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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  November 13, 2015 7:00am-9:00am CST

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we're excited we're on the front lines of the war against isis. >> donald trump releases a profane, insult filled rant against his rifles. could it mark a turning point for his campaign? and shark tagging in the gulf to see why the predators are thriving around oil riggs. first today's eye opener, your world,in 90 second. one of the world's most wanted terrorists was targeted in a drone strike. jihadi john in the cross hairs. if the strike was successful, it will be a strike at the heart of isis.
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iraqi city of sinjar from all directions. this lightweightht marco rubio, carly whatever the hell her name is, how dare the press not believe me that i hit somebody in the face with a padlock. lee robert morris is accused of sending obscene texts to someone who thought was a teenage girl. observed intentionally goingng overboard. president obama awarded florent groberg with the medal of hon nor. two burglaries making themes right at home, laughing and drinking orange juice straight out of the carton. an emu on the run is
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he's very crafty. ryan is beginning the celebration. saturday will mark the second democratic debate. i i ow it's hillary clinton and bernie sanders and the third guy is -- >> martin o'malley. >> right. that's the name. donald trump's latest attack on hillary clinton is that her hair isn't real. trump saysyse knows that because he saw her in his wig store. welcome to "cbs this morning." the pentagonon is working to confirm if an american drone strike skilled the notorious isis executioner known as jihadi johnhn jihadi john's real name is mohammed emwazi.
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he was featured in videos that showed the executions of hostages including several americans. >> we have learned he was targeted near the isis stronghold of raqqa. jonathan, good morning, what have we learned?d? >> reporter: penengon officials say a drone had been tracking mohammed emwazi since wednesday waiting for a car shot. lastight they got their chance just after he entered a vehicle. mohammed emwazi is better known as the knife wielding man behind the mask, responsible for the beheading of several hostages. his brutality and anonymity at the time earned him the name of jihaha john. the gruesome videos he appears in presented the world with a terrifying image of the islamic state.
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british prime minister david cameron praised the u.s. mission. >> he was intent on murdering many more people. so this was an act of self-defense. it was the right thing to do. >> reporter: emwazi, a british citizen believed to be in his mid 20s was born in kuwait but raised in london. heheirst came to t t attention of british intelligence in 2009, who believed he was planning to join a terrorist group in somalia. his rise among the ranks of isis is unclear is s. prime minister cameron also made clear the threat from isis is
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last night's mission is yet to be confirmed. american war planes and advisors are now helping the kurds.s. charlie d'agata is in sinjar where officials say it is too soon to declare a victory. >> reporter: we're now inside sinjar. you can heararhe gunfire rattling as gun battles are taking place to the east and west of the city. we're on the north side. we've had to walk down this road in order to get here. you can see it's piled with debris and cables all over it. that's one of the big threats, not stepping on a pressure plate or a trip wire that might set off a home made bomb. that as a peshmerga start clearing these roads, that's the biggest concern they have here, gunfire setting off a bomb. we watched this morning as a handful started winding intnt the village, then followed by dozens more and hundreds.
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house by house, street by street, going after any isis militants that may remain here. isis claims responsibility this morning forne of the deadliest attacac in lebanon i i 40 years. two suicide bombers blew themselves up in a suburb of beirut. more than 200 for hurt. the blast badly damaged buildings. crowds pulled out a motorcycle used by one of the bombers. the united states condemned the attacks. in iowa donald trump launched a stunninin attack on his fellow front runner ben carson. trump held almost nothing back at last night's campaign rally. he also attacked other opponents, the obama administraraon's response to isis and even some iowa voters. >> reporter: one of the questions that has long
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surprising resiliency as a republican front runner, could his temper and ego withstand. >> kasich, oh, i have a headache from this guy. i'm telling carly fiorina, whatever the hell her name is, would you stop cutting in? rubio, ready? weak on illegal immigration. like weak lili a baby. >> reporter: trump saved the lowest blows for ben carson, referencing the retired neuro neurosurgeon's description of himself as pathologically angry. >> if you're a child molester, a sick puppy, there's no cure for that. there's only one cure. we don't want to talk think
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that's the ultimate cure. there's death and the other thing.g. >> reporter: for carson, the anger is part of his story for redemption. >> and he plunged it into the belt and amazingly the belt stayed totally flat and the knifee broke. how stupid are the people of iowa? how stupid are the people of the country to believe this crap? >> reporter: and there was this referencnc to isis. >> i know more about isis than the generals do, beliefve me. i would bomb the [ bleep ] out of them >> reporter: trump went on for more than an hour with little regard for the fallout. >> i don't care. i may leave here and you may say, that was not nice what he says. who cares? i go backk to my life. >> reporter: trump arrived more than 30 minutes late. and the crowd was largely
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ben carson's support here is more organized and loyal than any early voting state. if trump's broad sides don't inflict more damage, it's safe to conclude nothing more. >> cbs news will bring you that debate with the democratic candidates tomorrow. twitter is one of our partners. we invite you to tweet us using the hashtag dem debate. we also have live coverage on cbsn. that is our 24-hour digital network. paul ryan believess it would be wrong to dismiss political outsiders in the race for the white house. ryan tells his home state paper the milwaukee journal sentalinal where things stand between him and president obama. >> reporter: have you spoken to the president? > number of times. >> reporter: since you became
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speaker? >> mm-hm. >> reporter: and the substance of those conversations has been what? >> variedn different issues, much o oit discussed on things we have to get done by the end of the year and courtesy issues. we talk about having teenage daughters too. >> reporter: but you found a man you can work with? >> sure. look, this is the job, absolutely. he's my president too. >> reporter: the job hasn't been getting done these last several years. >> i agree with this, but nonetheless this government does have to work. >> reporter: you said the president has been untrust worthy on immigration. >> on this particular issue he tried to go around congreses and
