tv CBS This Morning CBS November 6, 2015 7:00am-9:00am CST
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good morning. today is friday, november 6th, 2025. welcome to "cbs this morning." did a bomb take down the russian airliner. presidential politics take a bizarre turn. ben carson's new comments that will be the talk of the trail. >> hundreds of students at a colorado high school could face felony charges for exchanging sexually charged photos. we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener." your world in 90 seconds. he was a lot more than is now. >> the president says a bomb could be blamed for the russian jet crash. >> the department of homeland security is expected to announce plans to tighten regulations on u.s.-bound flights from international airports. >> do you think i'm a pathological liar like cnn does? >> ben carson is on the defense against cnn's investigation
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about his violent childhood. >> yes,s, this poll says he would beat you by 10%. >> we will just have to wait and see how that turns out. >> well, maybe you should start saying some crazy stuff. >> the coast guard is searching for a man who fell off the oasis of the sea druce ship northwest of the turks and caicos. >> a tornado toucheded dowow near ft. worth yesterday. >> the roof of the building just flew off. >> at least six people killed early this morning in arkansas. police say the bus went off an interstate and crashed. >> it's now reported that joe gliniewicz tried to hire a hitman to kill an official. >> a disaster in the making from brazil. a dam burst burying a small town and toxic slides. >> bengals at 8-0. >> all that. >> this forecast felt tonight -- what are you doing?
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>> will you marry me? >> yes! yes! >> all that matters. >> what if god was a woman? >> well, god's a woman and she definitely didn't write the bible. >> on "cbs this morning." >> president obama has found a way to set a positive -- using differenen variations of the word hate. >> good morning, kansas city! hey! a champion! hey! hey! yea! yea! hey! nice. announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota toyota. let's go places. with him to "cbs this morning." and, hey! charlie rose is on assignment and norah o'donnell on is off so we are in good company with anthony mason. >> hey! >> and kristine johnson.
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this morning that a security lapse in egypt allowed a terrorist to slip a bomb on the doomed russian jetliner. the inveveigation is focused on who haha access to that plane before it took off. the crash on saturday killed all 224 people on board. his first public comment about the disaster, president obama told a radio interview that it could have been terrorism. >> i think there is a possibility that there was a bomb on board. and we are taking thatery seriously. we are going to spend a lot of time just making sure that our own investigators and our own intelligence community figures out what is exactly going on before we make any definitive prononncements but it is certainly possible there was a bomb on board. >> thousands of british tourists stranded in egypt are beginning
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alex ortiz is at the airport in is because of airport capacity. many here are still looking for a way home. britishlanes have begun flying the nearly 20,000 tourists who are in sharm el sheikh after the uk suspended flights to and from the red sea report on wednesday. the airport is under scrutiny as flight restrictions support airport security is not up to federal standards despite the effort of egyptians to show off their safety measures. passengers getting on flights with liquid and one recounted paying airport official to get on the board to skip security. >> he put it the baggage on the conveyor belt and the girl checked her in and at no point did they go through a scanner. >> reporter: without waiting for
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the investigators report, that will detail why the plane went down. >> the reason we have acted before thaha is because of intelligence and information we had that gave us the concern that it was more likely than not it was a terrorist bond. >> reporter: the egyptian president visited london this weekeknd even he couldn't change the prime minister's mind. u.s. intelligence has told cbs news they now before it took off. >> alex ortizn sharm el sheikh, thank you. this morning, the egypt crash is triggering new security
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the department of homeland security is expected to roll out enhanced screenings for overseas flights as early as today. kris van cleave is in washington with what travelers can expect. >> reporter: sources tell cbs news discussions were under way thursday about the exact measures to take, how and where to increase security. out of an abundance of caution, the transportation security administration will put some procedures in place to heighten security for overseas flights. an important note here. no u u. airlines directly serve this region of egypt. however, one concern is the potential for an explosive to slip through screening at a remote airrt and make its way on to an american-bound airlrler. the underwear bomber left africa and connected through amsterdam where he boarded a flight for the united states. yesterday during that radio interview, president obama said the u.s. is taking the possibility of a bomb on board the russssn airliner very seriously, adding we know that the procedures we have here in the united states are different than some of the procedures that
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existed for outbound and inbound flights there. that difference between screening procedures here and abroro is a key concern for u.s. security officials. >> cbs news national security analyst juan zarate is in washington. good mororng. >> good morning. >> reporter: what do you make of the effort to step up international security on flights? >> the u.s. has to do something because a securit question of access. who has access to these aircraft that could be headed to the u.s.? and that is a very real risk and threat. >> juan, the u.s. and britain certrtnly leaning towards a bomb theory but egypt and russian are saying not so fast. what does that say to you? >> the conclusions have consequences.
