tv CBS Overnight News CBS December 14, 2015 2:00am-4:30am CST
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their lines. >> this is the "cbs overnight news." >> welcome to the overnight news, i'm jeff glor. seven weeks until the iowa two polls show a shakeup in the race. one poll, senator ted cruz has surged 10 points ahead of donald trump. the other, cruz leads trump 28% to 26% among likely iowa caucusgoers. another poll shows cruz has emerged as the strongest challeer to trump, 5 points behind. ben carson has fallen into fourth place on the republican side behind senator marco rubio. we begin with julianna goldman in washington. >> i don't go down, i go up. >> reporter: donald trtrp has said he only likes polls that treaeahim well. even before a new iowa poll showed him slipping he dismissed it as biased. >> i'm leading in virtually every state. i'm leading in iowa. although "des moines register" does a poll and i'm sure that will be negative. >> reporter: that poll conducted
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pollsters. it has ted cruz surging. senator cruz has spent months courting the voters with whom he's now leading, evangelicals and tea party conservatives. he's capturing supporters fleeing ben carson, who has faltered with the increased focus on national security. >> you look at the way he's dealt with the senate, where he goes in there frankly a little like a maniac. >> reporter: in the fox news interview the billionaire front-runner says cruz doesn't have the right temperament to the president. the poll of iowa republicans has the texas senator leading on that quality. on sunday trump enthusiastically tweeted out a different national poll showing him with a new high. cruz is 5 points behind in second place. marco rubio is third. >> trump is smart like a fox. >> reporter: these current and former trump supporters in virginia were part of a recent focus group conducted after his inflammatory proposal to bar muslims from entering the u.s. >> if trump gets elected, he
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him to ensure that these type of things aren't said out loud. >> the republican party has failed us the last two times with weak candidates. mccain who was weak, romney who was weak, we're tired of weak candidates. there is no number two to trump. >> reporter: as the republican contest sorts itse out it's looking more and more like the potential for a protracted primary between trump as the anti-establishment pick, someone like cruz who carries conservatives and religious voters, then the establishment candidate who republicans have historically nominated, whoever that may be this cycle. >> all right, julianna goldman in washington. weweher extremes across s e country tonight. this picture from western oklahoma a definition of whiteout conditions. this one from new york was experiencing record high temperatures. let's bring in chief meteorologist eric fisher. we're going to start in the northwest which is getting slammed by storms. what is happening with that system? >> jeff this storm has a lot more cold air to work with. we're seeing more snow all
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over the next 48 hours and eventually that energy spins out into the plains. as we head into tuesday and wednesday, snow moving up into nebraska, parts of south dakota. all told every state in the west picking up much-needed snowfall here. every state all the way until the plains picking up fresh snow the next 48 hours. the east, totally different story. a feel of spring, longstanding record high temperatures. detroit, record set in 1881, baltimore hit 72 today. more record highs possible tomorrow. especially in this little wedge of warm air in the east. also raiai travel to kick off f the week. there is a change e ming toward e middle and later s sges of this week. colder air working its way farther east. for some who haven't felt much of it, a feel of winter in the air. >> eric fisher, thank you very much. the system in the pacific northwest may be on its way out but it's still doing damage. david begnaud is in tillamook, oregon, tonight. david? >> reporter: good evening. seven families live along this hillside in western oregon, in part because of the view.
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danger of bebeg condemned, including this one right aboveve me that they are working to protect at thihour. some 11 inches of rain fell in % this area over a seven-day period causing a landslide, look at this, that opened up a hole big enough to fit almost 11 suvs. this is the road that leads to your house? >> yes. well -- at least it used to be. now it just kind of leads to a cliff. >> reporter: morgan cotchery has watched the land slide on herer family's property for the last six days. what started as a crack caved into a crater. bob flackas is her neighbor. >> you woke up, walked out, and it looked like this? >> yes. did not hear a sound. not a sound one. just -- the land went away. >> reporter: five feet from his front door is now a cliff. a week's worth of nearly nonstop rain in this picturesque part of tillamook, oregon, has left bob and his wife of 36 years, dee, literally living near the edge.
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more than 200 sandbags are holding down a tarp intended to stop the ground from sliding any more. >> i could cry. >> why? >> people that i never knew and probably might not see again came up here to help me save this hill. it overwhelms me. it's hard. >> reporter: 30 yards from the flackas home the landslide has pushed into a barn owned by her family. >> this is the only thing holding the hillside up. >> reporter: cotchery's barn in this home. they're now staying home is in danger of being condemned. cotchery, whose house is safe so far, says sandbags have been their best and only option. >> got to do something. >> reporter: bob is willing to try anything if it means staying in the home he and his wife call paradise. >> if it starts to move i'm not going to be stubborn and stay, i will get the hell out. until it starts to move, i'm staying. >> reporter: the hole in front of bob's house is 100 feet long
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right back. almost sixty million americans are affected by mental illness. together we can help them with three simple words. 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 america and major league baseball players to help train and inspire the next generation of volunteers. carlos p pa: it's easy to start an actioioteam at your school
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if you were a hippie in the '60s, you need to know. 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. all: cbs cares! the los angeles county sheriff's department is investigating a deadly shooting tonight. officers fired dozens of rounds and kept shooting while the suspect was on the ground. chris martinez has this story with this warning, the video can be disturbing. >> reporter: dramatic video captures the moment two los angeles county sheriff's deputies fire multiple shots at nicholas robertson in the linwood neighborhood of los angeles. robertson falls to the ground and after a short interval he's
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he's repeatedly struck by additional gunfire. last night, angry demonstrators gathered at the shooting scene. pamela brown is robertson's mother-in-law. >> he left three kids behind. two daughters and a son. what, they could have tasered him or anything. >> repororr: today, 24 hours after the shoong, the sheriff's department held a press conference. l.a. county sheriff jim mcdonald. >> we've come out today to try and be as ansparent we can with the information we can share at this time to say, here's what we have, here's what we know about it. >> reporter: the sheriff's department released this video showing robertson minutes before his encounter with deputies walking down a busy street, carrying a gun. investigators say the cocorontation started when deputies responded to multiple 911 cacas about a man firing shots into the air. l.a. county homicide detective captain steve katz -- >> he did not comply with their
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weapon. the movement of the suspect and the way in which he was holding the firearm indicates he was motioning in the direction of the deputy sheriffs. >> reporter: the video captures the moment the deputies began firing, a total of 33 rounds. robertson was pronounced dead at the scene. community activist naji ali says the video is disturbing. >> it appears this young man crawled to his death, he was shot again, again, again. >> reporter: local civil rights leaders have asked for an independent investigation into robertson's death. chris martinez, cbs news, los angeles. this week the federal reserve is expected to raise interest rates for the first time in more than nine years. the expectededncrease, .25 point. for more we turn to analyst jiji schlhlsinger. we think it's going to happen this week? >> it's almost certain and here's why. the fed slashed rates 10 times over 14 months until we got to 0% during the financial crisis.
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the economy. all these years later what's happened? the economy is growing by 2.25% a year the last few years, we've got job creation, unemployment 5%. the fed thinks it's time to normalize interest rate policy. they'll start this week. >> if this happens who w ws, who loses? >> finally good news for savers who have gotten 0% interest on their checking, savings, cds. borrowers could pay a little bit more for all kinds of loans whether credit cards, auto mortgage rates are not tied to these rates but they could go up as well. investors could be murky out there. i think stock and bond prices could be quite volatile the net few weeks. >> the global economy is slowing down, there's concern the american economy is going to slow down, some economists think this is too early? >> people like larry summers, the former treasury secrary, they even cite the fact that crude oil, which fell by 11% to seven-year lows, that that's a sign of the slow-down. janet yellen the fed chair says,
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things slow down, we don't have to keep raising rates. if things speed and up we get inflation, we could raise rates by more than .25% and more often. everything is data-dependent, we'll have to see. >> jill, thanks very much. this weekend fbi divers wrapped up their search of a lake in san bernardino, california. investigators won't say if they found evidence possibly dumped this by terrorists who killed 14 people and injured nearly 20 others. tonight john blackstone tells us how some in the community fear a backlash against them. >> reporter: since the san bernardino shootings, ranyel has changed the way she covers her hair so she looks less muslim. >> instead of the traditional i wear hats so i can blend in to minimize any possibility of someone retaliating or saying something to me. >> reporter: as a mother of five who lives three miles from the scene of the shootings she was already concerned about the safety of her family. then she learned the attackers
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shooter, i was devastated. the first thing i did is i end up writing an e-mail to all the principals of my kids' schools letting them know that i'm a muslim, we're a muslimm family, that we c cdemn these kind of attacks. >> reporter: since the paris attacks, there have been several attacks on muslims. a pregnant muslim woman assaulted in san diego. two airline passengers ordered off a flight in chicago after a passenger heard them speaking arabic and felt threatened. and after the san bernardino massacre, a copy of the koran filled with bullets left outside an islamic clothing store in southern california. on friday the fire bombing oa mosque in coachella, 70 miles from san bernardino. police arrested a 23-year-old man for arson and committing a hate crime. ranyel has decided her best defense is not to hide but to show the true nature of her religion. beginning with covering her
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>> now i feel like i'm more determined to keep it on and let everyone know what the muslim community is all about. and i feel i have that tool and i should use it. i cannot think of any place on this earth that i would want to be in other than the u.s. this is my country as much as anybody else's country who are americans. >> reporter: for this muslim american family, the message is that they are as outraged over the attack that took place here and just as united in grief as any other american family. >> john blackstone, thank you. a dramatic program trying to and the only thing better than winning the heisman trophy? the familyly celebration are "cbs overnight n ns" will be right t ck. on my long-term control medicine, i talked to my doctor and found a missing piece in my asthma treatment. once-daily breo prevents asthma symptoms. breo is for adults with asthma not well controlled on a long-term asthma control medicine, like an inhaled corticosteroid. breo won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems.