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violateing the separation of powers. >> watch 60 minutes on sunday to see speaker ryan on his home turf in wisconsin. you'll learn about his plans for social security and the tax code. that's sunda right here on cbs. there is new trouble this morning for the secret service. a uniformed white house officer is accused of sexting with someone he thought was a 14-year-old girl. lee robert morris is scheduled to appear in court later today. he sent an obscene photo to under cover detects who posed as a teenager. we're learning more details about the firing of the defense secretary's senior military assistant. ash carter announced he dismissed ron lewis after allegations of misconduct. carter wrote in a statement, quote, i expect the highest
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possible standards o o conduct from the men and women in this department, particularly from those serving in the most senior positions. there is no exception. security is ramped up this morning at howard university over an online threat of violence against the historically black school. officers increased patrols around the campus. the fbi is helping assess the threat's credibility. some students fear going to class. >> reporter: it is a threat that students and the administration here are taking seriously. it starteds a racist rant on social media. and whoever posted it wanted to that i can take their frustration out on student here at howawa. whoever made the threat claimed to have been driven by the student protests on the university of missouri campus. in a purported screen shot of the post, the author allegedly wrote i left mu yesterday
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i go home to maryland and what do i see? the same old [leep ]. it's always [ bleep ] causing trouble everywhere. the person threatened violence. security was increased but some students felt the university should have done more. >> i thihi it should go on for the rest of the week until we know it's safe to come back to school. >> reporter: in missouri just days after celebrating the ouster of the two top officials students remained on edge. wednesday night the black culture center was vandalized and prosecutors charged a third man for threatening to attack the campus. >> i think we could maybeven use a little more protection around security just at this point in time. >> reporter: 19-year-old hunter parkd ap park was arrested after making threats on social meded thaha were reminiscent of those made by the gunman in the october
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>> this is a resurgence in student activism. it s sms to be a renaissance of sorts. >> reporter: stephen bradley. >> i wasn't surprised about the death threats that occurred with the young people who have been demonstrating. unfortunately this is far for the course in terms of reaction. >> reporter: and there has been a wave of student activism at colleges and universities across the country. the dean of students in a california college resigned after it is alleged she made insensitive thecomments about latin students. amanda blackburn was shot in the head. she was the mother of a toddler and she was pregnant. >> it's such a tragic story.
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attack a robbery was reported a few doors down in their neighborhood. her husband is not a suspect. they are still following several leads. the coroner officially ruled amanda blackburn's death a homicide two days after she was gunned down in her family's indianapolis home. on thursday investigators ruled out her husband as a auspect. >> we don't have any reason to believe the husband is involved at all. detects have ruled him out at a possibility. >>olice believe an intruder entered the house on tuesday morning and shot blackburn in the head. the husband returned home and found her. rhe one-year-old son wasn't harmed. amanda was 13 weeks pregnant. >> in 2012 the young couple moved to indianapolis from south carolina to form the resonanan church where davie is the lead pastor.
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they often used sunday sermons and online videos to discuss marriage and relatatnships with the church community. >> your wife is your best friend, someone you should be willing to lay your life down for. there's no way to prepare yourself for circumstances like these, he wrote. i hold firm to the belief that god is still good, that he takes our tragedy and turns it into triumph. the indianapolis p pice will held a press conference about crime in the city where this had had is expected to be threatat. a government survey of parents finds that as many as one of every 45 children is autistic. that is a higher percentage than other studied reported.
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about the frequency ofrom 2013 to 2014. and they changed the order of the question and some of the questions. parents who had said they had a ild with another developmental delay now were switching them into the autism box so it went from 1 in 68 to 1 in 45. the disease isn't changing but certainly our awareness of. this question mayor, while it may be slightly more accurate, i think skews it a little bit. >> bottom line, more kids are getting it diagnosed and isn't that a good thing? >> no question about it. the real trend iss this is what i think the encouragement is why we are doing this in the science world is identify it early because then you can intervene early and hopefully get a better result. >> what is the big question ababt autiti? >> you know, what is it? where does it come from? we know there is a genetic link and how old your parents are and hoe clubhouse
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how close births are between each other and how stressed the mother is. we don't know the cause and we don't have tremendous ways to treat it so the research i early. we need a lot more research and resources in that field to make an impact. >> so what is your advice today, david, for parents who are watching? who are concerned? >> parents watching look at the ta and the trend. if you space a child between 2 to 5 years between the first child to the second child, lower incidents. the less stress the mother is, lower incidents. look at the genenecs of the parents and vaccines do nothing bottom line in terms of autism risk and association with autism and really focus on having a healaly pregnancy if you're the mother to all of the things your doctors say and keep that risk as low as possible. but still autism happens. >> dr. david agus, important information this mning. thank you. a couple says that wrongly packaged birth control led to two miscarriages.
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trouble proving who is at fault a pilot's decision to evacuate plane cost him his job. ahead, why allegiantnt air fired the pilot and what he is doing in response. the news is back this morning right here on "cbs this morning." announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by ocean spray. it's holiday time, and no fruit is as versatile as our ocean spray cranberries, which is why we're declaring it "the unofficial official fruit of the holidays." the fig's gonna be so bummed. chuckles ] for holiday tips and recipes, go to oceanspray.com.
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a popular fast food chain wants a start-up to stop delivering its food. ahead we look at in-n-outburg burger who is trying to protect their brand.
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night football" and ask you i i owe about $68,000. i owe $44,000 in sdent loans. my plan, the new college compact, says you should not have to borrow money to pay tuition if you go to a public college or university. and you ought to be able to refinance student debt. and i don't believe the federal government should be making a profit off of lending to young people who are borrowing to be able to get their education. we have got to make college affordable.
