cookie discounts. pizza loyalty discounts! [ kids chanting "flo!" ] i also have some great ideas on car insurance. [ silence ] finding you discounts since back in the day. call or click today. i like her.
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get help right away if you have swelling of the face or throat, or trouble breathing. tell your doctor your medical history. and find an arthritis treatment for you. visit celebrex.com and ask your doctor about celebrex. for a body in motion. the pictures are mind boggling, aren't they? and help cannot come fast enough for survivors of typhoon haiyan in the philippines. richard borden is the head of the philippine red cross joining us now by phone from manilla. thank you so much for being with us. we understand that an assessment team is in tacloban, a red cross assessment team, but aid workers and equipment had not been able to get there as of what we had heard. is there any update on access to these areas, richard? >> reporter: yes. tonight, moving out from here
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will be our rescue truck, that they can provide 25,000 liters per load. we're coming out also with food, coming out in ambulances, there's three ambulances. 5,000 liters of fuel. power lines, generators, 6 x 6 trucks, anything. we're going to take the route and we'll be there by midnight tomorrow, if we leave at midnight, hopefully we'll be there by midnight tomorrow. we're finally able to open the road leading to tacloban, so we'll be able to get there along with our food items. on the other side of the island, the icrc and the red cross have brought in a lot of food and a lot of items. unfortunately, they still haven't got the report on that, but, i hope that they weren't hijacked, and if they weren't, i would be very, very happy, and
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we would be able to take that also not just in tacloban, but the other areas that have been affected here. >> if i understand correctly, you're saying that you fear that maybe one of your trucks was hijacked? how concerned are you about that kind of thing happening? we are hearing of looters already. >> well, there will always be mobsters in every area. and the important thing for the police and the law enforcement is to capture the ring leaders right away before they start. as it was, the truck stopped and there was a long convoy and people started milling around it, back open of the truck, but we were able the to turn around and get them out, from what i hear. in the meantime, there is a lot of other people who are trying to aid this situation. and that is why i called on the police and the military to immediately arrest the ring leader of all these people. >> are you able to work well
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with the military and the government there as they try to get through? i'm wondering, when we hear about looters, what kind of authority is in place. and also, what is the greatest need there? >> the country has a history of being looters. but not all our people are looters. and i will say this. perhaps it's not a justification. the fact that they had been isolated. and the fact that there's no more food in the area is causing people to really do that. that's why the government and red cross and all other government agencies bring food as much as possible to the area and be sure that people line up and are able to be served. we're bringing in water, for example, for the people, but water, and i'm sure the government is doing that. and all we need is a little patience, a little bit more
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resolute handling of the rationing of all these things. and of course, to make people feel that help, indeed, is right there already and all they have to do is line up and don't have to be pushed around. >> all right, well, richard gordon, head of the philippines red cross, thank you so much for all of your efforts. thank you for updating us on what's happening there. best of luck to you. we'll continue to, you know, hopefully talk with you and get updates as things progress there. but thank you. stay safe to all there. and for you, i know, you're sitting at home wondering, gosh, is there anything i could do? if you want like to hope victims of the typhoon, visit our website, cnn.com/impact. cnn has found multiple ways you can make a donation. and we're keeping track of all the charities assisting with this rescue effort. and thank you for checking that out. >> all right, christi, i know our viewers will certainly support. a lot of people love the motor city, they love detroit. can detroit rising again? next on "new day," a new wave of
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♪ good morning, detroit. a live look here at the downtown area of the motor city. high temperature today, and you know it is november in detroit. prepare yourself. 46 degrees. >> i'm from ohio. when they say 47, yeah, that's probably -- >> like, whatever! 46 degrees. we're making light of the temperature, but there really are some difficult times to fight back in detroit. economically depressed, plagued with crime. the city is, we know, in bankruptcy. they filed in july. >> but the historic motor city isn't about to give up. our very own george howe has more on how politicians and start-ups are helping carry
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detroit into the future. >> reporter: christi, victor, it is a crucial time for one of america's most storied but troubled cities, from crime to abandoned neighborhoods and even the largest municipal bankruptcy in the nation's history. but when you take a closer look at what's happening in detroit, you do find some signs of hope. when you think detroit, what do people think about first? >> of course, they think motown. music. you you think the automobile industry, you think athletic tea teams. but the city is changing. >> reporter: most think the change that's coming about in detroit is the better. it's the getting there, they say, is tough. you see it in the headlines. >> justice! >> when do we want it?! >> now! >> reporter: on the streets of detroit, two separate triple murders just this week alone. folks here are fed up with the crime. >> we just have to be crime. we have to keep thinking about and praying to god and having faith, and just hoping, hoping,
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even though hope is really not fair, but we still have to keep hoping. >> reporter: then there's the issue of bankruptcy. the city is applying for a process that could dramatically cut the value of hard-earned pensions for thousands of retirees. even precious pieces of detroit's institute of art could be put up for sale to the highest bidder, to help make up for more than $18 billion in debt. >> as an elected official, you know, you represent this city. you grew up here. how do you cope, how do you deal with all the negative headlines that come out of detroit? >> it's hard sometimes. this probably had to happen. this was 40, 50 years in the making. we had to come to this point here. you know, what will we look like this time next year or two to three years there now, and there's great hope and optimism. we have people all over this world that are buying parcels in this city, preparing for the rebirth and renaissance of our city. >> reporter: renaissance comes in the most unlikely places, where most see a skyline of abandoned buildings, businesses
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like detroit labs are seizing opportunity. this company makes all sorts of mobile apps, and have had some fun with it too. >> we're here in the madison block. there are dozens and dozens of start-ups, like detroit labs. there are lots of business reasons to be here, but it's also great that the entrepreneurial activities taking place right downtown. >> reporter: detroit labs is one of many new start-ups, backed we a private equity group called detroit venture partners, a firm run by native detroit we are, dan gilbert, the founder and c of quicken loans and gilbert is doubling down on detroit. in addition to the ventures he's supporting, he's moved all of his quicken loan employees back into downtown detroit, setting the stage for others to follow. >> as they're looking down here, every time they see an empty building like that, they should look at it as an opportunity to come and make the space they want, make the company they want.
