tv Up to the Minute CBS February 4, 2016 2:07am-4:00am CST
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almost sixty million americans are affected by mental illness. together we can help them with three simple words.s. my name is chris noth and i will listen. from maine to maui, thousands of high school students across the country are getting in on the action by volunteering in their communities. chris young: action teams of high school students are joining volunteers of amerera and major league baseball players to help train and inspire the next generation of volunteers. carlos pea: it's easy to start an action team at your school so you, too, can get in on the tion.
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if you were a hippie in the '60s, you need totonow. it's the dawning of the age of aquarius. yeah, and something else that's cool. what? osteoporosis is preventable. all: osteo's preventable? right on! if you dig your bones, protect them. alal cbs cares! senator rand paul dropped out of the republican race today. he is going to focus now on getting re-elected to his senate seat in kentucky. now to the democrats, after losing to hillary clinton in iowa, by t t narrowest of margins, bernie sanders is beating her nearbily 2:1 in the latest poll in new hampshire. here is nancy cordes.
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e behind. >> reporter: with her poll numbers sinking here, hillary clinton all but concede to bernie sanders today. putting it off on geography. >> new hampshire always favors neighbors which i think is neighborly. >> reporter: sanders represents vermont next door. how much of your lead do you think should be attribut to the fact that you are from a neighboring state? >> if you did a poll about how many people in new hampshire new hillary clinton, how many people knew bernie sanders, i suspect more would have known hillary clinton. >> reporter: he says he is leading because he is in line with the state's progressive base. 56% of democrats who voted in new hampshire's 2008 pmary called themselves liberals. 36% were moderates. sanders was asked tuesday if he thinkskslinton is progressive? >> some days, yes.
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>> it was kind of a low blow. >> reporter: clinton took offense. but has aligned herself with both wings of the party. here's what she said in ohio last year. >> i get accused of being kind of moderate and center. i plead guilty. >> reporter: here's what she said today. >> we have been fighting the progressive fight and getting results for people for years. >> reporter: so, what changed from then till now? well, back in september, clinton wasn't expecting a tough challenge from the left. today, scott she says her fight is on n half of children's health insurance, women's rights and gay rights, prove she is in progressive's corner. >> thank you, nancy. late today we learned that bill cosby will be going on trial. a pennsylvania judge refused to throw out sexual assault charges against him.
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in norristown.n. jericka? >> bill cosby left the courthouse ten minutes ago. the disgraced comedian's attorneys had been working to get the case thrown out. argued there was a promise by thformer district attorney to never charge cosby for allegedly sexually assaulting, andrea constand. from a civiv deposition, 2005, unsealed last summer. in it, constand's attorney asked cosby, when you got the quaaludes was it in your mind you were going to use the quaaludes for young women that you wanted to have sex with? cosby replied yes. the case again moves forward in preliminary hearing, scheduled >> jericka duncan with the breaking news tonight. thank you. today congress investigated why veterans are being denied a cure for a deadly form of hepatitis. in a cbs news investigation we told you the cure was developed by a doctor working for the department of veterans affairs. the doctor got rich, but at
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afford it. here is chip reid. >> if i were you, i would be outraged. >> certainly the taxpayers should be outraged. >> reporter: much of the anger at today's heang was directed at some one who wasn't in the room, dr. raymond schinazi, played a leading role devil tuping a drug that cures hepatitis c. when he told his company to pharmaceutical giant, gilead in 2012. he made $400 million. did it all working 7/8 of his time for the department of veterans affairs. >> these are not full time. what i do with my remaining time is up to me. >> reporter: we first met dr. schinazi in december. >> has any bed questioned the arrangement that you have that allows you to become very wealthy while working 7/8 of your time wiwi the government? >> february has never questioned yet. >> reporter: that changed as members including tim huelskamp grilled david shulkin. >> he just sold a company for $400 million. did anybody know about that? >> i am not aware of who knew
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>> reporter: mike coffman wanted to know why schinazi got rich but the va got nothing. >> is it bureaucratic incompetence, corruption or combination of the two. this wasted resource is s y this nation is unable to take care of the men and women who served the country. >> others were upset the doctor was not there to be questioned. ththva said that he retitid two days ago. >> the person who is responsible always seems to retire just before the investigation starts. >> reporter: the va did approve schinazi's part time arrangement and told us part time employees are allowed to invest in private companies so long as all cocolict of interest rules are followed. the va says there will be internal and external investigations. >> chip reid, thank you.
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syria have led to the largest refugee crisis since world war ii. more than a million refugees welcomed by germany. but charlie d'agata found that the welcome is wearing thin. when they saw the suffering. germans opened their arms like no other country in europe. >> hopefully nothing. >> mayor boris palmer was amg them. >> we had people drowning in the mediterranean sea. i found that appalling and terrible. >> reporter: but the mayor of the university town of 80,000 has had a change of heart. >> if you have several hundred thousand men who come to your country as s sgles. and live in sports halls and town halls.
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they have no privacy. and they have no contact to women. and how long will that happen without any outbreak of violence? >> reporter: for many germans the tipping point was new year's even cologne. police and witnesses said gangs of drunken men including many north africans and arabs groped and assaulted hundreds of women in the crowd. police are investigating 380 complaints. including rape. seattle university student, caitlyn duncan lost her boyfriend in the mayhem that night. >> someone reached up my jacket. i was in a crowd. i i s kind of twisting, turning, hitting, kicking. so, it happened all very quickly. but, yeah, people grabbed, you know between my legs, my -- my head, my face. >> reporter: she didn't get a good look at her attackers but said they were all shouting in arabic. she was rescued by a group of
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>> i was just so relieved. and then they all, you know kind of hugged me. caitlyn, it is going to be okay. dodot cry. >> caller: duncan said she came migrants should be blamed. 2/3 are asylum seekers. the cologne attacks have and mayor palmer said germany migrant this year. >> the numbers have off to decline. otherwise, there will be breakdowns in german cities and communities. >> reporter: today the german cabinet took dramatic steps towards tightening asylum rules, scott, including a two-year ban on family reunions and barring north african countries altogether. >> the welcome mat wears thin. for desperate people. ththk you, charlie d'agata. connected a teenager with her killer.urface cells for a dramatic transformation without the need for fillers. your concert tee might shoho your age...your sksk never will. olay regenerist.
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and try regenerist micro-sculpting eyeswirl. it instantly hydrates to plump and lift. living g ll your immune system works hard t tkeep you on top of your game. you can support it by eating healthy, drinking fluids, and getting some rest. and you can combine these uimple remedies with airborne. no other leading immunity brand gives you more vitamin c. plus it has a specially crafted blend of 13 vitamins, minerals and herbs. so when you want to support your immune system, take airrne, and enjoy livivi well. dry spray? that's fun. it's already dryry no wait timeme this is great. it's very soft. can i keep it? (laughs) all the care of dove... ...now in a dry antiperspirant spray. man (sternly): where do you think k u're going? mr. mucus: to workrkwith you. it's taco tuesday. man: you're not coming. i took mucinex to help get rid of my mucusy congestion. i'm good all day.
