tv CBS This Morning CBS January 18, 2018 7:00am-9:00am PST
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good morning to our viewers in the west. it's thursday, january 18th, 2018. welcome to "cbs this morning." more than three quarters of the country's waking up to freezing cold weather today. rare snow and ice in the south making it difficult for millions to get around. the white house chief of staff says president trump's immigration promises were uninformed. and his views have evolved. and former chief strategist steve bannon makes a deal to answer all the special counsel's questions about russia. the dow opened this morning at a new all-time high, above 26,000. but with a potential government shutdown looming, is there a bubble ready to burst? and only on "cbs this morning,"
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dylan farrow, explosive allegations of sexual abuse against her adopted father, woody allen. farrow explains how she still carries the emotional scars. we begin this morning with a look at our today's eye opener, your world in 90 seconds. >> this is a very dangerous situation. snow just picked up out of nowhere. >> bitter cold follows a deadly winter storm. >> snow and black ice paralyzing travel. triggering highway crashes. >> please stay off the roads. >> president trump said a government shutdown could happen despite republicans controlling both chambers of congress and the white house. >> as soon as we figure out what he is for, then i would be convinced that we were not just spinning our wheels. >> steve bannon is expected to cooperate with special counsel robert mueller's investigation. >> did the white house tell him to invoke executive privilege? >> no. >> no? >> dylan farrow is addressing
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the alleged sexual abuse by her father woody allen. >> he's lying. he's been lying for so long. >> prosecutors are looking for evidence that the murder of a gay college student in southern california may have been a hate crime. >> all that -- >> a wild weather phenomenon in austria. they call it a gustanodo. >> it's crazy. >> and all that matters. >> the pentagon is reportedly considering nuclear retaliation as a response to cyberattacks by hackers. yes, the biggest challenge is building missiles that can penetrate a mother's basement. >> on "cbs this morning." >> after the breakdown of the daca negotiations, congress is now hurtling towards a government shutdown. the gop needs democratic votes to keep the government open. the democrats will only do that if trump will support daca but trump will only agree to daca if he gets his new border wall. it's all detailed in the new thriller taken 4 oops all
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kidnappers. >> this morning's eye opener presented by toyota, let's go places. >> welcome to "cbs this morning." i'm norah o'donnell with gayle king and john dickerson. it's cold outside. >> winter. it's going to be cold, ya'll. >> it's very cold. it's interesting to hear this number. more than 80% of the country is waking up to below freezing temperatures. bone chilling cold stretches all the way from the gulf coast to new england. the south is still reeling from yesterday's deadly weather. >> this storm dumped several inches of snow on southern states not accustomed to harsh wintry conditions. extreme cold along with icy roads blamed for at least ten deaths including an 8-month-old baby. >> the massive system dumped snow from louisiana to maine yesterday, parts of new york state and north carolina got up to a foot. kris van cleave is in greensboro, north carolina, among the most hard hit places.
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kris, good morning. >> reporter: good cold morning from greensboro, north carolina. nearly 8 inches of snow fell here. that was more than people expected. in fact, a lot of folks went to work thinking there would just be a little bit of snow, only to hear the state's governor to tell them to turn around and head home. by then, we were making our way here, watching cars spin out all around us. a wintry mix of snow, wind and cold led to icy chaos on the roads throughout the south wednesday. >> there's ice here and -- an ice rink out here. >> reporter: in less than 24 hours, the north carolina highway patrol says it handled 1,600 crashes. in houston, drivers would do anything to get out of the miles of icy traffic. here, going the wrong way down an on ramp. >> it scares me because i go sliding. >> reporter: it was a different picture in atlanta where normally clogged streets were nearly desolate as around 2 inches of snow brought the city to a standstill.
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in columbus, indiana, a driver was rescued from this upside down car after he hit ice and plunged into a river. not even nascar drivers were immune. racer daniel suarez showed pictures on twitter of his lexus stuck in the snow. and dale earnhardt jr. warneded people to stay off the roads in north carolina after he crashed into a tree. the winter storm prompted dozens of school districts to close wednesday with many remaining closed today. like in new orleans, where temperatures in the city dipped to 21 degrees wednesday, breaking the record set in 1977. >> got jackets, thermal clothes on and everything. all you can put on is all you can put on. >> reporter: the temperature was 6 degrees here in greensboro. it's going to warm up to the 40s. in the weekend, 50s up and down east coast. new york hasn't seen 50s in over a week. so all of this snow is not going to last very long. >> kris, thanks. a looming government shutdown is sharpening the
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debate over immigration and daca program. a cbs news poll out this morning shows most americans would let young immigrants brought to the u.s. illegally as children stay in the u.s. the white house chief of staff says the president -- that president trump's immigration views have, quote, evolved, and his campaign promises to crack down were, quote, uninformed. nancy cordes is on capitol hill where the house will vote on a plan to keep the government running without daca, without a daca deal. nancy, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. what we are watching now, john, is whether democrats make good on their threat to vote against government funding set to run out tomorrow night if there is no daca deal. and in a candid moment, the senate's top republican told me he's trying to work something out but that the president's lack of clarity isn't helping. daca divisions are consuming congress, even as leaders insist they all want the same thing. >> we want to fix daca.