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you see each country evaluating the risk on their own. the uk, obviously, has 20,000 tourists on the ground and they have been stung by terrorist attacks on their tours in the past and keep in mind that tunisian a beach resort attack. each country is e eluating the risk based on the consequences. for egypt and russian the consequences are extremely high if, in fact, this was a terrorist attk that brought down the airliner. each country is evaluating and determining the data on their own based on their calculation of risk. >> so if isis did target this russian plane with a bomb, i mean, what are the implications here? >> this is a game changer. if, in fact, isis brought down this russian aircraft,t means that the threat from isis is no longer just contained to the environment of syria and iraq but it h a more global dimension. it means the u.s. and russiaand the west have to worry about the isis affiliates that are cropping up around the world places like libya, yemen and even afghanistan. it does then raise the
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question -- do we have enough time to deal with what may be a metastasizing threat and frankly do we have a new global war on terror and this time not against al qaeda but perhaps against the lamic states. . >> how long before we determine what is happening here? can we trust the information we are getting from russia and egypt at this point? >> we don't have u.s. experts on the ground have to wait for the egyptians to invite our experts in but we are certainly evaluating data that we have. obviously, the satellite coverage has provided some of that data with respect to the heat flash which has led to the conclusion that there was an explosion on the aircraft. we are going to have evaluation of intelligence from thehe outside. so we will be able to evaluate the data and the report as it comes in from egypt. but we don't have our folks on the ground. >> juan zarara, thank you for joining us this morning. millions in the south and the midwest face a storm threat today. heavy downpours and suspected tornadoes hit texas and oklahoma and hammering the cars and
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buildidis there. the strong thunderstorms are moving across the mississippi and ohio valley this morning. omar villafranca is in ft. worth where a large building literally had its roof shredded. >> reporter: good morning. the decorative roof ripped off and landed here in the parking lot and smashing several cars. over here there are large chunks of metal sheets that came tumbling down off of that building. debris scattered hundreds of feet. the good news, no one was hurt. the roof of the building just [ bleep ] blew off! >> reporter: a likely tornado ripped through the roof of this office building thursday sending sheets of metal debris flying through the air. wrapping around cars, smashing out windows, and terrifying the employees inside. >> we went into panic mode. we ran out. we went into a bathroom. i have never been in a tornado. it's off my checklist now! >> reporter: overnight
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there were 60 miles an hour. flash flood warnings were posted in corsicana. int. worth a stead stream of violent lightning strikes lit up the night's sky. the powerful line of storms lashed the region with violent winds. strong enough to knock over trees in oklahoma. and pummeled decatur with baseball-sized hail. at least three tornadoes were reported in texas. the wicked weather even put football on hold. high winds toppled these stadium lights in ponder moments after the field was evacuated. no one was hurt. >> well, i think that we are very blessed and i've seen a lot of weird things and this is certainly unusual. >> reporter: the forecast here in ft. worth is promising for the rest of the day. but overnight in navarro county
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an inch and a half rain fell less than an hour and sparked flash flooding and several people had been rescued. a bus crash in arkansas kikied at least six people overnight. police say the charter bus veered off interstate 40 and then slammed into an overpass. several others in this group from michigan are in the hospital. the collision crushed the roof and the back of the bus. the cause is under investigation. presidential campaign is taking a new turn for the top two republican candidates. the department of homeland d securiri confirms donald trump and ben carson are getting secret service protection. carson is also gaining more attention for new comments about a violent story from his huge. jan crawford is in washington. >> reporter: good morning. carson, i mean, he is taking hits from his republican opponents and media whether he made up part of his life's store and thursday night carson pushed back. . >> those claims are absolutely true.
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you know, i am 100% sure ty are true. >> reporter: ben carson says the counts of an angry violent youth are true, includidi an attempted stabbing. >> the person that i tried to stab, you know, i talked to today, and it was a close relative of mine. >> reporter: a cnneport suggested otherwise. >> cnn has been unable to locate witnesses or victims. >> do you think i'm a pathological liar like cnn does? or do you think i'm an honest person. >> reporter: carson telling ofof that story over the years has evolved and 1990 auto biography "gifted hands" carson said he relative. it was in a film. >> the attempted stabbing incident occurred when with i was 13 or 14. ying to hit my mother in the head with a hammer, that was around the same time as the stabbing incident. >> reporter: republican rival
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neurosurgeon on twitter saying, the carson story is either a total fabrication,r if true even worse. trying to hit mother over the head with a hammer or stabbing friends? as carson's poll numbers grow, so does the scrutiny. >> now, my own personal theory. >> repororr: on thursday, the 64-year-old again defended his 1998 remarks that the egyptian pyramids were built by joseph to store grain., >> is that something you think people should know about? >> no. i think that ---ou know, some people believe in the bible, like i do. and don't find that to be silly at all and believe that god created the earth and don't find that to be silly at l. >> reporter: it might seem strange to see that, you know, someone insisting these bad things from his past are true but that has been a big part of carson's personal story of redemption. he o oen talks as a teenager he was saved from a life of violence when he found god, that his anger just went away. gayle?
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>> thank you, jan. the next republican presidential debate will have a smaller field and that leaves some o othe candidates left out. tuesday's prime time debate on fox business network now features john kasich, jeb bush, marco rubio, donald trump, ben carson, ted cruz, carly fiorina and randfall. mike huckabee and chris christie are to the lower poll. george take packy and lindsey graham have been dropped completely. fox business says their poll mbers are just too low. on "face the nation," donned trump and benefitarson and krir kirsten gillibrand will be guests. this morning, jeb bush is rejecting new criticism of his
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defense secretary as criticism comes from his father. in a new biography, george h.w. bush offers strong opinions of the presidency of george w. bush. nancy cordes is in washington wiwi the newest bush family drama. >> reporter: good morning. we have seen the bush brothers disagree with their mother publicly once or twice before. but this is a rare disagreement with their father. he was reluctant to say anythihi negative w wn his son was in the white house, but clearly not as reluctant any more. at the age of 91, the nation's 41st president is getting a few things off his chest. dodold rumsfeld, his son's secretary of defense is an air began fellow with a lack of humility. dick cheney, his son's vice president, is an iron act who just became very hard-line and very different from the dick cheney i knew and worked with. >> i've had much worse said about me. >> reporter: cheney seemed amused but rumsfeld said in a
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statement, bush 41 is getting up in years and misjudges bush 43, who i found mode his own decisions. >> george would say, this is is under my watch, i was commander in chief. >> reporter: presidential candidate jeb bush weighed in from new hampshire and said be, he didn't share his dad's opinion. >> as it relates to dick cheney, he served my brother well as vice president and,he served my dad extraordinarily well as secretary of defense. >> reporter: cheney and rumsfeld were two of the chief architects of the iraq war and that is at the heart of the elder bush's criticism. bush said rumsfeld served the president badly. i don't like what he did. and i think it hurt the president, having his iron-ass view of everything. >> george h.w. bush and donald rumsfeld have not liked each other for 40 years. they were competitors in the ford administration. >> reporter: he wrote his own biography about bush and said there could be several reasons
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>> is the older father thinking i want to protect my son by naking it clear to people that there some malaligned influences around him? perhaps. if you're the son, you don't want your father t to say that your administration was affected by bad influences because it means you were weak. it means you gave in. >> reporter: bush senior also revealed in this new book byy john meacham that donald trump once expressed interest in being his running mate. bush said he found that, quote, strange and unbelievable. anthony, it is hard to imagine trump as anyone's number two. >> that is exactly right, nancy. nancy cordes, thanks very much. disturbing new details this morning about the disgraced illinois police lieutenant's hitman. police say he feared a town official would find out he had
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wanted her gone. gliniewicz also faced allegations of sexual harassment and suspensions and complaints that he intimidated an emergency dispatcher with guns. >> the more you hear about this story, hard to believe. a missing child mystery solved after 13 years. the abducted boy himself broke this case wide open. how he found out he was missing all this timim first, it's time announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by walgreens.