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not 4, not 6, but 12 hours. let's end this here in the city, parking is hard to find. seems like everyone drives. and those who do should switch to geico because you could save hundreds on car insurance. ah, perfect. valet parking. hello! here's the keys. and, uh, go easy on my ride, mate. hm, wouldn't mind some of that beef wellington... to see how much you could save on car insurance, go to geico.com. ah! (car alarm sounds)
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her scarred. medicine caused her to gain weight says her stepmother, terri lovell. she would send me messages about the little girls picking on her, saying she was fat. she would cry. she didn't want to go totochool. >> reporter: the seventh gradede sought a bettetelie on line. and against her father's wishes she created social media personas. >> she was able, at 13 to go and set up profiles on facebook that we had no idea about. a minor should not be able to do that. >> reporter: in this invisible world online these kids are in. >> we have no idea. >> reporter: one person police believe she was talking to accused killer david eisenhauer, possibly on the app, kik. kik allows users to be anonymous and send photos not sad on the phone leaving no trace. and with the national center of exploited and mising children. >> every phone, every social media site has some parental control.
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time limits that are set. and, all of those are great. but technology doesn't solve all of the problems. >> experts say pararts need to take an aggressive role e knowing whatatheir kids are doing online and who they're talking to. monitoring all social media activity and getting copies of every e-mail and text. >> the lovells wish they could have done more. >> awful. tragedy. all could have been prevented. >> reporter: stt, kik said ey helped the fbi in this case and all child predator cases. >> don dahler.
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we'll be right back. the irs suffered a major computer failure and it can't accept many taxpayer returns online. the agency says it may not have a fix for this until tomorrow. there is also news tonight about cbs. leslie moonves elected chairman of the board. he will remain p psident and ceo as well. sumner redstone who recently stepped down as executive chairman, named chairman
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50 years of super bowl gold. woman: what does it feel like when a woman is having a heart attack? chest pain, like there's a ton of weight on your chest. severe shortness of breath. unexplained nausea. cold sweats. there's an unusual tirness and fatigue. there's unfamiliar dizziness or light-headedness. unusual pain in your back, neck, jaw, one or both arms, even your upper stomach, are signs you're having a heart attack. dodot make excuses. make the call to 9-1-1 immediately. learn more at womenshealth.gov/heartattack. when the twins were about 10 days old, the doctcts told us they were going to need blood transfusions. we're so proud of who they've become.
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we end tonight with a man who shares a super bowl record. one of only four men to take a snap at every super bobo game. here's john blackstone. >> reporter: at super bowl 1 in 1967, the very first super bowl touchdown was captured by photographph 15 years old. john biever. >> i had max mcgee's first
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wide shot, showing empty stand in the background. >> repepter: the stand were not full at the first super bowl? >> no. >> reporter: since then, biever photographed every super bowl. >> gentlemen namath, super bowl three. and john madden, super bowl 11. biever got to the first super bowl his father was photographer for the green bay packers. that game gave him the favorite photo. >> vince lombardi off the fielel my father to the right in the background. had two heroes together in the same shot. >> reporter: by super bowl 4. biever earned press credentials. for 30 years now, he has been with "sports illustrated." >> this player, celebrating with confetti made the picture. >> reporter: h photos reveal changes in both the game and photography.
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cover. this is the first year we didn't use film. now, it is all auto focus equipment. that little talent of following focus of the action is gone. >> reporter: you liked it in the old days when, some mud went flying. >> one of my favorite shots. >> super bowl 22. doug williams. >> real grass. real mud. the way the game use theed to be. >> used to be. better pictures. because it wasn't as antiseptic c as now. >> in spite of the changes. one thing at super bowl 50 will be exactly the same. john biever will be there with his camera. john blackstone, cbs news, san francisco. >> that's the overnight news for this thursday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back with us later for the morning news and "cbs this morning."
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>> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." hi, everyonene welcome to the overnight news. the zika virus epidemic has been granded a global health emergency. now it entered unpredictable new phase. the cdc confirms a person in texas contracted the virus through sex with someone who traveled to venezuela. the world health organization says sexual transmission of zika is very rare and it is the first
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contracted the virus without traveling abroad. ground zero of the epidemic the brazilian city of recife. dr. lapook is there. >> reporter: the health commissioner told me zika is rampant, sexual transmission not yet t cumented. felt to be spread by mosquitoes and causing a devastating birth defect which is why pregnant women are so concerned. 30-year-old is pregnant with her urth child. are you worried for your own baby? she says she is worried but had no obvious symptoms of zika. cases of microcephaly across brazil total 4,000. several hundred suspected cases just last week. recife, is epicenter of an explosion of microcephaly, small head at birth linked to zika.
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doorordding chemicals to w wter and spraying pesticides. in order tc attack the mosquitoes breeding ground. >> a lot more mosquitoes in january of 2015 than november. this doctor took us to the situation room inside recife's health department where the city of 1.6 million is charting the infections. >> this is all recife. >> a lot of cases. >> yes. reporter: the healtlt department estimates, 50,000 to 100,000 people have been exposed. 80% of the time those infected with zika don't feel sick. what do you think when you see the babies with microcephaly and you know you arereregnant? she is worried about the threat of infection because it is a very critical situation. >> really heartbreaking. >> reporter: the doctor told us this historically impoverished community needs to fiend a solution to an epidemic which threatens an entire generation. >> these childrev will be
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stage. apart from the scientific and public health personon i think as human beings, we really feel the need to do something about it. >> super bowl is just three days away. one denver broncos player will levision. sasaty ryan murphy on the practice squad, wasn't going to play anyway was sent home after questioned by police at a prostitution sting. murphy wasn't charged. but the team doesn't want hihito be a distraction as they prepare for the sunday big game against the carolina panthers. jeff glore has more. >> reporter: denver broncos safety, ryry murphy caught in a a prostitution outside this hotel in san jose tuesday evening. the 23-year-old played in college for or gun state. questioned and releaued. he was not arrested. but t lice did issue his brother, who was with him at t t time, a citation. the broncos sent murphy back to denver. in a statement, the head coach, gary kubiak, decided it was best
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preparations for super bowl 50 without him. >> a week of heavy distraction. got to handle those things. get ready to play. >> reporter: over the weekend kubiak addressed the importance of staying focused. >> to get to this point in your football career, player, team. hard to get there. i talked to them about that all the time. last min of the distraction for the atlanta falcons. >> 17 years ago, starting player for the falcons, eugene robinson arrested after soliciting sex from an undercover officer the night before super bowl 33. robibion played the next day. >> that could be a living example. don't mess this up. >> radio analyst for the panthers, robinson spoke with the team sunday abut the dangers of game we temptations. >> i want my guys to know. i love this team. hey, you got a great opportunity. ach great opportunity. go ahead and seize the moment. and don't in this respect be like me. homeland security secretary jay johnston in northern california everseeing the build-up of super bowl security. sunday's game is in silicon valley and will feature technologies never used before
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michelle miller has more. >> reporter: this is one of several roadblocks along the perimeter of levi stadium to keep the prying eyes of the public out. humvees, patrol caca on sight. one thing is for certain. if you come anywhere near the game, on sunday, you will be watched. and closely. everywhere you turn, in the san francisco bay area this week you will find a massive security presence. from the watero land. even in the air. quite a takeoff. the air and marine branch of customs and border protection is one of 50 law enforcement and government agencies working to keep super bowl 5050ecure. video cameras are powerful enough to show me the faces of
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stadium. a structure with license plate readers and controversial trackers, that could let police monitor your phone. nce the super bowl was happening in the heart of silicon valley, some agencies are trying out new technologies and including a data collection program that g ges law enforcement a complete picture of what is happening by integrating video feeds with agency cell phones and radio communications. >> reporter: outside levi stadium. custom and border patrol agents, screen cargo, with x ray machinin that can detect radad active material. they did not want us to reveal detailed images captured with proprietary technology. but i was allowed to take a
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>> reporter: i see straight through this truck. thes event will test those both on and off the field. >> we're working with a lot of interagency partnerships at state, local and federal levels. out there assisting making sure the super r wl 50 event goes without any hitch. no group has yet to claim responsibility for the explosion aboard a passenger plane in somalia. the blast blew a hole in the plane, forced the pilot to make an emergency lananng. one person was killed when he was sucked out of the hole. mark phillips has more. >> reporter: somalia's aviation director referred to the airbus developing a sudden defect. it was pretty clear what caused the defect. a gaping hole in the plane's side. one passenger was apparently blown out of the hole, his body found later. surviving passengers said they heard a tale tale bang. a somali diplomat on board, awaki kulani, recorded the scenes and said he shared the same fears as any one else. were they all going to die. all but one of the passenger and crs survived seemed beuse the exexosion occurred earlylyn the climb out of mogadishu.