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>> reporter: it's the hope this city is counting on, that seeds of optimism are just starting to take root and people here are determined to turn the tide and steer the motor city into better days ahead. as detroit heads into bankruptcy, there is new optimism as new faces take the helm. a new mayor takes office in january, along with five new members of the city's nine council members. their one and only job is to turn things around. christi, victor? >> and our george howell in detroit for us. it's going to ache a lot, but they are working on. >> that was a great thing the guy said, in terms of switching your brain around, and said, instead of seeing that building as something that's just a complete mess, see it as what you can make it. >> be optimistic about a it. hey, talk about optimism, something good coming up in detroit. his second season finale, "parts unknown," anthony bourdain takes us to the motor city to see how the failing economy has changed the landscape and the lives of the people there. >> you can get more insight into
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the decline of detroit at 9:00 p.m. eastern. and anthony is also hosting a live one-hour show after the finale from las vegas. you know you don't want to that miss that. all righty, coming up on "new day." sometimes playing for a team means going above and beyond what others ask of you. >> that's exactly what a boy did for his team and you won't believe what he did to give his teammates a boost of motivation. let's check in with dr. sanjay gupta to see what's coming up at 7:30 eastern. good morning, sanjay. >> christi, the food and drug administration is making this major recommendation, which is to get rid of trans fats. they're the ultimate junk food. it could happen. how soon? we'll tell you. also, you might be in for a shock when you see the potential replacement. we have it at the bottom of the hour. . and i'm michelle. and we own the paper cottage. it's a stationery and gifts store. anything we purchase
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time now for the good stuff. that's where we feature stories about some of the good news out there. and first up, free bacon. >> that's good! the skst state women's basketball team sizzled up more than 300 pounds of bacon friday night. it was a move to lure students out to their season opener. there is something about the smell of bacon. >> administers say it started as a joke, but it worked. >> we talked about, you know, the normal giveaways like t-shirts, bobbleheads, that kind of stuff. we talked about food, pizza being a big one, and jokingly threw out the idea of bacon and the student advisory board just ate it up. they were so excited about it. >> it took chefs about six hours to fry up all those crispy strips. >> just before it gets burnt. there was an incredible moment for a seventh grade boy confined to a wheelchair. he's a huge football team and
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loves his hometown medical school team, but he can't play because he was paralyzed in a car crash. now, he is still important to the team, though. he's their manager. and during the last game of the season, bain did something special for his teammates as they faced off against one of their biggest rivals. he surprised them by doing something he's been working on for ten years. watch this. he got out of his wheelchair and he took his first steps across the field. >> now, if i walk on to the field, i'll tell them, hey, if i can walk, anything the possible. y'all can beat these guys. >> that's amazing. he saved that for them. bain admits he's had his up and downs, but his main message is simple, never give up. >> what an example. i love to see the team cheering for him, too. that always gives you a little bit of oomph extra. if you've looked a to the calendar already, i cannot believe it's almost
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thanksgiving. >> i was telling you they were playing the new year's stuff in the mall already. >> the christmas stuff, that's right. but we've got to get through the annual thanksgiving day parade, right? and macy's knows that. they took some of their stars out for a test spin this weekend. yeah, the balloons included the likes of sponge bob, square pants, and of course you saw snoopy, there he is. and woodstock. they're just making sure they still know how to fly. >> everything's still in the air, everything's working out. >> what is that? >> i've watched the cartoon, but i can't remember the name. there's spongebob. >> i was trying to figure out the other one. at this point, i rike to watch it to see if there's anything i recognize. before we go, logon to our impact your world site to learn how you can help victims of the typhoon in the philippines. you've been seeing some incredible pictures this morning. they are so in need. and the site is cnn.com/impact. >> you can do something good, too. cnn has found multiple ways that you can make a donation, and we're keeping track of all the charities assisting the rescue
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effort. and you know, if you've been watching this morning, the folks there certainly need it. >> they do! and thank you so much for checking that out and anything you do for them. we'll see you back here at the top of the 8:00 hour eastern for another hour of "new day sunday." >> but first, could a simple medication save addicts from drug overdoses? "sanjay gupta md" starts right now. we've got a big, important show today. the food and drug administration is making a major recommendation, get rid of trans fats. it's the ultimate junk food. this could happen. how soon? we're going to tell you. also, you might be in a shock when you see the potential replacement. also, i'm wearing a magnetic shirt. take a look at this. there's an amazing story behind this shirt. let's get started. first off'd today, i want you to meet a young woman. her name is liz and she's been struggling with heroin addiction. i recently came across this remarkable video that shows her overdosing, even close
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