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it is a graphic demonstration in philadelphia that aims to prevent violence by taking teenagers step by step through what happens to a gunshot victim in the emergency room. >> welcome, everybody. >> reporter: the hospitatawhere 16-year-old lamont adams died in 2004 -- >> by the time you get here the odds have been stacked against you. >> reporter: -- has been turned into a school of hard knocks. >> when he came in he wasn't breathing at all. >> reporter: throughout the year hundreds of philadelphia students visit the trauma unit at temple university hospital for the cradle to grave program. >> we're going to tell the story of a young man named lamont adams. >> reporter: t ty learn about
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his life, from birth to death. dr. amy goldberg and outreach $% coordinator scott charles have been re-enacting the night adam died, for nearly ten years. >> lamont's going to have a bullet wound right there and he's going to have a bull hit wound right there -- >> reporter: charles uses dozens of red stickers to mark where the bullets hit adam. >> another here, another here. >> i'm not trying to politicize this issue. i'm simply saying, this is the thing that is more likely to kill you in philadelphia than anything elslswhen you're young. i want them to take ownership of this. >> we were both really ccerned that the students didn't really seem to know the true ramifications of what ullet injuries and gunshot wounds can cause. >> if the things that i'm showing you are too troublesome for you, talk to me. >> reporter: the students watch a video showing graphic pictures of more gunshot victims. some students can't bear to look. sometimes i go in t t
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cry. >> reporter: the pain adams' grandmother describes hit home for 16-year-old rochelly sanchez. >> i can't imagine my mom crying because something happened to me or one of my family members. >> reporter: 15-year-old jordan beretto first went into the program in may. >> i was in the streets with the wrong people, doing the wrong thing. the program really opened my eyes that gun violence is real and people are getting killed for nothing. and it ain't no names to them bullets. >> the students also visited a morgue. so far, more than 10,000 students have come through the cradle to grave program at temple university hospital. jeff, organizers say that fewer than a dozen of those students return back to that hospital's trauma unit with a gunshot
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>> thank you very much. for the first time women have been elected to office in saudi arabia. yesterday was also the first time women were allowed to vote in the country. more than a dozen women won local elections. a wonderful reaction last night after this year's heisman trophy winner was announced. alabama running back derek henry. that is his family at a hospital in florida where henry's grandmother has been undergoing treatment. henry broke the conference record for rushing this year. the nba's golden state warriors are undefeated no more. saturday night they lost to the milwaukee bucks 108-95. the wawaiors are now 24-1 thth seasas. it was theheeam's first regular-season losossince april 7th. it took nearly a lifetime but a man in england has finally
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at 6 years old, david halock put a letter to santa in his chimney asking for any toys he had to spare. more than 70 years later builders found that letter while working on the house. so they located mr. halock, who had long since moved away, and made sure he got everything he requesesd. including toy soldiers and a pencil box. 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 tiredness 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. don't make excuses. make the call to 9-1-1 immediately. learn more at womenshealth.gov/heartattack.. while i was on a combat patrol in baqubah, iraq, a rocket-propelled grenade took my arm off at the shoulder. i was discharged from the army, and i've been working with
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warriors, you don't have to be severely wounded to be with the wounded warrior project. we do have a lot of guys that have post-traumatic stress disorder. being able to share your story, i guess it kind of helps you wrap your mind around what did happen over there. my namamis norbie, and yes, i do o ffer from post-traumatic stress disorder,
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finally, most stage actors say their biggest fear is forgetting their lines. so some are getting extra help. as jamie yucas reports that's prompting criticism. >> reporter: it's a star-studded season on broadway. al pacino in "china doll." bruce willis in "mizly." james earl jones and cicicy tyson in "the gin game." while those actors draw big box offices, some are having trouble remembering their lines. each has reportedly used teleprompters or an ear piece so
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the reviews are not great. al pacino's "china doll" may be the worst reviewed play of the season. "the wall street journal" says, yes, h hs using teleprompterer and he was not at ease with his lines. the "new york post" writes, al pacino needs teleprompters for lines in terrible new broadway play. >> the more they use celebrities to drive ticket sales for plays or musicals, you're going to come uptwith a problem which is that you need to have assistance. >> reporter: david cody is "time out new york's" theater editor. he says audience members walked out after the first act watching pacino search for teleprompters. >> s sebody used to filil actctg will have a little more difficulty in a play where they have to sustain a scene over several minutes. >> reporter: cody doesn't hold back on willis' performance either. calling it stiff. willis and pacino worked through numerous script changes through previews. that gave them less time to memorize their parks. for actors like jones and tyson reciting their lines is complicated by having to play a
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play. even broroway great angela lansbury needed some h hp. the 90-year-old actress used an ear piece in the 2009 production of "blithe spirit." but she won her fifth tony for that performance. >> delicious. >> as you get older, it gets worse, more difficult. >> reporter: mark davey chairs the graduate acting program at nyu. he says remembering lines is challenging, especially for older actors who have been away from the stage. ear pieces can be a solution. >> if you want to see a major movie star, you don't necessarily want to see an incredible feature, you want to see them being relaxed and responsi. if that's what it takes, it seems to me that's fine. >> james earl jones, cicely tyson, al pacino. fabulous. >> reporter: new yorker cheryl rubin is a big theater fan. she says she didn't notice any of the actors getting prompted. >> theatergoers are not getting ripped off. they're seeing great acting by
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>> reporter: great actors doing whatever it tatas to keep their names on broroway. >> that is the "overnight news" for this monday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back with us later for the morning news and "cbs this morning." this is the "cbs overnight ws." welcome to the overnight news, i'm jeff glor. negotiators have left paris after reaching an agreement on climate change. nearly 200 countries have agreed. some protesters insist the agreement doesn't go far enough. president obama said it could be a turning point for the world. here's mark philips. >> reporter: it took a day longer than planned and the intent of the deal still has at any turned into action. but when french foreign minister
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gavel it confirmed there was a long-elusive deal to limit how much the earth will be allowed to heat up. delegates had been up the past two nights pulling the deal together. and it had taken some arm-twisting. not least by u.s. secretary of state john kerry. >> it's a victory for all of the planet and for future generations. >> reporter: it will take decades for the effect of this deal to take effect and many more extrememelimate events like the floods that hit areas of england this past week are still likely. but the provisions of the deal are ambitious. it calls for the global average temperature rise to be held at less than 2 degrees celsius above preindustrial levels. forever. that's 3.6 degrees fahrenheit. and even says the rise should ideally be lower than that. e deal, once ratifieie would be legally binding. and it wouldldstablish $100
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countries would help poorer ones cope with the consequences of climate change like these floods. this is supposed to be the road, the lake is supposed to end over there. they built special flood defenses here the last time this happened. good, they said, for the 100-year event. but clearly they haven't coped and that last flood was just six years ago. but the significance of this deal is that both rich and poor countries have agreed on what has to be done, even if there's no clear agreement on exactly how to do it. the new deal will not of itself end global warming. the pledges most countries have made to cut their carbon emissions will not keep that warming to the limits with which the world will cope. but jim, this deal is being seen as a turning point with the whole world now agreed on what muste done. and that's something. >> the climate change agreement sets targets each country must reach to cut carbon emissions. the targets are nonbinding and
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countries to comply. john dickerson asked secretary of state john kerry about this on "face the nation." >> it's possible that a country will slip. but to get an agreement with 186 nations signing on to a uniform system of required manantory reporting by which they can be held to a standard, and also to be able to have a very ambitious goal and have the flexibility that we have in this agreement to be able to meet those standards, is essential. and so i think it's a breakaway agreement which actually will change the paradigm by which countries are making judgments about this. the most important thing, john, that really happened today, is that the bususess community of the entire world is receiving a message about countries now moving towards clean, alternative, renewable energy and trying to reduce their carbon footprint.
