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tv   CBS Weekend News  CBS  September 4, 2016 4:30pm-5:01pm MDT

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captioning sponsored by cbs >> quijano: where is hermine headed next? the deadly storm gained strength leaving a path of destruction along the coast. also tonight, voters weigh in on hillary clinton's honesty issues, and whether donald trump's minority outreach is changing minds. minnesota. what lead police to the remains of a boy who had been missing for decades. a powerful earthquake felt in seven states rattled the oil & gas industry. and pope francis celebrates mother ter-- elevates mother teresa to sainthood. >> mother teresa was called saint of the gutters and before becoming pope francis was referred to as the bishop of the
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this is the "cbs weekend news." >> quijano: good evening, i'm elaine quijano. hermine is gaining strength and threatening to become a hurricane again. the slow moving system has already killed at least two people including a homeless man hit by a falling tree in florida, and a truck driver blown off the road in north carolina. storm warnings and watches are posted along the atlantic coast from north carolina to massachusetts. tony dokoupil son the jersey shore. >> reporter: after mowing through florida as a hurricane, tropical storm hermine chewed the coast of georgia and the carolina saturday bringing heavy rain and punishing wind. rough seas rocked this royal caribbean cruiseship en route to new jersey to bermuda. now hermine may crash a five foot wall of water into the midatlantic. the storm is menacing picturesque coastline from maryland to massachusetts, much of it newly rebuilt after superstorm sandy tore through in 2012.
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>> how bad was the damage with sandy? >> devastating, devastating. this has all been rebuilt over the last four years. approximately fouries. the icon of-- it was devastating. >> reporter: sandy damaged thousands of homes in social county. residents are aren't taking any chances with hermine which could bring record floods. emergency coordinator bill hibell. >> just out here making sure what is on the other side of the boardwalk but when the wind >> reporter: new jersey governor chris christie put hermine in context. >> i want to make this clear, this is certainly not sandy. nowhere near that. >> reporter: but he warned against complacency. >> the biggest thing today is for people not to be lulled by the nice weather that nothing is going to what, something is going to happen. >> reporter: the storm was already washing out holiday weekend plans. >> we didn't think it would be this bad with the waves being this, you know, tall. but i would imagine the undertow would take you right out, so
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>> reporter: instead of one last weekend of summer fun, beaches for hundreds of mile along the atlantic coast are closed and swimming is forbidden. >> farther south storm cleanup continued as officials tried to restore power to thousands of homes from florida to virginia. so far the midatlantic impact is economic. >> i see empty tables here. >> reporter: at one sea side eatery in the boardwalk in new jersey. >> today we were expecting a lot more people but because of the storm, a lot of people-- he had had a lot of cancelaon the hotel people. >> reporter: as it continues to churn up the atlantic coast officials warning res dnts to secure loose items so they don't become project aisles, elaine, in seaside heights many homes were elevated after sandy. for those that weren't, the fire department here has handed out about 500 sand bags. >> quijano: tony dokoupil thanks. meteorologist pamela gardner is trapping the storm at wbz boston. >> the storm continues to churn
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winds. max winds 70 miles per hour moves east northeast at six miles per hour but it is soon to take a turn towards the midatlantic states and that is where we have westerns and watches in place also across south eastern new england. the storm will continue to push slowly north, northwest and then linger to our south and west here. tuesday morning, 75 mile per hour winds. that is equal to hurricane strength, tuesday into thursday, the storm exits out to sea and then we're done with it but prior to this, we could pick up some beneficial rain in south eastern massachusetts. one to two inches of rainfall, with the heaviest rain staying offshore and those max wind gusts, 50 miles per hour from time to time, right during labor day. and we're also dealing with some intense wind gusts of 35 to 60 miles per hour all along the coast, primarily tuesday morning with major erosion likely across the beaches. >> quijano: pamela gardner, thanks. the u.s. is not rushing into a deal with russia to try to end