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healthy. students are accused of collecting nude photos like trading cards. >> ahead, inside the school sexting scandal that has rocked a community and the secretive app that hid the images. the news is back this morning right here on "cbs this morning." announr: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by nationwide. nationwide is on youruride scanner: rescan item.
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released a new 60-second radio ad that uses rap music to try to appepe to black voters. let's hear a littltlof that. ben carson 2016. president be awesomeme >> there you have it. get out and vote for ben carson on november 3rd, 1992. >> ben carson, a black v ve is not hard to get. you're the black candidate. you're in danger of losing it now! what did you think was going to happen? yo, man, you got to vote for ben carson. no, man, i ainin voting for that man. he wrote a rap song. what? >> it does seem to be an interesting strategy in the carson campaign. >> a most unexpected one. >> i'll say. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, students accused of exchanging hundreds of new photos of
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themselves but the school sexting scandal could lead to felony c crges and s sw you how an app kept the images hidden from mom and dad. he was living alive for more than a decade but he didn't know it. how a teen's college application unlocked his own missingngchilils caca. that is ahead. time to show you this morning's headlines. "usa today" looks at the high cost of a failed pentagon program to train opposition fighters in syria. they were supposed t battle islamic militants 384 million dollars was spent on the program. that is about $2 million per fighter. 180 syrians were vetted and trained and equipped and only 95 in syria today. pentagon says the actual cost of the training was $30,000 and most of the money went to weapons, equipment and ammunition ammunition. a 9-year-old boy was executed because of his father's gang ties. police now say that the little boy was lured into an alley on monday and then shot several
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times as part of a bloody gang war.r. investigators say that the boy's father has refused to cooperate with the detectives. homicide and shootings are up about 18% in chicago so far ts year. "the new york times" says exxonmobil is under investstation by the new york attorney general. at issue here is whether the company lied to the public about the risks of climate change. also, whether it lied to investors about how the risks might hurt the oil business. exxonmobil says it unequivocally rejects claims it declined private research. new figures say facebook is the seventh largest company in the s&p 500 index and jumped after better than expected earnings this week. facebook is worth $306 billion ananis closing in onn amazonon mark zuckerberg's stock value went up 2.4 billion dollars in the first 15 minutes of trading yesterday. >> not a bad 15 minutes of wo, huh? >> i want that job!
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>> me too! parents in a colorado community are outraged this morning after a massive high school sexting scandal. dietrict attorneys in canon city have discovered a large number of nude photos on the students' phones and the d.a. says they could be charged with child pornogogphy. carter evans is live. >> reporter: good morning. the school district said an equal number of boys and girls were involved in the sexting scandal and some as young as eighth grade. itit forced the varsity football team to cancel its final game this weekend and parents to monitor teens in a high-tech world. at an emergency meeting, concerned parents learned that hundreds of students at canon city high may be involved i collecting naked pictures of themselves on cell phones like baseball cards.
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>> it was flooring to us how many photos we were finding. >> reporter: school administrators@started investigate investigating on monday after an anonymous tip and started suspected phones that were turned over voluntarily. $% >> the evidence w made to call police and you need toand over everything you got and let the criminal investigation proceed. >> reporter: at least half of the football team has been implicated in the sexting scandal. as a result, administrators announced the team will forfeit its final game of the season. >f we are going to preach character and integrity and doing the right thing when nobody is looking, we just can't step on the field and compete and represent our school and our community with that. >> reporter: investigators say the teens hid pictures using secretive appears that masked their true purpose, like this one that looks like a calculator, not a photo album. >> the city of canon city is any town usa. it's going on everywhere.
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study, 28% of teens surveyed had used social media to send naked pictures of themselves to another person. 60% have been asked for a naked photo. >> i think it's impmptant that parents and students understand that the mere possession of these materials does constitute an ongoing cre. >> reporter: misty's son is on the football team but says he wasn't involved. some of the things the d.a. mentioned in there are pretty scary. >> they are scary. they could of these boys' for the rest of their lives. >> reporter: the district attorney says it's a school-wide isise and that hundreds of students, both boys and girls, could face felony charges. >> i hope not and i'm confident in the system and the people that are involved in the stem that we can achievehe right outcome in these cases somewhat regardless of what the laws are. >> reporter: authorities say they are going to evaluate each incident on a case-by-case basis to make sure appropriate charges are filed. but in a strangegetwist, because
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minors taking pictures of themselves, some oenders could be victims of their own crimes. >> carter evans, thank you. these apps, so worrisome. >> the mother raised a good point. it could follow you the rest of your life and they don't see that. a cleveland man faces charges this morning in a longstanding missing child's case. investigators always thought that julian hernandez father stole him in 2002 but they couldn't find him. they created an image of what he looks like now. at 13 years the teenager's own deduct work that uncovered his true identity. elaine quijano is here now with the mystery finally solved. >> reporter: the fbi andhe national center for missing and exploited children looked into hundreds of leads from across the u.s. and canada but in the
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end, julian hernandez found himself. the missing child posteraid julian has a small freckle on his left cheek near his mouth. he is three feet tall and 43 pounds. julian hernandez was 5 when he disappeared. on august 28th, 2012, bobby hernandez was supposed to drop his son off at preschool. instead, he took him from the birmingham, alabama, suburb of vetstavia and traveling to ohio where they assumed new identities. >> all he talked about his son and all he wanted him to do is be able to go to college. >> reporter: when the now 18-y-yr-old was applying for college, he discovered his social security number did not match his name. with the help of his guidance counselor he saw his picture on the database for missing andnd exploited children. police in vestavia hills talked with the neighbor. >> she had been through so many false claims and chasing leads
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for 13 years. she was kind of apprehensive but really excited. >> reporter: xib agents in cleveland took bobby hernandez into custody monday. the 53-year-old has been charged in cuyahoga countyp court with tampering with rerecords. >> it was just great for me to be able to tell the mother he has been alive all this time and he is doing well. >> reporter: bobby hernandez is held on $250,000 bond and is expected to be extradited backk to alabama on a felony arrest warrant. authorities have not said when julian's mother will be reunited with him. they say it's up to him since he is legally an adult now. >> amazinghat little boy solves his own case later in life. >> how must he feel about his mom, about his mom? a lot to sort through. adele is likely to have a new smash hit album m her hands t will streaeang sites be chasing profits and could the release up-end the music
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. adele performed her new hitit song hello for the first time last night. she's debating whether to include, shelf or ignore streamingservicic. her decision could influence the future of the music business. the release is still two weeks away. but its hit status on the pop charts may already be assured. hello >> it's the call adele fans have been anxiously awaiting. i was wondering if after all these years you'd like to meet to go over