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>> we very much want to get a deal done on daca. >> we're all committed to getting this. >> reporter: small bipartisan groups have already gotten to yes in the house and senate. >> to me it's a layup. you have a reasonable daca solution with some border security. >> reporter: but the president rejected one of those plans, calling it horrible. so congressional leaders are starting over. how is your agreement likely to be different from the deal that was already struck by a bipartisan group of senators? >> i'm looking for something that president trump supports. as soon as we figure out what he is for, then i would be convinced that we were not just spinning our wheels. >> reporter: it appearings ths wants $18 billion in border wall funding, plus an end to the diversity visa program, in exchange for giving legal status to daca recipients. >> what they want in return is continuously moving target and continuously expands. >> reporter: democrats told white house chief of staff john
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kelly in a closed door meeting that's unrealistic. >> campaign to governing is two different things. >> we will build a wall. >> reporter: kelly told them the president's campaign pledges about a border wall were not fully informed. >> he's very definitely changed his attitudes towards the daca issue. and even the wall. >> reporter: with funding set to run out tomorrow night, kelly expressed optimism in a gop bill that would keep the government open for a few more weeks. >> as i understand it, they have the votes and they're fairly confident. >> reporter: some have wondered how the president would react to his own chief of staff describing his campaign views as uninformed. well, this morning, we have our answer. bright and early, the president tweeted, the wall is the wall. it has never changed or evolved from the first day i conceived of it. norah. >> the president and his chief of staff appear to be at odds. nancy cordes, thank you so much. cbs news confirmed white
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house communications director hope hicks is expected to testify on capitol hill tomorrow about russia. she is one of the president's longest serving advisers and former white house chief strategist steve bannon has agreed to an interview with special counsel robert mueller. he refused to answer many questions at a congressional hearing on tuesday. but a source tells cbs news bannon will answer anything that mueller asks him. major garrett is at the white house. major, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. president trump will be campaigning later this afternoon in pennsylvania in advance of a special house election there in what already looks like a turbulent and possibly down political year for the president and republicans in congress. the president's mind might also be on steve bannon, the estranged former white house ally who will testify again today before the house intelligence committee. >> i think we've been dealing with this hoax for the better part of a year. >> reporter: white house press secretary sarah huckabee sanders repeated the administration's
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assertion that the russia investigation is a waste of time. >> if we have to endure the ridiculo ridiculous for another month. >> reporter: the drum beat of former officials testifying before the committee has picked up speed in recent days. white house communications director hope hicks is expected to appear tomorrow. former chief strategist steve bannon could be back before committee today. his second time this week. while former campaign manager corey lewandowski and deputy chief of staff rick dearborn both went before the committee yesterday. bannon's testimony on tuesday irritated both republicans and democrats. >> steve bannon refused to answer any questions after the campaign. >> reporter: but sources tell cbs news bannon has agreed to cooperate with special counsel mueller and he will, quote, tell all. white house lawyer ty cobb told the cbs podcast the takeout that mueller will also likely get a chance to interview the president. >> the president is very eager to sit down and explain whatever
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is responsive to the question. >> reporter: but cobb is concerned mr. trump could perjure himself. >> do you have any fear of a perjury trap? >> no, but i think it would be foolish to not proceed without considering that possibility. >> reporter: cobb tells us he expects the mueller investigation to be over in four to six weeks. acknowledging he's made that prediction before and been wrong. the difference now, cobb told us, he believes mueller is, quote, desperately trying to bring this to an honorable conclusion. >> a lot of people hope that's the case. thank you very much, major. a government shutdown could affect the nation's response to the most widespread flu season in recent years. a map from the centers for disease control and prevention shows how this virus has spread since october. so if a funding bill is not passed, the agency will likely furlough a majority of its staff, including those who monitor this virus.
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some school districts in texas shut down because of the flu. omar villafranca is in dallas with the story. omar, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. here in dallas county, 38 people have died from the flu just this season. at this time last year, there were no deaths reported. here at the children's health system, they've seen already more than 2,100 confirmed cases of the flu. that number is expected to get bigger. >> for the past month or so, we have been overwhelmed with a very large number of patients. >> reporter: with flu patients pouring into health centers nationwide, some hospitals are responding as they would for a major disaster. this triage tent was constructed outside the emergency room for california's loma linda university medical center. >> we set up the tent outside in an attempt to just find a place to continue to evaluate patients and treat them. >> reporter: at a congressional hearing on public health threats, federal health officials stress the severity of the flu's impact. >> influenza is probably the greatest natural health threat we face. >> reporter: in oklahoma, the
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flu has forced at least half a dozen school districts to shut down for at least a day. the virus alone has caused more than 20 deaths and more than 1,000 hospitalizations across the state. across the border in texas, 58 students called out sick wednesday at the shelton school and evaluation center in dallas. >> you can use it in your mouth. >> reporter: nearly half of the school's 920 students are using smart thermometers to record their temperature online. >> the parents can post anonymously what their child is feeling. if they have a sore throat, if they have flu, if they have a headache. >> reporter: nurse eve herman says it helps the school community monitor and limit the spread of flu outbreaks. >> if the families know that their child has symptoms of other children that have the flu, they're more than likely to keep them home. >> reporter: kinsa is one of the makers of the smart thermometer and they say missouri is the sickest state in the country, at
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about 5.2% of their users. the company also says about 40,000 people are sick with the flu in missouri and 33 people have died. >> boy, those numbers really put it in perspective. omar, thank you so much. a 20-year-old southern california man is charged with murder in the stabbing death of a former high school classmate. 19-year-old ivy league student blaze bernstein was reportedly stabbed more than 20 times. his body was found in a park earlier this month, one week after he disappeared. mireya viareal is at borrego park. >> reporter: the memorial behind me for blaze continues to grow, with candle, flowers and notes, some from people that didn't even know him. blaze bernstein was home for break from the university of pennsylvania. he was visiting his family. his parents sat down with me yesterday. they say his death has been extremely difficult for them in
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every way imaginable. >> when we think of a future without blaze, that's crushing for us. >> reporter: jeanie and gideon bernstein are looking for justice. as legal proceedings began wednesday against the man accused of killing their son. >> the court will call the matter of people versus samuel lincoln woodward. >> reporter: prosecutors say samuel woodward picked up blaze bernstein at his parents home on january 2 after the two communicated on snapchat. bernstein parents reported him missing the next day. one week later, his body was found in a shallow grave in this park. investigators say woodward had scratches and dirt on his hands. while under surveillance, he returned to the crime scene and also cleaned his vehicle. >> generally means they're trying to -- that person is trying to destroy evidence. >> reporter: he was a rested friday. police say no weapons had been found. and they are still trying to determine the motive in this case. but according to an affidavit obtained by the orange county register, woodward told investigators he became angry
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after bernstein, who was gay, kissed him the night he disappeared. >> could there be a consideration for a hate crime in. >> that's certainly an open question and that's -- we are, in fact, looking for evidence that might support that. >> reporter: bernstein was studying psychology and worked at a campus culinary magazine. his friends and family gathered at a memorial service earlier >> now, this bright young soul, with the world at his fingertips, and then all a sudden they're gone. >> he was learning to love himself. and i think he was there. just tears me up. he was ready. he was ready to just be himself and be proud. >> reporter: the suspect's attorney say the woodward family is also in shock. they're trying to figure out how an eagle scout is now an accused murderer. samuel woodward is in jail. he did not enter a plea - yesterday. right now, we know he will be
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back in court early next month where he will face a formal arrangement. >> mireya, thanks. the dow jones industrials are trading lower this morning after soaring more than 300 points yesterday. the index closed above 26,000 for the first time. cbs news analyst jill schlesinger is here. good morning, jill. >> good morning. >> why is it going up? >> well, you know, same factors as last year which propelled the market. we've got strong global growth, really strong. that has propelled corporate earnings and they've grown much faster than expected. all this against a low interest rate. and i just want to say for the corporate earnings part of it, we're now in the reporting season. we are expecting a 10% increase for fourth quarter earnings from a year ago. that's before those tax cuts ever took place. and to loosen regulations. you put it all together, wow, the bulls are really in control. >> they've been gone for a while. so what goes up, must come down, right? i don't want to -- but how long can this last?