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some of the world's scientists are studying climate change at the top of the world glacier. 3/4 of greenland is covered in ice. each year it loses more ice then it gains in snowfall. believed to contribute to the rise in sea levels and maybe worse. sharon alfonsi traveled to the arctic circle to see what the researchers have discovered. >> great to see you.
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>> reporter: who did you upset to be put o o here. >> the gods. >> the gods. >> keith nichols is an expert drilling in remote places. in terms of remote this would be really hard to beat. feels like you are on another planet. >> can't take a walk around here. expecting scott yo to beam you up. it is extraordinary. >> reporter: nichols and scientists are drawn to this sliver of greenland in part by the satellite images. in 2010, a chunk of ice, four times the size of manhattan, broke off. then, two years later, another large chunk came down. the glacier has receded by 20 miles in five years. nichols and his team are trying to drill beneath it. >> this is a lot of work. difficult conditions. what do you hop to learn? >> what we are trying to learn how the ocean is interacting
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and in future how that might change.. they heated melt water from the glacier to make a hot water drill to pierce through the 300 foot thick ice. there has to be serious challenge to running equipment like this in this kind of weather? >> the biggest challenge we have got water. it is very cold. so if you have water freezing in hoses that can be devastating. it's for the projects. >> this is the moment the coring machine struck the bottom of the sea floor. a half mile beneath the ice, they made history. it was the first time any one has ever collected sediment from beneath the ice shelf in greenland. >> the ocean beneath is probably the least accessible part of the world ocean.
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is a triumph frankly as far as we are concerned. the ice shelf extends from the glacieieand floats on the ococn. they believe it acts like a dam, holding back ice from sliding into the sea. if it goes away, sea levels go up. is there a sense o ourgency in the work that you are doing? >> the sea level rises, the big question we are trying to get at. and peterman glacier, this experiment here, gives us an opportunity to g g at the processes, and try to understand the basic physics to how that can happen. >> our visit to the ice camp was cut short. our pilots warned of something, ice fog moving in. and could strand us here for days. we high tailed it back to the helicopter. heading to another outpost of the expedition. what the scientists call boulder camp. set up on the edge of peterman glacier. steve marquatt and geologists have been here fororeeks gathering samples from rocks. >> this was probably deposited when the ice was maybe a few hundred to few thousand feet thicker.
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talking about, 600 feet of ice above us. >> above where we are now. >> above where we are now. peterman would have been much larger, dropping the rocks all over the surface. >> to the person at home whohos looking at you guys chipping at rocks why should i care about this? >> we know if you warm the planet up. glaciers respond. they melt. e question is at whaharate? how fast is that going to that pen? where is if the going to happen? where are the vulnerable spots in the ice sheet. to understand all that you have to understand how the ice sheet, whwh controls an ice sheet. we need to understand this glacier to provide a better prediction for the ice sheet. that matters to us because of sea level. if the glaciers can respond die namingly, we should all be concerned. because the that can create flood infrastructure. we need new know that planning for the future. >> reporter: we camped out next to the scientists. with 24 hourof light. we slept in the tents under the
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in the morning, we were shuttled out to meet the swedish ice breaker making its way around peterman glacier. it supports the scientists on land and acts as a floating labotory. med after a norse god who sought wisdom. it is home to 50 climate scientists from around the world with similar convictions. their work is funded mostly by the swedish governrnnt. and the u.s. national science foundation. larry mayor, is one of geologists on the ship. and using sonar to map the ocean floor. creating the first detailed maps that show how peterman glacier slid into the sea. see it like skid marks of a car at an accident scene. >> yeah, the ice went here. the ice went there. we can see it. oh, stopped here.
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world's oceans have been mapped with detail. >> 6%, 7%. >> reporter: you can make the trip to peterman glacier a f f weeks eachchummer when the ice melts enough to allow passage. >> see the blocks of ice drifting by. >> reporter: allen mix i running the ship's coring operation. trying to grab sediment from the sea floor. >> actually the coring site is under the block of ice. we just can't get there. we are trying to drift with the ice and sort of snook up on it. gently. >> reporter: it is hard to sneak up on anything in an ice breaker. he doesn't so much as sail, as it does smash the ice like a 13,000 ton hammer. once in position they throw a piston core, like a dart, at the bottom of the ocean. >> that doesn't sound good. >> after multiple attempts.
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hit it with a gravity core. >> a core sample look this is collected. inside the ship's lab, the multiyear process of investigating those cores, begins. what is your best guess. how old is this? >> so the base of this core -- probably is no more than 10,000 years. >> reporter: ann jennings with institute of arctic and alpine research. she says each core holds clues about peterman glacier's past. >> we didn't really expect to @ find tngs living under the ice shelf. we have. >> what have you found? sivisivides-storfi. >> easy for you to say. >t is a seashell. single celled animal. >> reporter: the single celled
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is made out of carbon allowing scientists to determine when they lived. take the depth scale here. convert it to age. then wcan say when did the ice retreat? how quickly did it retreat? was there a lot of melt water coming out? >> you can get all of that from what looks like mud? >> yes. >> reporter: after a week in greenland, we headed home. but the scientists kept working. taking advantage of the final dada of the short arctic summer. the 66 core samples they collected during their month at sea will be studied by scientists around the world for decades. >> this is the largest core repository in the world. >> a paleo climatologist at columbia university. he says cores collected in greenland are like a black box of the earth's inner workings. this one he collected south of greenland. >> this is today's climate. we have had 10,000 years of relatively warm climate. then we go, 10,000 years in the past. boom. there is the last ice age. this is when long island was formed.
