tv CBS Overnight News CBS December 7, 2016 3:08am-4:00am EST
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in oakland, california, firefighters have now searched 90% of the warehouse that went up in flames during a dance party on friday night. late today, a crane began knocking down sections that are unsound. 36 bodies have been recovered. all but one have been identified, and david begnaud has the later. >> reporter: the bureau of alcohol tobacco and firearms is on the scene tonight, leading the investigation into what caused the fire. jill snyder is the special agent in charge. there is a report that a refrigerator may have been the source of the fire. can you confirm that? >> the fire investigators have not made a conclusion yet as to what the source of the fire is. they're still examining all of the evidence. >> reporter: the a.t.f. does not believe the fire was intentionally set. cadaver dogs were used to search the building twice.
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they did not find any more human remains. there is an ongoing criminal investigation. teresa drenick is spokesperson for the alameda county district attorney's office. you're looking at the woman who owned the building and the person who leased it, correct? >> amongst others. >> reporter: what are the possible criminal charges that they could face? >> everything from murder, possibly, to manslaughter, to other criminal violations. >> reporter: a former resident of the so-called ghost ship shot this video of deplorable conditions-- broken walls, propane tanks in bathroom, debris, and water leaking on the bathroom floors. and cbs news obtained this video showing police inside of the warehouse in october. we're told they were there to access the roof of a neighboring building, but you can see them looking around. oakland city councilman noel gallo represents the area where the warehouse is located. >> i am not going to make excuses for the city because we have documented, we have turned it in, we have called it in. i have called personally the police in front of it to shut
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that place down and to get them to remove that debris. >> reporter: there is a california law now decades old which says people in this case, victims' family members, cannot sue the city of oakland for failing to make an inspection. scott, cbs news has confirmed when recovery crews went into that warehouse to start removing the bodies, some of the victims were holding each other. >> pelley: david begnaud at the scene, david, thank you. we also know more this evening about the man who ran the building. mireya villarreal has that story. >> reporter: can i talk to you for a second, derrick. the manager of the ghost ship refused to answer our questions early tuesday morning. almena was leasing the building at the time of the fire for $4,500 a month and renting out space to musician and local artists. >> i am incredibly sorry. >> reporter: almena called the ghost ship his dream, a place that brought people together. he defended the space, telling nbc his own family lived there. >> should i be held accountable? i can barely stand here right now.
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>> reporter: almena and his family were not in the building at the time of the fire. the ghost ship was the subject of numerous code complaints. former tenants like shelley mack say she lived here because it was cheap but there were no fire alarms, sprinklers or proper electricity. >> this is all illegal. there's no heat. it's filthy. >> reporter: court records show almena was on probation after pleading no contest in january after receiving stolen property. danielle boudreaux was close to the family. >> these children were living in squalor and i called everyone i could and their families to get those children out of that environment. >> reporter: just hours after the fire ripped through this oakland warehouse, almena posted on his facebook page. confirmed, everything i worked so hard for is gone, it's a dream that i woke from to be
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standing in poverty. she blames almena. >> he didn't take the time to put sprinklers, to put fire alarms, to put fire extinguishers, to put any kinds of signs to where the back stairs were. >> reporter: while almena could face charges, the owner of the building is also being investigated. he has yet to surface. scott, throughout the day there has been a steady procession of people coming by this memorial right here. they've all left different messages of love and support with different wording but all with the same sentiment: we will never forget. >> pelley: mireya villareal, thanks. the upper midwest is being hit by an arctic blast tonight. north dakota is getting the worst of it. schools, highways, and airports have been closed. omar villafranca is in bismarck. >> reporter: it's only fall, but winter is here in the great plain. in douglas city, minnesota, drivers battled nearly zero- visibility highway conditions. in bismarck, north dakota, with wind gusts topping 60 miles per hour, whiteout conditions and icy roads made driving nearly impossible.