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>> after a four-year absence, the british pop star i back. hello from the other side >> p pple absolutely love her. >> brian hayat is a senior uniter at rolling stone. when he spoke with adele for her most recent cover story, she and her manager weree still deciding how to release her latest work. >> you can make money from streaming. but you might make more money and have more impact just from selling albums the old fashioned way. >> it's clear her legions of fans are listening. the album's first single "hello" is the first song in history to have more than one million paid down loads in a week. and it has more than a quarter of a billion youtube views. >> adele is a test case for the blockbuster album in the age of streaming. >> which is fast becoming big
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over the last decade cd sales are down 80%. >> but streaming policies have caused some big names to push back. last year taylor swift pulled all of her music from spotify. this year she threatened to withheld her blockbuster 1989 from apple's streaming service until they agreed to pay artists for their songs during the freeee trial period. but adele's appeal is so universal, sales may spike no matter where people find her music. her last album sold 30 million copies world wide, making it one of the most popular in the last ten years. >> i think for her it's obviously worked perfectly. >> and rumor has it that big
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direction and justinn bieber have shifted their late november release dates so they don't coincide with adele. i'll find someone like you >> she transsendscends the realities of the business. nobody wants to be in adele's shadow. billboard predicts her album sales to reach 1.8 million in just the first week. we reached out to adele's team, but they had no comment on how thth would roll out her music. >> we just want it. just give it to us. >> it's going to sell no matter where she puts it. >> i can't wait. >> not all artists have this option.
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imagine looking out of your airplane window and seeing this! wowo two jet pack daredevils get close to an emirates airline 8380. the largest passeer jet and it took the airliner and three months to come up with this very carefully choreographed display. it took place 4,000 feet above dubai. do not try this at home. they worked on this and practiced it and know what they are doing. >> it looks like something out of a bond film. >> it does. >> we said yesterday, it's charlie. i could see charlie and norah doing that. no thanks. > a whole new world for our kids this morning. in the classroom, google wants to give students and teachers
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and amazing view of education from the bottom of the ocean to the top of the great wall of china. we will try it out a aad on "cbs thisisorning." did you know only 1%1%f supplements have earned the usp mark... an independent certification for quality and purity? i recommend nature made because they've earned the most of any brand. nature made. the number 1 pharmacist recommended letter vitamin brand. this test paper represents proteins in your skin. watch it react to direct contact with ordinary soap.
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welcome back to "cbs this in it's friday, november 6th, 2015. welcome back to "cbs this morning." more real news ahead, including a field trip for the eyes. how a new virtual reality program can take students just about anywhere. but first here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. >> transportation security administration will put some procedures in place to heighte security for overseas flights. >> investigators are still analyzing the black boxes but people are speculating about who sglaen. >> if in fact isis brought down this russian aircraft it means the threat has a more global dimension. >ver here you can see large chunks of metal sheets that came tumbling down. >> carson is taking hits from his republican opponents and the media about whether he made up part of his life story. >> questions are brewing about
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how she'll release her new highly anticipated album. they predict her album sales first week. >> ladies and gentlemen, my mom and dad are here tonight. they were my correspondents at the nfl football game at wembley stadium in london. >> i'm sorry. >> i'm not used to sucuc things from men. >> hello do you, i'm gayle king with anthony mason and christine johnson n wcbs right here in new york. charlie is on assignment and norah is off today. cbs has learned u.s. intelligence sees terrorism as tht leading theory for what brought down that russisi passenger jet in ypt. president obama says the u.s. is on board very seriously, but he stressed there is no firm
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the crash on saturday killed 2222 people. >> the bomb theory is based on heat flashes seen by a u.s. salts when the plane went down. the first flash is followed by three more as the jet falls to the ground. passengers have reported lax security at the airport. intercepted communications show isis members taking responsibility. the u.s. is moving to toointighten security on overseas flights. kris van cleave spoke to a tsa authority on what the measures might look like. >> perhaps additional law enforcement officers on random, unpredictable patrols around checkpoints and through the airport. may see additional canine teams out there, bomb-sniffing dogs that are looking for explosives. and then ramped-up or enhanced security through explosive trace detection. >> homeland security may roll out these measures as soon as today. this morning the louisiana
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state police are investigating a shooting involving city marshals that killed a 6-year-old boy and then critically wounded his father. christopher few and his autistic son, j jemy mardis, were shot tuesday after a chase in the central louisiana town of marksville. david begnaud is outside the marksville police department with what police say led to the marshal's firing. david, good morning. >> reporter: christine, good morning. the coroner says he was told by a crime scene investigator that the four marshals were pursuing the driver because there was an outstsnding warrant. but this mornini theouisiana state police tell us there is no evidence a warrant even exists. 6-year-old jeremy mardis was killed by bullets that were intended to stop his father, christopher few. according to louisiana state police, few led four law enforcement officers on a short pursuit tuesday night and stopped on a dead-end road. >> the initial conversation to my investigators when they arrived is that the vehicle is
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backing up, they feared for their life and started firing. >> reporter: colonel michael edmondson is head of the louisiana state police, which is leading the investigation. "cbs this morning" h h learned as many as two law enforcement officers fired nearly 18 rounds at the suv. >> there were a lot of shots fired that night. they were coming in one difection. there's nothing for us that indicates any fire coming from that suv. there was no weapons found in that vehicle. >> reporter: young jeremy was hit by five bullets in the head and the chest, killing him at the scene.@ his father was also shot and is hospitalized in serious condition. >> he tried to basically get me out of the van. >> reporter: megan dixon says she is engaged to few. she claims they argued that night outside a local pool hall. shortly after, she says few stopped alongside her vehicle at a red light. >> instead of me running him over -- i mean i just went around him and then i heard the sirens. >> reporter: dixon believes that interaction may be what caught the attenenon of the
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authorities, prompting the law enforcement officers to pursue him. >> why were they trying to pull mr. few over? >> until we speak to those officers, we don't know. >> reporter: the colonel says at this point, his investigators need morenformation from those officers involved in that shooting. >> does this situation trouble you? >> i think the longer it takes for these officers to come forward and give us information, it's more concerning. come forward, tell us w wt happened. >> reporter: at least three of the four officers involved work full-time for the marksville city police department. the other works full-time for the marshals office. at the time of the shooting we're told by state police they y were working a side job for the marshal's office, further complicating exactly whose authority they were operating under. there is video from one of the officers that may show the events leading up to the shooting. >> what a sad story. thanks, david. with hillary clinton regaining momentum in the democratic presidentjal race, bernie sanders is using free media to make h h next move.