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go on. just find this color. this is filled with these rocks. ice rafted treditis. this period. whoa, a warm phase. cold phase. then another warm phase. short cold phase. longer warm phase. boom, another ice age. so you have had, cold, warm, cold, warm, cold -- warm. today. you can see the full report on our website. cbsnews.com. the overnight news will be right back.'re new liquid gels. and you're coming g th me... you realize i i ve gold status? mucinex sinus-max liquid gels. dissolves fast to unleash max strength medicine. let's end this. dry spray? that's fun. it's already dry! no wait time. this is great. it's very soft. can i keept? (laughs) all the care of dove... ...now in a dry antiperspirant spray.
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the wounded warrior project again finds itself in the cross hairs of those who say it is wasting money that could be spent on america's wounded veterans. a cbs news investigation found the organization spent millions of dololrs on lavish parties and expensive conventions. now the watch dog group, charity navigator put the wounded warrior project on its watch list saying it spend 60% of the money it raises providing veteran services. chip reid has beenovering the story from the start. >> reporter: the nation's most prominent veterans charity is
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spend the more than $800 million it raised in the past six years. we asked mark owens, former director of tataexempt organinitions at the irs to review the woundnd warrior projects, tax documents. what was your biggest concern in reading the forms? >> that i couldn't tell the number of people that were assisted. i thought that was truly usual. if the organization is asking for money and spending money, purportedly spending money to assist veterans, i would look to know. >> reporter: wounded warrior project says 80% of their money is spent on programs for veterans because they include promotional items. direct response advertising and shipping and postage costs. ic they take that out, and it looks like charity watch dogs, say 60% of donations go toelp wounded service memberer >> the c c said fund-raising should and can be included in the programs and services. your response? >> well, i would be curious to know how asking people for money equates to the assistance
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2009. in 2 24 paid $500,000 in line with similar sized charities. many former employees said they thought it was too much. nardizzi defended his salary to our norfolk affiliate last april. less than 1/10 of 1% of donation that come in. i am running an organization that is helping hundredsdsf thousand of warriors. >> reporter: last year, wwp gave $150,000 grant to a group that defends higher spending on overhead, executive salaries and fund-raising by charities. nardizzi says the more money the charity raises the more it can spend on veterans. >> if your fixation is spending the most on programs. that's feeling the good. not necessarily doing good. you can run program activities. spent a lot of money. >> charity watch dog says his biggest concern is that the
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million surplus. and not enough of it is being spent on veterans. >> it would be helpful if the hundreds of millions of dole lars are being spent to help veterans in the shorter term. in the y yr or two rather than being held for longer term. >> the cbs overnight news will be right back.ng pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbcaption test !!! maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. tesesng pc-17 f1 cdefghijklmnopqrstuvuvyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 6789090 cbs caption testst!! maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing pc- cbs caption test !!! abcdefghijmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890
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abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 678 it's ryan's cell phone. gibbs: isisate calls from psy-ops, government-issueuelines. there's five or six different numbers here. cross-reference with incoming calls to banks over the past month. when the engines failed on the plane i was flying, i knew what to do to save my passengers. but when my father sank into depression, i didn't know how to help him. when he ultimately shot himself, he left our family devastated. don't let this happen to you. if you or a loved one is suicidal, call the national suicide prevention lifelin no matter how hopeless or helpless you feel, with the right help, you can get well. (franklin d. roosevelt) the inherent right to o rk is one of the e emental privileges of a free people. endowed, as our nation is, with abundant physical resources...
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and opportunities available for the enjoyment of all... ...we approach reemployment with real hope of finding a better answer than we have now. narrator: donate to goodwill where your donations help fund job placement and training for people in your community. millions of people in the midwest are still digging out after the week's massive snowstorm. heavy snow and powerful wind knocked out power. for schools and businesses forced to close and iggered flight cancellations from colorado to northern michigan. the harsh winter weather isn't trouble for everyone. one businessman is transforming snow and ice into a castle of his own design. jamie yukas has the story. >> reporter: piece by piece. day and ght.
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nearly a quarter million of them. >> i've got to be one of the luckiest guys. >> it began as a hobby for brent christianson. the kids and i would build igloos, ice rinks, and using icicles and spraying water as a way to build. >> from his backyard to now a $2 million business. this year, four crews are creating ice parks in canada, utah, minnesota and new hampshire. warm weather forced a late start in new hampshire. his team of 20 artisans worked 14 hour days for three weeks. spraying 5 million gallons of water in temperatures as low as 2 degrees. it opened last weekend and offers chills and thrills for all ages. >> we've got slides. mazes made out of ice. and canyons, and tubes. >> this park is open day and night. with the help of thousand of embedded led lights. >> they go, right. blue, green. we have them synchronized to music. >> reporter: work continues on the sculptures throughout the season. some will grow to as high as 40 feet.
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nature allows. a health emergency has been declared in florida with nine cases of zika virus and all conditions ripe for more. devastating t tnados in the deep south. >> just unreal to walk out and see this, this could happen in a matter of seconds. >> as the candidates campaign in new hampshire, trump calls for a do-over in iowa. and the incredible super bowl record set by a photographer. >> i had two of my heroes togegeer in the same ot.
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overnight news." a tornado touched down near fort stewart in georgia. it was on the ground about ten minutes. there are reports of damage. and power outages. the twister you see there would be the 11th tornado so far from the major storm system that has crososd towards the east. for more on the damage from tuesday night, we will go to david begnaud in collinsville, mississippi. >> reporter: scott, g gd evening. collinsville knows what the people of georgia are dealing with. 24 hours ago at this very moment a tornado came from this direction and ripped through the first baptist church where we are tonight. the only people here, pastor, wife and their son. they hid in the safest place they know. the church. this was the scene throughout alabama and mississippi over thehe last 24 hours. >> coming right at us.
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mississippi, vicky hartley took shelter with a neighbor in a basement before her roof was blown off. >> is was shocking. i was thankful that we were all okay. >> reporter: the tornado continued 3/4 mile, approaching the first baptist church of collinsville. pastor wade ricks heard it coming. >> took off running. and my son was right over here. i said get inside. we went inside and got underneath a desk. and soon as we got under the desk it hit. >> reporter: pastor rick says it took less than 20 second to dupe this to the 85-year-old church which had been damaged during hurricane katrina. >> hard to believe that something could do this much damage so quick. >> reporter: north of mississippi, in tennessee, the same system that fueled those tornado thousands, caused flooding. eight people in rankin countnt were rescued from their homes. another this morning in ashland city. back in mississippi -- >> sun day i preached on how to handle storms.