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>> you can see a semi turning the wrong way here. >> reporter: residents are digging out of a blizzard that blanketed parts of the state in 19 inches of snow. bismarck resident corrie guerts woke up to a seven-foot snow drift blocking her door. the arctic blast is on the move. the cold front is sweeping across eastern montana to minnesota, widespread subzero wind chill temperatures. western north dakota is getting punched with the lowest wind chill-- all the way down to 30 below zero. the wind chill is 14 below zero because of these 40-mile-per- hour gusts. and, scott, residents expect this white stuff to stick around until the spring. >> pelley: omar villafranca with the big chill. thanks. today, the supreme court dealt a blow to apple. the justices sided unanimously with samsung in a long-running patent dispute.
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the court found that samsung did copy some of the apple's design for the iphone, but not enough to hand over all of its profits from samsung devices. a lower court will now decide how much samsung does owe. coming up, we'll bring you this story, a good night's sleep can be a matter of life and death. and later, 75 years after pearl harbor, arizona honors the crew of its namesake battleship.
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cough doesn't sound so good. take mucinex dm. i'll text you in 4 hours when your cough returns. one pill lasts 12 hours, so... looks like i'm good all night! some cough medicines only last 4 hours. but just one mucinex lasts 12 hours. let's end this. >> pelley: how much sleep are you getting? your life could depend on the answer. a study out today found getting behind the wheel on four or five hours' sleep is just as dangerous as driving drunk. here's errol barnett. >> reporter: look closely at the bottom of the screen and you'll see it this driver's eyes are closed. at the top, the approaching light post.
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this sleeping driver woke up when his car left the road. in a new study, a.a.a. found 35% of u.s. drivers get less than the recommended seven hours of sleep daily. sleeping just five to six hours left drivers almost twice as likely to be involved in an accident. four to five hours meant four times as likely. and driving on less than four hours' sleep increased the crash risk by nearly 12 times. >> teenagers, older adults, and people who have a sleep debt are among the highest risk groups. >> reporter: jake nelson is with a.a.a. >> one in five crashes where somebody dies in that crash involved a driver who was drowsy or hadn't earned enough sleep the night before. >> reporter: 18-year-old tyler warne of one of them. six years ago he died in a crash after falling asleep at the wheel in the middle of the day. he was about to graduate from high school. >> he didn't recognize that he was too tired.
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>> reporter: his mother, kerrie, said he was getting an average of five hours of sleep. >> i never once talked to him about drowsy driving or what that would look like. i didn't know. i didn't know to do that. >> reporter: best way to avoid this danger, a.a.a. says, is to get off the road, even if you feel slightly drowsy, to have a passenger who can take turns driving if possible, and, scott, avoid heavy foods before you hit the road. >> pelley: errol barnett for us tonight. thanks, errol. still ahead, beyonce's grammy record. delsym helpswhich means, impulse to cough for 12 hours. you're controlling your cough on your morning commute. and later when you're joking with beth...
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rooms come in all sorts of shapes and sizes. with eight times more fragrance control, the air wick® scented oil warmer lets you dial up or down for the perfect amount of fragrance. no matter the size of the room. air wick®. home is in the air. >> pelley: most parents will tell you they'd like to limit the time their kids spend in front of a screen but it turn s out many are setting a bad example. a survey from common sense media found moms and dads spent on average, more than nine hours a day in front of tvs, computer screens and other devices. that's about the same as their kids. it looks like beyonce will be getting plenty of screen time at the grammys. she picked up nine
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nominations today, including record of the year for "formation." she is also the first to be nominated in the rock, pop, r & b, and rap categories all in the same year. the grammys will be handed out in february right here on cbs. and you may have noticed that this broadcast has a new look. we now come to you from studio 57 at the cbs broadcast center in new york, the longtime home of "cbs this morning." we joined our a.m. colleagues here for election night coverage and we liked it so much, we elected to stay. up next, the university of arizona's unique memorial to the crew of the u.s.s. "arizona."
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>> pelley: the date lives in infamy -- december 7, 1941. 75 years ago tomorrow, the japanese launched a surprise attack on pearl harbor. tonight, barry petersen shows us a unique new memorial to the 1,177 crew members who died aboard the u.s.s. "arizona." >> i have watched the ship blow up hundreds of times on television, and every single time i've watched that explosion, i felt a little pang in my heart.