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appearances to help sanders round out his imknowledge, focusing on policy with a side of personality. they areresking why so many stand-up comics are backing the humorless presidential candidate. jim axelrod asked sanders if he has a funny side. >> if you don't mind -- >> reporter: comedians have certainly had their fair share of fun with bernie sanders. >> we're doomed! we need a revolution, millions of people on the streets, and we've got to do something, and we've got to do it now! ahh. >> how many of you guys are looking forward to going to college, raise your hand. how many are worriedbout the cost of college? >> reporter: the candidate himself is not exactly known for his sense of humor. >> one of the things thate are trying to do is to make public colleges and universities tuition-free. would that mattete to u? in media today, there is not a
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lot of opportunity for serious political discussion. >> reporter: he's a policy guy, the last guy you'd expect to be a viable dirndcontender. >> a professor said bernie is the last person you'd want to be stuck on a desert island with. two weeks of lectures about health care and you'd look for a shark and dive in. >> not quite, not quite. i sound worse than i am, actually. i do have over my lifetime made one or two friends. i do have -- that was a joke. that's how bad my sense of humor is. >> bernie sanders embraces the realities of presidential politics, selfies and all. you can see the entire interview on sunday morning herer on cbs. >> can't wait. something tells me we're going to see larry david back too as bernie sanders. >> the best. schools on the cutting edge of technology turn to virtual reality to explore our world. ahead, google's experiment that combines a simple setup
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grand view of the planet's "the new york times" says hamilton is s s good, it might be "the new york times" says hamilton is so good it might be worth mortgaging your home to buy tickets. we preview charlie rose's interview with the manehind the blockbuster ahead on "cbs this morning." what if there was another way to look at relapsing multiple s serosis? this is tecfidera. tecfidera is not an injection.
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this is such a cool story. google is teaming up with hundreds of schools to take students around the world from insisi their classrooms. this program is called expeditions and it uses virtual reality. it actually can teleport students to far-flung places often seen in tirtextbooks. vinita nair is at a new york city school using this technology.
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vinita, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. we're at lab middle in lower manhattan where the kids are due in i just a few moments. this is about one of a hundred schools across the globe using this new virtual technology. we spoke with google and they told us they came up with this idea after hearing from teachers who wanted to bring abstract concep to life. google's new program is taking kids on field trips where no bus has ever gone. this sixth grade science class plplged deep into australia's coral sea, getting 360-degree views of the great barrier reef. cause the planet to the galapagos islands, setting an up-close look at sea lions far beneath the surface of the ocean. the students pauau to take notes before losing themselves in the
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write down your observations at this poin >> reporter: their teacher, allison davis, guided the tour from her tablet, stopping periodically to discuss what they were seeing. >> what tells us that the coral is thriving? >> well, they're really colorful. they're not like#-- like in the video we watched, they're not bleached or anything. >> they point things out that i wouldn't think to look at. >> reporter: davis says it's a learning experience for both the students and the teacher and believes her students are gaining a betternderstanding of her lessons. >> they're making connections to things that they're hearing on the news and going on in the world. >> reporter: those 360-degree views are created by stitching together photographs from google's street view. 16 gopro cameras are also used to make the trip feel life-like. >> you put on the glasses, what is it like? >> well, i think it's really cool because it feels like you're there. >> thehe panoramas themselves don't change, it's how the teacher aploizplies it.
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>> reporter: the google program director say teachers can tailor the voyages to their curriculum. >> we had a math teacher that created an expedition on the great wall of china. that same expedition was used by a 10th grade chinese language teacher to teach vocab. >> reporter: the kit includes a smartphone, cardboard viewers, a tablet for the teacher and a router that allows expeditions to run offline if necessary. google says they'll provide the kits free of cost for the first year, but will eventually charge schools. >> can you give us an idea of a price point? would it be the cost of a phone? would it be the cost of a group of phones? >> i get that question all the time. so to be honest right now within the expedition's primary program, we're just trying understanding how the technology can work. we want to make it a a accessible as possible. >> there's a question around cost and really thinking about the maintenance of the technology long-term. >> reporter: new york lab's
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middle school principal megan adams says for cash-strapped hools, investing in the program may be hard. but she says it's an important learning tool. >> some kids might see this technology and still prefer a textbook. some kids will see this technology who don't normally engage in reading or discussion and all of a sudden understand the concepts. >> reporter: it's not just virtual voyages. google tells us in the near future they would love to expand into career options. what d ds that mean? it means in the n nr future you can shadow a professional like a physician, a lawyer or, gayle, maybe even a news anchor. >> i like it. i think the whole thing is genius and so smart of google to say, listen,, we'll let you have it for year and charge because once you look into it, you want it. whether you're 3 to 93, you're thinking i want one of these. >> it's a form of immersion and kids love being immersed in something. >> and it really is 360. you turn around and everything is here. >> come back, christine. come back! >> christine is back.