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i guess god iss saying, "you know, you are going to practice what you preach." >> reporter: there have been no major injuries or deaths reported from any of the tornados. and scott,t,he pastor here at first baptist church in collinsville says if the tornado would have hit 24 hours later, there would have been a group of children in this classroom for bible study.y. david begnaud, thank you. tonight, for the first time a health emergency declared in this country because of the zika virus. which is suspected of causing birth defects. the governor of florida put the emergency into effect in four counties including miami-dade. it will allow more spraying for mosquitoeshat can spread the disease. zika can also be transmitted sexually. florida has at least nine cases. all of the patients were infected overseas. but now there is concern that those patientnt could infect
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so far, there are 48 patients in 12 states and washington, d.c. all infected overseas except for one sexually transmitted case in dallas. all week this week, dr. jon lapook has been covering zika at the place that the outbreak is at its worst in brazil. jon, you have been working on why florida is taking this action. what have you learned? >> reporter: scott, i think an attempt to stay ahead of problem lowering the odds that zika virus wiwi enter the local mosquito population in florida. no evidence that mosquitoes have the zika virus. a person gets fected witit zika in brazil. flies to the united states, in florida. stays in the blood stream a week. a low cull mosquiton florida. bielts that infected person. picks up the virus. turns around. bites an uninfected person. you have low cull spread of zika.
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>> john, nibody has more experience dealing with this than the brazilians. what are they doing there that we may see here later? >> scott, an all-out effort here. first, public spraying. trying to reduce mososito breeding ground. they are going house to house. went with soldiers. public health officials. educating about prevention. small containers that contain walter scan be a breeding ground for the species of mosquito.. >> you have b bn talking to a lot of authorities about this. what's the likelihood there will the united states? >> scott, i think it is very, very likely that's eventually zika will make its way into local mosquitoes in the southern part of the united states first. but all of the health officials i have spoken to think it is unlikely you will have a big outbreak on the came of something say in brazil. >> dr. jon lapook on the front line of the zika outbreak in brazil tonight. jon, thanks. six days to new hampshire.e.
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donald trump with a huge lead over iowa caucus winner ted cruz and marco rubio. jeb bush, john kasich, chris christie in single digits. despite the lead, julianna coleman says trump is sore about iowa. >> reporter: donald trtrp sounded likekee had come to terms with his iowa loss last night. but wok up this morning on the twitter war path. accusing senator ted cruz of stealing the election and calling for a caucus redo. the texas senator fired back. >> it is no surprise that donald is throwing yet another temper tantrum, if you like, a trumper tantrum. >> reporter: as cruz and trump battle for the insurgent mantle. jeb bush focused fire on marco rubio. >> marcoubio came in third place in a caucus state. we are all supposed to bow out. that is absolutely absurd. >> the florida senator has
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rivals on the stump. leaving it to television ads. >> two names from the past. tied to the past. >> congress makes a choice -- >> some of rubio's toughest attacks from chris christie. who dismiss bush and ohioo governor john kasich. >> this new hampshire primary now done to a choice between me and marco rubio. everybody knows it. >> what did you mean by that? >> you can tell the way the senanar is engagagg and i'm engaging with him. it is down to two of us on the side of the street. >> news to kasich. >> everyone has an opinion in this business. if i get absolutely smomod up here the i will go home. i don't think that is going to happen. >> reporter: recent polls, showcase itch ahead ofshow showkasich ahead of christie. polls are unrelyiable until votes are cast. >> julianna coleman for us.
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senator rand paul dropped out of the republican race today. he is going to focus now on getting re-elected to his senate seat in kentucky. now to the democrats, after losing to hillary clinton in iowa, by the narrowest of margins, bernie sanders is beating her nearbily 2:1 in the latest poll in new hampshire. here is nan cordes. >> their argument is, look, you are bebend. >> reporter: with her poll numbers sinking here, hillary
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bernie sanders today. putting it off on geography. >> new hampshire always favors neighbors which i think is neighborly. reporter: sanders represents vermont next door. how much of your lead do you think should be attributed to the fact that you are from a neighboring state? >> if you did a poll about how many people in new hampshire new hillary clinton, how many people knew bernie sanders, i suspect more would have known hillary clinton. >> reporter: he says he is leading because he is in line with the state's progressive base. 5656of democrats who voted in new hampshire's 2008 primary called themselves liberals. 36% were moderates. sanders was asked tuesday if he thinks clinton is progressiv >> some days, yes. and then i guess she is not a progressive. >> it was kind of a low blow. >> reporter: clinton took offense. but has aligned herself with both wings of the party. here's what she said in ohio last year. >> i get accused of being kind of moderate and center.
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>> reporter: here's what she saidtoday. >> we haveeen fighting the progressive fight and getting results for people for years. >> reporter: so, what changed from then till now? well, back in september, clinton wasn't expecting a tough challenge from the left. today, scott she says her fight is on behalf of children's health insurance, women's rights$% and gay rights, prove she is in progrereive's corner. >> thank you, nancy. late today we learned that bill cosby will be going on trial. a pennsylvania judge refused to throw out sexual assault charges against him. jarika duncan at the courthouse in norristown. ja jericka? >> bill cosby left t t courthouse ten minutes ago. the disgraced comedian's attorneys had been working to get the case thrown out. argued there w a promise by
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never charge cosby for allegedly constand. from a civil deposition, 2005, unsealed last summer. in it, constand's attorney asked cosby, when you got the quaaludes was it in your mind you were going to use the quaaludes for young women that you wanted to have sex with? cosby replied yes. the case again moves forward in preliminary hearing, scheduled next month. >> jericka duncan with the breaking news tonight. thank you. > today congress investitited why veterans are being denied a cure for a deadly form of hepatitis. in a cbs news investigation we told you the cure w developop a doctor working for the department of veterans affairs. the doctor got rich, but at $1,000 a pill, the v.a. can't afford it. here is chip reid. >> if i were you, i would be outraged.
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should be outraged. >> reporter: much of the anger at today's hearing was directed at some one who wasn't inn the room, dr. raymond schinazi, played a leading role devil tuping a drug that cures hepatitis c. when he td his company to pharmaceutical giant, gilead in 2012. he made $400 million. did it all working 7/8 of his time for the department of veterans affairs. these are not fulll time. what i do with my remaining time is up to me. >> reporter: we first met dr. schinazi in december. >> has any bed questioned the arrangement that you have that allows you to become v vy wealthy while working 7/8 of your time with the government? >> february has never questioned yet. >> reporter: that changed as members including tim huhuskamp grilled davidid shulkin. >> he just sold a company for $400 million. did anybody know about that?