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>> hang on, will you? the reality is this is the second longest bull market on record. after lived through the tech boom, what we know is even though that bull markets can get a little bit long in the tooth or evaluations, meaning the price of a stock can get ahead of earnings, they can often last more than people really expect. again, anything can undo it. but right now, the bulls are in charge. and there doesn't seem to be anything that's going to stop them. >> so what would a government shutdown do? the deadline is tomorrow. >> i looked this up because i was interested in this. because what i remembered i guess misrepped emisrememberedt this must be terrible for markets. the last time the government shutdown in 2013, the s&p 500 was up by 3% during the shutdown. it's the debt ceiling that really freaks out investors. i don't think the shutdown's going to unnerve the bull market. other things might, but not the shutdown. >> what's your advice for those investing in the stock market? >> take a breath. you know, when we -- when i come
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on here and the market is cratering, i say the exact same thing. and the reality is you want to stick to your game plan. you want to have a diversified portfolio. don't jump in just because it's too high and don't get out when it goes down. stay with it. you're a long-term investor. you know why you're doing this. don't try to up-end the plan. a short time ago, amazon narrowed the field for its new second headquarters. ahead, the cities that made the list of finalists,
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ahead, and only on cbs this morning, dylan farrow. in a raw and emotional interview, she opens up about the alleged sexual abuse by her adopted father woody allen. >> you're watching cbs this morning. al abuse by woody allen. >> and you're watching "cbs this morning." shes the scalp and... ...keeps you up to 100% flake free head and shoulders' dry scalp care we rbut we are not victims.ack. we are survivors. we are survivors. we are survivors. and now we take brilinta. for people who've been hospitalized for a heart attack. we take brilinta with a baby aspirin. no more than one hundred milligrams... ...as it affects how well brilinta works. brilinta helps keep platelets from sticking together and forming a clot. in a clinical study brilinta worked better than plavix®. brilinta reduced the chance of another heart attack. or dying from one.
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ahead, three things y start running a new ten-car train. the agency had faced a series of good morning, it's 7:26. i'm michelle griego. bart has the green light to start running a new 10-car train. the agency had faced a series of setbacks in launching what's being called the fleet of the future. a deputy has been arrested in connection to the beating of an inmate at the santa rita jail. deputy joseph bailey is facing criminal charges stemming from the october incident. investigators say bailey allowed a group of inmates to jump the victim leaving him with a fractured nose. stay with us, traffic and weather in just a moment.
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westbound 26 minutes. we have a fog advisory in place for the span. this is oakland 880. i promise! but it's very difficult to see. very foggy conditions if you are heading over to the oakland airport. please be careful. you can barely see the cars on the road now. it's 23 minutes from 238 to the maze. eastshore freeway is a mess crowd into berkeley. a mile visibility in oakland less than that in the camera shot we just saw. livermore down to a third of a mile of visibility. the fog is all over the valley. we are watching for the rain on our hi-def doppler. still well to the north of us. but when it does get here, we are going to see about a quarter inch of rain for the bay area. cold air winds high sierra snow and big surf. y
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ones who qualified. they'll consult for plans on a unified women's hockey team. only on "cbs this morning" dylan farrow is speaking for the very first time on tv about her sexual assaultgations against her father director/actor woody allen. at the age of 7 dylan told her mother mia farrow allen had molested her. allen has always denied the allegations. farrow has always stood by her
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statements. we spoke with farrow at her connecticut home on monday where she went into detail about what allegedly happened one august morning. >> i want to show my face and tell my story. i want to speak out literally. >> reporter: dylan farrow is 32 and has been married for almost eight years. she's the mother of a 16-month-old girl and she's still carrying the scars that she got at the hands of her father. >> i loved my father. i respected him. he was my hero. and that doesn't obviously take away from what he did, but it does make the betrayal and the hurt that much more intense. >> let's go to august 4th, 1992. if you could tell us what happened that day. >> i was taken to a small attic
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crawl space in my mother's country house in connecticut by my father. he instructed me to lie down on my stomach and play with my brother's toy train that was set up, and he sat behind me in the doorway and as i played with the toy train, i was sexually assaulted. as a 7-year-old i would have said he touched my private parts. >> okay. >> which i did say. >> all right, all right. as a 32-year-old he touched my labia and my vulva with his finger. >> and where was your mother? >> she went shopping that day. >> and then after you told her, what happened? >> she was upset. my first impulse was that i had done something wrong. >> reporter: mia farrow took dylan to the pediatrician, but when the doctor asked her where
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she had been touched, the little girl pointed to her shoulder. >> she said, why didn't you tell the doctor what you told me, and i said i was embarrassed? and you went back in. >> i went back in and told the doctor. >> months earlier mia had found nude pictures of her daughter sunni who she had adopted during her marriage. allen confessed to having an affair with sunni. they're a cup toll this day, married for more than 22 years. >> you can see why he would make that claim. people could say you were filled with range and you were out for revenge and full of rage. >> and what i don't understand is how is this crazy story of me being brainwashed and coached more believable than what i'm saying about being sexually assaulted by my father. >> because your mother was very
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angry so she would try to coach you and try to get you to turn against your father. >> except every step of the way, my mother has only encouraged me to tell the truth. she's never coached me. >> i wanted to play a clip from "60 minutes," and interview he did at that time where he was asked about that incident. are you okay with looking at it? are you okay? >> is it illogical that i'm going to at the height of a very bitter acrimonious custody fight drive up to connecticut where nobody likes me and i'm in a house full of enemies. i mean mia was so enraged at me and she had gotten all the kids to be angry at me, that i'm going to drive up there and suddenly on visitation pick this moment in my life to become a child molester. it's just incredible. if i wanted to be a child molester, i had many opportunities in the past. i could have quietly made a
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custody settlement with mia in some way and done it in the future. you know, it's so insane. >> what do you say to that? >> i'm really sorry. >> don't apologize. >> i thought i could handle it. >> are you crying because of what he said or seeing him? what is upsetting you? >> he's lying and he's been lying for so long. it is difficult for me to see him and to hear his voice. i'm sorry. >> allen had adopted dylan and her 13-year-old brother moses the previous december. the couple also had a younger son ryan. but as mia farrow's boyfriend, allen had been part of dylan's life since she was a baby. dylan said the incident in the attic wasn't the only time his behavior had been inappropriate. >> what would he do? >> he would follow me around. he was always touching me, cuddling me, and if i ever said like i want to go off by myself,
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he wouldn't let me. >> some could say that's a very doting and loving father. >> except he wasn't this way with ronen. >> what else would he do? >> he would often ask me to get into bed with him when he had only his underwear on and sometimes when only i had my underwear on. >> woody allen was never charged with a crime in this case. both new york state child welfare and yale-new haven hospital found the abuse did not happen. the prosecutor on the case frank mako questioned the yale-new haven report's credibility. he thought there was probable cause but he thought dylan was too fragile to go ahead with trial. >> do you wish they would have gone ahead with the charges because you would have had to take the stance. >> yes, i do wish, even if i'm speaking in retrospect. i was already traumatized.