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investment. and it's technology, it's american ingenuity and creativity, that is really going to solve this problem. people expect somewhere in the vicinity of $50 trillion to be spent over the course of the next 30, 40 years. that is going to be an enormous transformation of our economy. and all to the better because it will reduce our dependency on foreign fuel, it will increase our security, it will provide for our environment, cleaner air, healthier people. there are just all kinds of pluses. and in the end it's going to be a job creator. >> what signal does this send to the coal, oil and gas market? >> we're going to continue to be pumping gas and using gas and oil for years to come. bubuwhat it does is it signals that there's a transformation taking place and people need to diversify, people need to look for cleaner ways of doing things. we commit a fair amount of money to the effort to find clean
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if we can burn coal in a clean way, then coal could conceivably have a future under those circumstances depending on the price. but more and more, energy producucon is going to become price dependent. the president sees this a critical transformational issue for the american economy. it's also critical for us because you can already see in the united states the negative impacts of climate change. the president went up to alaska this year and showed the world our glacier up in the glacier national park that's disappearing and will be altogethth gone in a few yearsrs that's happening around the world. the pacific northwest is dealing with rain and severe flooding, but the northeast is basking in springlike temperatures. buffalo hit 64 degrees on sunday. and has yet to see a measurable snowfall this year. >> reporter: the calendar may say december. but in buffalo, new york, the
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manmade at canalside ice rink. homeowners like mary bowden welcomed the warm temperaturur. >> it is a break. i'm not getting younger with thehe shoveling and all that. you know what i'm saying? >> reporter: this time last year the bowefamily was digging o from snow above the door. buffalo dubbed november 2014 snow-vember. this year her lawn is green. >> actually, the gentleman up the street was mowing his lawn. >> reporter: the city has not seen any measurable snowfall this season. that breaks a 116-year-old snow recoco. >> we are devoted golfers. >> and it's not snowing so we can play. >> reporter: john wagner and jim yusick are two golfers taking advantage of the warmer than normal temperatures. >> we're fortunate enough to year to have this beautiful weather in buffalo. >> reporter: last year at this time the course was buried in nearly 8 feet of snow. this year by the end of the
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will have hit the links. while golf carts are rolling, plows are parked. many forecasters point to el nino, a weather pattern that develops from a warm pacific ocean. it means heavy rain and snow in the southwest and warmer, drier winters in the northern midwest and northeast. the worst combination for kissing bridge ski resort president mark halter. >> i'd be far more comfortable now if i had half the ski area open and i had all my employees trained. >> reporter: instead, his trails are full of mud. >> a white christmas means economic success for the ski area. >> reporter: dreaming of a white christmas. something that in buffalo may
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it's called lola ya bonobo -- the bonobo paradise. for these endangered apes that's exactly what it is. this refuge e s created by conservationist claudine andre, belgian bornrnhas lived in congo most of her life. when she's asked why she cares about bonobos, she says look in their eyes. >> the way they look in your eyes, literally in you, it's like they look in your soul. >> it's rare most primates don't maintain eye contact like that. >> yeah, because don't try to do this with gorilla, you know. >> right. threatening gesture if you do it. bonobos look right at you? >> yeah. >> reporter: bonobos may have a brain that's a third the size of ours but they're remarkably intelligent. those high-pitched screeches are sophisticated forms of communication.
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unmistakable. like chimpanzees, bonobos use tools in a wide variety of ways and are capable e abstract problem solving. >> she has a baby. so she cannot go deep. >> so she's breaking the stick, actually. >> yeah, she showed the stick is too short. >> so she got a longer stick. that's amazing. so she's using the stick to see how deep the water is. >> yes. >> reporter: bonobos are unique among great apes because they're not dominated by malal. according to brian hare, a duke university evolutionary anthropologist who studies them at lola, it's the females who run the show. >> here if you try to be an alpha male you will be as they say corrected by the females. >> not just by one female, by all the females? >> that's right. bonobos violate a rule of naturerewhere usually if you're bigger you're going to be
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they're still not dominated by males. they work together. >> reporter: what's more, bonobos have never been observed to kill each other. the same can't be said of chimpanzees or humans for that matter. >> bonobos don't really have that darker side. that's where they could help us. how could it be a species with a brain a third of the size of ours can do something that with all our technological prowess we can't accomplish, which is to not kill each other? >> reporter: the answer might be found in their favorite pastime. these apes have more sex, more often, in more ways, than any primate on the planet. their sexual contact is so frequent, brian hare reforce to it as the bonobo handshake. >> it's not that they want to procreate or have kids, it's not that they even find each other attractive, it's just -- >> no, it's a negotiation. >> reporter: hardly surprising many of these negotitiions take place e er food. >> chimps will fight over food, bonobos won't necessarily fight
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>> that's right. so basically, chimpanzees get primed for competition. testosterone increases. bonobos get stressed out. if they feel they're not going to be able to share they get anxious and that drives them to want to be reassured and they have a bonobo handshake to make it better. >> males will do that with females, males do that with males, females with femas, doesn't matter? >> any combination, any age. >> reporter: it's an irony this peace-loving primate is being hunted to extinction. though it's illegal to kill or capture bow nobody bow bonobos in congo that hasn't slowed their rapid decline. forest animals are sold in bustling bush meat markets for food. at the largest, in capital's pital kinsha shasa you can buy monkeys, porcupines, alligators, dead or alive. bonobos aren't openly sold here anymore but you can still buy them in many parts of congo. orphaned babies often end up in
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them. lola ya bonobo. the babies arrive traumatized, often injured. each is assigned a surrogate human mother. their job is to raise the babies as their own, showering themem with the love and attention the orphaned apes so desperately need. >> it's incredible to see them up close like this. >> human. >> yeah. >> you know, i say all the time that for sure they are great apes. they are not us. and we are not them. but we have a line in the middle of the two worlds that we cross all the time. >> reporter: baby bonobos are as playful as any human toddler.
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susie would know. she's in charge of the bonobos' welfare at lola and oversees their rehabilitation. >> you have a child of your own? >> yes. >> how are they y fferent? >> i can s s there's no difference. >> there's no difference? you really have to be a mother to this baby? >> yes. most of the time you need experienced mothers. they give a lot of affection and this is the only way to serve them. >> that's what saves these babies? >> yes, and make them in life. >> they need love? >> yes, absolutely. without that they die. >> reporter: susie decided to study bonobos because she felt they c cld teach us a lot ababt human evolution. after five years at lola, she realized that their behavior is closer to ours than she'd ever imagined. >> is it hard not to think of them as human? >> yes. yes, because we share most of the time -- we share time with them. >> you spend time with them? >> all day. >> reporter: at the end of that day, susie sees to it the babies
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for the night. at 6:00 p.m. it's lights out. >> do you read thehea story? >> no, they don't need, they're tired. they spend all the time jumping in trees, playing so much. >> they're exhausted? >> very exhausted. >> reporter: by age 5 the orphaned apes move from lola's nursery to the kindergarten where their peers teach them something their human mothers never could. they teach them how to be bonobos. they still crave affection. they've started developing their own distinct personalities. >> he's the one who like jump. >> you want to jump? i can't work under these conditions. it's very hard to conduct an interview like this. >> reporter: claudine andre came across her first bonobo 20 years ago. the country was racked by violence and on the verge of a brutal civil war. she volulueered to help at a local zoo.
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bonobo. though the zoo director warned her about getting too close. >> he said, don't put your heart in this animal? >> yes, it's a bonobo. bonobo? it's the first time for me i hear this word. he say, they never survive in captivity. >> he was warning you, don't fall in love with a bonobo because it's going to die? >> yeah, it was a sort of chchlenge. >> reporter: there are now more than 70 bonobos at lola. many of the original orphans have children of their own. to save these primates from extinction their numbers in the wild will have to grow. six years ago the team from lola decided to try to release some back into the forest. nothing like it had ever been done with bonobos before. they hand-picked nine apes who they thought would do well on their own. >> they have to be able to get along in a group as well as be strong themselves? >> it's like you chose people to
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>> reporter: it's not quite the moon but the site they found to release the bonobos is about as remote as you can find on the planet. it's a three-hour flight deep into the wilderness of northern congo. then a long, slow ride up the river in a dugout canoe. life along the river hasn't changed much in centuries. congo is one of the least-developed countries in the world and has millions of acres of virtually untouched forest. it may look pristine. even peaceful. but many of the people who live in these parts have suffered from years of war. the wildlife here was decimated. the bonobos disappeared from is area because of hunting? >> yes. >> for bush meat? >> yes. >> also during the war, soldiers would hunt here? >> yes. >> reporter: we were taken to the spot where that first group of bonobos was released. for a while we couldn't see anything.
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cbsnews.com. lilly. she pretty much lives s her favorite pririess dress. but once a week i let her play sheriff so i can wash it. i use tide to get out those week old stains and downy to get it fresh and soft. you are free to go. tide and downy together. man (sternly): where do you think you're going? mr. mucus: to work, with 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. [announcer:] mucinex keeps working. not 4, not 6, but 12 hours.
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one of the hottest new gifts this season is the hoverboard. they may be funn the ground but t ree major american airlines have banned them from flights. >> reporter: the u.s. consumer products safety commission is investigating ten reports of hoverboard fires in nine different states. many of the hoverboard electric scooters have high-watt lithium batteries which can start fires in a plane's baggage compartment. already one of the season's hottest gifts -- it appears hoverboards are continuing to heat up. >> holy cow. >> reporter: literally. cell phone video like this from earlier in the week claim to show a hoverboard burning in a washingtontate mall. another rider from alabama posted this video saying his hoverboard just caught fire.
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>> reporter: now this year's must have gift is finding its way onto some less-popular lists. on thursday the nation's three largest airlinin banned the scooters from flight. they're concerned about the toys' lithium ion batteries. >> they ignite and catch fire very violently -- >> reporter: aviation consultant denny kelly. >> the faa probably would ban lithium batteries from airplanes period if there wasn't so much pressure from the airlines not to do that. >> reporter: cell phones, tablets and laptops use low-wattage e thium ion batteries. whwhh fall within faa regulations. but airlines are concerned about the hoverboards' battery. in a statement, delta pointed to the size and power of their lithium ion batteries and found the strength of the batteries in hoverboards often exceeded government limits for what's allowed on board an aircraft. one hoverboard manufacturer, swagway, blames cheap knock-offs for the problem saying, they don't compromise when it comes
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parts and urged customers to be aware of fake units that are beg sold on the internet. according to sean cain, founder of the safety institute, the hugely popular products may eventually be recalled. >> they're considered toys but they're not. so at the end of the day you have a product that doesn't have to meet any safety requirements and it's finding its way to u.s. markets. 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.