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>> reporter: bill westcott was named after an uncle he never met who died aboard the u.s.s. "arizona." >> his name is william percy westcott jr. >> reporter: may i see the picture? >> you may. >> reporter: three years ago, he started work on an idea for this-- a thin red outline across the bustling commons at the university of arizona. it is something new to remember something old-- the exact measurement of the doomed battle ship's main deck. >> the fourth bomb came down in this area here. >> reporter: david carter, who restores historic buildings, studied the ship's blueprints and discovered a perfect fit, like it was meant to be. >> in the initial outline of the ship, 597 feet long, and we had five-eighths of an inch to spare. >> reporter: five-eighths of an inch. >> yes. >> reporter: wow. in the middle, a structure like the ship's bridge with a medallion for each man who died, more than 700, 22 were under college age.
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students of today, like elizabeth quinlan, can meet the young men of that terrible day. >> it's very humanizing, so you start realizing that there's actual names and faces that go to these different incidents. >> reporter: the last medallion was for william westcott, signed by bill. >> now and forever. >> reporter: the memory of every lost sailor now passed to a new generation. when you see your uncle's name, what's in your mind? >> i think about the scale of the ship and the scale of the loss. >> reporter: and a debt of honor to a fallen uncle now paid in full. barry petersen, cbs news, tucson, arizona. that's the overnight news for this wednesday, for some of you the news continues, for others check back with us a
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little later for the morning news and be sure not to miss cbs this morning. from the broadcast center in new york city i'm scott pelley. this is the cbs overnight news. >> hi, everyone, and welcome to the overnight news. i'm demarco morgan. president-elect donald trump continues his victory tour. he and vp-elect mike pence were at a rally in north carolina. at last night's rally, mr. trump formally announced the replacement to the pentagon. mr. trump said the number from boeing was ridiculous and wants the contract cancelled. nancy cordes has the story. >> reporter: mr. trump's tweet
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before the opening bell caused the stock to plunge before the opening bell of the day. mr. trump wrote costs are out of control, more than $4 billion. cancel order. >> i think it's ridiculous, i think boeing is doing a little bit of a number. we want boeing to make a lot of money but not that much money. >> the two planes that currently serve as air force one are more than 25 years old, the last of the 747 passenger jets still used in the united states. the air force contracted with boeing to complete them in 2023. mark rosinger over saw the result. >> it is cheaper to buy a new aircraft, than to try to maintain the aircraft built in the '80s. >> it was not clear what prompted mr. trump's tweets, but
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it came just after the highlighted differences between mr. trump and boeing's ceo when it comes to trade with china. the president-elect insisted last summer that air force one is a step down in every way. although his 757 can't refuel mid-air or deflect missiles. >> it's a beautiful aircraft but is not capable of supporting the president of the united states. >> a few hours after bashing boeing, mr. trump praised a japanese company, softbank, making this announcement in the lobby of trump tower with softbank's ceo. >> and he just agreed to invest $50 billion in the united states and 50,000 jobs. >> now president-elect trump has sticker shock over air force one, but wait until he hears what other embassies cost around the world. the chairman of the house
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oversight committee jason chaffetz has the results. >> well, that investigation was led by top republican jason chaffetz who accuses the administration of spending too much and taking too long. now the next secretary of state will have to determine whether or not to construct jewels. >> reporter: a steel frame cube surrounded by glass will soon exceed its billions in projection. >> i feel very misled by the state department because he hif are not opening the doors in february, the cost is about $100,000 a day in a facility that we used to own. >> that facility will be used to house our personnel until the new london embassy is ready. according to a new report, it
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accounts for a $22 million cost increase. the house oversight committee found that arguing over a glass wall in indonesia cost tens of millions of dollars in change order requests. and nearly $3 million was spent on u.s. art at the embassy in pakistan, one of the biggest bills came from mexico, where the u.s. paid for a 15 acre lot and $56 million on the mission. but nothing has been built there yet. chaffetz, who visited the site, said it will cost millions. >> something has to change, they're building them slower, coming in over budget, they're not necessarily secure. >> so for the next secretary of state, is this the top of the list? >> i am glad we have mr. trump coming in. i think he will fix it in a hurry. >> but the strict standards for building a classified diplomatic work is not a typical project.