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t tt is intntcepted. the bills are going to win it. >> buffalo's 22-17 win over the jets last night was hard for some of the fans to watch. the bills uniforms were all red and the jets were all green. that is a problem for viewers who are colorblind. we tweaked the colors and this is what they saw. they cannot tell the playeye a lot. about 60% of all men have blue, red, green blindness. what color is this, charlie rose? >> red. >> what color is this, charlie rose? >> green. >> very good opinion you pass, sir. he got joked. with him to "cbs this morning." in this half hour a couple shares their anguish saying a birth control packaging led to two miscarriages and they are facing a lawsuit against the drugmaker. a commercial pilot claims he was fired for protecting is passengers. he evacuated his plane when his
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flight crew smelled smoke. ahead why the airline is standing by its decision. time to show you this morning's headlines. "wall street journal" says general motors plans to be the first major automaker to sell chinese-made cars in the united states. next year, gm plans to sell the buick envision. it is made in eastern china. gm recently reached a tentative contract agreement with uaw workers that is expected to increase labor costs. the san josep mercury news rerts on a google self-driving car getting pulled over travel 25 in a 35 miles an hour zone the other day in mountainview. the officer realized it was google car andnd made contact with the operators. the cars are tapped at 25 miles an hour per safety and no ticket was issued. a tranlant to treat infertility. the first in the country's surgery is expected to be at the cleveland clinic. 50,000 women could eventually
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the transplant would be temporary with the uterus removed. the pregnancies could be high-risk. the new york daily news reported jurors acquitted vincent asaro. his case was portrayed in the movie "goodfellas." he was helping plan t t 1978 lufthansa heist at new york's kennedy airport. outside the courthouse, asaro was shocked by the verdict that set him free. the star of a hit cbs drama is detailing a horrifying attack ghent pauley perrette. she says she was assaulted last night by a homeless man in los angeles. she tweeted about theencounter saying this. he grabbed me so forcefully, repeatedly telling me he was going to kill me. i was alone, terrified and trapped. perrette says the man let her goo
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and she was shahan and traumatized she says by my house, my beloved hollywood and my beloved homeless people that i spend my life protecting. my life changed tonight. perretet said police caught up with the man and charged him with felony assault. we are glad she is okay but touching to me in the middle of this she is still sayg don't paint all of the homeless people with one broad brush and reaching out to this story. >> painful to write about it and she talks about it in her blog she tried to calm the homeless man while he was screaming at r a different me, william. i'm glad she is okay. she is a wonderful person and she is one of the sweetest people i've ever met. >> very scary. i'm sorry. this morning we are heariri for the first time about the anguish women faced over surprised pregnancies they blame on birth control packaging error. 113 women have joined a class action lawsuit against a drugmaker in pennsylvania. they are claiming millions of dollars in damages. john blackstone shows us why it
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make their case. >> reporter: chrisisne armando believes their family was complete after having a son but had a miscarriage and -- >> i did not want any more children because i had lost a child. i stopped having kids for that reason. >> reporter: christy began taking birth control pills but then she says she got pregnant twice. both times she says were miscarriageses >> so you question the pill f f a minute and you think, maybe it was one of those flukes, but when it happens again, eight months later, it was not because i wasn't taking the pill correctly. it was because something was wrong with the pill and, at the time, my husband and i could not figure out for the life of me what was going on. and how does that happen twice? and until i got that letter, did i understand more about what was going on. >> reporter: that letter in september of 2011 warned of a recall of eight brands of birth
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in some packages, the pills were upside dowow a result the letter said the daily dosing for these tablets may be incorrect and could leave you without adequate protection and at risk for unintended pregnancy pregnanay. what was it like as you made that connection, you said? >> there's no responsibility being taken. >> reporter: christy is one of 111 women in 28 states who say they became pregnant on the recalledills and are now included in a lawsuit filed last week against the companies that made and packaged the contraceptives and they are seeking millions of dollars in damages. trial attorney diane isman. >> what we are talking about here is an injury case. they are saying the pregnancy was an injure that caused damages and caused them to lcse time from work, things like that. reporter: the pill's manufacturer is subsidiary of endo recalled 3.2 million packages of pills in 2011. but the company says only select packages were affecteded
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said it has been able to confirm only one package that manifested a defect and was sold to a patient. pantheon, the company that packaged the pills, said patient safety and product quality is at the center of everything we do. >> it's going to be really difficult to prove that a pregnancy is the direct r rult of a manufacturing e eor because there are a lot of things that go into the effectiveness of brirt birth control pills. >> reporter: in court you'll be pressed. did you take them at the same time every day every day? >> same time every day and twice is too many to get pregnant on in a year. >> it' suchh complicated case. you wonder if they will ever really have an answer to it. >> but very painful for some of the women involved. very, very painful. a pilot is suing allegiant
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afte this captain says what went wrong was not withhe engines but how the airline responded to the emergency. >> the flight attendants reported a burning smell. reporter: that smell of smoke prompted an emergency landing for allegiant flight 864 back in june. >> tower ground allegiant 864 we are going t tbe evacuating. >> reporter: that decision to evacuate passengers cost jason kinzer his job. >> i was divested and ends a two decade long career as a captain. being terminated is a major ordeal. >> reporter: he can be heard
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engines for smoke. but air traffic control recordings show minutes of confusion followed. >> reporter: after waiting nearly three minutes for an answer, kinzer ordered everybody off. using emergency slides. >> it went described textbook one company investigator to you're terminated. >> reporter: his now suing. allegiant in a statement declined to comment specifically but they say kinzer. >> if i had to do it over again, i wish there wouldn't have been quite the confusion that there
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responders that smoke. kinzer's attorne says they look forward to their day in court. > is a beef over food delivery. in-n-out is suing a company that brings burgers to customers. if you're head ofg toing off to work, it's friday, the 13th! be careful! set your dvr so you can watch "cbs this morning" any time you want. we will be here until 9:00. don't miss judith hill who is fronon and center after working behind the biggest names and we will introduce you later on. we will be right back. fortunately, many have found a different kind of medicine that lowers blood sugar. imagine what it would d like to love your numbers. discover once-daily invokana .