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don't let this happen to you. if you or a loved one is suicidal, call the national suicide prevention lifeline. no matter how hopeless or helpless you feel, with the right help, you can get well. (fraralin d. roosevelt) the inherent right to work is one of the elemental privililes of a free people. endowed, as our nation is, with abundant physical resources... ...and inspired as it should be to make those resources 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
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finally here, a holiday tradition, the secret santa. steve hartman has more. >> reporter: 'twas a few weeks before christmas when there arose such a clatter, the people of pittsburgh must have thought something's the matter. but far from it. once again this year, the man in the red coat who i know only as secret santa is out doing random acts of kindness across america. >> we ready? >> reporter: every year with the help of elves and local law enforcement this anonymous wealthy businessman gives away about $100,000 worth of 100-dollar bills to total strangers.
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>> reporter: asking for nothing in return except to spread the kindness. >> see you, sweetie. give a hug. >> reporter: tamecka green is a program m ordinator at the ymcmc she wanted to use some of her money to help the kids in her after-school program. >> i promise as soon as i get out of here i'm going to come in like, guess what! it's amazing. >> we'll put another couple in there. i've got to quit talking to you, i'm running out of money. all right, babe. we love you, you're doing great. don't stop. >> thank you so much. >> see you, babe. >> reporter: secret santa has been doing thihiabout a decade. he says he feels more needed now than ever. >> this year the time is perfect for everybody to come together one random act of kindness at a time. >> is she a christian? >> who knows? >> reporter: a muslim? who cares? all he looks for are people who seem like they could use a little caring in their lives. >> merry christmas, babe. >> reporter: in other words,
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>> kindness is the bridge between all people. kindness is the one thing that cuts through everything, regardless of your station in life. >> reporter: really, that's what he's handing out here. nothe money. money doesn't make people break down like this. these are the faces of people overwhelmed by something truly priceless. >> i want to talk to you. >> reporter: lest you doubt that, consider this encounter. >> this is for you, $100 from secret santa. >> reporter: her name is m mdred morris. >> i just came from chemo. and i work every day -- >> reporter: mildred has stage 4 breast cancer. she said a milon dollars couldn't have turned her day around, yet here she was, overjoyed. >> thank you. god bless you. >> god bless you. >> i am happy. >> explain that to me. >> it's just amazing to get so much compassion with all this ugly stuff that's going on.. >> reporter:r:very year people tell me they'd like to do this t they don't have thmoney.
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you need is kindness. steve hartman on the road in pittsburgh, pennsylvania. >> you can hug him too. >> that is "the overnight news" for this monday. for some of you the news for others check back with us for the morning news and "cbs this morning." from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm jeff glor. cruzzing ahead. texas senator ted cruz surges to the top in iowa. donald trump lashes out. >> i don't think he has the right temperament. i don't think he's got the right judgment. sinkholes and landslides leave homes in oregon on the brink. >> this young man crawled to his death. he was shot again, again and again. >> disturbing video of a fatal police shooting in los angeles. why did officers keep firing as the suspect crawled away? lifting the curtain on a
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how some stars avoid flubbing their lines. >> this is the cbs overnight news. >> welcome to the overnight news, i'm jeff glor. seven weeks until the iowa cacauses, first in theenation. two polls show a shakeup in the race. one poll, cruz leads. another poll shows cruz has emerged as the strongest challenger to trump, 5 points behind. ben carson has fallen into fourth place on the republican side behind senator marco rubio. >> i don't go down, i go up. >> reporter: donald trtrp has said he only likes polls that treat him well. even before a new iowa poll showed him slipping he dismissed it as biased. >> i'm leading in virtually every state. i'm leading in iowa. although "des moines register" does a poll and i'm sure that will be negative.
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by one of the state's most respected and accurate pollsters. it has ted cruz surging. senator cruz has spent months courting the voters with whom he's now leading, evangelicals and tea party conservatives. he's catching supporters fleeing ben carson who has faltered with the increas focus on national security. >> you look at the way he's dealt with the senate, where he goes in there frankly a little like a maniac. >> reporter: the billionaire front-runner said cruz doesn't have the right temperament to be president. the poll of iowa republicans has the texas senator leading on that quality. trump tweeted out a different national poll showing him with a new high. cruz is 5 points behind in second. marco rubio is third. >> trump is smart like a fox. >> reporter: these current and former trump supporters in virginia were part of a recent focus group conducted after his inflammatory proposal to bar muslims from entering the u.s. >> if trump gets elected, he
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him to ensure that these type of things aren't saidut loud. >> the republican party has failed us the lasas two times with weak candidates. mccain who was weak, romney who was weak, we're tired of weak candidates. there is no number two to trump. >> reporter: as the republican contest sorts itself out it's looking at potential for protracted between primary as trump, anti-establishment pick, someone like cruz who carries conservatives and religious voters, then the establishment candidate who republicans have historically nominated, whoever thatatay be this cycle. >> all right, jululnna goldman in washington. weather extremes across the country tonight. this picture from western oklahoma a definition of whiteout conditions. this one from new york was experiencing record high temperatures. let's bring in chief meteorologist eric fisher. we're going to start in the northwest which is getting slammed by storms. what is happening with that system? >> jeff this storm has a lot more cold air to work with. we're seeing more snow all
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over the next 48 hours and peventually that energy spins out into the plains. as we head into tuesday and wednesday, snow moving up into nebraska, parts of south dakota. all told every state in the west picking up much-needed snowfall here. every state all the way until the plains picking up fresh snow the next 48 hours. the east, totally different story. a feel of spring, longstanding record high temperatures. detroit, record set in 1881, baltimore hit 72 today. more recoror highs possible tomorrow. this wedge of warm air in the east, rainy to kick off the week. there is a change coming toward the middle and later stages of this week. colder air working its way farther east. for some who haven't felt much of it, a feel of winter in the air. the system in the pacific northwest may be on its way out but it's still doing damage. david begnaud is in tillamook, oregon, tonight. >> reporter: good eveneng. ven families live along thihi hillside in western oregon, in part because of the view.
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danger of being condemned, including this one right above me that they are working to protect at this hour. some 11 inches of rain fell in this area over a seven-day period causing a landslide, look at this, that opened up a hole big enough to fit almost 11 suvs. this is the road that leads to your house? > s. well -- at least it used to be. now ititust kind o o leads to a cliff. >> reporter: morgan has watched the land slide on her family's property for the last six days. what started as a crack caved into a crater. bob flackas is her neighbor. >> you woke up, walked out, and it looked like this? >> yes. did not hear a sound. not a sound one. just -- the land went away. >> reporter: five feet from his front door is now a cliff. a week's worth of nearly nonstop rain in t ts picturesque part of tillamook, oregon, has left bob and his wife of 36 years, dee, literally living near the edge.
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more than 200 sandbags are holding down a tarp intended to stop the ground from sliding any more. >> i could cry. >> why? >> people that i never knew and probably might not see again came up here to help me save this hill. it overwhelel me. it's hard. >> reporter: 30 yards frorothe ackas home the landslide has pushed into a barn owned by her family. >> this is the only thing holding the hillside up. >> reporter: her relatives live alongside the barn, now staying in a horse trailer because the home is in danger of being condemned. cotchery says sandbags are their only option. >> got to do something. >> reporter: bob is willing to try anything if it means staying ininhe home he andnd his wife calall paradise. >> if it starts to move i'm not going to be stubborn and stay, i will get the hell out. until it starts to move, i'm staying. >> reporter: the hole in front
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the los angeles county sheriff's department is investigating a deadly shooting tonight. officers fired dozens of rounds and kept shooting while the suspect was on the ground. chris martinez has this story with this warning, the video can be disturbing. >> reporter: video captures the moment two los angeles county sheriff's deputies fire multiple shots at nicholas robertson in the lin wood neighborhood of l l angeles. robertson falls to the ground
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seen crawling on his stomach as he's repeatedly struck by additional gunfire. last night, angry demonstrators gathered at the shooting scene. pamela brown is robertson's mother-in-law. >> he left three kids behind. two daughters and a son. what, they could have tasered him or anything. >> reporter: today, 24 hours after the shooting, the sheriff's department held a prprs conference. l.a. county sheriff jim mcdonald. >> we've come out today to try and be as transparent we can with the information we can share at this time to say, here's what we have, here's what we know about it. >> reporter: the sheriff's department released this video showing robertson minutes before his encounter with deputies walking down a busy street, carrying a gun. investigators say the confrontation started when deputies responded to multiple 911 calls about a man firing shots into the air. l.a. county homicide detettive captain steve katz ---
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repeated requests to drop the weapon. the movement of the suspect and the way in which he was holding the firearm indicates he was motioning in the direction of the deputy sheriffs. >> reporter: the video captures the moment the deputies began firing, a total of 33 rounds. robertson was pronounced dead at the scene. community activist naji ali sayay the video is disturbing. >> it appears thihi young man crawled to his death, he was shot again, again, again. >> reporter: local civil rights leaders have asked for an independent investigation into robertson's death. chris martinez, cbs news, los angeles. this week the federal reserve is expected to raise interest rates for the first time in more than nine years. the expected increase, .25 points. for more we turn to analyst jill schlessinger. we think it's going to happen this week? >> it's almost certain and here's why. the fed slashed rates 10 times
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0% during the financial crisis. that was an effort to stimulate the economy. all these years later what's happened? the economy is growing by 2.25% a year the last few years, we've got job creation, unemployment 5%. the fed thinks it's time to normalize interest rate policy. they'll start this week. >> if this happens who wins, who houses? >> finallyly good news for savers who have gotten 0% interest on their checking, savings, cds. borrowers could pay a little bit more for all kinds of lopes whether credit cards, auto lorens. mortgage rates are not tied to these rates but they could go up as well. investors could be lurky up there. i think stock and bond prices could be quite volatile the next few weeks. >> the global economy is slowing down, there's concern the american economy is going to slow down, some ecocomists think thisiss too earlrl >> people like larry summers, the former treasury secretary, they even cite the fact that crude oil, which fell by 11% to seven-year lows, that that's a
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janet yellen the fed chair says, don't worry about. things slow down, we don't have to keep raising rates. things speed and up we get in inflation, we could raise rates more often. everything is data-dependent, we'll have to see. >> jill, t tnks very much. > fbi divers wrapped up their search of a lake in san bernardino, california. investigators won't say if they found evidence possibly dumped this by terrorists who killed 14 people and injured nearly 20 others. tonight john blackstone tells us how some in the community fear a backlash against them. since the san bernardino shootings, ranyel has changed the way she covers her hair so she looks less muslim. >> instead of the traditional i wear hatat so i can blend in to minimize any possibility of someone retaliating or saying something to me. >> reporter: as a mother of five who lives three miles from the scene of the shootings she was already concerned about the safety of her family. then she learned the attackers were muslim.