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here's the thing. outside of the court of law, we do know what happened in the attic on that day. i just told you. >> we reached out to former connecticut prosecutor frank mako earlier this week. he tells us that in his experience there was no manipulation by mia farrow. he adds nothing in the police investigation indicates that dylan was being controlled or manipulated by her mother. in a statement woody allen writes in part, even though the farrow family is cynically using the opportunity afforded by the "time's up" movement to repeat this discredited allegation, that doesn't make it any more true today than it was in the past. i never molested my daughter. he has a lengthy response to what she's saying today. >> i remember reading her op-ed, but to hear her tell the story, so painful clearly for her and to see her adopted father again. >> you know, norah, that's why she wanted to do a tv interview.
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she said sometimes when you see the written words, it doesn't ptranslate. she wanted people to see how strongly she felt about it and how pained she was by it. she thought maybe it was lost in translation because people did not believe her. you said it best, john. you said maybe people are listening with new ears. >> is that what she hopes or does she hope now that she's been able to tell it, it helps her heal? >> i think she wants to tell her story and let people make their own decision. that's where she is at this point. we'll have part 2 on our interview with dylan farrow in the next hour. she talks about these pods in tr mouths and posting videos online. it's very deadly. you're watching "cbs this morning."
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remove all videos to its site that show people participated in the tide pod challenge. we showed you last week how people are putting laundry detergent pods in their mouth and posting online. proctor and gamble warned of the health dangers and at least ten deaths -- listen to that -- ten deaths have been related to consuming the tide pods. youtube said the video showed, quote, inherent risk of physical harm. we work to quickly remove flagged videos that violate our policies. up next, look at this morning's other headlines including a popular way to fund raze at school using cereal boxes is a way of fund-raising for
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." here's a look at some of this morning's headlines. the press enterprise of riverside, california, reports a forensic team examined the home where authorities say 13 children were held captive. the team combed through and removed several boxes of evidence from the home. david and louise turpin are due in court today on charges of torture and child endangerment. a neighbor at their former address tells cbs news the children acted like robots. >> they would bedrooms, march i for hours in the middle of the night. >> the children are recovering from malnew trix.
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their paternal grandparents say they saw nothing wrong when they visited six years ago. cardiologists say mr. trump has very high levels of bad cholesterol called ldl. they say he has a real risk of having a heart attack or stroke. the president's physician said mr. trump was excellent in his cardiac health. >> big difference. "the indianapolis star" they included patient records and customer e-mails. the systems were back monday it
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to .05. they also suggest increasing taxes. a popular school fund-raiser is just junk food marketing to to adults, not kids. it's a fund-raising program for parents to support communities. you remember that too. remember when you had to sell the box of chocolates too? my parents say i would rather write the check than have all the chocolate in the house. >> do you remember your sales pitch? >> no. >> you would have to say, hi, my
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name is so-and-so and we're trying to raise money for -- >> girl scout cookies. >> you must have had a good sales pitch, john. >> no. you could collect broccoli stems. >> nerd alert, nerd alert. ahead, a family with seven generations of army service talks about the value and anxiety it brings to their lives.
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ruptured spleen, sometimes fatal as well as serious lung problems, allergic reactions, kidney injuries, and capillary leak syndrome have occurred. report abdominal or shoulder tip pain, trouble breathing or allergic reactions to your doctor right away. in patients with sickle cell disorders, serious, sometimes fatal crises can occur. the most common side effect is bone and muscle ache. so why go back there? if you'd rather be home, ask your doctor about neulasta onpro.
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targeted buses full of tech workers on interstate 280. s good morning, i'm kenny choi. the california highway patrol is looking for the culprit who targeted buses full of tech workers on 280. some of the buses had their windows shattered. the attacks happened between woodside and cupertino. a former uc-berkeley basketball player says that she was sexually assaulted when she was a student and is now suing. according to layshia clarendon's civil suit against the uc regents, an employee assaulted her 10 years ago in the lawsuit according to the lawsuit. raffic and weather in just a moment.
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we are tracking major slowdowns through novato. this is 101 at ignacio boulevard and traffic on the right jam-packed in the red 47 minutes from roland to 580. as you head further south we're tracking a crash coming in right near lucky drive. that's keeping your ride slow and the richmond/san rafael rain on the camera lens here, 20 minutes from marina bay parkway to sir francis drake. eastshore freeway, in the red, 39 minutes over towards the toll plaza. and very foggy conditions. let's check in with neda now. our roof camera showing all that fog covering the transamerica pyramid and i also want to show you this camera shot our sutro camera with those raindrops on it. it is a very light drizzle out there this morning but showers that are more measurable are on the way towards the north bay. they are still well to the north of us. the ones that are shopping up on hi-def doppler. but there is that light drizzle everywhere. low clouds pretty much affecting visibility all throughout the bay area. one to two-mile visibility even less than that for santa rosa. this storm system that's on its way is bringing us early- morning drizzle.