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>> do you have any kind of time line as to when these embassies will be both secure and finished? >> all i can say is that you know our diplomatic security bureau and our overseas building bureau work hand in hand to make sure safety is the main thing. >> state officials say they're mindful of how an embassy looks impacts the perception of the u.s. but they say despite the delays they will remain within budget. and a new study shows that driving while drowsy can be as dangerous as driving drunk. errol burnett has more. >> reporter: aaa says you have to make sure you're not driving drowsy, because a third of drivers hit the road when they have a hard time keeping their eyes open which is proving to be deadly.
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these videos show how quickly a drowsy driver can lose control. >> i remember screaming at the top of my lungs and sort of collapsing. because that couldn't be true. >> reporter: kerrie's 18-year-old son, tyler, was killed after he crashed his car while still in high school. he was on a mid-afternoon drive, when a witness saw him flip several lanes and strike a tree. six years later, his family is still consumed by grief. >> definitely cheated and it felt unfair. >> all right. it's hard every day. i mean, it's been six years. but little things come up and it gets really difficult. >> police found no signs of alcohol or drugs in tyler's system, but lack of skid marks led investigators to conclude tyler fell asleep at the wheel. his family said he was getting four to six hours of sleep at
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night. >> i knew about texting and driving, and joy riding, cell phones, impaired driving, all of those things we're educated about. but not once was there a conversation about young adults and drowsy driving. >> teenagers, older adults, and people who have a sleep debt are among the highest risk groups. >> jake nelson is the manager of research. >> not one crash where somebody died in the crash involved a driver who was drowsy or had not earned enough sleep the night before. >> in a new study, aaa finds that sleepy drivers are five times likely to get in an accident with five hours of sleep. more than four times as likely with four hours, and 12 times with less than four hours. >> drivers who only earned four hours in a 24 hour period can be
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just as vulnerable as people driving drunk. >> how aware do you think people are? >> not aware at all. and i think that is really the punch line. one pill lasts 12 hours, so... looks like i'm good all night! some cough medicines only last 4 hours. but just one mucinex lasts 12 hours. let's end this. rooms come in all sorts of shapes and sizes. with eight times more fragrance control, the air wick® scented oil warmer lets you dial up or down for the perfect amount of fragrance. no matter the size of the room. air wick®. home is in the air. thope to see you again soon.. whoa, whoa, i got this. just gotta get the check. almost there.
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75 years ago today, the japanese launched their sneak attack on pearl harbor in hawaii. more than 2500 u.s. service personnel were killed that day. 1100 others were wounded and others have gathered in hawaii for today's memorial. lee cowan has the story of the date that will live in infamy. >> reporter: hawaii's pearl harbor, it was just a place before it became a memorial. a tropical, tranquil place, that was dorinda nicoleson's family home. she was just 6 years old that sunday in 1941. born in hawaii, her family was civilian and lived near the dock for the famous pan am clippers. the idea of war coming to this
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remote pacific outpost seemed to most here about as likely as a white hawaiian christmas. but, at 7:55 a.m. on december 7th, a storm did indeed come. >> they were coming right over the house. >> and when you came outside and you looked up -- they were right there? >> right overhead. >> six japanese aircraft carriers had sailed to within 300 miles of the hawaiian islands, loaded with more than 350 planes. they were on oahu like a swarm of angry mosquitos, her family fled to the sugar cane fields. but he had nowhere to go. >> 2 or 300 yards over there was where i was. >> he had joined the navy at
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nienlt, a19, and had helped man the boats out at naval island. >> how close were the boats? >> within 100 yards. >> reporter: he high tailed it to a nearby ditch for cover. >> and when i'm first laying in it, i'm on the bottom of it. another fellow came and jumped right on top of me. and he was saying hail mary's as fast as he could say them. and i said well that takes care of that part. i don't have to do that. >> reporter: but then, a japanese pilot spotted him. >> this fellow says well, you may as well turn over and watch this. dumb me, i turn over and look up at a dive bomber coming down. >> straight at you? >> oh, yeah, banked right in the air field looked right there the ditch. i could look him right in the eye. >> hangar 71, just one row down, still bears the scars, the
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bright window panes remain, shattered on a quiet sunday morning. >> were you mad or confused? >> i don't really recall if i was mad or not. a lot of people asked if i was scared, i'm sure, i was, if not something was wrong with me. >> at the air field nearby, the japanese assault continued, nearly every american war bird was blown up before every taking flight. but japan's real target was battleship row. >> the utah is shown capsized and partly sunk. >> within minutes, the california was sinking. and the oklahoma had also capsized, trapping hundreds in her hull. >> the whole side of them, clear down to the arizona, is covered with flames. people in the water. swimming, trying to get out. it was a terrible, terrible scene.