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shooter, i was devastated. the first thing i did is i end up writing an e-mail to all the principals of my kids' schools letting them know that a muz when we're a muslim family, that we condemn these kind of attacks. >> reporter: since the paris attacks, there have been several attacks on muslims. a pregnant muslim woman assaulted in san diego. two airline passengers ordered off a flight in chicago after a passenger heard them speaking arabic and felt threatened. and after the san bernardino massacre, a copy of the koran filled with bullets left outside an islamic clothing store in southern california. on friday the fire bombing of a mosque in coachella, 70 miles from san bernardino. police arrested a 23-year-old man for arson and committing a hate crime. ranyel has decided her best defense is not to hide but to show the true nature of her religion.
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>> now i feel like i'm more determined to keep it on and let everyone know what the muslim community is all about. and i feel i have that tool and i should use it. i cannot think of any place on this earth that i would want to be in other than the u.s. this is my country as much as anybody else's country who are americans. >> reporter: for this muslim american family, the message is that they are as outraged over the attack that took place here and just as united in grief as any other american family. >> john blackstone, thank you. a dramatic program trying to keep kids away from ouble. ananthe only thing betetr than nning the heisman we've been changing things up with k-y love. oh yeah. it's a pleasure gel that magnifies both our sensations. it gives us chills in places we've never gotten chills before. yeah, it makes us feel like... dare to feel more with new k-y love. >> important message for residents age 50 to 85.
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it is a graphic demonstration in philadelphia that aims to preveve violence by taking teenagers step b step through what happens to a gunshot victim in the emergency room. >> welcome, everybody. >> reporter: the hospital where 16-year-old lamont adams died in 2004 -- >> >> by the time you get here the odds have been stacked against you. >> reporter: -- has been turned into a school of hard knocks. >> when he came in he wasn't breathing at all. >> reporter: throughout the year huhureds of philadelphia studentstsisit the trauma a it at temple university hospital for the cradle to grave program. >> we're going to tell the story of a young man named lamont adams.
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adams. his life, from birth to death. dr. amy goldberg and outreach coordinator scott charles have been re-enacting the night adam didi. >> he's going to have a bullet wound right there and there -- >> reporter: charles uses dozens of red stickers to mark where the bullets hit adam. >> i'm not trying to politicize this issue. i'm simply saying, this is the thing that is more likely to kill you in philadelphia than anything else when you're young. i want them to take ownership of this. >> we were both really concerned that the students didn't really seem to know the truth ramifications of what bullet injuries and gunshot wounds can cause. >> if the things that i'm showing you are too troublesome for you, talk to me. >> reporter: the students watch a video showing graphic pictures of more gunshot victims. some students can't bear to look.
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bathroom, i close the door. and i get down on my knees and i cry. >> reporter: the pain adams' grandmother describes hit home for 16-year-old rococlly sanchez. i can't imaginene my mom crying because something happened to me or one of my famamy members. >> reporter: 15-year-old jordan bear reto first went to the program in may. >> i was with the wrong people, doing the wrong thing. the program really opened my eyes that gun violence is real and people are getting killed for nothing. and it ain't no names to them bullets. >> the students also visited a morgue. so far, more than 10,000 students have come t tough the cradle to grave program at temple university hospital. jeff, organizers say that fewern n than a dozen of those students return back to that hospital's trauma unit with a gunshot
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>> thank you very much. for the first time women have been elected to office in saudi arabia. yesterday was outside the first time women were allowed to vote in the country. more than a dozen women won local elections. a wondedeul reaction las night after this year's heisman trophy winner was announced. alabama running back derek henry. that is his family at a hospital in florida where henry's grandmother has been undergoing treatment. henry broke the conference record for rushing this year. the nba's golden state warriors are undefeated no more. saturday night they lost to the milwaukeee bucks 108-95. the warriors are now -1 this season. it was the team's first regular-season loss since april 7th. it took nearly a lifetime but a man in england has finally
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at 6 years old, david halock put a letter to santa in his chimney asking for any toys he had to spare. more than 70 years later builders found that letter while working on the house. so they located mr. halockck who had long since moved away, and made sure he got everything he requested. including toy soldiers and a pencil box every day it's getting closer
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a love like yours will surely come my way hey, hehe hey babies areret fully developed until at 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 part of the american 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, pay attention to our surroundings. [ cheeringng everyone plays a role in keeping our community safe. whether you're traveling for business or pleasure, be aware of your surroundings. if you see something suspicious,
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finally, most stage actors say their biggest fear is forgetting their lines. help. prompting criticism. >> reporter: it's a star-studded season on broadway. al pacino in "china doll." bruce willis in "misly." dawson. while those actors draw bigig box offices,s,ome are having trouble remembering their lines.
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someone can cue them. the reviews are not great. "china doll" may be the worst reviewed play of the season. "the wall street journal" says, yes, he's using teleprompters. and he was not at ease with his lines. the "new york post" writes, al pacino needs teleprompters for lines in terrible new broadway play. >> the more they use celebrities drive ticket saleses for playsys or musicals, yououe going to come up with a problem which is that you need to have assistance. >> reporter: david cody is "time out new york's" theater ed correspond. he says audience members walked out after the first act watching pacino search for teleprompters. >> actors used to film acting will have difficulty in a play where they have to sustain a scene over minunus. >> reporter: willis' performed he called stiff. willis and pacino worked through numerous screen changes through previews. that gave them less time to medical rise their parks. for actors like jones and tyson
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complicated by having to play a card game throughout the entire play. even broadway great angela lansbury needed some help. the 90-year-old actress used an ear piece in the 2009 production of "blithe spirit." but she won her fifth tony for that performance. >> delicious. >> as you get older, it gets worse, more difficult. >> reporter:ark davey chairs the graduate aing program at nyu. he says remembering lines is challenging, especially for older actors who have been away from the stage. ear pieces can be a solution. >> if you want to see a major movie star, you don't necessarily want to see an incredibib feature, you want to see them being relaxed and responsive. if that's what it takes, it seems to me that's fine. >> james earl jones, cicely tyson, al pacino. fabulous. >> reporter: new yorker cheryl rubin is a big theater fan. she says she didn't notice any of the actors getting prompted. >> theatergoers are not getting
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they're seeing great acting by great actors. >> reporter: great actors doing whatever it takes to keep thehe nanas on broadway. >> that is the "overnight news" for this monday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back with us later for the morning news and "cbs news this morning." this is the "cbs overnight news." welcome to the overnight news, i'm jeff glor. negotiators have left paris after reaching an agreement on climate change. nearly 200 countries have agreed. some protesters insist the agreement doesn't go far enough. president obama said it could be a turning point for the world. here's mark philips. >> reporter: it took a day longer than plan and the intent of the deal still has to be turned into action are.
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laurent fabius brought down his gavel it confirmed there was a long-elusive deal to limit how much the earth will be allowed to heat up. delegates had been up the past two nights pulling the deal together. and it had taken some arm-twisting. not least by u.s. secretary of state john kerry. >> it's a victory for all of the planet and for future generations. >> reporter: it will take decades for the efffft of this deal to take effect and many more extreme climate events like the floods that hit areas of england this past week are still likely. but the provisions of the deal are ambitious. it calls for the global average temperature rise to be held at less than 2 degrees celsius above preindustrial levels. forever. that's 3.6 degrees fahrenheit. ananeven says the rise shouldd ideally be lower than that. the deal, once ratified, would be legally binding.