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it's the #1 prescribed in the newest class of medicices that work with the kidneys to lower a1c. invokana is used along with diet and exercise to significantly lower blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes. it's a once-daily pill that works around the clock. here's how: the kidneys allow sugar to be absorbed back into the body. invokana reduces the amount of sugar allowed back in and sends some sugar out through the process of u unation. and while it's not for weight loss, it may help you lose weight. invokana can cause important side effects, including dehydration, which may cause you to feel dizzy, faintntlightheaded, or weak especially when you stand up. other side effects may include kidney problems, genital yeast infections inary tract infections, changes in urination, high potassium in the blood, or increases in cholesterol. do not take invokana if you have
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it's incredible. that has been there for 10,000 years. >> incredible. tourists in iceland captured an iceberg breaking away from a glacier.
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covered in volcanic ash. the people who watched it break away say the entire nation vibrated. unbelievable. >> yeah. i've been on a glacier in alaska. it's one of the most beautiful sights i've ever seen in my life. >> especially when you see a polar bear. >> you can't see what you're seeing in that shade of ice. fast food chain is starting stop a silicon valley starter to stop delivering its food. california-based in-n-out burger is saying its brand could be hurt by cold or slow delivevees. mireya villarreal tells us how it could affect the online delivery business. >> reporter: in-n-out wants you to eat their burgers. tony shu wants you to eat his burgers but he wants his company doordash to deliver them. a few clicks on the app and food
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>> 85% of the restaurants in this countryryon't deliver so for almomo all of these merchants it brings something new to them. >> reporter: in-n-out isn't on biting. they filed a lawsuit against shu's company demanding doordash stop delivering theiroot citing concerns about concerns and food handling practices. they are also alleging trademark infringement because doordash uses hits logo on its website and app. >> they are putting so much time and money into it and sets these different restaurants apart. >> reporter: another burger seller welcomes the service. megan dwyer marketing director with this burgry says doordash has helped open the door to new business. >> unlike in-n-out you've decided to go in a different direction. why is that? >> we found that rather than saying no to incremental sales volume and potentially introducing a whole new set of people to umani burger and our
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brand wwould rather work closely with the third-party delivery companies to ensure that people are getting the best product product. >> repter: umani spent money wiwi dododash and other online delivery companies including amazon prime and caviar but they want quality control too. >> we want to ma make sure the hot bagsgshey are using are up to the spec so that our burgers get delivered to our guests hod. >> reporter: unlike restaurants who follow strict food handling guidelines, these new tech-driven delivery services are largely unregulated but that could change. >> we are seeing this more and more with the on-demand apps and services that cities are beginning to regulate them. >> reporter:r:o whether staurants like it or not, apps like doordash could be a taste of things to come. for "cbs this morning," mireya villarreal, los angeles. look. i think also people should expect that, you know, in the time it gets delivered to your
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door there is a drop-off in the temperature and the bun may get a little soggier, don't you think? >> i don't want a cold burger. >> yeah. >> so -- >> you should go to the store. >> i hear the point she is making but i still don't want a cold burgerer >> that may mean you have to go to the store and get it. >> probably. another first to the team at o-search. they are tagging and tracking sharks in the gulf ofof mexico. jeff glor shows us how it could
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good morning. it is friday the 13th, november 13th, 2015. welcome back to "cbs this morning." there's more real news ahead, including what you can expect from tomorrow night's democratic debate. we'll talk to the moderators, john dickerson and nancy cordeses first here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. >> a drone had been tracking mohammed emwazi since wednesday waiting for a clear shot. last night they got their chance. >> we are now inside and you can hear the guns fire. >> they're clearing out the city house by house. >> one of the questions that has long surrounded donald trump, could his temperr and ego withstand long-running political competition. last night an answer. >> and he plunged it into the belt. >> theresident has proven himself untrustworthy. >> he tried to go around congress and write the law unilaterally. >> it started as a racist rant on social media.
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pwhoever posted it wantedo take their frustration out on students' powers. >> the captain said what went wrong wasn't just with the engine but with how the airline responded to the emergency. >> it went from being described as textbook from one company investigator to you're terminated. >> this saturday the democratic candidates will be duking it out right here on cbs tv. now, this is going to be different from the republican debate becausehe gop field is so big, hey, guys, that you didn't even notice i put john kasich in there three times. i'm charlie rosep with gayle king and norah o'donnell. a government official tells our david martin this morning the united states is, quote, pretty god damn certain that they killed a notorious isis executioner jihadi john, whose real name is mohammed emwazi.
