tv CBS Overnight News CBS November 22, 2016 2:37am-3:37am PST
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? the material its hard to beat. in setting, scale, and sheer theatrics. whether it is the car cardinals chapel. or that memorable good-bye flight over the eternal city when benedict 16th became pope emeritus. this room hold enough memory to store 28,000 video cassettes. this is an expensive operation, vatican tv. is why dedicate so many resources to tv? >> the answer this helps get the
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superstar bruno mars about to kick off a world tour in support of his first new album in four years. 24 karat magic. he took time out to discuss his work. >> this show in connecticut last concert of the year. >> mohican sun! >> reporter: he used it for a tune-up of release of album and world tour to follow. ? hallelujah ? ? hallelujah ? >> reporter: on every song and every note, from arenas to halftime of the super bowl. he and his band, the hooligans
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? ? ? you don't believe it just watch ? >> reporter: his standard are high because the legends of music set them. ? don't believe it just watch ? >> i really care about what people see. i want them to know i'm working hard for them. ? hey hey hey ? you know, michael, prince, james brown. you watch them and you understand that they're paying attention to the details of -- of their art. and they care. so much about what they're wearing, about how the they're moving, about how they're making the audience feel. and not phoning it in. they're going up there to murder any body that performs after them or performs before them. that's what i watch my whole life. and admire. >> reporter: he is a throwback
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see it in the choreography on stage. and hear it in the songs themselves. descendants of the generations that came before him. ? oh yeah yeah oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah ? >> reporter: when i listen to your songs, you can hear all of those people that you have listened to. >> yeah. >> over the years. >> a lot of people are really quick to say that song sound like this. or he trying to sound look this. and i'm always like, you are damn right i am. rents who were professional .n
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performing together in the tourist show rooms of the hawaiian beach. their act was called the lovenotes. >> bruno, you rad to rock 'n' roll? >> when bruno was 4 years old his parents included him in the family business. ? he played little elvis. it's when heap first learned he could steal the show. ? ain't no friend of mine ? >> the little elvis routine lasted sick years. but the lessons of his parents vegas style, entertainment review, have lasted a lifetime. >> you know it's like school of rock for me. and it was just -- this kind of razzle-dazzle lifestyle. >> that's real show business.
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by the time he turned 12, his parents divorced. and the family band broke up. money was tight. his four sisters moved in with his mom. he and his brother lived with his dad. >> on top of this building? >> on top of this building. >> anywhere they could. >> my dad was the king of finding these little spots for us to stay that we should never have been staying at. >> you were look homeless people? >> yeah, for sure. we was in a limousine, once, 1984 limousine. >> reporter: sleeping in the back of the car, on top of buildings and this place. >> this is where you lived? >> paradise park. a bird zoo where his dad took a job. this was the first time he had been back here since. even people who work with him, haven't heard this part of his story. >> where we were staying at first. didn't have a bathroom. so we would have to walk across the park to this other spot that
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>> reporter: wow. >> in a -- >> reporter: some times in the middle of the night. >> middle of the night. >> reporter: when the park closed they stayed, moving into this one-room building. >> right here. >> reporter: this was your house? >> yeah. >> reporter: they lived here more than two years. had a roof.k like this.ink we didn't have plants growing inside. >> don't hav don't know what happened to the roof. bed would be there in the middle. awe. >> reporter: all sleep in one bed? >> sleep in one bed. >> happy memories? >> the best. >> reporter: that is kind of amazing. >> yeah. >> reporter: and what you remember about it is not the struggle or the things you didn't have -- all the things you had. >> yeah. we had it all. you know? we had each other. and it never felt like it was the end of the world. sorry, we don't got, electric
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it's all right. temporary. we'll figure this out. you know, maybe that's why i have this mentality when it comes to the music. because i know i am going to figure it out. just give me some time. >> reporter: as soon as he graduated high school, he left the show rooms and hawaii altogether. >> reporter: you could have stayed here, right? >> yeah. >> reporter: made a good living. and done what your dad did and been a big star in hawaii. >> i wanted to go for tip. >> reporter: you wanted more? >> i wanted more the my family pushed me. and this island pushed me. >> reporter: how? >> these are my team. this is my culture. i want to represent them. think of hawaii, palm trees, magical island, and bruno mars. >> reporter: so he headed for los angeles where he was quickly signed by motown record. gone was his given name of peter hernandez.