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billion fund under which rich countries would help poorer ones cope with the consequences of climate change like these floods. this is supposed to be the road, the lake is supposed to end over there. they built special flood defenses here the last time this happened. good, they said, for the 100-year event. bubu clearly they haven't coped and that last flood was just six years ago. but the significance of this deal is that both rich and poor countries have agreed on what has to be done, even if there's no clear agreement on exactly how to do it. the new deal will not of itself end global warming. the pledges most countries have made to cut their carbon emissions willllot keep that warming to the limbs with which the world will cope. but jim, this deal is being seen as a turning point with the whole world now agreed on what must be done. and that's something. >> the climate change agreement sets targets each country must
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the targets are nonbinding and there's no way to force countries to comply. john dickerson asked secretary of state john kerry about this on "face the nation." >> it's possible that a country will slip. but to get an agreement with 186 nations signing on to a uniform system of required mandatory reporting by which they can be held to a standard, and also to be able to have a very ambitious goal and have the flexibility that we have in this agreement to be able to meet those standards, is essentiti. andd soo i think i is a b bakaway agreement which actually will change the paradigm by which countries are making judgments about this. the most important thing, john, that really happened today, is that the business community of the entire world is receiving a message about countries now moving towards clean, alternative, renewable energy and trying to reduce their
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that is goingng to spur massive investment. and it's technology, it's american ingenuity and creativity, that is really going to solve this problem. people expect somewhere in the vicinity of $50 trillion to be spent over the course of the next 30, 40 years. that is going to be an enormous transformation of our economy. and all to the better because it will reduce our dependency on foreign fuel, it will increase our security, it will provide fofoournvironment, cleaner air, healthier people. there are just all kinds of pluses. and in the end it's going to be a job creator. >> what signal does this send to the coal, oil and gas market? >> we're going to continue to be pumping gas and using gas and oil for years to come. but what it does is it signals that there's a transformation taking place and people need to diversefy, people need to look for cleaner ways of doing things. we commit a fair amount of money
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coal. if we can burn coal in a clean way, then coal could conceivably have a future under those circumstances depending on the price. but more and more, energy production is going to become price dependent. the president sees this as a critical transformational issue for the american economy. it's also critical for us becacae you can alrdy see in the united states the negative impacts of climate change. the president went up to alaska this year and showed the world our glacier up in the glacier national park that's disappearing and will be altogether gone in a few years. that's happening around the world. >> the pacific northwest is dealing with rain and severe flooding,,ut the nororeast is basking in springlikik temperatures. buffalo hit 64 degrees on sunday. and has yet to see a measurable snowfall this year. >> reporter: the calendar may say december.
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only winter fun is currently manmade at canalside ice rink. homeowners like mary bowden welcomed the warm temperatures. >> it is a break. i'm n n getting younger with the shoveling and d l that. >> reporter: this time lastear the bowen family was digging out from snow above the door. buffalo, dubbed november 2014 snow-vember. this year her lawn is green. >> actually the gentleman of up the street was mowing his lawn. >> reporter: the city has not seen any measurable snowfall this season. that breaks a 116-year-old snow record. >> we are devoted d lfers. >>nd it's not snowing so we can play. >> reporter: john wagner and jim yusick are two golfers taking advantage of the temperatures. >> we're fortunate enough to year to have this beautiful weather in buffalo. >> reporter: last year at this time the course was buried in nearly 8 feet of snow. this year by the end of the
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will have hit thelings. the links. while golf carts are rolling, plows are parked. many forecasters point to el nino, a weather pattern that developsrom a warm pacific ocean. it means heavy rain and snow in the southwest and warmer, drier winters in the northern midwest and northeast. the worst combination for kissing bridge ski resort president mark halter. >> i'd be far more comfortable now if i had half the ski area open and i had all my employees trained. >> reporter: instead, his trails are full of mud. >> a white christmas means economic success for the ski area. >> reporter: dreaming of a white christmas.
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the bonobo paradise. for these endangered apes that's exactly what it is. this refuge was created by conservationist claudine andre, ben january belgian born, has lived in congo most of her life. when she's asked why she cares about bonobos, she says look in their eyes. >> the way they look in your eyes, literally in you, it's like they look in your soul. >> it's rare most primates don't maintain eye contact like that. >> yeah, because don't try to do this with gorilla, you know. >> right. threatening gesture if you do it. bonobos look right at you if. >> yeah. reporter: bonobos may have a a brain n at's a third the size of ours but they're remarkably intelligent. those high-pitched screeches are sophisticated forms of communication.
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unmistakable. like chimpanzees, bonobos use tools in a wide variety of ways and are capable of abstract problem solving. >> s s has a baby. so she canant go deep. >> she's breaking the stick. >> yeah, she showed the stick is too short. >> so she got a longer stick. that's amazing. so she's using the stick to see how deep the water is. >> yes. >> reporter: bonobos are unique among great apes because they're not dominated by males. according to brian -- hair o duke university it's the female who run the show. >> here if you try to be an alpha male you will be as they say corrected by the females. >> not just by one female, by all the females? >> that's right. bonobos violate a rule of nature, if you're bigger, you're
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here females are smaller but they're still not dominated by males. they work together. >> reporter: what's more, bonobos have never been observed to kill each other. the same can't be said of chimpanzees or humans for that matter. >> bonobos don't really have that darker side. that's where they could help us. how could it be a species with a brain a third of the size of ours can do something that with all our tech i don't logical prowess we can't do, which is not kill each other? >> reporter: the answer might be found in their favorite pastime. these apes have more sex, more often, in more ways, than any primate on the planet. their sexual contact so is frequent, brian refers to it as the bonobo handshake. >> it's not that they want to procreate or have kids, it's not that they even find each other attractive, it's just -- >> no, it's a negotiation. >> reporter: hardly surprising many of these negotiations take place over food.
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bonobos won't necessarily fight each other over food. >> basically, chimpanzees get primed for competition, testosterone increases. bonobos get stressed out. if they feel they're not going to be able to share they get anxious and that drives them to want to be reassured and they have a bonobo handshake to make it better. >> males will do thaha with fefeles, males, doesn't matter -- >> any combination, any age. >> reporter: it's an irony this peace-loving primate is being hunted to extinction. though it's illegal to kill or capture bonobos in conbow, that hasn't slowed their rapid decline. forest animals are sold in bustling bush meat markets for food. at the largest, in capital's capital canshasa, you can buy monkeys, porcupines, alligatats, dead or alive. bonobos aren't openly sold here anymore but you can still buy
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orphaned babies often end up in the only place that can care for them. the babies arrive traumatized, often injured. each is a assigned a surrogate human poerth mother. their job is to raise the babies as their own, showering them with the love and attention the orphaned apes so desperately need. >> it's incredible to see them up chose like this. i mean, they're so -- >> human. >> yeah. >> you know, i say all the time that for sure they are great apes.. they are not us. and we are not them. but we have a line in the middle of the two worlds that we cross all the time. >> reporter: baby bonobos are as playful as any human toddler.
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susie would know. she's in charge of the bonobos' welfare at lola and ovovsees their rehabilitataon. >> you have a child of your own? >> yes. >> how are they different? >> i can say there's no difference. >> there's no difference? you really have to be a mother to this baby? >> yes. most of the time you need experienced mothers. they give a lot of affection and this is the only way to serve them. >> that's what saves these babies? >> yes, and make them in life. >> they need love? >> yes, absolutely. without that they die. >> reporter: susie decidededo study nobos becauau she felt they could teach us a lot about human evolution. after five years at lola, she realized that their behavior is closer to ours than she'd ever imagined. >> is it hard not to think of them as human? >> yes. yes, because we share most of the time -- we share time with them. >> you spend time with them? >> all day. >> reporter: at ththend of that
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are tucked into their hammocks for the night. at 6:00 p.m. it's lights out. >> do you read them a story? >> no, they don't need, they're tired. they spend all the time jumping in trees, playing so much. >> they're exhausted this. >> very exhausted. >> reporter: by age 5 the orphaned apes move from lola's nursery to the kindergarten where their peers teach them something their human mothers never could. they teach them how to be bonobos. they still crave affection. but they're also more confident. they've started developing their own distinct personalities. >> he's the one who like jump. >> you want to jump? i can't work under these conditions. it's very hard to conduct an interview like this. >> reporter: claudine andre came across her first bonobo 20 years ago. the country was racked by violence and on the verge of a brutal civil war. she volunteered to help at a local zoo.
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bonobo. though the zoo director warned her about getting too close. >> he said, don't put your heart in this animal? >> yes, it's a bonobo. it was the first time for me i hear this word. he sasa they never survive in captivity. he was warning you, don't fall in love with a bonobo because it's going to die? >> yeah, it was a sort of challenge. >> reporter: there are now more than 70 bonobos at lowell what. many of the original orphans have children of their own. to save these primates from extinction their numbers in the wild will have to grow. six years ago the team from lola decided to try to release some back into the forest. nothing like it had ever been done with bonobos before. they hand-picked nine apes who they thought would do well on their own. >> they have to be able to get along in a group as well as be strong themselves?
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go to the moon. >> reporter: it's not quite the moon but the site they found to release the bonobos is about as remote as you can find on the planet. it's a three-hour flight deep into the wilderness of northern congo. then a long, slow ride up the river in a dugout canoe. life along the river hasn't changed much in centuries. congo is one of the least-developed countries in the world and has millions of acres of virtually untouched forest. it may look pristine. evenpeaceful.. but many of the people who live in these parts have suffered from years of war. the wildlife here was decimated. the bonobos disappeared from this area because of hunting? >> yes. >> yes. >> also during the war, soldiers >> yes. >> reporter: we were taken to the spot where that first group of bonobos was released. anything.
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one of the hottest new gifts this holiday season is the hoverboard. they may be fun on the ground. but they major american airlines have banned them from all flights. >> reporter: the u.s. consumer products safety commission is investigating ten reports of hoverboard fires in nine different states. many of the hoverboard electric scooters have high-watt lithium tteries which can s srt fires in a plane's baggage compartment. already one of the season's hottest gifts !- it appears hoverboards are continuing to heat up. >> holy cow. >> reporter: literally. cell phone video like this from earlier in the week claim to show a hoverboard burning in a washington state mall. another rider from alabama posted this video saying his hoverboard just caught fire.