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>> 95-year-old delton walling was sitting high in a patrol tower that day and seeing it all unfolding. >> can you imagine what i'm feeling now when i watch my great navy stuffed down my throat? i'm devastated. man. >> and it got worse, not far away, the shaw, a destroyer, exploded so largely it was seen a half mile away, and captured in this photograph. >> that almost knocked us off the tower. >> but it was the arizona that got the worst of it. hit by armor-piercing bombs it too exploded killing 1,177, the single largest lost in american naval history. her hull is still in the mud where she sank. >> the arizona remains the final resting place for her crew,
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including brothers, families, in a war that had not been declared. >> when we talk to people they would say oh, my father or grandfather wouldn't tell us anything until they were 60 years old, they were told to just forget about it and get on with their life. >> craig nelson spent the last five years recounting the pearl harbor, december 7th 1941, was possibly just as perfeivotal to history as 1776. >> it completely transformed the united states, at that point we were 14th military power behind sweden. >> so it served as a rallying cry. >> it made us put on our big boy pants and become a global leader. >> the u.s. did bounce back in double time. all but three of the ships damaged or sunk on december 7th
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were raised, repaired and sailed again, and in fact by the end of the world the u.s. had looked for the ships that launched the attack. >> this is the greatest generation in the world. and we're down to a handful left. >> thank you for your service. >> wally, like most of the other 40,000 or so enlisted men on ohau that day was just a teenager that day. but history's clock was relentless. >> i see their faces right before me. i know they're gone. >> pearl harbor's chief historian, daniel martinez, has worked here for 42 years, and with each passing year, he worries that the collective memories are fading. >> most of the people that come here don't have a clue what took place or don't even know who won the war. how will we remember world war ii after they're gone? >> this was a huge open part of
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the harbor. >> dorinda now lives in kansas city, missouri, but made the 5,000 mile trip here to tell her story, sometimes brings with her the tiny gas mask that she and her brother wore as children in the days after the attack. so why did you keep those all of those years? >> it's my history. >> reporter: it was history that chanced her life and ours. the cry, "remember pearl harbor," sounds pretty ominous but the challenge for the next generation is to really remember absent those who will no longer be here to remind us face to face. >> they are my heroes and i well tell their stories as long as i live. >> we'll have more on the pearl harbor anniversary in two minutes. you're watching "the cbs overnight news." and flexibility, ity
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cough doesn't sound so good. take mucinex dm. i'll text you in 4 hours when your cough returns. one pill lasts 12 hours, so... looks like i'm good all night! some cough medicines only last 4 hours. but just one mucinex lasts 12 hours. let's end this. americans were in a state of shock 75 years ago on the news that the japanese had launched a devastating attack on pearl harbor. but one man, president roosevelt, had calmed the nation. >> the japanese have attacked the american naval base at pearl harbor, hawaii, and our defense
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facilities at manila, capital of the philippines. >> the attack was made on naval and military activities on the principal island of oahu. >> on that sunday, he was working on his stamp collection. herman everhart is the curator in new york. it was 1:47 p.m. washington time. >> and what was the president's first reaction? >> the first reaction was to shout into the phone no, sort of in a state of disbelief. >> the critical hours recorded moment by moment by the people around the president. sometimes on quickly written notes on scraps of paper, now on display on the 75th anniversary
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of the attack. >> paul sparrow is director of the fdr library. >> it was the worst day of his presidency, the worst military defeat in american history. >> the battleship arizona was completely destroyed, four others severely damaged. >> i think it is one of the most important days in american history. it was a transitionist moment, where we became a global super power. >> the president convened a war meeting. >> how did they describe him? >> angry but compose d. but he is clearly under control and processing information and not losing his cool. >> at 3:50, as roosevelt noted in his handwriting, he received this update. severe damage, the battleship oklahoma has capsized.