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bruno, his childhood nickname, mars, shooting for the stars. the name stuck. but the record contract didn't. motown dropped him. >> i don't blame motown. it was simply, wasn't ready yet. i think everybody don't know what color i am. it's like, he is not black enough. he's not white enough. he's got a latin last name. he doesn't speak spanish. who are we selling this to? are you making urban music? are you making pop music? what kind of music are you >> reporter: with no hit songs of his own and dead broke, he started over. ? i got nothing on you ? >> writing and producing songs for other artists with arie levine and phillip lawrence. they were starving musicians, inspired by the hustle to pay for food. they came up with this song. ? i want to be a billionaire so frickin 'bad ? >> it led to another record deal of his own.
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? there's not a thing that ? >> reporter: his career as a songwriter and performer was finally on track. >> just the way you are. about that time though, he was arrested for possession of 2 1/2 grams of cocaine. from the outside you really seem to keep it together. and to be very professional and, you know very committed. but you nearly threw it all away. >> i did something very stupid. i'm in las vegas, laura, i'm 24 years old, i'm -- i'm, you know, drinking way more than i am supposed to be drinking. and it was so early in my career. and i always said that i think it had to happen. that was the reality check i needed. and i, i'm -- promised myself that, you know, never going to read about that again. ? i'll catch a grenade for you ? >> reporter: headlines for hits, not drug busts have been his
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capped by two super bowl halftime performances in three years. and three grammys including record of the year for his collaboration with producer, mark ronson. uptown funk. the biggest hit in a career full of them. >> you can see the full report on our web site. cbs.com. the "overnight news" will be right back. it's judgment day. ur oven. but you've cleaned all baked-on business from meals past with easy-off, so the only thing they see is that beautiful bird. go ahead. let 'em judge. my hygienist said the most random thing. she said i should think of my teeth like an apple. it could be great on the outside not so great on the inside. her advice? use a toothpaste and mouthwash that strengthens both. go pro with crest pro-health advanced. it's uniquely formulated with activestrength technology
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the museum in san francisco where the food in the cafeteria is a work of art. john blackstone stopped by for a bite. >> reporter: at san francisco's recently expanded museum of modern art, record crowd have been feasting their eyes on the works of contemporary masters, like ellsworth kelly, andy warhol. and feasting themselves on the works as like wily duframe and dominique ansel. >> so obvious when you think about it. >> reporter: chef cory lee reimagined the museum restaurant as a museum gallery. >> a lot of people kind of stumble in here. they sit down. they're look what is this? >> reporter: the restaurant offers signature dishes of some of the world's celebrated chefs. >> they open this menu that
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the world. dates on them. i think it is disorienting for them. >> lee is a celebrated chef himself. his three michelin star menu is blocks away. but the 37-year-old does not serve any of his own creations at the restaurant. >> i think of cory as curator of food. >> chosen to design a museum worthy restaurant. >> wonderful amount of curiosity about what we do, curators work, pictures come to be on the i explained if we wanted to do one, our curator would bring them to our museum. >> i wanted to do the same thing with food. a diner can come in and try a dish from the chef in bell up. chef in japan. chef in hong kong. this very fun, kind of new experience with food. >> reporter: chefs from from all over the u.s., and asia have
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when executive chef brandon rodgers prepares fresh steamed crab claw it looks and tastes just as it did when first served at hong kong's restaurant in 1970. >> got the exact bowl they use to prepare it. same portions they serve. try to immitate that exactly. he does the same with chef thomas keller's pan roasted duck breast from the world renowned french laundry in calirn >>-from 1995. within the first year of them opening. >> reporter: some of the classic dishes served here are no longer on the menus where they originally appeared. and sometimes, the chefs who created them, are among the diners here. alice waters stopped in to try the meier lemon ice cream and
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not only is thanksgiving week the biggest travel week of the year, it is also primetime for holiday shopping. 137 million americans are expected to hit the stores between now and next monday. and most of them will get there by car. but there are new warnings about the dangers of parking lots. the national safety council says up to 2/3 of drivers may be distracted as they look for parking space. and the insurance industry says one f every five accidents happens in a parking lot. kris van cleave has the story from a parking lot in arlington. >> no surprise number one culprit for distraction in the parking lot is the cell phone. experts say we all have a false sense of security because of the slow speeds cars are traveling in parking lots. but the consequences of
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speeding driver struck a mother pushing her 15-month-old baby's stroller last month. 24-year-old maria cruz gonzalez cortez died. her baby survived. wisconsin police released a video of a driver who lost control of his vehicle, slamming into nine cars, before coming to a stop. amazingly, no one was seriously injured. but the national safety council found on average, at least 60,000 are injured and 500 or more die in 50,000 plus crashes in parking lots and garages >> just as dangerous to be distracted, in a parking lot, going five miles an hour, as it is to be going 50 miles an hour. >> deborah herzman runs the national safety council. >> people have their heads down, in their phones, behind the wheel or pedestrians. there is a lot of inattention out there. >> reporter: a recent survey found 66% felt comfortable
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more than half would text. roughly half of drivers were okay with sending e-mails. using social media taking pictures or watching video. 42% said they would video chalt. joyce droba was more focused on her phone than cars around her. >> do you think you give the parking lot the same attention as the road? >> not really. >> why do you think that is? >> we think there is not a lot of traffic in the parking lot. actually there its. >> on average, every year, 51 people die in parking lot accidents that involve cars backing up. experts say particularly this time of year where it is getting dark earlier and people are increasingly wearing dark winter coats. worth taking a second to double check before you back up, or use that camera. that's the "overnight news" for this tuesday.