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>> reporter: now this year's must have gift is finding its way onto some less-popular lists. on thursday the nation's three largest airlines banned the scooters from flight. they're concerned about the toys' lithium ion batteries. >> they ignite and catch fire very violently -- >> reporter: aiv yare consultant denny kelly. >> the faa probably would ban lithium batteries from airplanes period if there wasn't so much pressure from the airlinenot to do that. >>eporter: cell phones, tablets and lapto use low-wattage lithium ion batteries. but airlines are concerned about the hoverboards' battery. delta pointed to the size and power of their lithium ion batteries and found the strength of the batteries in hoverboards often exceeded government limits for what's allowed on board an aircraft. one hoverboard manufacturer, swagway, blames cheap knock-offs for the problem saying, they
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to using the highest-quality parts and urged customers to be aware of fake units that are being sold on the internet. according to sean cain, founder of the safety institute, the hugely popular products may eventually be recalled. >> they're considered toys but they're not. so at the end of the day you have a product that doesn't have to meet any safety requirements barrassed by a prostate exam? imagine how your doctor 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 save lives. 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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. >> a holiday tradition, the secret santa. steve hartman has more. >> reporter: 'twas a a few weeks before christmas when this arose such a clatter the people of pittsburgh must have thought something's the matter. but far from it. once again this year, the man in the red coat who i know only as secret santa is out doing random acts of kindness across america. >> we ready? >> reporter: every year with the help of elves and local law enforcement this anonymous wealthy businessman gives away about $100,000 worth of
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>> oh! >> reporter: asking for nothing in return except to spread the kindness. see you, sweetie. give a hug. >> reporter: tamecka gre is a program coordinator at the ymca. she wanted to use some of her money to help the kids in her program. >> i promise as soon as i get out of here i'm going to come in like, guess what! it's amazing. >> we'll put another couple in i've got to quit talking to you, i'm running out of money. we love you, you're doing great. don't stop. thank you so much. >> see you. >> reporter: secret santa has been doing this about a decade. he says he feels ss more needed now than ever. >> this year the time is perfect for everybody to come together one random act of kindness at a time. >> is she a christian? >> who knows? >> reporter: a muslim? who cares? all he looks for are people who seem like t ty could use a little caring in their lives. >>erry christmas, babe.
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anyone. >> kindness is the bridge between all people. kindness is the one thing that cuts through everything, regardless of your station in life. >> reporter: really, that's what he's handing out here. not the money. money doesn't make people break down hike this. these are the faces of people overwhelmed by something truly priceless. >> i want to talk to you. >> reporter: lest you doubt that, consider this encounter. >> this is for you, $100 from secret santa. >> reporter: her name is mildred morris. >> i just came from chemo. and i work every day -- >> reporter: mildred has stage 4 breast cancer. she said a million dollars couldn't have turned her day around, yet here she was, overjoyed. >> thank you. god bless you. >> god bless you. >> explain that to me. >> it's just azing t tget so much compassion with all this ugly stuff that's going on. >> reporter: every year people tell me they'd like to do this
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now we know the only currency you need is kindness. steve hartman on the road in pittsburgh, pennsylvania. >> you can hug him too. >> that is "the overnight news" for this monday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back with us for thth morning news and"cbs this morning." om the broadcast center in new york city, i'm jeff glor. cruz'ing ahead. the top in iowa. donald trump lashes out. >> i don't think he has the right temperament. i don't think he's got the right judgment. sinkholes and landslides leave homes in oregon on the brink. this young man crawled to his death. he was shot again, again and again. >> disturbing video of a fatal police shooting in los angeles. why did officers keep firing as the suspect crawled away? lifting the curtain on a broadway stage secret.
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their lines. >> this is the "cbs overnight news." >> welcome to the overnight news, i'm jeff glor. seven weeks until the iowa caucuses, first in the nation. two polls show a shakeup in the race. one poll, senator ted cruz has surged 10 points ahead of donald trump. the other, cruz leads trump 28% to 26% among likely iowa caucusgoers. another poll shows cruz has emerged as the strongest challenger to trump, 5 points behind. ben carson has fallen into fourth place on the republican side behind senator marco rubio. we begin with j jianna goldman in washington.n. >> i don't go do, i go up. >> reporter: donald trump has said he only likes polls that treat him well. even before a new iowa poll showed him slipping he dismissed it as biased. >> i'm leading in virtually every state. i'm leading in iowa. although "des moines register" does a poll and i'm sure that will be negative. >> reporter: that poll conducted by one of the state's most
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pollsters. it has ted cruz surging. senator cruz has spent months courting t t voters with whom he's now leading, evangelicals and tea party conservatives. he's capturing supporters fleeing ben carson, who has faltered with the increased focus on national security. >> you look at the way he's dealt with the senate, where he goes in there frankly a little like a maniac. >> reporter: in the fox news interview the billionaire front-runner says cruz doesn't have the right temperament to the president. the pollllf iowa republicans has the texas senator leading on that quality. on sunday trump enthusiastically tweeted out a different national poll showing him with a new high. cruz is 5 points behind in second place. marco rubio is third. >> trump is smart like a fox. >> reporter: these current and former trump supporters in virginia were part of a recent focus group conducted after his inflammatory proposal to bar muslims from entering the u.s. >> if trump gets elected, he
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him to ensure that these type of things aren't said out loud. >> the republican party has failed us the last two times with weak candidates. mccain who was weak, romney who was weak, we're tired of weak candidates. there is no number two to trump. >> reporter: as the republican contest sorts itself out it's looking more and more like the potential for a protracted primary between trump as the anti-establishment pick, someone like cruz who carries conservatives and religious vovors, then the establishment candidate who republicananhave historically nominated, whoever that may be this cycle. >> all right, julianna goldman in washington. weather extremes across the country tonight. this picture from western oklahoma a definition of whiteout conditions. this one from new york was experiencing record high temperatures. let's bring in chief meteorologist eric fisher. we're going to start in the northwest which is getting slammed by storms. what is happening with that system? >> jeff this storm has a l l more cold air to work with. we're seeing more snow all across the intermountain wes
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eventually that energy spins out into the plains. as we head into tuesday and wednesday, snow moving up into nebraska, parts of south dakota. all told every state in the west picking up much-needed snowfall here. every state all the way until the plains picking up fresh snow the next 48 hours. the east, totally different story. a feel of spring, longstanding record high temperatures. detroit, record set in 1881, baltimore hit 72 today. more record highs possible tomorrow. especially in this little wedge of warm air in the east. also rainy travel to kick off the week. there is a change coming toward the middle and later stages of this week. colder air working its way farther east. for some who haven't felt much of it, a feel of winter in the air. >> eric fisher, thank you very much. the system in the pacific northwest may be on its way out but it's still doing damage. david begnauauis in tillamook, oregon, tonight. david? >> reporter: good evening. seven families live along this hillside in western oregon, in part because of the view.
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danger of being condemned, including this one right above me that they are working to protect at this hour. some 11 inches of rain fell in this area over a seven-day period causing a landslide, look at this, that opened up a hole big enough to fit almost 11 suvs. this is the road that leads to your house? >> yes. well -- at least it used to be. now it just kind of leads to a cliff. >> reporter: morgan cotchery has watched the land slide on her family's property for the last six days. what started as a crack caved into a crater. bob flackas is her neighbor. >> you woke up, walked out, and it looked like this? >> yes. did not hear a sound. not a sound one. just -- the land went away. >> reporter: five feet from his front door is now a cliff. a week's worth of nearly nonstop rain in this picturesque part of tillamook, oregon, has left bob and his wife of 36 years, dee, literally living near the edge. people are pitching in to help.
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holding down a tarp intended to stop the ground from sliding any more. >> i could cry. >> why? >> people that i never knew and probably might not see again came up here to help me save this hill. it overwhelms me. it's hard. >> reporter: 30 yards from the flackas home the landslide has pushed into a barn owned by her family. >> this is the only thing holding the hillside up. >> reporter: cotchery's relatives live alongside the barn in this home. they're now staying in a horse trailer because the home is in danger of being condemned. cotchery, w wse house is safe s s far, says sandbagag have been their beststnd only option. >> got to do something. >> reporter: bob is willing to try anything if it means staying in the home he and his wife call paradise. >> if it starts to move i'm not going to be stubborn and stay, i will get the hell out. until it starts to move, i'm staying. >> reporter: the hole in front of bob's house is 100 feet long
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right back. almost sixty million americans are affected by mental illness. together we can help thehe with threeeeimple words. my name is chris notot 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 america 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
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if you were a hippie in the '60s, you need to know. it's the dawning of the age of aquarius. yeah, and d mething else that's cool. what? osteoporosis is preventable. all: osteo's preventable? right on! if you dig your bones, protect them. all: cbs cares! the los angeles county sheriff's department is investigating a deadly shooting tonight. officersrsired dozens of rounds and d pt shooting while the suspect t s on the ground. chris martinez has this story with this warning, the video can be disturbing. >> reporter: dramatic video captures the moment two los angeles county sheriff's deputies fire multiple shots at nicholas robertson in the linwood neighborhood of los angeles. robertson falls to the ground and after a short interval he's
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he's repeatedly struck by additional gunfire. last night, angry demonstrators gathered at the shooting scene. pamela brown is robertson's mother-in-law. >> he left three kids behind. two daughters and a son. what, they could have tasered him or anything. >> reporter: today, 24 hours after the shooting, the sheriff's department held a press conference. l.a. county sheriff jim mcdonald. >> we've come out today to try and be as transparent we can with the information we can share at this time to say, here's what we have, here's what we know about it. >> reporter: the sheriff's department released this video showing robertson minutes before his encounter with deputies walking down a busy street, carrying a gun. investigators say the confrontation started when deputies responded to multiple 911 calls about a man firing shots into the air. l.a. county homicide detective captain steve katz -- >> he did d t comply with their
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weapon. the movement of the suspect and the way in which he was holding the firearm indicates he was motioning in the direction of the deputy sheriffs. >> reporter: the video captures the moment the deputies began firing, a total of 33 rounds. robertson was pronounced dead at the scene. community activist naji ali says the video is disturbing. >> it appears this young m m crawled to his d dth, he was ot again, again, again. >> reporter: local civil rights leaders have asked for an independent investigation into robertson's death. chris martinez, cbs news, los angeles. this week the federal reserve is expected to raise interest rates for the first time in more than nine years. the expected increase, .25 point. for more we turn to analyst jill schlessinger. we think it's going to happen this week? >> it's almost certain and here's why. the fed slashed rates 10 times over 14 months until we got to 0% during the financial crisis.