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what, three, four years ago. >> reporter: mike coffman wanted to know why schinazi got rich but the va got nothing. >> is it bureaucraticc incompmpence, corruption or combination of the two. this wasted resource is why this nation is unable to take care of the men and wichl whunomen who served the country. >> others wereupset the doctor was not there to be questioned. the va said that he retired two days ago. >> the person who is responsible always seems to retire just before the investigation starts. >> reporter: the va did approve schinazi's part time arrangement and told us part time emplyies are allowed to invest in private companies so long as all conflict of interest rules are followed. the va says there will be internal and external investigations. >> chih reid, thahk you. well, war and poverty in syria have led to the largest
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more than a million refugees welcomed by geany. but charlie d'agata found that the welcome is wearing thin. when they saw the suffering. germans opened their arms like no other countnt in europe. >> hopefully nothing. >> mayor boris palmer was among them. >> we had people drowning in the mediterranean sea. i found that appalling and terrible. >> reporter: but the mayor of the university town of 80,000 has had a change of heart. >> itchf yru have several hundred thousand men who come to your country as singles. and live in sports halls and town halls. what do you expect them to do? they have no privac and they have no contact to women. and how long wilil that happen without any outbreak of violence? >> reporter: for many germans the tipping pointas new year's even cologne. police and witnesseses said gangs
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north africans and arabs groped and assaulted hundreds of women in the crowd. police are investigating 380 compmpints. including rape. seattle university student, caitlyn duncan lost her boyfriend in the mayhem that night. >> someone reached up my jacket. i was in a crowd. i was kind of twisting, turning, hitting, kicking. so, it happened all very quickly. t, yeah, peoule grabbed, you know between my legs, myy -- my head, my face. >> reporter: she didn't get a good look at her attackers but said they were all shouting in arabic. she was rescuedy a group of rian migrants. >> i was just so relieved. and then they all, you know kind of hugged me. caitlyn, it is going to be okok. you are safe now. don't cry. >> caller: duncan said she came forward to show that not all migrants should be blamed.
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far. 2/3 are asylum m ekers. the cologne attacks have hardened german's attitudes. and mayor palmer said germany simply cannot take as many migrant this year. >> t numbers have off to decline. otherwise, there will be breakdowns in german cities and communities. >> reporter: today the german cabinet took dramatic steps towards tightening asylum rules, scott, including two-year ban on family reunions and barring north african contreenz aluntries altogether. dry spray? that's fun. it's already dry! no wait time. this is great. it's very soft. can i keep it? (laughs) all the care of dove... ...now in a dry antiperspirant spspy. living well your immune system works hard to keep you on top of your game. you can support it by eating healthy, drinking fluids,
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there is a bail hearing tomorrow for one of two virginia tech students charged in the stabbing death of nicole lovell. investigators believe the girl was lured to her death online. here's done dahler. >> reporter: in her 13 years, nicole lovell endured life ththat tenning illnesses. liver transplant surgery left
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medicine caused her to gain weight says her stepmother, terri loveve. she would sese messages sake the girls picking on her, saying she was fat. she would cry. >> reporter: the seventh grader sought a better life on line. and against her father's wishes she created social media personas. >> she was able, at 13 to go and set up profiles on facebook that we had no idea about. a minor should not be able to do that. >> reportete in this invisible world online these kids are in. >> we have no idea. >> reporter: one person police believe she was atalked to accused killer david eisenh all. er, possibly onhe app, kik. kik allows users to be anonymous and send photos not saved on the phone leaving no trace. and with the national center of exploited and missing children.. >> every phone, every social media site has some parental control. whether blocking soft ware or
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and, all of those are great. but techchlogy doesn't solol all of the problems. >> experts say parents need to take an aggressive role in knowing what their kids are doing online and who they're talking to. mon soreitoring all social media activity and getting copies of every echt-mail and text. >> the lovells wish they could have done more. >> awful. tragedy. all could have been prevented. >> reporter: scott, kik said they helped the fbi in this case and all child predator cases. >> don dahler.
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we'll be right back. the irs suffered a major computer failure and it can't accept many taxpayer returns online. the agency seltzays it may not have a fix for this until tomorrow. cbs. leslie moonves elected chairman of the board. he will remain president and ceo as well. sumner redstone who recently stepped down as executive chairman, named chairman emeritus.
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hey, hey, hey babies aren't fully developed until least 39 weeks. if your pregnancy is healthy, wait for labor to begin on its own. a healthy baby is worth the wait. o0 c1 travel is s rt of the amemecan way of life. when we're on vacation, we keep an eye out for anything that looks out of place. [ indistinct conversations ] miss, your bag. when we travel from city to city, we pay attention to our surroundings. [ cheering ] everyone plays a role in keeping our community safe. whether you're traveling for businessr pleasure, be aware of your surroundings. if you see something suspicious,
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touchdown. wide shot, showing empty stand in the background. >> reporter: the stand were not full at the first super bowl? >> no. >> reporter: since then, biever photographed every super bowl. >> gentlemen namath, super bowl three. and john madden, super bowl 11. biever got to the first super bowl his father was photographer for the green bay packers. that game gave him the favorite photo. >> vince lombardi off the field. my father to the right in the background. had two heroes together in the same shotot. >> repepter: by super bowl 4. biever earned press credentials. for 30 years now, he has been with "sports illustrated." >> thihi player, celebratingngith confetti made the picture. >> reporter: his photos reveal changes in both the game and photography. >> this was our first digital cover. thisiss the first year we didn't use film. now, it is all auto focus equipment.
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focus of the action is gone. >> reporter: you liked it in the old days when, some mud went flying.. >> one of my favorite shots. >> super bowl 22. doug williams. >> real grass. real mud. the way the game use theed to be. >> used to be. better pictures. bauptz it bebeuse it wasn't as antiseptic as now. >> in spite of the changes. one thing at super bowl 50 will be exactly the same. john biever will be there with his camera.. john blackstone, cbs news, san francisco. >> that's the overnight news for this thursday. for so of you the news continues. for others check back with us later for the morning news and "cbs thissmorninin" from the broadcast center in new
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>> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." hi, everyone. welcome to the overnight news. the zika virus epidemic has been granded a global health emergency. now it entered unpredictable new phase. the cdc confirms a person in texas contracted the virus through sex with someone who traveled to venezuela. the e rld health organization says sexual transmission of zika is very rare and it is the first time anyone in the u.s. has contracted t(e virus without
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grgrnd zero o othe epidemic the brazilian city of recife. dr. lapook is there. >> reporter: the health commissioner told me zika is rampant, sexual transmission not yet documented. felt to be spread by mosquitoes and causing a devastating birth defect which is why pregnant won are so concerned. 30-year-old is pregnant with her fourth child. are you worried for your own baby? she says she is worried but had no obvious symptoms of zika. cases of microcephaly across brazil total 4,000. several hundred suspected cases just last week. recife, is epicenter of an explosion of microcephaly, small head at birth linked to zika. government workers go door to door adding chemicals to walter and spraying pesticides. in order to attack the
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>> a lot more mosquitoes in january of 2015 than november. this doctor took us to the tuation room inside recife's health department where the city of 1.6 million is charting the infections. >> this is all recife. >> a lot ofcases. >> yes. >> reporter: the health departmentestimates, 50,000 to 100,000 people have been exposed. 80% of the time those infected wiwi z za don't f fl sick. what do you think when you see the babies with microcephaly and you know you are pregnant? she is worried about the threat cf infectionecause it is a very critical situation. >> really heartbreaking. >> reporter: the doctor told us this historically impoverished community needs to fiend a solution to an epidemic which threatens an entire generation. >> these children will be surviving the impact on their families. cannot be measured at this stage. apart from the scientific and public health persona, i think as human beings, we really feell
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it. >> super bowl is just three days away away. one denver broncos player will be watching the game on television. practice squad, wasn't going to play anyway was sent home after questioned by police at a prostitution sting. murphy wasn't charged. but the team doesn't want him to be a distraction as they prepare for theunday big game against the carolina panthers. jeff glore has more. >> reporter: denver broncos safety, ryan murphy caughtn a prostitution outside this hotel in san jose tuesday evening. the 23-year-old played in college for or gun state. questioned and released. he was not arrested. but police did issue his brother, who was with him att the time, a citation. the broncos sent murphy back to denver. in a statement, t head coach, gary kubiak, decided it was best for the team if wee continued our preparations for super bowl 50 without him. >> a week of heavy distraction.