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. good morning to our viewers in the west. it is thursday, january 18th, 2018. welcome back to "cbs this morning." white house chief of staff john kelly says president trump made immigration promises that were uninformed. we'll talk with ed o'keefe from "the washington post" first to report the comment. . only on cbs this morning, dylan farrow tells us how she feels about actors who worked with her adoptive father woody allen she says molested her years ago. here's today's "eye opener" at 8:00. >> bone chilling cold from the gulf coast to new england the south is still reeling from yesterday's deadly weather. >> 8 inches of snow here. more than people expected. we were watching cars spin out
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all around us. >> what we are watching now is whether democrats vote against government funding if there is no daca deal. . >> the president's mind might be on steve bannon, the estranged former white house ally who will testify again today. >> here in dallas county 38 people have died from the flu. this season. at this time last year, there were no deaths reported. the memorial behind me for blaze bernstein continues to grow with candles, flowers and notes from people who didn't even know him. >> what goes up, must come down, right? but how long can this last? >> right now, the bulls are in charge and there doesn't seem to be anything that's going to stop them. north and south korea will form their first unified olympic team in 11 years. north korea's 230 person cheerleading squad will far outnumber its athletes at next month's games. >> these north korean cheerleaders have their cheer worked out, it goes, give me an "h," give me an "e," give me an
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"l," give me a "p." help, seriously, help, somebody. i'm john dickerson with noral o'donnell and gayle king. >> good morning. >> from the country from the gulf coast to new england is waking up to frigid temperatures. another day of record breaking cold gripping the south. the windchill made it feel like zero overnight in atlanta. a massive winter storm dumped snow from louisiana to maine yesterday. durham, north carolina, racked up the snowflakes to nearly a into the. >> at least ten people died from the storm including an 8-month-old baby killed when his mother's car plunged into a can nall. north carolina's highway patrol says they investigated about 1600 crashes yesterday. congress could start voting today on a plan to avoid a government shutdown tomorrow night. house gop leaders are trying to pass a measure to fund the government through february 16th. the senate may not go for a short-term spending plan. minority leader chuck schumer says some democrats may not support the deal.
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it does not include a fix for daca. majority leader mitch mick conditional says a daca deal is difficult because he's not sure what the president will support. white house chief of staff john kelly says president trump's view on immigration has evolved. in a meeting with the hispanic caucus on capitol hill kelly reportedly said there will be no wall, quote, that mexico will pay for. lawmakers say kelly told them certain things are said during the campaign that are uninformed. kelly's comments were first reported by "washington post" congressional reporter ed o'keefe who is a cbs news contributor and with us from washington. good morning, ed. >> good morning, guys. >> great reporting yesterday. interesting to hear what the white house chief of staff told members of congress that he was uninformed and later in a fox news interview saying that president's views on the wall are evolving. you've seen the president's tweets this morning trying to recorrect that record. end of day, what does it mean? >> it means nobody knows what exactly the president wants to
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do here and that's a problem. absent specific guidelines from the president, republicans aren't quite sure how to proceed because they could put something up and cast votes on it and have the president end up vetoing it and putting them in a difficult position. so until the president gets specific on what exactly he would like to see paired with permanent legal protections for d.r.e.a.m.ers, republicans aren't quite sure what they should be doing. >> can you clarify for everybody, you saw nancy ask the senate majority leader yesterday about this and he said until we know what the president does we're not going to sit here spinning our wheels. what is the debate point around daca. >> nobody disputes that the d.r.e.a.m.ers should be protected and that congress is ultimately probably going to pass something. the issue is remember, republicans control congress and they don't want to just do that. they want to pair it with something and make changes in border security, make changes in what's called family based migration, and the issue is to what extent will you go? do you want to fully fund new
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wall and fence construction on the mexico border or you willing to put up some of that money now and continue that debate in the coming years. and the president continues to say as he did in his tweets this morning we have to do that wall. it's going to be see-through in some parts which is trump for a fence. and then the question is, exactly how much money do you put up that he would find acceptable and that is what has been infuriating democrats and republicans. he won't just keep to one idea. >> this is in an acute moment because this is tied to keeping the government open. >> yeah. >> so where are democrats on this specifically in the senate in terms of are they going to vote for a spending deal that does not include daca and if they don't, does that mean the government is chug shugts down? >> you need 60 votes to pass a spending bill in the senate. 51 republicans right now but two of them at least have vote nod in the past on these things. one more lindsey graham says, and he's not for it. down to 47. you need at least 13 democrats to vote with the republicans. 18 of them voted yes on the last
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short-term spending bill in december. but at least three of them yesterday said they're voting no. that leaves 15. today we may hear from more democrats who voted yes in the past saying i don't like this, i'm not voting for it. if they can't get 60 votes we're headed to a shutdown. >> all right. ed o'keefe, thanks for breaking it down. the fourth time they've tried to hit the snooze bar. a report says michigan state university ignored multiple warnings of alleged abuse by physician larry nassar. the detroit news states eight women reported abuse claims and university president was notified of one. today more victims of the former usa women's gymnastics team doctor are expected to give statements in a michigan courtroom. jericka duncan is following the story. good morning. >> good morning. more than 150 lawsuits have been filed against nassar and many women are suing his former employers, usa gymnastics an michigan state university, for failing to stop his abuse. a new report this morning
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implies that the university knew about his conduct over a period of at least 20 years. >> we were just kids. >> reporter: women who say they were sexually abused by larry nassar painstakingly explain the impact he had on their lives. >> i thought you were fixing me but i realize you broke me. >> i was molested, shamed, and removed of my dignity. i pray that you are tormented by the memory of the words spoken to you by the brave women standing before you today. >> reporter: the team doctor for usa women's gymnastics got a start at michigan state university. the detroit news reports how the university missed multiple opportunities over two decades to stop nassar. at least eight women reported his abuse and the report says no fewer than 14 university representatives, including trainers, assistant coaches, and a university police detective were notified.