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murder of james foley, steven sotloff and peter kassig. >> he was targeted near raqqa in syria yesterery. at the same timemehe united states is supporting a kurdish offensive against isis in the strategic city of sinjar. the kurdish flag is floig in the centnt. troops entered hours ago in their battle to drive out isis forces that took the city last year. this morning many republicans are wondering what's next after donald trump's tirade last night. trump attacked and insulted his fellow candidates in iowa, especially his main rival, ben carson. >> he went after fred and he lunged, he lunged that knife into the stomach of his friends, but lo and behold, it hit the belt. hit the belt. and the knife broke. give me a break. how stupid are the people of iowa. how stupid are the people of the
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how dare the press not believe me, that i went afterer my mother with a hammer, that i hit somebody in the face with a padlock, that i tried to stab friend of mine whose name was bob but nowt's changed. so what he's saying is that these series of events, and he goes into the bathroom for a couple of hours and he comes out and now he's religious. and the people of iowa believe him. so he's a pathological, damaged, temper a problem. then they talk about my tone is a little bit tough. give me a break. bush, i don't like his tone. that's the problem with this country. we need somebody with tone. we need somebody with tone. >> carson's campaign told cbs news it had no comment. the republican nominee's future opponent will be on stage at tomorrow's democratic debate here on cbs. "face the nation" host j jn
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moderator and gave a preview to stephen colbert on last night's "late show." >> will you tell us any of the questions you're going to ask the candidates? >> no. >> are you going to ask the questions that are really on everybody's mind like do they believe the pyramids were used to store grain or would they kill baby hitler, the real questions that concern the iowans? >> those may come in through twitter, so that's why we'll be monitoring it so closely. >> john dickekeon is cbs news political director, is with nancy cordes who is also a moderator tomorrow night at drake university in des moines. good morning. >> good morning. >> good morning. >> how was that, john, on colbert last night? >> i'm glad i got out of there alive. >> let me begin with a big question about the debate. what do you think the imperatives are, first, for bernie sanders, second, for hillary clinton in this debate? >> well, the first imperative is
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directly and honestly. the big political imperative for sanders is to show why there's a distinction with hillary clinton. she's way ahead in the polls, she's doing well in organization. he has to explain in the debatete which is about differentiating positions. here they're on the same stage so as to make that kind of choice clear. for hillary clinton, it's basically to cement and lock in her lead. >> nancy, how concerned do you think hillary clinton should be? you know, sanders is gaining some ground and just picked up two big endorsements in the last 24 hours. one for the postal workers union and the other froro a party leader in ohio who's pledging their support. >> it shows that she doesn't have a lock on union support and has some work to do. she still has a big lead on the unions. she has about a dozen big unions so far, but this shows that clearly bernie sanders and his message of empowering workers and standing up for the little
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some of those unions wanted to wait to see whether vice president biden would get into the race so she's got some work to do there. >> john, what are some of the biggest differences between thehe candidates? >> ll, there are two different kinds. there's the policy differences on health care, on education, on basically fighting wall street and breaking up the financial institutions, but then there are tactical differences. bernie sanders is running as a proud and long-standing progressive, for 30 years holding some of the same positions. hillary clinton has shifted her positions more over the course of her career. and the question is once one of them gets in office and the pressures of politics come upon them, which of them will be stronger against those pressures, whether pressures from their donors and their backers or pressures from the political moment. and they are both arguing they have a better backbone to handle those pressures. so that's kind of a stylistic difference between the two of them. >> john, obvbvusly the talk is about the democratic debate, but
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we've all seen this tirade by trump last night. is there much talk on the ground in iowa about that and its implicatatns? >> well, i mean he achieved sort of orbital escape velocity in that tirade given -- but the chatter is mostly just kind of can you believe what he said? ofofourse that's what we've been saying about him for so long. i think for his supporters, it will be the same thing they love about donald trump. i think once again, though, we come back to this ceiling for support. if you were unsure about donald trump and you're a kind of middle of the road republican voter, that probably would have been a little extreme for you. >> okay. martin o'malley is also going to be on the stage tomorrow night. is there anything he e n do to get back in the game -- get in the game? >> well, he has signalled that he's going to go after hillary clinton and possibly even bernie sanders pretty aggressively and that's a big switch for him from the last debate. so she's going to have to be prepared for that. how does she deal with his attacks while she's trying to
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stay above the fray. >> john and nancy, thank you so much. we'll all be watching tomorrow night. twitter is one of our partners. we invite you to tweet us your questions for the candidates using the #demdebate and then watch the debate at 9:00 eastern/8:00 central on cbs. we'll have coverage on cbsn, our 24-hour digital network. on sunday john talks with bernie sanders and rand paul, that's sunday here on cbs. tail a tiger shark. have you ever done that? coming up next we'll take you along for new a aentures in the gulf of mexico. can a scene of disaster turn into hope for marine life? coming up next on "cbs this morning." this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by farmers insurance. get smarter at farmers.com.rn about coverage, the more gaps you may find. [burke] like how you thought you were covered for this... [man] it's a profound statement. [b[bke] but you're not even covered for thth...
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this morning o search is wrapping up its first-ever expedition in the gulf of mexico. for years we have followed this group of fishermen and scientists who track and tag the sharks around the world. we were there when the team made history catching, tagging and releasing the first white shark in north atlantic waters. jeff glor was also out on the ocean with the team on its latest trip. jeff, good morning. >> gayle, good morning. the gulf of mexico has received
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enormous attention in recent years mostly for what went wrong.g. the deepwater horizon spill to start. five years after that disaster, parts of the gulf are teaming with life, providing o search a chance to studyow many sharkrk are there and where they're going. >> yeah, finley. looking good, ole girl. >> reporter: meet finley, a 10-foot-long tiger shark.k. >> here it is, finley, the tiger shark, for all of you all to enjoy following across the gulf of mexico. >> reporter: this group of scientists and fishermen just wrapped an expedition off of texas. chris fischer is their leader. >> a tiger shark gets very close to shore. >> they love to comento beaches s dstuaries as well as roam offshore. >> reporter: they tagged four sharks with gps trackers, two tigers and two hammerheads. they're posting all their data to their tracking website. in the process, bringing global
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attention to a body of water with an often muddy reputation. >> a lot o& people think of the gulf as a mess largely because of the spill. at kind of shape is the gulf in? >> i think the gulf is in pretty good shape. if you talk to the people out there fishing, it' rebounding, full of life. >> reporter: and he hopes full of sharks. remove too manyrom their natural place and second-tier predators would roam, uneaten and unchecked, devouring smaller fish populations and throwing the entire ecosystem off balance. in the gulf, o search is cautiously optimistic. finning, one of the biggest threats is not as prevalent here. over the past couple of decades the ininux of oil rigs has created just as many artificial reefs. >> there are about 4,000 active oil rigs in the gulf of mexico. above water they are steel, stark, industrial. but underwater, an explosion of life.