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get ready to play. >> reporter: over the weekend kubiak addressed the importance staying focused. >> to get to this point in your football career, player, team. hard to get there. i talked to them about that all the time. >> last min of the distraction for the atlanta falcons. >> 17 years ago, starting player for the falcons, eugene robinson arrested after soliciting sex from an undercover officer the night before super bowl 33. robinson played the next day. >> that could be a living example. don't mess this up. >> radio analyst for the panthers, robinson spoke with the team sunday abut the dange of game week temptatitis. >> i want my guys to know. i love this team. hey, you got a great opportunity. ach great opportunity. go ahead and seize` the moment. and don't ih this respect be like me. homeland security secretary jay johnston in northern california everseeing the build-up of super bowl security. sunday's game is in silic vallll and will feature
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to keep the public safe. michelle miller has more. >> reporter: this is one of several roadblocks along the perimeter of levi stadium to keepephe prying eyes of the public out. humvees, patrol cars on sight. one thing is for certain. if you come aywhere near the game, on sunday, y y will be watched.d. and closely. everywhere you turn, in the san francisco bapy area this week you will find a massive security presence. from the water to land. even in the air. quite a takeoff. the air and marine brah of customs and border protectioiois one of 50 law enforcement and government agencies working to keep super bowl 50 secure. video cameras are powerful
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any one in the vicinity of levi a structure with license plate readers and controversial trackers, that could let police monitor your phone. since the super bowl was happening in the heart of silicon valleyeysomegencies are tryiyi out new technologies and including a data collection program that gives law enforcement a complete picture of what is happening by integrating video feeds with agency cell phones and radio communications. >> reporter: outside levi stadium.border patrol agents, screen cargo, with x ray active material. they did not want us to reveal detailed images captured witit proprietary technology. look. >> reporter: i see straight through this truck. this event will test those both on and off the field.
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interagency partnerships at state, local and federal levels. out there assisting making sure the super bowl 50 event goes without any hitch. no g gup has yet to clala responsibility for the explosion aboard a passenger plane in somalia. the blast blew a hole in the plane, forced the pilot to make an emergency landing. one person was killedhen he was sucked out of the hole. mark phillips has more. >> reporter: somalia's aviation director referred to the airbus developing a sudden defect. it was pretty clear what caused thth defect. a gaping hole in the plane's side. one passenger was apparently blown out of the hole, his body found later. surviving passengers said they heard a tale tale bang. a somali diplomat on board, awaki kulani, recorded the scenes and said he shared the same fears as any one else. were they all going to die. all but one of the passenger and crews survived seemed because the explosion occurred early in
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there was no violent decompression. and theircraft heldtogether. that allowed the pilot. a 64-year-old serbian to land it. surviving partners, calmly collected their belongings and filed off the plane. in somalia, a country enduring a seemingly endless that's a lot of dishes& no problem. i'll use a lot of detergent. dish issues? get cascade platinum. one pac cleans tough food better than 6 pacs of the bargain brand combined. cascade. this is mineral build up it collects leaving gross germ-ridden stains. clorox toilet bowl cleaner with bleach is no match fofothat. but lysol power toilet bowl cleaner eliminates mineral build-up effortlessly. so why choose anything other than lysol? (cell phone rings) where are you?
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> me of the world's scientists are studying climate change at the top of the world glacier. 3/4 of greenland is covered in ice. each year it loses more ice then it gains in snowfall. believed to contribute to the rise in sea levels and maybe worse. sharon alfonsi traveled to the arctic circle to see what the researchers have discovered. >> great to see you.
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>> reporter: who did you upstreet to get putupit to be put out here. >> the god. the god. >> keith nichols is an expert drilling in remote places. in terms of remote this would be really hard to beat. feels like you are on another planet. >> can't take a walk around here. expecting scott yo to beam you up. it is extraordiny. >> reporter: nicls and scientists arerawn to this sliver of greenland in part by the satellite images. in 2010, a chunk of ice, four times the size of manhattan, broke off. then, two years later, anotherer large chunk came down. the glacier has receded by 20 miles in five years. nichols and hihi team are trying to drill beneath it. >> this is a lot of work. difficult conditions. what do you hop to learn? >> what we are frying to learntrying to learn
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with ice, momenting it. and in future how that might change. they heated melt water from the glacier to make a hot water drill to pierce through the 3000 foot thick ice. there has to be serious challenge to running equipment like this in this kind of weather? >> the biggest challenge we have got water. it is very cold. so if you have water freezing in hoses that can be devastating. it's for the projects. >> this is the moment the coring machine struck the bottom of the sea floor. a half mile beneath the ice, they made history. it was the first time any one s ever collected sediment from beneh the ice shelf i i greenland. >> the ocean beneath is probably the least accessible part of the world ocean. and just getting access to that is a triumph frankly as far as we are concerned. the ice shelf extends from the
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they believe it acts like a dam, holding back i i from sliding into the sea. if it goes away, sea levels go up. is there a sense of urgency in the work that you are doing? >> the sea level rises, the big question we are trying to get at. and peterman glacier, this experiment here, gives us an opportunity to get at the processes, and try to understand the basic physics to h that can happen. >> ourur visit to the ice camp was cut short. our pilots warned of something, ice fog moving in. and could strand us here for days. we hig tailed it back to the helicopter. heading to another outpost of the expedition. what the scientists call boulder ca. set up on the j ofedge of peterman glacier. steve marquatt and geologists have been here for weeks gathering samples from rocks. >> this [as probably deposited when the ice was m mbe a few
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when deposited you are probably talking about, 600 feet of ice above us. >> above where we are now. >> above where we are now. peterman w wld have been much larger, dropping the rocks all over the surface. >> to the person at home who is looking at you guys chipping at rocks why should i care about this? >> we know if you warar the planet up. glaciers respond. they melt. the question is at what rate? how fast its that going to that pen? where is if the going to happen? where are the vulnerable spots in the ice sheet. to understand all that you havee to undersrsnd how the ice sheet, what controls an ice sheet. we need to understand this glacier to provide a better prediction for the ice sheet. that matters to us because of sea level. if the glaciers can respond die namingly, we should all be concerned. because the that can create dynamic changes in sea level and flood infrastructure. we need new know that planning r the future. >> reporter: we camped out next to the scientists.