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"hamiltoto has t ten broadway by storm. >> welcome to the president, we're running a real nation. would you like to join us? doing whatever the hell it is you do in. >> charlie has more on this hip-hop musical next o"cbs this morning." of work... his business. i'm on the move all dadalong... and sosotimes, i just don't eat the way i should. so i drink boost to get the nutrition that i'm missing. boost complete nutritional drink has 26 essential vitamins and minerals, including calcium and vitamin d to support strong bones and 10 grams of protein to help maintain muscle. all with a great taste. i don't plan on slowing down any time soon. stay strong. stay active with boost.
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face of casualty and not thinking pas tomorrow >> the broadway m mical "hamilton" shares the story of alexander hamilton and our founding father using rap, hip-hop and a largely minority cast. it is open to rave reviews tpat continue today. one reviewer from "the new york times" said, quote, i am loathe to tell people to mortgage their houses and lease their children to require tickets to a hit broadway show but "hamilton" might just about be worth it. on "60 minutes," charlie rose talks about lin-manuel miranda. he is writer and star of the show. here is a preview. >> here is what i know about hamilton. i knew he was on died in a duel with the vice president and he's on the 10 dollar bill. >> what happened? >> i was thunder struck. i got to the part where a
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where hamilton is liverging and he writes a poem about this carnage and the poem getsim off the island. i drew a direct line hamilton writing his way out of circumstances and the rappers i had grown up adoring. >> they wrote themselves out of circumstances? >> but it's jay-z writing about the project housing in brooklyn and eminem growing up in detroit and writing about that struggle and d ur writing is so good it gets you out. >> miranda's gift is making that story in alive. >> are you ready for a cabinet meeting? huh? huh? >> reporter: witnesssshamilton's battle with jefferson how to pay off the revolutionary war debt. >> in virginia we plant seed. yowant to move our money around. this is an outrageous demand and too manynyamn pages forny man tond! >> thomas, that was a real nice declaration. welcome to the present. we are running a real nation!
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would you like t join us? or stay doing whatever thee hell you do? a message from the slaver. you don't pay for labor. we plant seeds in n e house and we rananng and wee know who is really doing the planting. >> i think the secret sauce of this show is that i can't believe this story is true. it's such an improbable and amazing g ory and i learned it about it while i was writing it and i think that enthusiasm is based into the recipe. >> you can see charlie's full report on "60 mines," including what miranda thinks about some of the modern polititil heavyweights who sit in the audience. that is sunday on "cbs this morning." if that doesn't make you want to go see it, i don't know i'm _______it's e eht-25 on this friday morning. your top stories are coming up in just a moment...but right now -- let's take a look at what's happening outside --
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$, firefighters spent their morning at a large fire in the corridor. corridor.several different departmes were called out t the amana colonies golf club early this morning in amana.a cbs 2 news photojournalist on the scene says the entire club house was engulfed in flames and is completely burned to the ground.be sure to check out cebook page and our website, cbs 2 iowa-dot-com
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for the latest all day on this developing story. just in a few hours, the murder trial for nicolas luerkens will continue with closing statements.. then it will be handed over to the jury. jury.luerkens is accused of killing lynnsey donald -- stabbing her to death in the hy-ee parking lot in marion.on thursday -- the defense rested their case -- telling the jurors at luerkens was not guilty because he was insane. his brother and sister testified saying they could see his personality change in the month's leading up to the attack.a forensic psychologist detailed luerkens medical history, calling his diagnosis a major depressive disorder. but prosecutors argued luerkens kept notes on ways to track down and kill donald, showing premeditation.court proceedings begin at 11.1. it took three and a half hours for authorities to end a stand off in tripoli. tripoli.deputies say a man was threatening to harm himself with a weapon yesterday afternoon.a viewer told cbs 2 news residents were a aed to stst inside their homes with the doors locked as a precaution.the man eventually gave up and was taken to a
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local hospital. in blackhawk county, a fire truck responding to a medical emergency in cedar falls collided into another vehicle. vehicle.the cedar falls fire department says it had both its emergency lights and siren on when it hit a vehicle that had just pulled away from a stop sign.no injuries were reported but the truck had about 4-4-and in damames.the driver of the second vehicle was issued a citation for failing to yield at a stop sign. don't forget -- cbs 2 connects with you - call cbs 2 if you see news happen.800 222 kgan. you can also email tips, pictures, and even video --to news -- at cbs 2 iowa dot com. that's a quick look at your friday morning news.get more news anytime online - at cbs 2 iowa dot com!have a great day. day. good morning, , do you think when you are president you'll be paid as much
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, andy cohen is inur toyota green room. there he is. he's the guy responsible for the real housewives franchise that a lot of us watch. yep. we'll talk pop cultutu and his road trip with john mayer. apparently mayor they're another kind of best friend. we'll talk about that. plus pop culture on the auction block, some by michaha jackson, elvis, the beatles and other stars going on sale. see the guitar that could set a world record. that's ahead. right now it's time to show you some of the headlines from around the globob "usa today" says five companies collected more than 70% of the
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they are amazon, google holding company alphabet, ebay, facebook and liberty interactive. big companies still getting stronger while small players fall behind. "the telegraph" report on shoppers rushing h & m m to get the hands on the new balmain collection. they stormed in trying to get an idea from the highly desired collection. some reportedly lined up for days. few said they would sell their purchase for two to three times for what they paid. i hate it when people do that. "the orlando sentinel" reports on how solar storms turned mars into a barren desert. solar winds are still stripping away the gas in the planet's atmosphere. solar storor were common billions of years ago. they could have gutted mars atmosphere causing it to lose its moisture. andy cohen is no stranger to cbs news.