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breaking news. children have been killed in a school bus crash in tennessee. >> also tonight, a contender for secretary of homeland security failed to secure his plan to enforce a major trump campaig promise. >> an officer down in front of headquarters. >> the manhunt for a cop killer. and, one of the most dangerous places to be this holiday season. >> how well do you think people drive in parking lots? >> not well at all. i think it's cut-throat. >> announcer: this is the cbs "overnight news." reporting tonight from phoenix, arizona. we begin the broadcast with
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chattanooga, tennessee. jim axelrod is working on the story and has the latest. >> reporter: it is an horrific scene in chattanooga, scott. close to three dozen elementary students on a school bus this afternoon when it crashed. police are confirming multiple fatalities. according to the hamilton county district attorney, at least six children are dead. these are kids ranging in age from kindergarten to fifth grade the name of the school is woodmore elementary school. 23 taken to area hospitals. a fluid situation. the bus the only vehicle in the crash. pictures from the scene show a tree slicing through. the crashed bus a grim situation in tennessee tonight what the governor is calling a tragic event. >> jim axelrod, thank you. we will update this as we get more information. just as millions of americans are starting to hit
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of them have become very dangerous. in the east, many are covered with snow and ice. parts of new york state got about 2 feet of lake-effect snow. and another foot is possible by tomorrow. tony dokoupil is in the storm zone. >> reporter: winds gusting up to 50 miles an hour and deep snow pummelled upstate new york blinding drivers and sending dozens of vehicles careening off the road. it was a frigid snap day before. when rochester and watertown basked in 70 degree heat. jefferson county sheriff colleen o'neal. >> everybody went from short sleeves and shorts to mittens and hats. >> reporter: the first major lake-effect storm of the season dropped as much as an inch of snow an hour. the same storm whipped through minnesota and michigan. giving wolverine football fans a snowy celebration in ann arbor.
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york buried in 2 feet of snow, jackknifing this tractor-trailer. this is tug hill region of new york, the snowiest place in america last year. timing is not great for people in this region. the start of the holiday travel season is today. >> when you see the weather report showing snow, what goes through your mind? >> cars in the ditch. here we go. >> jefferson county deputy, steve gruber busy since 5:00 this morning. >> how dangerous are winte to places in the country? >> this is the worst i have ever seen. >> winter storm warning remains in effect for vast stretches of upstate new york. and 5,000 homes are without power. scott, conditions are expected to improve in time for thanksgiving. tony dokoupil, thank you. eric fisher, our chief meteorologist at cbs in boston, wbz, eric, what is coming next? >> scott, the winds will continue to crank.