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these oil and gas platforms have been in for dedes. no one realized how great ecosystems would be formed around them. >> reporter: greg stunz is the director of science and conservation at texas a&m in corpus christi. >> we're going to be fishing oil and gas ststctures that come up out of the water. >> reporter: he works down in the gulf. >> you've been diving many of these rigs. when you first saw one of these underseaworlds, what was your reaction? >> one is just the sheer size is quite amazing. from the surface of the water it's flat and looks like nothing but as soon as you dive down and see the size of building underwater and then of course the next thing you see is the abundance of marine life, particularly fish that are just everywhere. >> reporter: over time man mad structures like oil rigs become artificial reefs. eventually the lions of the ocean, sharks. they also attract controversy.
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and a decision needs to be made. should parts of it stay and be permanently reefed or go. >> this is a tricky issue, though, everybody agrees there are environmental benefits to it. some s s, listen, we're against reefing regardless of where it is or when it is because it just encourages the oil companies to drill more, true? >> yeah. well, yes and no. many say it's ocean dumping. you'u' just leaving the trash. believe it or not, the oil and gas companies don't necessarily want to do this. the scrap value of the steel is worth way more for them to bring it in. a lot of concern people might have is it's oil and gas and oil and gas doesn't always have the best reputation. >> look, ocean first. great grandchildren fifit. if you want an abundant future for the gulf of mexico, it would be an absolute catastrophe to not reef every single one of those rigs you can. >> oh, putting on a show.
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trash is fischer's treasure. finley and her friends will provide data they never had. whatat role artificial reefs play and what threats are real versus imagined. >> it's kind of crazy to be pioneering this kind of work in 2015. you would have thought it was done a long, long time ago. it's cruciaia because we should be absolutely terrified of an ocean with no sharks. if that is the case, there simply will not be fish sandwiches for our children to eat. >> boy, i love chris's passion about this whole project. expedition. have they learned anything? >> they're waiting for finley to ping in, but their suspicion is that the female sharks, which finley is, actually stay in the shallower wawars and the males go to the deeper waters which would potentially put them in a little more risk if they cross the internationally boundary because they might be finned. >> and how is mary lee? >> mary lee, the most famous shark they caught off cape cod,
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she has traveled 24,000 miles in three years. mama lee, 3500 pounds. she's been up to the new york area before. she's currently just off cape hatteras, north carolina. >> so who knew you were a shark expert too, jeff f glor? >> i have learned so much about them in the past few years. fascinating. >> mary lee, you can follow her on twitter, she's very popular. >> yes, she is. e ran toward a a suicide bomber. up next, an american hero
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ahead an international mystery with roots in the deep south. >> i'm with 8 hours." she led the fbi on a nearly 20-year long chase that ended in australia after fleeing with her baby with fake passports. for the first time she explains how she did it.
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he fought back emotions but this morning, america's newest medal of honor recipient is being praised for fighting off a suicide bomber. army captain florent groberg held off a suicide bomber. four of his comrades were killed. he recently shared his mixed
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emotions about the award with cbs news. >> i turned right back in, i'd turn it right back in, no thank you, and say bring my guys back right here. >> the former runner went through 33 leg surgeries. he is the first american to earn the highest military honor among those who served in afghanistan and iraq. >> i marvel they are always so heroic but you can tell they are uncomfortable getting that kind of attention. >> yeah. he's an incredible man and we are going to have much more tomorrow. if you want to learn more about him on "cbs this morning" on saturday, including the unique from. you'll mead the dedicated group king sure veterans get honored for their valor. that is all i'm _______it's eight-25 on this friday morning. your top stories are coming up in st a moment...but right now -- let's take a look at what's happening outside --
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this morning -- we're getting a bettererook at some of the damage left by a strong line of storms that made its way through the state wednesday night. the national weather service is investigating whether a rnado touched down in eastern iowa.the storms tore through the shed and barn on a williamsburg property, but only took a few shingles from the nearby house.a resident taking shelter in the basement at the time ss the wind sounded like a constant thunder.she tells cbs 2 news a 500 gallononarrel full of fuel
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the national weather service tornados touched down statewide during the storms. here's more damage in monroe county.several buildings were destroyed when an e-f-1 tornado touched down there.one couple says they ran to their basement and two minutes later, the top of their home was gone.no serious injuries have been reported from last night's storms. authorities are still trying to figure out why a teenage girl was walking on a busy highway in the middle of the night. night.17-year-old johanna gingerich- feil was hit and killed by a semi along highway 30.it happened near the entrance of palisades kepler state park. park.the linn county sheriff's office tells cbs 2 news gingerich-feil was in the eastbound lanes when she was hit.the drivererf the semi was not hurt. right now fierce debating continues over a controversial pipeline project. project.the bakken oil pipeline would stretch across four states in the midwest.in iowa, it would cut across 1 1 coununes, that ararhighlighted in this map.hundreds turned out in boone county to speak for and against the pipeline.
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because of the number of speakers, each had just two minutes to state their case. the iowawautilities boararwill have the final say on the project.they already have another hearing on the issue set for next week. don't forget -- cbs 2 connects 4- 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 anytimemenline - at cbs 2 iowa dot com!have a great day. day. good morning, dad: i'm on it. culligan man: dude don't do it yourself. dad: no? culligan man: no. anncr: leave it to the experts. with a culligan whole-house water softening system, you get better water, and service you can actually count on.