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>> look at that computer. >> in 1989. he went on to become the executive and the mastermind behind the wildly popular "real housewives" franchise. now he not onlyosts his own late-night talk show. there's anderson. but he's also a "new york times" best-selling author. the book offers an insideook at his celebrity-filled life and it's out in paper book. andy cohen, welcome back to the table. >> gayle, you got the lips right today. >> you saw that thing the other day? >> yep. they look great. >> oprah sent me something that said your lips are too red. you should say something to your makeup artist. i said no, i did that myself. there was dead silence. that's what friends are for, senator? >> that's what friends are for. >> and you have a lot of famous friends. >> i do. you're one of them. can i call you a friend? >> absolutely. >> okay, good.
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part when you're putting me in that. but this is the thing, andy, you know so many famous people and you write about them liberally. >> yes, i do. >> but you know what line to cross and not t t cross. >> i think i do. i hope i do. >> have you ever gotten in trouble boy one of your friends? >> no. everyone who's in the book, and there's a lot of people, they seem to all be speaking to me. >> you didn't get any calls from -- why am i not in the book? >> no, no. no. everything is good. i rode the line very well, i think. >> you talked about one little incident, though, on a female talk show format where maybe -- >> on "the view"? >> where the creator got a little upset? >> i put my foot in it with barbara walters live on the air and i talk about what that was like. it was scary. >> what happened? >> no. i just -- gosh, we were trying to -- she said she didn't gege
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maybe it was a generational thing. which i meant because my mom had said to me she didn't get it a context. >> that's the thing about you, andy. once you said your mouth has always been your greatest asset but gotten you into trouble. i would like examples of bo. >> i remember when i was on the seventh floor of this building answering the phones at the news desk when i was an intern.. i remember someone from a cbs affiliate in, i think, spokane, washington, called and i said are you number one in your market? i was an intern at the time. and they said ah. i said, oh, we don't know anything about being number one at the cbs morning show loudly, so the whole newsroom could hear. and someone said, you know, you need to tone it down, terally. i wrote about that in my first book about the advice i got when i was an intern at cbs news. i never totally toned it down, bu i feel like i learned a little bit. but you know what, the news is back, guys. congratulations. the news is back. you finally figured this show out.
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it took about 40 years, but you figured it out. >> and that joke you made was something you heard a lot back in those days. >> we'll take that as a compliment. >> no. i love this show. >> we were talking about his celebrity friends and one of the celebrity friends that i was surprised that you had was john mayer. >> yes. >> and you guys t tk a little road trip together. >> we did. we drove from l.a. to san francisco to see the grateful dead. he's on tour with the grateful dead now. dead? >> i love the grateful dead. i'm a major deadhead. >> but you compared your friendship to another friendship involving someone sitting at this table. >> of the periscope we did? >> our version of oprah and gayle, right? >> yeah. where we're both -- i think who's oprah and who's gayle? >> oh. oh, that's a good question. who's oprah? >> i think in this situation i'm ur gayle. >> i think you're oprah and i'm gayle. >> i'm happy to be your gayle. >> hmm-mm. >> we did decide that i was oprah and he was the gayle on
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that trip. >> how did you guys become buddies? >> h h did we? through our friend, ricky. i met him through our friend, ricky. you know ricky. anthony, you know ricky. >> there is something, i just saw this game called plead the fifth. >> yes, my game on watch what happens live. signature game. are we going to play? >> have you ever had a guest on your show hit on you before or after the show? >> i havav >> well, we like names. >> well, sweetie, the question was have i ever had a guest. >> what was the name of the guest who hit on you before or after the show? >> i plead the fifth. >> have you ever hit on a g gst before or after the show. >> yes. >> and what is the name? >> no, i was -- i remember i was incredibly way too flirty with ricky martin in a embarrassing -- i mean so much so. in a really horribly embarrassing way. >> my last one. do you have a sexting picture
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>> a sexting picture that'm prououof? a picture of myself? >> don't act like you don't know what a sexting picture is. >> no, i do. but i'm very smart about -- i don't send pictures of my genitals. >> what about your absr something like that? >> sure. you know what, i'm going to e-mail you my picture that i'm proud of. >> it's back in the morning. >> the news is back. cbs has figured it out. >> i justant to bring up something, though. as successful as you are, you're a very savvy businessman. >> i appreciate that. >> and you talk about never being scared to speak up. >> yes. >> and always owning things and don't forget yourr friends.s. >> that's right. that's right. >> all right. andy cohen, thanks for being with us. the andy cohen diaries is on sale with paper book ahead. this may be as close as you get to becoming a beatle. >> i'm at julian's auction in beverly hills and this was one
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he used it to write wanto hold your hand." it's expected to go at auction for over a million dollars, a potential world record. that story coming upn "cbs this morning." there are many sides to basketball star an fashion icon russell westbrook. and with coverage in the middle ofofnywhere from u.s. ceceular, he can find some new ones. like, farmer. russell's brussels. russell speaking. paleontologist.
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hashtag t-rex. park ranger. where am i? and t.v. spokesperson. that's my line. i got it. with u.s. cellular, you can do all the things you like, from theheiddle of anywhere. that is my line! the son of a polish immigrant who grew up in a brooklyn tenement. he went to public schools, then college, where the work of his life began -- fighting injustice and inequality, speaking truth to power. he moved to vermont, won election and praise as one of america's best mayors. in congress, he stood up for working families and for principle, opposing the iraq wawa supporting vetetans. now he's taking on wall street and a corrupt political system funded by over a million contributions, tackling climate change to create clean-energy jobs, fighting for living wages, equal pay, and tuition-free public colleges. people are sick and tired of establishment politics, and they want real change!
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>> nirvana's lead singer had a carda acarargan that became famous and it's part of a collection up for auction this weekend. fans of the beatles and the king of pop can also score big. she was just 17 >> reporter: if you've ever seen the fab four's 1964 ed sullivan performance, there's no mistaking that beatles logon ringo's drumhead. now it's on the auction block. >> when it comes to pop culture history, it's one of the most important pieces that you could find. i iant to hold your hand >> reporter: beatle maniacs who dreamed of holding this acoustic guitar john lennon used to write hits is also for sale.