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through overnight into tomorrow. then it starts to taper off. some additional snowfall. some towns will pass 30 inches of snow from the first big lake effect event of the year. tomorrow watching a developing storm in the middle of country. that will bring rain to chicago midweek. wintry mix across the upper midwest. and a wintry mix, in the northeast. as we head into thanksgiving itself. the stormiest part of the country, the pacific north west. round of rain swinging into washington state, oregon, one to three feet of mountain snow expected here and windy conditions at the coastline. that will go through friday. but look at our coast to coast on thanksgiving day. dry, mostly mild across the southern tier states. light, wintery mix, moving through the northeast. stormiest across the pacific northwest. not a major storm on thanksgiving day, scott, a few pockets here and there. >> eric fisher, wbz, thank you. >> adding to the travel worries there was concern about a
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a major national hub. well today baggage handlers and janitors said they will walk out, but not until the tuesday after thanksgiving. japan has been hit by a very powerful 6.9 earthquake today. off of fukushima devastated by the quake and tsunami five years ago. a small tsunami hit the shore today. first reportsnd were no higher than 3 feet. no immediate sign of further damage at the nuclear power plant that was knocked out in 2011. in syria, the assad dictatorship with the help of russia is completing the bloody destruction of its largest city. rebel-held eastern aleppo is shuddering as bombs rain down with no place to treat the wounded. we have more on this now from liz beth palmer. >> reporter: after each air
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but some times, all of the rescue crews can do is take away the bodies. between 200 and 300 people have been killed in the past week of relentless bombing. hospitals that were still functioning just have now been hilt. and there are none left to help the more than 200,000 residents, many of them already gravely hurt. rescue crews, known as the white helmets are now experts at ruins. slowly, he says, can we flip this rock? he survived the one air strike. the bombs are still falling. the goal is to drive opposition fighters out of eastern aleppo. then the government will be looking to talk to president elect donald trump, says syria's foreign min see, whalid moalam. we will want the next u.s. administration, he says to stop
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same. but that's politics. and this is war. six years in, and still escalating. in fact this past week's bombing, scott, has been some of the very heaviest since the war began. elizabeth palmer in our london newsroom. liz, thank you. today a man from brooklyn, new york arrested on terrorism charges. mohammad rafiq traveling to turkey yemen in an attempt to join isis. federal prosecutors say he expressed support for a potential truck attack in times square. like the one that killed more than 80 people in nice, france in july. the cbs "overnight news"
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president elect trump said his actions on his first day in office will include withdrawing from the trade deal known as the transpacific partnership. and ordering that for every new government regulation, two must with 60 days to go, and top cabinet positions to fill, mr. trump's new york city office has become the busiest employment office in the country. chip reid is there. >> reporter: a parade of job-seekers passed through the lobby of trump tower today. former massachusetts senator, scott brown, told mr. trump he wants to be secretary of veterans affairs. >> i think i am the best person. but there are some tremendous people out there. >> reporter: former texas
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why he was there. sources say he is being considered for secretary of energy. at least one democrat met with mr. trump, congress woman ga she came to offer her opinion on u.s. policy in syria. some top network news people came for an off the record discussion. 13 days after the election, mr. trump has not held a press conference. then president elect obama held one on day three. but late today, the president el r outlining plans for his first 100 days in office. >> i will formulate a rule which says that for every one new regulation, two old regulations must be eliminated. >> you know who that is, right? >> over the weekend, mr. trump met with a long series of job candidates at the ornate, trump national golf club in new jersey. during the campaign, mitt romney called mr. trump a phony and a fraud. mr. trump called romney a loser.
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>> very thorough and indepth discussion. >> marine general james mad dog mattis leading candidate for secretary of defense. >> he is the real deal. >> the kansas secretary of state, a leading critic of illegal immigration appears to be making a play for secretary of homeland security. seen holding a document titled department of homeland security, kobach strategic plan for first 365 days. it lists
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trump tower luxury complex. the trump organization says it was an exchange of hellos. but indian media thought it was more. saying, donald trump meets indian partners. one storition quoting a business parter saying he discussed economic policy with trump's children. >> i think the focus was very much on the business leaders as well. who are they, what kind of
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future. what was this going to do to their business. one thing it definitely did was increase the visibility of both the trump projects. but also, these indian business partners within the indian media. >> mr. trump's personal business interests could also create unique conflicts of interest, when it comes to national security. for example, in turkey, where the u.s. has been critical of the government for its crackdown on dissent and its approach to the syrian civil war. the new president has licensed his name to the tmp residential building in istanbul. on face the nation, vice president elect mike pence promised this. >> what i can assure you and all of your viewers that all of the laws pertaining to his business dealings and service as president of the united states will be strictly adhered to. and, and he set that tone from the very beginning. >> reporter: note that the vice president elect said all of the laws will be followed. but there are no laws on
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the president or vice president. by the way, scott, that photo of mr. trump with his indian business partners, it has since been deleted. anna werner, trump tower, manhattan's fifth avenue. thank you. late today police in texas made an arrest in the murder of a veteran san antonio detective. benjamin marconi ambushed while writing a traffic ticket. police believe surveillance tape shows the suspect at police shooting. this was one of four attacks on police yesterday. officers were shot and wounded in st. louis, and in kansas city suburb and in sanibel, florida. 60 caps ha0 cops have been kill u.s. this year. that nierzis neary double last . in phoenix, a look inside the so-called alt right movement. later, attention shoppers, the
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it's judgment day. back seat chefs peer inside your oven. but you've cleaned all baked-on business from meals past with easy-off, so the only thing they see is that beautiful bird. go ahead. the far right-wing movement known as the alt right, latched on to the donald trump campaign and some of its leaders say that his victory is now giving them a big boost. we have more now. >> hail trump. hail our people.