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officials from both sides spent the weekend trying to reach an agreement. margaret brennan is traveling with president obama at the g-20 summit in china. >> reporter: u.s. officials thought they would be announcing a ground-breaking deal with russia to coordinate air strikes against isis and al-qaeda-linked terrorists in syria. but there was a hitch. >> there still remains, i say, a couple tough issues. >> reporter: russia pulled back from their initial agreement with the u.s it would have ended civilians and enabled aid to flow into areas like aleppo. any agreement with russia would be extraordinary given their propping up bashar al-assad by bombing u.s. rebels trying to overthrow him. but mr. obama admitted that america now needs russia if it has any chance of ending the has any chance of ending the war that has killed 400,000 people and created five million
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from the russians on reducing the violence and easing the humanitarian crisis, then it's difficult to see how we get to the next phase. >> reporter: russian president vladimir putin and mr. obama may try to revive the deal when they meet tomorrow. the trip itself got off to an awkward start yesterday when just after landing, a chinese official yelled at national security advisor susan rice and tried to block her from joining the president's motorcade, prompting the secret service to intervene. president obama downplayed that incident saying he understands how much strain countries are under when they have to host the u.s. president given his sizeable security entourage. elaine? >> quijano: margaret brennan, thank you. >> labor day marks the beginning of the homestretch for the presidential campaigns with nine weeks until the election, a new cbs battleground tracker poll shows hillary clinton leading donald trump by eight points in pennsylvania. in north carolina our poll shows
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for more on this let's bring in errol barnett and cbs news election director anthony salvanto in washington. >> anthony, new your new numbers show clinton still in a winning position but weaknesses remain. >> she's got the lead nationally, she's got the lead in enough states, in the battleground states that if the election were held today she would be in a commanding position. but for a frontrunner she has remarkably high unfavourable numbers and she also has issues with the trust question. exemplified by people's skepticism over answers to the email server question. where many more people say that her answers are becoming lessy believable. >> and this is why her vice presidential candidate tim kaine is doing some damage control on that front. let's listen to him on abc. >> she did make a mistake. and she made it by deciding she wanted to use one device rather than multiple devices. she has apologized for that. she said it was a mistake.
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>> now for the republicans, what are people saying about donald trump's perceived immigration policy shifts. >> more people think he has been steady than think that he has switched, to become easier on people who are in the country illegally. but this underlines the balancing act that he has. he is trying to appeal to a broader base of voters who don't necessarily like his current policies but he's also trying to keep his base happy. >> his number two governor mike pence is defending the policy. let's listen to what he said sunday. >> we're going to build a wall. we're going to enforce the laws of this country, we're going to end catch and release. we're going to do all of the things that politicians in both political parties have beenhe talking about for more than a generation. >> we should explain that all of this is part of donald trump's overall minority outreach. any proof that's working yet? >> he's still not polling well among minority voters, but then again we might not expect polls like that to move overnight or even over the course of a week. >> let's listen to a bit of donald trump speaking at a black
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>> i'm here today to listen to your message. and i hope my presence here will also help your voice to reach new audiences in our country. >> i notice he said new audiences there. my thought being moderate republicans? >> yeah, it could be. because you've got some of those moderate republicans who heretofore have said that theyns don't necessarily like the rhetoric that's come out of his campaign. and so watching him try to reach out to a broader base could bring some of them back into the fold. stuff. cbs elections director anthony salvanto, thanks for your time, elaine. >> errol barnett, thank you. >> there was a break this weekend in a cold case that had shocked the nation. 11 year old jacob wetterling ling disappeared nearly 30 years ago on a rural road near his home in central minnesota. jamie yuccas is here. >> my name is jacob wetterling. i'm in fifth grade. >> jacob wetterling's face has