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we slept in the tents under the midnight sun. in the morning, we werer shuttled out to meet the swedish ice breaker making its way around peterman glacier. it supports the scientists on land and acts as a fleeting ingfloating laboratory. named after a norse good who sought wisdom. it is home to 50 climate scientists from aroundndhe world with similar convictions. their work is funded mostly by the swedish government. and the u.s. national science foundationon larry mayor, is one of geologists on the ship. and using sonar to map the ocean floor. creating the first detailed maps that show how peterman glacici slid into the sea. see it like skid marks of a car at an accident scene. >> yeah, the ice went here. the ice went there. we can seep it.
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>> reporter: hauch ofow much of the world's oceans have been mapped with detail. >> 6%, 7%. >> reporter: you can make the trip to peterman glacici a few weeks each summer when the ice melts enough to allow passage. >> see the blocks of ice drifting by. >> reporter: allen mix is running the ship's coretion operion. trying t t grab sediment from the sea floor. >> actually the coring site is under the block of ice. we just can't get there. we are trying to drift with the ice and sort of snook up on it. gently. >> reporter: it is hard to sneak up on anything in an ice breaker. he doesn't so much a sail, as it does smash the ice like a 13,000 ton hammer. once in position they throw a piston core, like a dart, at the bottom of the ocean.n. >> that doesn't sound good. >> after multiple attempts. >> go to the next up.
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>> a car sample look this is collected. inside theheship's lab, the multiyear process of investigating those cores, begins. what is yourest guess. how old is this >> so the base of this core -- probably is no more than 10,000 years. >> reporter: ann jennings with institute of arctic and alpine research. she says each core holds clues about peterman glacier's past. we didn't really expect to find things living under the ice shelf. we have. >> what have you found? >> this one we found, sivisivides-storfi. >> easy for you to say. >> it is a seashell. single celled animal. >> reporter: the single celled animal like all living creatures made out of car been alug scientists to -- carbon, alug scientists to determine when
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take the depth scale here. convert it to age. then we can say when did the ice retreat? how quickly did it retreat? was there a lot of multiwalter coming out? >> you can get all of that from what looks like mud? >> yes. >> reporter: after a week i i greenland, we headed home. but the scientists kept working. taking advantage of the final days of the short arctic summer. the coreamples they collected during their month at sea will be studied by scientists around the world for decades. >> this is the largest core repository in the world. >> a paleo climatologist at columbia university. he says cores collected in greenland are like a black box of the earth's inner workings. this one he collected south of greenland. >> this is today's climate. we have had 10,000 years of roll tiffly warm climate. then we go, 10,000 years in the past. boom. thfre is the last ice age.
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cape cod was formed. go on. just find this color. this is filled with these cks. ice rafted treditis. this period. whoa, a warm phase. cold phase. then another warm phase. short cold phase. longer warm phase. boom,$ another ice age. so you have had, coldld warm, cold, warm, cold -- warm. today. you can see the full report dry spray? that's fun. it's already dry! no wait time. this is great. it's very soft. can i keep it? (laughs) all the care of dove... ...now in a dry antiperspirant spray. hi, anne.. how are you doing? hi, evelyn. i know it's been a difficult time since your mom passed away. yeah. i miss her a lot, but i'm okay. wow. that was fast. this is the check i've been waiting fofo mom had a guaranteed acceptance life insurance policy
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the wounded warrior project again finds itself in the cross hairs of those who say it is wasting money that could be veterans. a cbs news investigation found the organization spent millions of dollars on lavish parties and expensive conventis. now the watch dog group, charitit navigator put the wounded warrior project on its watch list saying it spend 60% of the money it raises providing veteran services. chip reid has been covering the story from the start. >> reporter: the nation's most prominent veterans charity is facing criticism from more than 40 former eloyees about how it spend the more than $800 millili it raised in the past six years. we asked mark owens, former director of tax-exempt organizations at the irs to review the wounded warrior
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what was your biggest concern in reading the forms? >> that i couldn't tell the number of people that were assisted. i thought that was truly unusual. if the organization is asking for money and spending money, purportedly spending money to assist veterans, i would look to know. >eporter: wounded warrior project says 80% of their money is spent on programs for veterans because they include promotional items. direct response advdvtising and shipping and postage costs. ic they take that out, and it looks like charity watch dogs, say 60% of donations go to help wounded d rvice members. >> the ceo said fund-raising should and can be included in the programs and services. your response? >> well, i would be curious to know how asking people f f money equates to the assistance
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>> steven nardizzi, ceo since 2009. in 2014 paid $500,000 in line with similar sized charities. many former employees said they thought it was too much. nardzi defefded his salary to our norfolk affiliate last april. >> my sally is less than 1/10 of 1% of donation at come in. i am running an organizatioio that is helping hundreds of thousand of warriors. >> reporter: last year, wwp gave $150,000 grant to a group that defends higher spending on overhead, executive salaries and fund-raising by schar tees. nardizzi says the more money the charity raises the more it can spend on veterans. >> if your fixation ispending the most on programs. that's feeling the good. not necessarily doing good. you can run program activities. spent a lot of money. >> charity watch dog says his
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group is sitting on a $24 million surplus. and not enough of it is being spent on veterans. >> it would be helpful if the hundreds of millionon of dole lars are being spent to help veterans in the shorter term. in the year or two rather than ing held for embarrassed by a prostate exam? imagine how your dococr feels. as a urologist, i have performed 9,421 and a half prostate exams. so why do i do it? because i get paid. und... on this side of the glove i know prostate exams can saveveives. so, if you are a man over 50, talk to you doctor to see if a prostate exam is right for you. if we can do it, so can you.
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millions of people in the midwest are still digging out after the week's massive snowstorm. heavy snow and powerful wind knocked out power. for schools and bususesses forced to close and triggered flight cancellations from colorado to northern michigan. the harsh winter weather isn't trouble for everyone. one businessman is transforming snow and ice into a castle of his own design. jamie yukas has the story. >> reporter: piece by piece. day and night. this colorful mountain is molded
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it is manhad using icicles. nearly a quarter million of them. >> i've got to be one of the luckiest guys. >> it began as a hobby for brent christianson. the kids and i would build igloos, ice rinks, and using icicles and spspying water as a way to build. >> from his backyard to now a $2 million business. this year, four crews are creating ice parks in canada, utah, minnesota and new hampshire. warm weather forced a late start in new hampshire. his team of 20 artisans worked 14 hour days for three weeks. spraying 5 million gallons of ter in temperatures as low as 2 degrees. it opened last weekend and offers chills andhrills for all ages. >> we'veot slides. mazes made out of ice. and canyons, and tubes. >> this park is open day and night.
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embedded led lights. >> they go, right. blue, green. we have them synchronized to music. >> reporter: work continues on the sculptures throughout the season. some will grow to as high as 40 feet. >> to share with other people. also make a lifrg from it. i can't think of any b to trade place with. >> theing of ice castles even if his reign lasts as long as nature allows. >> that's the everovernight news for thursday. for some the news continues. check back with us for the
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morning. a health emergency has been declared in florida with nine cases of zika virus and all conditions ripe for more. devastating tornados in the deep south. >> just unreal to walk out and see this, this could happen in a matter of seconds. >> as the candidates campaign in new hampshire, trump calls for a do-over in iowa. and the incredible super bowl record set by a photographer. >> i had two of my heroes together in the same shot.
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