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university president who has led msu since 2005 was confronted in the courtroom. >> the focus of the attention should be on the people telling their story and not on me or michigan state. >> this has been a distraction over 20 years now. that means absolutely nothing to us, just so you know. >> reporter: the university has received more than 100 complaints about nassar's misconduct. one from amanda thomashow reached the desk. >> the school i loved and trusted had the audacity to tell me i did not understand the difference between sexual assault and a medical procedure. >> reporter: msu told cbs news any suggestion that the university covered up nassar's conduct is simply false. john manly represents more than 100 victims. >> it's the largest sexual assault cases in sports history. people either ignored the signs or woefully ignorant. >> reporter: university president simon told the detroit
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news she was informed a doctor was under investigation but never received a copy of that report. neither michigan state university or usa gymnastics has been under -- has been able -- has been under public investigation by police. gayle. >> pretty disgusting, the numbers happening, and because he was a doctor it seems many of the girls thought it was a medical procedure. >> exactly. they did. >> yeah. >> but sadly we've seen over 100 women and girls come through. >> pervasive and people claim they didn't know, people in power. that's been proven wrong. thank you. >> thank you. dylan farrow feels the "me too" movement makes the most appropriate time to openly share the alleged sexual abuse by her father woody allen. ahead more of our conversation with dylan farrow and her response to people in hollywood who support
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would you be willing to take a 10% pay cut if you could control your work skeds until linkedin's career expert is here in our toyota green room in work in progress, why side hustles are becoming more popular. you're watching "cbs this morning." becoming more popular. you're watching "cbs this morning."
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dylan farrow says she has felt ignored for years after alleging that her adopted father woody allen sexually abused her. allen has denied the accusations and has never been charged with a crime. in her first tv interview about the allegations, dylan farrow says she's speaking up again to have her voice included in the "time's up" and "me too" conversations. it's an interview you'll only see on "cbs this morning." over the past two weeks women have spoke out including natalie portman. we showed farrow a clip from that interview. >> dylan farrow was visibly moved by support from natalie portman. >> i believe you, dylan. i want to say that. >> i'm going to start crying. >> she's been searching for that acknowledgement for most of her
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life. >> with so much silence being broken by so many brave people, against so many high-profile people, i felt it was important to add my story to theirs because it's something that i've struggled with for a long time. it was very momentous for me to see this conversation finally carried into a public setting. >> reporter: as the "me too" movement continues, dylan took to social media to call out celebrities who have starred in woody allen's films. >> are you angry with the people t celebrities starring in his movies that hold him in high regard and continue to compliment them? >> i'm not angry with them. i hope that, you know, especially since so many of them have been vocal advocates of this "me too" and "time's up" movement, that they can acknowledge their complicity and maybe hold themselves accountable to how they have
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perpetuated this culture of silence in their industry. >> and how are they complicit? >> because i have been saying this -- i have been repeating my accusations unaltered for over 20 years, and i have been systematically shut down, ignored, or discredited. if they can't acknowledge the accusations of one survivor, how are they going to stand for all of us? >> people say it's a family matter, it was many years ago, i don't really know the details of this case. >> so find out. i mean it's really -- like i said, it's so easy in this day and age. it's a family matter, but here's another thing. i am a real person, and i've been struggling, coping on my good days with the aftershocks of being sexually assaulted as a small child, and that's real and that matters. >> how has this affected your
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life? >> it's affected every part of my life. you know, growing up -- and like i said, i pushed it to the side. i tried to pretend or tried to convince myself that this was something moving forward that i did not need to bring with me even though it came nay. it's impacted everything. >> married and a mother to a 16-month-old daughter, dylan is an advocate for victims of sexual abuse. >> i have a wonderful husband and i have this amazing little girl now. >> so what will you tell her when the time comes? what will you tell her about how to be in this world? >> that if she was ever in a position, that she's not helpless because one of the things that i remember very clearly as a small child is this feeling of helplessness.
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and if i can give her some of the tools that i didn't have, then i'm hoping i will have done right by her as a parent. >> we reached out to the actors who mentioned farrow in their tweet, but they have not replied back. tim thee chalamet is donating his entire salary to the movement. he writes on instagram, i want to be worthy of standing shoulder to shoulder with the brave artists who are fighting for all people to be treated with the respect and dignity that they deserve. woody allen writes in part, even though the farrow family is cynically using the opportunity afforded by the time's up movement -- >> i'm so impressed by her
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courage to speak out about this. >> i was, too, norah. i reached out to her a couple of days ago. she's worried what will be the reaction to her telling the truth, but she says, i feel at least even if no one believes me, i have said what i needed to say. she's concerned there will be a backlash. >> we'll see. we'll see. >> we will see. >> mm-hmm. right now to this story, the man who attacked figure skater nancy kerrigan more than two decades ago, is now speaking out about the assault. ahead, why care began's joours could have been much worse. you're watching "cbs this morning."
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edition" after hit her knee with a batum. he was hired by a friend of the ex-husband of tonya harding. all three went to jail. >> there was talk of doing something further. >> there was initial talk of cutting her achilles tendon which would have crippled her. >> if you could send a message to nancy kerrigan from the heart, what would you say to her? >> that i hope she understands i'm sorry and i'm a different person. >> kerrigan went on to win silver in the 1994 olympics. this whole saga, of course, coming back because of the movie "i tonia." >> it's very good. and nancy kerrigan's team says, wait a second, don't forget what happened here.
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ahead, we'll meet one family who's been p good morning, i'm neda iranpour rain is coming down across san francisco. a lot of fog is forming impacting visibility. this is our sutro camera. look at the rain. it's a light drizzle now. we'll see more widespread rain by noon but i want to show you areas where that fog is very dense making the drive very difficult this morning. so we are down to two-mile visibility for mountain view, less than that one mile in san jose. even less than that for livermore. fog in the bay area this morning. rain to the north. throughout the bay area, all we are seeing is light drizzle mist just enough to wet the roads.