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you get better water, and seice you can actually count on. dad: hey, culligan man. culligan man: hey! dad: this is great! culligananan: i know. anncr: leave it to the experts. with a culligan whole-house water softening system,
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, a mystery "48 hours" started investigating years ago. a mother who kept her daughter hidden overseas nearly two decades now breakser silence. wh finally brought her back to the u.s. to f face justice. plus singer judith hill worked with everyone from michael jackson to josh groban. now she's finding her own voice in her debut solo album. right now it's time to show you some of the morning's headlines. "the chicago tribune" reports on a recall of aghettio's because of a potential choking hazard from pieces oflastic that may peel off from the can lining. they are recalling 355,000 cans. 14.2 ounce cans are affected. they're stampepefebruary 22nd, 2017. "the los angeles times" reports on a judge using taylor
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lawsuit involving her pop song "shake it off." haters gonna hate, hate, hate >> swift was accused by an r & b singer by stealing the lyrics from his 2013 song of the same name. the u.s. district court judge tossed out the lawsuit saying, clever, at present the court i i not saying that braham can never, ever, ever get his case back in court. that's one of her lyrics. at least for the moment, dedendants have shaken o o this lawsuit. it sounds bike gail standish is a swifty. >> is that what they call taylor swift fans, swiflt yties? a swifty. >> norah, you're a swifty too. >> i am indeed. there's clearly no bad blood now. >> there you go. our cbs station in
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capture of an escaped emu. the emu named eddie turned up in a northern daware town more than two months ago. workers from the petting zoo tracked down the six-foot tall bird. eddie will stay at a farm until he is adopted. any takers? officials have no idea where he came from. and "the w whington post" reports on a creative attempt to smuggle 48,000 cans of heineken into saudi arabia. alcohol is bned in the conservative muslim country. the uggle was caught at the border. agents discovered cases of pepsi were not what they seemed. they peeled back the label to reveal the beer cans underneath. somebody is in trouble. >> yeah, but someoeo went to great lengths to shrink wrap those heinekens. >> somebody wanted some beer. >> but they treat you very harshly for r ings like that. a mysysry captivated charleston, south carolina, for almost two decades. a young mother vanishes with her
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then a tip from the other side of the world. dorothy lee barnett is brought back to the u.s. toace c crges that could mean more than 20 years behind bars. tomorrow night "48 hours" correspondent maureen maher investigates the stunning mother-daughter journey, and here's a preview. >> a few months before my mom gave birth to me she started writing a diary. it starts off on the first page saying to my dear savannah, some day i'll give this journal to you so that you can hopefully understand your mother. my name is savannah geldenhuys. i group upn the sunshine coast australia. i was born savannah but i didn't know that. savannah lee barnett. i knew my mom in ale mize entire life but in reality she was lee. lee barnett. >> alex geldenhuys' perfect
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a secret past of lee barnett. >> there was a big pounding on my door and this man was standing there with guns. he said i'm here with a warrant for your arrest. >> reporter: the fbi had been chasing dorothy lee barnett for almost two decades across five continents. agent chris quick. >> dorothy lee was very equipped at running from the w. she thought about this, she was planned, s s was determined. >> reporter: in april, 1994, lee barnett vanished with her baby daughter after losing custody to husband, harris todd, in an ugly court batttt. a battle fueled by allegations that lee was violent and mentally ill. >> the psical violence is one thing. the mental instabilily is another. >> reporter: "48 hours" has been on this story for the past 16 years. covering it from a grieving father's perspective. >> how could she be here and then be gone?
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time, we are hearing lee barnett's side of the story. >> did you ever have any history of mental illness? >> i never had any mentata illness. >> reporter: but she says proving it was another matter. >> how hard is it to prove that you are not crazy? >> it's impossible. >> reporter: after a 13-day trial, the judge made it clear who he believed. he awarded custody to harris todd. >> when they came and took herer is when i lost it. >> reporter: lee says she lost all faith in the family court system. she took her baby and ran and stayed missing until that knock camemet the door. > realized it was all up, that they had found me, and i knew that i'd have to face the consequences. >> maureen maher is here. maururn, good morning. >> good morning. >> could she face some charges now? >> no. she's already served her time. she pled at one point and was
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given 23 months, time served, and she's out now which is why she's able to sitown with us and talk about her story. >> how were they able to stay on the run without getting caught? >> she never called a single family member the entire time. she picked up with no ctures, no phone calls, no communication whatsoever. >> an incredible story. maureen, thank you so much. you n watch maureen's full report tomorrow night on "48 hos" at 7:00 in the central time zone and after the democratic debate in the west here on cbs. >> debate tomorrow? we'll be watching. singer judith hill is getting the ear of some of music's biggest names. you big it up and you say hello. >> and he says, judith, this is chris. >> i was like -- i was really ke oh, hi. real calm but really going crazy in my living room.
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that's comin i owe about $68,000. i owe $44,000 in student loans. my plan, the new college compact,
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says you should not have to borrow money to pay tuition if you go to a public college or university. and you ought to be able to refinance student debtbt and i don't believe the federal government should be making a profit off of lending to young people who are borrowing to be able to get their education. we have got to make college affordable.
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>> that woman with the powerful vovoe, that is judith hill on the piano. during her recent performance on "the late show with stephen
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years on backup for some of music's biggest names and this momoing she is front and center with her debut solo album. it's called "back in time." it's not what you can see everything else is what you're going to be >> how do you describe the style of your music and your voice? >> very retro, sold school kind of music. the record has got stuff from nk to a little bit of jazz and soul. >> in 2015 are people still craving funk? >> i'm excited to do funk in 2015. >> because? >> because it's kind of a lost art. a lot ofof people have forgotten about it or they haven't celebrated it as much, especially younger artists. before we go any further >> it is in my dna and i wanted to celebrate my roots and where i come from. >> so when did you first fall in love with music? >> well, i wrote my first song when i was 4 years old.