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when he, his brother and a friend biked to a convenience store to rent a movie. 11 year old jacob would never come home. for more than 26 years jacob's mother patty wetterling has pleaded for his abductor to come forward. >> we will hope and pray that one day we will have the answer to the one question that we've asked forever. where is jacob. >> on saturday sterns county sheriff's deputies confirmed jacob's remains were located. after longim heinrich lead the fbi to a farm in central minnesota not far from the abduction site. sources say he gave the location as part of an ongoing plea deal. according to court documents, heinrich was questioned in connection to the case in 1990 but never charged. neighbors say they always knew he was a suspect. >> everyone just got to talking and everyone heard about it. that he was a suspect back in '89. they booked him and took his mug
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>> reporter: the case changed the lives of parents and children in minnesota. >> we went everywhere. we just knew you had to be home for dinner and you had to be home at bed time. and could you roam anywhere. >> life changed after that. very much. >> reporter: jacob's family has not spoken publicly but his mother patty wetterling did tweet out our family is drawing strength from all your love and support. we're struggling with words at this time. thank you for your hope. hashtag jacob's hope. the case had national implications. named after jacob wetterling that requires states to set up sex offender registries, elaine. >> quijano: thank you. mother teresa was proclaimed a saint today by pope francis in a ceremony that drew an estimated 120,000 people to the vatican. our seth doane was there. >> the faithful packed st. peter's square beneath the giant portrait of the now saint teresa
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acknowledged i think maybe we will have some difficulty calling her saint teresa, because of her tenderness, he added, we will continue to call her mother teresa. >> i think people recognized her as a living saint. >> yeah. >> when she was alive. they knew. >> rick farrell and mary basilone came from anchorage, alaska. >> she gave of herself. she gave her life to help the poor. >> reporter: pope francis praised that dedication as nuns the pope noted mother teresa had defended human life, the unborn and the abandoned. mother teresa was called the saint of the gutters. and before becoming pope, francis was referred to as the bishop of the slums. both put the poor at the center of their ministry. today pope francis called poverty a crime. in rome, indian flags were flown with pride while in kolkata formerly known as calcutta where
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missionary work for nearly half a century, others catched the canonization on a large tv screen. erin mckelvee and paul hunter traveled from dallas. this he are not catholic but said mother teresa's appeal is universal. >> great humanitarian, great compassion for the less fortunate. so she means something to many people regard its of faith. >> the albanian born nobel peace prize winner who dedicated her life to those in the shadowsas honored today in the bright sun light, less than two decades after her death. seth doane, cbs news, rome. >> quijano: we want to note the passing of dabny montgomery, he was a tuskegee airman serving in southern italy during world war ii and a civil rights activist in selma, alabama. he served as a body guard to dr. martin luther king, jr. on his 1965 march for voting rights. in 2007 montgomery was awarded a
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final weeks talking to school kids about his experiences. dabny montgomery was 93 years old. coming up next, this weekend's powerful earthquake in oklahoma shakes up the oil & gas industry. the oil & gas industry. laxatives. linzess treats adults with ibs with constipation, or chronic constipation. it can help relieve your belly pain, and lets you have more frequent and complete bowel movements that are easier to pass. do not give linzess to children under 6 and it should not be given to children 6 to 17. it may harm them. don't take linzess if you have a bowel blockage. get immediate help if you develop unusual or severe stomach pain,
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it was bad. >> reporter: in 2015 oklahoma averaged 2.5 earthquakes a day with a magnitude of 3.0 or higher, a total of 907 at that rating took the state last year compared to just two in 2008. oklahoma geological experts have connected in saturday's quake prompted the state to initiate the fastest shutdown of waste water wells in state's history, 37 are scheduled to be closed. >> if we stopped it tomorrow t is not like it would stop tomorrow. >> seismologist susan hough said induced earthquake mainly caused by waste water injection aren't as severe as naturally caused one but that could change if oklahoma and other states where fracking is booming don't take note.