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a moment to imagine it in lennon's hands. >> so he would have beenhere? >> exactly,y, that's right. >> reporter: the guitar disappeared in 1963 after a show in london only to resurface 50 years later in san diego. and if it sells for a million dollars, as expected, it would set a world record for the sale of a single guitar. >> when it comes to guitars and john lennon, this is the holy grail. grail. >> reporter: if fashion is your thing, you can buy a piece of kurt cobain's i don't give a damn style. it's the sweater the pioneer grunger wore during nirvana's famous 1993 mtv unplugged concert that comes complete with burns and stains. >> we sold another jacket that he wore on stage for $87,000, but because this is such a a importrtt performance, itould sell for upwards of $100,000. it's really a piece that belongs
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from elvis are in the building. this 24-karat gold leaf piano is also on the block. but when you consider what a lock of his hair goes for -- >> elvis pressleypresley's brought $35,000, a clip of his hair. >> reporter: if that's not weird enough, this mold was used to outfit michael jackson for fangs in "thriller." there may be a few bargains here and there, but if you're determined to own something that belonged to a superstar, it might just help to be ser rich. for "cbs this morning" -- >> okay, i like the fangs. >> it's been in someone's mouth. i don't know, anthony. > knew you'd have that reaction. >> the drum top, i think that's cool. that's really cool. i do like that. there is a milestone in digital news. have y y heard this?
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thanks for joining us. i'michelle miller. >> i'm elaine key hanna. president obama hopes to find common ground with a new republican mjtn congress. >> the very first report from our 24-hour digital network cbsn that launched one year ago. you were there, elaine. vladimir duthiers and elaine quijano. we come with nothing but the best. congratulations and continued success. >> you're aging we gracefully.
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>> thanks. >> what ispthe expection when it started and how do you feel a year later? >> the first day wee just wanted to make sure the thing didn't go to black. we cleared that hurdle and it was editorially speaking makin sure that the cbs network new this wasaslace everyone could converge and have smart conversations and good reporting. >> and also be able to essentially dive deeper into the stories you guys are doing. this is a good time to tell people where they can go to watch. >> from where we launched last year to today, amazon fire and cbs news mobile apps your desktop. go to cbs news mobile app and download it from there. >> we thank you both. congratulations. that will do it for us. we leave you today as we take a look back at the week that was. have a great weekend. there is a significant possibility the russian aircraft was brought down by an explosive device. >> the egyptian civil aviation
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evidence y to supporthe bomb theory. >> this is the first time, as a law enforcement ofofcer, i felt ashamed bill the acts of another police officer. the investigation revealed a cop who was a big-time thief and staged his owneath to make it heroic. >> he admits he was drunk when he got into the car that night. [ bleep ] [ bleep ]. >> it was hard to watch and i'm ashamed. >> i seemurder! i cannot stand by! >> his comments put him on the radar of police nationwide. >> chipotle forced to close some of its stores after customers became sick. >> there's a good chance we will end up with more cases. >> he me a split-second decision and it saved lives. >> a plane is coming down with a parachute. >> hey, hey, ho, ho, donald trumhas got to go. >> i'm the absolute st. what can i say?
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champions! >> we are the kansas city royals, world series champs! >> please welcome charlie rose! >> you're wearing shoes that lady gaga wouldn'tet into it. >> i now know what norah and gayle go through every morning. >> would walter cronkite do this on television? >> he has a dimple in his chin! >>. [ screaming ] >> i got really, really hungry and i ate all of your halloween candy when you were at school. >> don't ever do that again! >> it is so great to bebe back here at east islip. >> boomer, you reported that the new york jets asked the nfl to sweep the locker room of the patriots. what is it about patriot
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paranoia evevebody has? >> the patriots are the preeminent organization and in the nfl, people don't like success, especially when it's sustained like that. >> what is the one thing all successful people have in commmm? >> hunger! >> congratulations. the news is back. you finally figured this show out. it took about 40 years but you figured it out. >> chris stapleton "traveler." >> chris stapleton! >> there is probably going to be a party tonight! let me hear you say i can'thank you >> they call you big sexy. >> i don't know where that name came from. >> do you think we have a new nickname for charlie now? at are you thinking?
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firefighters spent their morning at a large fire in the corridor. rridor.several different departments were called out to the amana colonies golf club early this morningngn amama. our cbs 2 news photojournalist was on the scene, he says the entire club house was engulfed in flames and is completely burned to the ground.be sure to check out facebook page and our website, cbs 2 iowa-dot-com for the latest all day on this developing story. november is the worst month of the year for car versus deer collisions in iowa.state farm insurance's annual study shows iowans have a one in 68 chance of hitting a deer this year. and remember if you see *one, it's likely there are more nearby.the insurance company suggests using your brigs when there is no on coming traffic.they say scan the
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road, don't rely on devices ch as deer whistles, and if you do come in path with one on the road, never veer for deer. in downtown cedar rapids -- expect to pay more for parking. park cedar rapids plans to increase monthly rates on january first.the higher cost will affect the fourth avenue ramp -- the five seasons ramp and lot 44 off 8th avenue.fees will also go up for violations in ramps and metered spots.the added revenue will help pay for facilili maintenance and improvements to the five seasons ramp. don't forget -- cbs 2 connects with you - call cbs 2 if you see news happen.800 222 kgan. you can also email tips, pictures, and even video --to news -- at cbs 2 iowa dot com. that's a quick look at your
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news anytime online the son of a polish immigrant who grew up in a brooklyn tenement. he went to public schools, then college, where the work of his lafe began -- fighting injustice and inequality, speaking truth to power. he moved to vermont, won election and praise as one of america's best mayors. in congress, he stood up for working families and for principle, opposing the iraq q r, supporting v verans. now he's taking on wall street and a corrupt political system funded by over a million contributions, tackling climate change to create clean-energy jobs, fighting for living wages, equal pay, and tuition-free public colleges. people are sick and tired of establishment politics, and they want real change!
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