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the economy. all these years later what's happened? the economy is growing by 2.25% a year the last few years, we've got job creation, unemployment 5%. the fed thinks it's time to normalize interest rate policy. they'll start this week. >> if this happens who wins, who loses? >> finally good news for savers who have gten 0% interest on their checking, savings, cds. borrowers could pay a little bit more for all kinds of loans whether credit cards, auto mortgage rates are not tied to these rates but they could go up as well. investors could be murky out there. i think stock and bond prices could be quite volatile the net few weeks. >> the global economy is slowing down, there's concncn the americananconomy is going to slow dowow some economists think this is too early? >> people like larry summers, the former treasury secretary, they even cite the fact that crude oil, which fell by 11% to seven-year lows, that that's a sign of the slow-down. janet yellen the fed chair says,
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things slow down, we don't have to keep raising rates. if things speed and up we get inflation, we could raise r res by more than .25% and more often. everything is data-dependent, we'll have to see. >> jill, thanks very much. this weekend fbi divers wrapped up their search of a lake in san bernardino, california. investigators won't say if they found evidence possibly dumped this by terrorists who killed 14 people and injured nearly 20 others. tonight john blackstone tells us how some in the community fear a backlash against them. >> reporter: since the san bernardino shootings, ranyel has changed the way she covers her hair so she e oks less muslim. >> instead of the traditional i wear hats so i can blend in to minimize any possibility of someone retaliating or saying something to me. >> reporter: as a mother of five who lives three miles from the scene of the shootings she was already concerned about the safety of her family. then she learned the attackers were muslim.
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shooter, i was devastated. the first thing i did is i end up writing an e-mail to all the principals of mymyids' schools letting them know that i'm a muslim, we're a muslim family, that we condemn these kind of attacks. >> reporter: since the paris attacks, there have been several attacks on muslims. a pregnant muslim woman assaulted in san diego. two airline passengers ordered off a flight in chicago after a passenger heard them speakakg arabic and felt threatened. and after the san bernardino massacre, a copy of the koran filled with bullets left outside an islamic clothing store in southern california. on friday the fire bombing of a mosque in coachella, 70 miles from san bernardino. police arrested a 23-year-old man for arson and committing a hate crime. ranyel has decided her best defense is not to hide but to show the true nature of her religion. beginning with covering her hair.
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determined to keep it on and let everyone know what the muslim community is all about. and i feel i have that tool and i should use it. i cannot think of any place on this earth that i would want to be in other than the u.s. this is my country as much as anybody else's country who are americans. >> reporter: for this muslim american family, the message is that they are as outraged over the attack that took place here and just as united in grief as any other american family. >> john blackstone, thank you. a dramatic program trying to keep kids away from trouble. and the only thing better than winning the heisman trophy? the family's celebration are "cbs overnight news" will be right back. i have asthma... ...one of many pieces in my life. so when my asthma symptoms kept coming back on my long-term control medicine, i talked to my doctor and found a missing piece in my asthma treatment. once-daily breo prevents asthma symptoms. breo is for adults with asthma not well controlled on a long-term asthma control medicine, like an inhaled corticosteroid. breo won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems.
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it is a graphic demonstration in philadelphia that aims to prevent violence by taking teenagers step by step through what happens to a gunshot victim in the emergency room. >> welcome, everybody. >> reporter: the hospital where 16-year-old lamont adams died in 2004 -- >> by the time you get here the odds have been stacked against you. >> reporter: -- has been turned into a school of hard knocks. >> when he came in he wasn't breathing at all. >> reporter: throughout the year hundreds of philadelphia students visit the trauma unit at temple university hospital for the cradle to grave program. >> we're going to tell the story of a young man named lamont adams. >> reporter: they learn about
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his life, from birth to death. dr. amy goldberg and outreach coordinator scott charles have been re-enacting the night adam died, for nearly ten years. >> lamont's going to have a he's going to have a bull hit wound right there -- of red stickers to mark where the bullets hit adam. >> another here, another here. >> i'm not trying to politicize this issue. i'm simply saying, this is the thing that is more likely to kill you in philadelphia than anything else when you're young. i want them to take ownership of this. >> we were both really concerned that the students didn't really seem to know the true ramifications of what ullet injuries and gunshot wounds can cause. >> if the things that i'm showing you are too troublesome for you, talk to me. >> reporter: the students watch a video showing graphic pictures of more gunshot victims. some students can't bear to look. >> sometimes i go in the bathroom, i close the door.
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cry. >> reporter: the pain adams' grandmother describes hit home for 16-year-old rochelly sanchez. >> i can't imagine my mom crying because something happened to me or one of my family members. >> reporter: 15-year-old jordan beretto first went into the program in may. >> i was in the streets with the wrong people, doing the wrong thing. the program really opened my eyes that gun violence is real and people are getting killed for nothing. and it ain't no names to them bullets. >> the students also visited a morgue. so far, more than 10,000 students have come through the cradle to grave program at temple university hospital. jeff, organizers say that fewer than a dozen of those students return back to that hospital's trauma unit with a gunshot
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>> thank you very much. for the first time women have been elected to office in saudi arabia. yesterday was also the first time women were allowed to vote in the country. more than a dozen women won local elections. a wonderful reaction last night after this year's heisman trophy winner was announced. alabama running back derek henry. that is his family at a hospital in florida where henry's grandmother has been undergoing treatment. henry broke the conference record for rushing this year. the nba's golden state warriors are undefeated no more. saturday night they lost to the milwaukee bucks 108-95. the warriors are now 24-1 this season. it was the team's first regular-season loss since april 7th. it took nearly a lifetime but a man in england has finally
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at 6 years old, david halock put a letter to santa in his chimney asking for any toys he had to spare. more than 70 years later builders found that letter while working on the house. so they located mr. halock, who had long since moved away, and made sure he got everything he requested. including toy soldiers and a pencil box. 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 tiredness 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. don't make excuses. make the call to 9-1-1 immedidiely. learn more at womenshealth.gov/heartattack. while i was on a combat patrol in baqubah, iraq, a rocket-propelled grenade took my arm off at the shoulder. i was discharged from the army, and i've been working with the wounded warrior project since 2007.
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finally, most stage actors say their biggest fear is forgetting their lines. so some are getting extra help. as jamie yucas reports that's prompting criticism. >> reporter: it's a star-studded season on broadway. al pacino in "china doll." bruce willis in "mizly." james earl jones and cicely tyson in "the gin game." while those actors draw big box offices, some are having trouble remembering their lines. each has reportedly used teleprompters or an ear piece so
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the reviews are not great. al pacino's "china doll" may be the worst reviewed play of the season. "the wall street journal" says, yes, he's using teleprompters. and he was not at ease with his lines. the "new york post" writes, al pacino needsdseleprompters for lines in terrible new broadway play. >> the more they use celebrities to drive ticket sales for plays or musicals, you're going to come up with a problem which is that you need to have assistance. >> reporter: david cody is "time out new york's" theater editor. he says audience members walked out after the first act watching pacino search for teleprompters. >> somebody used to film acting will have a little more difficulty in a play where they have to sustain a scene over several minutes. >> reporter: cody doesn't hold back on willis' performance either. calling it stiff. willis and pacino worked through numerous script changes through previews. that gave them less time to memorize their parks. for actors like jones and tyson reciting their lines is complicated by having to play a
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play. even broadway great angela lansbury needed some help. the 90-year-old actress used an ear piece in the 2009 production of "blithe spirit." but she won her fifth tony for that performance. >> delicious. >> as you get older, it gets worse, more difficult. >> reporter: mark davey chairs the graduate acting program at nyu. he says remembering lines is challenging, espececlly for older actors who have been away y frfr the stage. ear pieces can be a solution. >> if you want to see a major movie star, you don't necessarily want to see an incredible feature, you want to see them being relaxed and responsive. if that's what it takes, it seems to me that's fine. >> james earl jones, cicely tyson, al pacino. fabulous. >> reporter: new yorker cheryl rubin is a big theater fan. she says she didn't notice any of the actors getting prompted. >> theatergoers are not getting ripped off. they're seeing great acting by
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>> reporter: great actors doing whatever it takes to keep their names on broadway. >> that is the "overnight news" for this monday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back with us later for the morning news and "cbs this morning." captioning funded by cbs it's monday, december 14th, 2015. this is the "cbs morning news." a shake-up in the iowa caucuses. new polls indicate ted cruz surging past donald trump and now he appears to be trump's strongest challenger for the gop presidential nomination. questions this morning about
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