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but most of theheavier rain here in the next few hours reaching the north bay first. here's the futurecast: not very impressive rain totals with this storm. showers through friday. but what we are watching is for that high sierra snow. one to two feet of snow expected at the higher elevations. also big surf associated with this storm system. we have a winter storm warning in effect this afternoon through tomorrow afternoon for the lake tahoe area. lake level could see 4 to 7 inches of snow. we get a break from the rain on saturday and another chance of rain sunday into monday. we'll be right back with a check of traffic. you can get... ..venture,
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good morning, time now:28. very foggy conditions for drivers hitting the roads this morning. take a look at oakland very difficult to see from our camera here but you can see those brake lights on the right side and it is about 30 minutes from 238 to the maze just a busy and slow commute. we're tracking an accident northbound 680 as you approach stone valley road. that's blocking two lanes keeping your ride heavy heading into walnut creek. we are seeing some slowdowns along highway 24 and your ride heading through the south bay starting to get slow, 101, 51 minutes to san antonio avenue.
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♪ ♪ you give love a bad name that's why we're glad jon bon jovi is singing it and not me. i love you, john bon voe i have. he's rocking out. he's appalled. >> john dickerson is appalled. >> you should have seen john dickerson's face like okay. jon bon jovi was rocking out on the "late show" with stephen colbert. welcome back to "cbs this morning." norah o'donnell has an appreciation for my off-key singing. john, you may grow to love it.
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>> gayle, you are reading me long. you ha you. >> this morning we show you headlines from around the globe. "usa today" says walmart is offering a free way to safely dispose of unused opioid medications it's small packet containing powder. when it's poured into a prescription bottle it turns into a biodegradable gel that you can throw in your trash. they're the first to offer it for free at all of its pharmacy locations. the bbc reports on a selfie. the girl to the left was strangled to death with a belt she's wearing. this year she's sentenced to seven years for manslaughter. a giant asteroid will whiz
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by earth. it will be so close it will pass by on february 4th. there's no chance it will make impact. it's expected to stay more than 2 1/2 million miles away. scientists will keep a close eye on it though. "time" reports that british people are so lonely, they now have a minister of loneliness. prime minister theresa may appointed tracey crouch to the position yesterday. may said loneliness is the sad reality of modern light. last year they found nearly 9 million people in the country feel loneliness. a "hollywood reporter" says author michael wolff's "fire & fury" will be a meesh. he'll serve as executive producer of the series. the network is not yet attached to the project. the "washington post" said 94-year-old bon dole received a
quote
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congressional medal yesterday. president trump led it for the former senate leader. he overcame world war ii injuries to serve in congress for 35 years. he was the gop presidential nominee back in 1996. the citation says dole was honored for his leadership in working with democrats. >> nice to see him honored. and billboard reports dolly parton broke two guinness world records. the country great now holds the country's most hits on the top country songs charts and she's the female with the most hot charts. she said she was humbled and blessed by the honor. can i just say "islands in the stream" one of my all-time favorites. i love dolly par on the. >> do you want to sing? >> remember when kenny rogers was here one time and i asked him if he would sing with me and he said no. >> he politely declined.
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>> he was very nice. >> we're going to have singing after this show. >> be ready with that. most americans define success as being happy at work instead of just making more money. that's one of the findings in a new study from linkedin. we've teemed up with the a professional networking site called "work in progress." only 4% of workers say scoring a corner office is a measure of success. 60% believe it's loving what i do and 34% say they'd be willing to take a 10% pay cut if it meant they could design their own work schedule. catherine fisher is linkedin's career expert and joins us at the table. good morning to you. >> good morning. >> i want to talk about the 10% pay cut. what do they want to do? >> what's fascinating is we spend 90,000 hours over the course of our lifetime working. so that's half of your waking hours of working. and we really wanted to
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understand what motivates people, what gets them up in the morning, really what are people in it for, and they -- what they told us is that success means many different things to different people. and so for the millennials, they really value the ability to travel. so while they're still motivated to have that financial stability, they also want to take some different risks so they can do what they love, which is traveling. >> so if it meant getting a lower salary but it would allow them do that, they would take that as opposed to higher salary. >> they view that as being successful. >> they like side hustles. what is that? another job? >> another job that's not your primary source of income and not your 9 to 5. if you're not getting the passion you want from 9 to 5. let's say you love teaching yoga but it's not going to pay your bills, you do it on the side. that's like a side hustle. >> the side hustle sounds like
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something almost illegal. >> i was thinking that too. >> that sounds like moonlighting. isn't that basically what we used to call moonlighting? let me ask you about the penchant for wanting to travel and also people have career "fomo." >> i think there's a fear that if you're not up to date on your skills and you're not keeping yourself open to opportunities you may miss the next big thing. >> how did gender play it out in different ways in the study? >> what's surprising about the gender, we saw it as a flop. so the men are more interested in making it home in time for din e whereas when we saw an increase with women, they want the next bonus and pay raise. >> that's interesting to me. >> you know why women say that?
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they're going to use that bonus and pay raise to bring take jute home and not have to make the dinner. >> men are saying we want to get home for dinner. you would have thought it would have been different. it's also interesting to see millennials have different ideas of the ages of success. how does that work? >> i think with older people -- >> what's older people. careful, catherine. john's at the table. what do they say? >> your career evolves. what may have been really important to you in your 20s, that's going to evolve and what defines you and what you see as success ebbs and flows and you realize it's a journey and, you know, many people, the millennials, they're very interested in making time for themselves whereas the older generations, they're motivated by giving back, mentoring and volunteering. >> what about this idea of
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happiness, meaning when employees are happy. how does it affect a company's bottom line? >> it makes a huge impact. if your employees are happy and they're contributing more, they're engaged. think about it. if an employee isn't happy and they decide to leave the company, what happens is they have to recruit and train pple happy. so we'll stay in our jobs. >> yes. >> we're all content here. >> yes, we are. thanks very much. there's a growing divide between military members and civilians they protect. we'll introduce you to a family who's endured long years of service including moves. >> when jerry moved, that was our 53rd address. we lived in hotel rooms, a water tower at one time.
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america, and this morning we welcome steve. he met a family with a tradition of service stretching back to the revolutionary war. steve, good morning. >> norah, good morning. while most people don't serve, for some it runs in the family. there's actually a term, "military brat," which people often call themselves when they grow up in military families. many of them live apart from the rest of us often enduring experiences like the miller family. >> i have three children serving in very dangerous positions, one in afghanistan, two in iraq. that was the hardest season of being a mom. >> i'm thinking about what must have gone through your mind every time the phone rang or the doorbell. >> the phone. you dread the calls that might be ugly. >> reporter: the phone rang in
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their house in 2011. their daughter caroline was commanding a deployment out in iraq. >> one of my convoy got hit with a roadside ied. >> reporter: the truck in front of hers got sick. >> how much of this did you tell your mom when you had a chance to call home? >> she told me enough to know that she said, mom, i thought i might have lost my guys. it was the worst day of my life. >> this is a lineup of all of the graduates in our family from west point, the direct line from my three greats grandfather to my number three caroline. >> caroline sister's kate served as well as their husbands, and in-laws and family before them.