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policy institute in alt right think-tank drew hundreds inside the ronald reagan pavilion in washington, d.c. >> identity is the foundation of politic thousands, the foundation of culture. and even more outside. since 2008, the alt right or alternative right movement lived mostly on obscure message boards online. it gained more attention after donald trump hired steve ban nonto run his presidential campaign b bannon's breitbart has the had 300 million views. richard spencer is president of the national policy ens to the. >> i'm enthusiastic about steven bannon acting as the strategist. breitbart has been an open place for a lot of idea i care about. bannondenies being alt right.
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educated white males with strong right-wing views. they're difficult to define because of the wide range of members from those who believe that america will be great only when it looks out for itself, to those who believe in anti-immigration, and white dominance. >> instead of asking, you know, what's good for the world? they ask, what's good for us? >> thomas maine, public policy professor at baruk college in new york city has been following the movement for years. he says afterhe increasing minority population, many white men began to feel left out of the political process. >> i think what happened is that all of the shocks to the system made a lot of people, especially a lot of people on the right, say -- gee, our current way of thinking is not working for us. >> what do you say to people who call groups like yours racist? >> the word racist doesn't have any meaning anymore. it's basically calling me a mean old guy.
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people because of the color of their skin? >> everyone is discriminating in a all sorts of -- >> do you do that though? >> i discriminate all the time. discriminating is living. >> spencer says he opposes violence, scott, he calls the election of donald trump a step toward our new normal. thank you. when we come back, whenever i try to grow out my hair, strands always break off. practically unbreakable. the pro-v formula makes every inch stronger. so i can love my hair longer.
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as the holiday shopping season kicks into high gear, perhaps we shouldn't be surprised to learn that parking lots are dangerous places. how dangerous? kris van cleave has the story. >> reporter: a security camera captured the moment a car backed up into a 24-year-old mother bushi pushing her baby's stroller last month. the mother was killed. her child unhurt. in wisconsin police released this v o into nine cars. amazingly there were no serious injuries. they're just two of the more than 50,000 crashes that take place in parking lots and garages each year. how well do you think people drive in parking lots? >> not very well. not very well at all. i think it's cutthroat. >> reporter: the crashes led to more than 500 deaths and 60,000 injuries. the leading cause, likely distracted driving. a new study found 66% of drivers
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making calls while driving in a parking lot. 56% would text while about half would send e-mails, use social media, take pictures or watch videos. 42% said they would video chat. deborah herzman runs national safety count still which publish the report. >> when we look at the holidays we are looking at compounding a hectic busy environment. there could be overcrowding a lot going on. parents separated from their children. just a dangerous granted because things are slow moving. >> reporter: we found joyce droba focused on her phone, not cars. >> we think there is a lot a lot of traffic in the parking lot. there is. people should be more aware. pedestrian fatalities are on the rise and injuries from so-called distracted walking accidents. scott, every year on average, 51 people die in accidents where a car is backing up in a parking lot.
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finally tonight here at walter cronkite school of journalism and mass communication at arizona state in phoenix. to celebrate the centennial of the man for whom the school was named. walter once said it is up to journalists to help educate americans so that they have the information to select their leaders. today, we spent time with the next generation of journalists as they prepare to take up the cronkite challenge. more important now than ever. is bound tightly to the quality of our journalism. >> the kind of journalism taught here at the cronkite school. under the leadership of dean chris callahan. >> as we celebrate what would have been walter cronkite's 100th birthday. we believe there is no more appropriate and deserving recipient of the 2016 cronkite award than scott pelley of cbs news.