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>shsh-off. >> yeah. i mean it was really from the very beginning, from the crib. >> your first song at 4 years old. let me hear it. god has made the birds and the trees god has made everything >> you did that at 4? oh, my gosh, i think i was potty trained at that's pretty good. >> i grew up in mainly a white community and i was the one girl with like the big hair, biracial and a lot of times kids were like can you please move, i can't see the chalk board because your hair is too big so skin. >> but now people are trying to get wigshat look like your hair. so you go from can you move to how can i get a wig that looks like judith hill's hair. >> her career began as a backup singer. the 2013 oscar and grammy-winning documentary, "20
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journey. >> i've often wondered, i don't know of any background singer that doeoe't want to be in the front. >> there are some people that would just love the textures and the blends of voices. that's something beautiful. but yes, tuat the heaea oft we're alal singers and we want to present our voice and our interpretation of what we see. >> she worked with stevie wonder. and josh groban. but it was performing with the king of pop that put judith hill on the map. >> youou must take us to that moment. >> oh, my gosh. >> take me all the way there. >> it was like being thrown into the fire. i was told to likee give it your all, like michael, this is your first time performing with him. he's got to see.
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i was like okay, just go for it. >> do you ever think how does this happen to me? >> yes, i do. i think i take it as like, okay, i've been called to do this and i need to like take allf this inspiration i've got from these incredible peoplend really like make sure i make the best version of me and get out there and do it. >> she c cpeted on s sson 4 of "the voice" two years ago. although eliminated, hill stayed persistent. >> it was always like i'm working on my record. oh, when is the record coming out? i don't know. 10 years, 20 years have gone by. >> in a 2014 interview, she was asked who was left on her dream llaboration list? >> wellllyou know,, i'm a big prince fan. >> and two weeks later, her phone rang. >> you pick it up. >> i say hello. and he says, judith, this is prince.
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>> [ screaming ] >> oh, hi, prince, really calm-like but really going crazy in my living room. then we shared our love for funk music and thatat how it all started. >> did you say i'm available right now? >> prince invivid hill to his pays lowisley park studios for a groundwork. that would become the grodwork of her session. >> prince was funky. i wanted to work with someone who was funky and understood that and it was the perfect collaboration. >> on "back in time" hill celebrates funk, jazzzzsoul, and a beautiful life. a beautiful life
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>> didn't you get goosebumps just now? >> her voice is so rich. she's got a degree in musus composition. she said working with prince is tough because he's a task master in a good way. it's like a boot camp and he expects excellence. >> and dancing with michael.
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horigan got producing credit. 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 war, supporting veterans. 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 tuititn-free public colleges.
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people are sick and tired of establishment politics, and they want real change! [ cheers and applause ] bernie sanders -- husband, father, grandfather, an honest leader building a movement with you to give us a future to believe in.
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a look back at the week that was. and have a great weekend. >> take it easy. >> hold it. waitit minute. >> i'm going to getet my question right now. >> it's a silly argument. >> i don't have i don't to hear from this man. believe me. >> accused of being naive on isis and impractical on immigration. >> who was?
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>> politicians can do whatever they want with the questions i ask. >> can i clarify your position on that? you would see the 4 million plus immigrants deported? >> we need to. >> annnnncer: our law. >> our david martin is told, pretty goddamn certain they got him. >> they are helel in isolation. >> he was an awesome boy. >> inside sinjar, you can hear the gunfire. >> theids we spokeo say they phone. why not? >> started as sort of anti-valentine's day. november 11th, 1111, all of those one's. >> stop! >> that is the closing bell at the new york stock exchange. several veterans of the cbs news family being hohored. >> a sky diving grandmother. her dentures fell out of her mongolia and hit her instructor
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in the head! she didn't knock him out. you used to call me on your cell phone >> they call this the halo of the space needle and 520 feet off the ground and the one of the best views in all of seattle. >> i think we should tell ben tracy's mom cbs news really loves her son very much. >> how many times have you thought, i can't do this any more? i need to stop? >> zero. >> everybody is looking for mental toughness. the only way youain mental toughness is to do things you're not happy doing. >> people are going, you can do it! no, i can't, actually! >> it felt like a body of work that i was naturally called to do. >> the man who bout both jewels
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he reportedly bought the stones for his 7-year-old daughter. >> she didn't want a barbie? >> are you the best because of the look that you had? >> not at all. >> no? >> i don't thinknko. not at all. >> is it because of what? >> i think because of my personality. >> any news in your life? everything going okay? >> you are really struggling, aren't you? >> what happened? >> i don't knonoif you just said that to me in private. >> a boy on the way. >> on behalf of today's organization, i want to apologize e you. >> congratulations, mrs. script. i am so happy for you.
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it could happen n you! i'm _______it's eight-55 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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at the university of iowa, despite earlier hinting the school might opt-out of a local minimum wage increase... increase...cbs 2 news has learned campus leaders are going along with johnson county'slan to raise the wage.the university says it raised the minimum wage to 8-20 an hour earlier this month.the increase means a raise for more than 700-temporary and student employees. hawkeye fans prepping for a big sports weekend will be in downtown iowa city for a pep rally tonight.the rally starts at 5 at the weatherdance fountain stage in the ped mall. a double header basketball game will follow at carver hawkeye arena.and tomorrow, a hawkeye wrestling meet and football game e ll both be held inside kinnick stadium. wrestling starts at 11, football at 7. a film made right here in the
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tonight at the paramount theatre.the showowg starts at 7 tonight, with a pre-party at 6.tickets are 15-dollars.it's about a smaller than average dog at the north pole, who gets left behind at a home in iowa after he sneaks onto santas sleigh. dodot forget -- cc 2 connects with you - call cbs 2 if you see news happen.800 222 kgan. you can also email tips, ctures, and even video --to news -- at cbs 2 iowa dot com. thth's a quick look at y yr friday morning news.get more news anytime online - at cbs 2 iowa dot com!have a great day.
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today on the wayne: i'm on tv! jonathan: it's a trip to napa. - (screams) wayne: (high pitched sounds)
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you've got the car!
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