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>> seven generations. >> seven generation, unbroken line. >> reporter: and unbroken commitment. >> and i think peopsome people to step up to the call and some not. >> the first question that i dread getting is have you killed anyone or have you shout anyone. that's just the wrong question to ask. >> people ask that. >> oh, yes. all the time. because they don't know what else to ask. >> most of you as americans don't know them. many of you don't know any of them who knows any one of them. >> reporter: last october john kelly called out the isolation from the troops. kelly's son was killed in afghanistan. >> they're the very best this country produces. they volunteer to protect our kentry when there's nothing in our country anymore that seems to suggest that selfful service to the nation is not only
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appropriate but required. >> you can't make people understand what you do. >> jerry said kelly's remarks were necessary. >> you hope they become maybe more aware. i get a lot of people who come up to me on veterans day and say thank you for serving, so on and so forth. i get others who don't even know it's veterans day. >> reporter: it's hard to be aware because civilians may never meet a military family. they move from base to base as clair did growing up. >> when jerry and i got married, that was my 53rd address. we had lived in hotel rooms, we had lived in a water tower at one time. >> reporter: she passed on the lifestyle to her daughter kate who has moved 17 times in 18 years. >> i've spent every day of my adult life serving the military either as a spouse or as a military officer and many days both. >> why is it important that
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people should understand the service of those who go into the military? >> our top leaders of our nation are civilians. our civilian populous needs to understand how our military serves, who those folks are, what they're willing to sacrifice because ultimately we will fall in line and fall on our civilian leadership. >> we the people send them. they face the risks. >> what were the things that you did to manage that anxiety, if that ooh is the right word. >> well, for us, you turn to your faith. you turn to it when they're off doing things that you wouldn't wish upon them but you know they signed up for the duty and they agreed. >> and the gym. bless the gym. between prayer and the gym, you can get through anything. >> that's pretty good. between prayer and the jim. it's such an important reminder that veterans day is so much
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more than the sale or school's closed and there's no delivery. that there's people behind it. >> it's recognizing people serve. this is an extraordinary story. seven generations at west point and norah knows from covering the pentagon in the past, it's kind of normal. there are lots of families who have cement the military in. >> that's my family. my sister volunteer and just returned from deployment in the army. it is. it's a culture, and it's an idea about service larger than yourself and to your country. i have some empathy on what general kelly said from the white house, about understanding the ethos, doing something that's not in your own interest. >> we're in the 17th year of war since 9/11. there are people who have sent two generations into the war. >> meaning fathers and sons. >> or daughters, yeah. >> thank you, steve. very nice to have you at the % table. >> thank you. a penguin catches researchers in ant article baby
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cbs presented by target.... art and history spark connections across cultures, igniting curiosity, conversation, and inspiration. the asian art museum, with the support of target, celebrates the unique achievements of asian art and cultures providing a catalyst for discovery and dialogue. the asian museum is here to make asian arts and culture relevant to everyone's life. to be culturally literate i think is important today. the impact is very great.
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it's so important that people come to the asian art museum because the reality is we all have a story to tell. it's what makes us who we are. target free sunday's allows people in the community to learn more about their heritage and enjoy beautiful artwork. we truly believe this museum is for all and target makes this possible. cbs eye on the community is sponsored by target. perfect song for this story. a nosy penguin surprised researchers with an unexpected visit this weekend. they were collecting water samples at the time. the penguin checked out the crew's gear before leaping back into the water and swimming away. the researchers say 18 penguins will pop into a boat over the
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it's all about big values, jr. prices. bart now has the green light to start running a new ten-car train. the agency had faced a series of setbacks in launching what's being good morning, it's 8:55. i'm kenny choi. bart has the green light to start running a new 10-car train. the agency had faced a series of setbacks in launching what's being called the fleet of the future. weather and traffic after this quick break.
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good morning. 8:56. and we are tracking a big backup and we'll begin in the south bay. this is along highway 85 at stevens creek. you can see that traffic really backing up especially in the exit lanes. we haven't had any accidents in this exact location but traffic is very slow. at least we can see the traffic this morning along this stretch as it's been very foggy out there. we are tracking a 45-minute ride from 101 up towards 280. we have 92 very foggy conditions as you can see across the san mateo bridge. just under 20 minutes heading across the span. and 101 this is right near sfo, not too bad visibility-wise. your drive just slow in that northbound direction. we continue to track delays making your way towards the lower deck of the bay bridge toll plaza. slow to eastbound 80. neda has the forecast. >> our cameras are not just blurry and smudgy. this is fog, this is drizzle.
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that's what's happening across san francisco this morning. that's normally a view of the transamerica pyramid. not so much now. here's our view of -- from sutro and that's obviously nice and wet and damp. we are seeing a light drizzle already this morning. the rain has pretty much arrived but it's not quite showing up on our hi-def doppler because it's not that measurable precipitation. satellite-radar showing plenty of clouds out there and, yes, that mist just enough to be a nuisance right now. we are going to see more raindrops later on though. half moon bay visibility down to less than a mile. about a mile in san jose. so it's impacting the south bay, the east bay, and definitely the north bay as well with visibility very low. here's where the rain is showing up on hi-def doppler. you can see some high elevation snow coming down and that's a look at what's to come. we are going to see plenty of sierra snowfall the next couple of days with this colder air associated with this storm. also high surf, yes, the waves up to 40 feet by saturday drying up, another storm sunday into monday. more rain wednesday. at stanford health care,
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we can now repair complex aortic aneurysms without invasive surgery. imagine what we can do for varicose veins. and if we can precisely treat eye cancer with minimal damage to the rest of the eye, imagine what we can do for glaucoma, even cataracts. if we can use dna to diagnose the rarest of diseases, imagine what we can do for the conditions that affect us all. imagine what we can do for you.
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