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steps are going to help overall, the rates are going go down and the hazard will go down. but we don't have an exact crystal ball so there is the potential certainly for more earthquakes. there is the potential for bigger earthquakes than what we have seen. >> the 37 waste water wells set to be shuts down are just a small fraction of the 4200 currently permitted by the state. elaine, the oklahoma governor has declared a state of emergency for the affected area. >> quijano: mireya, thank you. still ahead, the story of a sick child and the healing power of horses. horses. ? baby,? from the makers of lantus?, ? slice it right. ? toujeo? provides blood sugar-lowering activity for 24 hours and beyond,
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pharmacist today about a vaccine that can help prevent shingles. >> quijano: in new jersey a little girl who has been battling cancer is starting third grade this week. she couldn't go to school last year. marlie hall tells us how she recently discovered the healing power of horses. >> reporter: kaia carroll says she hasn't had this much fun in months. >> awesome, so much fun. >> the eight year old has a rare form of leukemia, but last year of her life has been a blur of doctors, hospitals and chemotherapy. >> this week i felt good. i wasn't really nauseous and i wasn't in any pain, really. >> kaia and 19 other young patients took part in pony power therapy in the ramapo mountains. patients and their families learn to ride.
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four day program. >> lots of joy on the farm. there is some exercise. we're getting dirty so there is just endless opportunity for physical, emotional, recreational, social. >> reporter: despite their size and strength, horses tend to be very calm. studies have shown children who spend time with them experience lower levels of stress. pediatrician steven percenty says riding also helps build muscle and coordination. >> particularly with kids that have developmental disabilities understanding, get them on the animals and to be moving limbs in a different way is really helped them. >> reporter: kaia has also he gained something her parents longed to get back. >> this has brought so much happiness to her. she has looked forward to this for so long. it's really nice to know that opportunities are there for them, to make them feel special. >> reporter: marlie hall, cbs news, mahwah, new jersey. >> quijano: great to see you. up next, the heart warming story of a college football star and
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one of them travis rudolph, the team's star wide receiver noticed one sixth grader in particular. >> i saw him by himself and i was just like, yo, can i have a seat, eat with you. he was like sure, why not. we started off having a good conversation. >> i was sitting on this side. >> reporter: that kid was 11 year old bo paske. >> you looked up and there he was. >> yeah. >> and what did he say? >> he said what's up dude? >> someone near by took this photo of bo and travis having lu notice everyone else in the picture is sitting far away. you see, bo has autism and often eats lunch by himself. >> on the days that he is sitting alone, i think those are the days that it bothers me more than it bothers him. >> reporter: leah is bo's mother. she posted the photo to facebook saying this is one day i didn't have to worry if my sweet boy ate lunch alone because he sat across from someone who is the a hero in many eyes.
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>> i'm just moved with emotion at his generosity and his kindness. i don't know what made him pick bo, but i'm so grateful he did. >> reporter: travis rudolph could score a million touchdown this season, and never come close to making one family so happy. >> i haven't gone through bullying but i have seen it and i don't like it i don't approve of bullying. i feel like it's wrong. honestly, that say cool person, i will hang out with him any day. >> bo. >> right here. >> rep w wanted to sit with him. >> i'm a superstar. everybody recognizes me. >> mark strassman, cbs news, tallahassee. >> quijano: we'll be cheering for them both. that is the cbs weekend news for this sunday. later on cbs, "60 minutes." the new continues now on our 24 hour digital network cbsn as cbs news.com. i'm elaine quijano in new york. for all of us at cbs news, thank
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coming up on cbs4 news at 5:00, breaking tonight, firefighters are on the scene of a fast moving wildfire in larimer county. some homeowners have been told to leave. plus, how the community is coming together to help a family of a sheriff's deputy injured in a shooting. and hermine continues to churn up trouble along the east coast. a check on where the storm could strike next. and huge crowds at the vatican as mother te
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copter 4 is over a wildfire where emergency crews are evacuating homes. this fire is burning near county road 59 and starwood trail never livermore. that's not far from the colorado/wyoming border in larimer county. firefighters estimate the fire at 200 acres.

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