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>> scott is in so many ways the standard bearer for the kind of journalism that walter cronkite defined for so many of us. >> it was humbling to receive the award but heartening to meet the reporters of tomorrow. journalism and our democracy are in good hands. and that's the "overnight news" for this tuesday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back with us just a littleat morning news" and be sure not to miss "cbs this morning." from phoenix, arizona, i'm scott
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? it's tuesday, november 22nd, 2016. this is "cbs morning news." >> this is an absolute nightmare for this >> breaking overnight, a school bus driver is charged with vehicular homicide for the crash that left several students dead and many more hospitalized. hail trump, hail our people! >> a white nationalist group with president-elect trump. now the president-elect is speaking out about the death threats. winter-like blast, burying parts of the northeast and more
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captioning funded by cbs good morning from the cbs news headquarters at cbs news here in new york. a driver of a school bus of a deadly crash is under arrest. at last five students were killed. the bus driver, 24-year-old johnthony walker is being rescue crews were still going through the wreckage, two hours after the crash. >> it's my privilege to serve the community in good times and bad and they don't really get much worse than they are today. >> reporter: the site of the accident scene itself is enough to worry any parents. >> multiple children lost their lives today. >> reporter: the bus was the
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35 students from kindergartners to fifth graders were on board. chattanooga's police chief said 23 were rushed to the hospital. this woman lives around the corner from where the accident happened. i just heard a big boom. i was watching tv and the power went out. while speed is said to play a role in the accident, the cause wasn't know. investigators say the conditions were clear and dry at the time. >> a warrant has been issued to remove the black box from the bus. and review the evidence on the video cam or cameras on the bus. >> reporter: the ntsb has dispatched a go team to investigate, they get to work this morning. now to the holiday week weather. for some folks it means cold and snow. blurrerry snow moved into part, of the northeast. western new york recorded two feet of snow. a bus taking students from the
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swerved in near whiteout conditions and the bus driver and students suffered minor injuries. our boston station takes a look at the holiday forecast. >> major lake-effect snow starting to wind down. now, we look at the next storm system looking across the country at its highest strength on wednesday as we head towards peak travel time, a band of snow like the end of last week. as the storm travels into the northeast for thanksgiving, a lot of chilly temperatures with a light wintry mix. the stormiest weather is here in the pacific northwest. rounds of rain and snow are going to move through tuesday, wednesday into friday, several feet of snow looks likely in washington, down the cascades and northern california as we take a look at the end of the week. for thanksgiving, this is it,
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mix in the northwest. in the desert southwest and southern california. mild and dry in the northern states. travel safe, everyone. i'm meteorologist erik fisher for cbs news. president-elect donald trump has not held a news conference since the election but last night he posted a video to youtube outlining his plans for day one in office. they include withdrawing the u.s. from a major trade deal. na new york. good morning. good morning, anne-marie. president-elect donald trump is laying out his plans for the first 100 days of his administration. the development which came in the form of a 2 1/2-minute video posted online after a day of possible cabinet picks at trump tower. >> my agenda will be based on a simple core principle putting america first. >> reporter: in a video posted to the president-elect's
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monday, donald trump vowed to bring jobs back to the u.s. by backing outside of the largest global trade deal in history on day one. >> i'm going to issue a notification of intent to withdraw from the transpacific partnership, a potential disaster for our country. >> reporter: just two days ago, president obama sought to reassure world leaders gathered in peru that trump would make good on the agreement. >> people should take a wait and see policy proposals matches up with some of the rhetoric of his campaign. >> reporter: the president-elect also detailed his plans for immigration reform. >> i will direct the department of labor to investigate all of the abuses of visa programs that undercut the american worker. >> reporter: mr. trump met with several prominent republicans at trump tower yesterday. including former massachusetts senator scott brown eyeing the
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but there are tremendous people out there. >> reporter: and oklahoma governor, mary falon, a candidate for interior secretary. >> it was a wonderful discussion. very excited. >> reporter: the president-elect also met with democratic congressman kelsey gabbert of hawaii to discuss the syrian crisis. trump aides says he wants to hear viewpointses from across the political spectrum as he continues to fill his cabinet. formal conference in two weeks but did meet privately with charlie rose, gayle king and nora o'connell. >> hena daniels here in new york, thank you so much. i popular restaurant in washington is apologizing for hosting a white nationalist group friday night. maggiano's little italy said it
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the next day the national policy institute held a conference to celebrate donald trump's election. >> hail, trump! hail, our people! hail, victory! >> the group's website says it advocates for the identity and heritage of people of european descent in the u.s. yesterday, a statement released president-elect trump has continued to denounce racism of ki because he will be a leader for every american. we will take a look at donald trump's business holdings. a an accused of gunning down a san antonio police officer is under arrest, police say tyrone mckane.
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