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hangars on fire, heavy casualties, then he turned to his secretary, grace, to compose a message. >> she says he lit a cigarette, leaned back in his chair and dictated the speech. she said he dictated most of it without interruption, after he finished she left the room and typed it up, brought it back to him. and then fdr himself did all the editing in pencil to his own speech. >> and here it is, edited by roosevelt in his own hand. >> this is one of our most treasured documents here at the roosevelt library. >> two and a half pages in length, it begins with what is one of the most famous lines in american history. >> he takes the lines, a date that will live in world history, he strikes out world history
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changes it to infamy and in the process transforms it to one that really rings to us down the decades to today. >> yesterday, december 7th, 1941, a date which will live in infamy, the united states of america was suddenly and deliberately attacked by naval and air forces of the empire of japan. >> some of his advisers, the secretary of state and war wanted to deliver a much longer speech. >> the state department drafted this speech, rehashing the u.s. relations. but roosevelt set it aside and used his gut. >> they wanted to hear that we had been wronged and will see final victory. >> no matter how long it will
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>> no matter how long it will take us to overcome this hey, thanks for stopping by. you know, i've followed your character since the first episode. i'm a big fan, big, big fan... thank you. listen, your storyline makes for incredible tv drama. thing is, your drug use is very adult content. too adult for the kids. so, i'm gonna have to block you. aw, man. yeahh... well. have a good one. you're a nice lady. (alex)tor) if you have medicare or will be covered soon, here are some important things you should know. first, if you think medicare covers everything, you may be in for an expensive surprise. second, you could be responsible for thousands of dollars in out-of-pocket costs. which brings us to number three. a medicare supplement insurance policy from colonial penn life insurance company can help you save money by helping to pay the bills
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over the century, millions of americans have fought for our country and millions of names have been forgotten. this man has decided to honor their sacrifices, by revealing what time has covered up. >> reporter: in cemeteries across america you will see them, head stones blackened by age and the elements. what do some of these stones look like? >> you can't recognize them. they were filled with moss and very dirty. >> and what troubled andrew loomish more, many belonged to veterans. what disturbed you about that so much? >> they were forgotten, i couldn't properly thank them and properly understand who they were or what they were about. >> reporter: so these were totally black? >> they were black, you could
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not read them at all. >> reporter: so loomish made it his life's goal to scrub and uncover the names so visitors would see them. >> if you properly restore the monuments, you can begin an entire conversation and potentially in a figurative sense, bring the person back to life. >> loomish's specialty job is cleaning, although he never worked on a head stone before he developed his own method for cleaning them. >> i scrub and i scrub and i get the edges and i get the letters and numbers. it could take 20 minutes or hours. >> and his results are stunning. this is what a grave stone from 1917 looked like before he cleaned it. and now. >> if i could do this every day i would. >> reporter: he set up this facebook page titled with his
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nickname, the good cemeteryian. it's a celebration of those veterans' lives filled with the stories of the men and women underneath the grave stones. he gets a lot of thanks from veterans and their families for what he does but has trouble feeling like he deserves it. >> i am appreciative of it, but i'm unworthy of the same respect of someone who chooses to go the route to serve our country. and for someone to approach me to show me that level of respect, it's humbling. to say the least. >> bringing back the names and lives of veterans, he says, is just what he does. >> that's the overnight news for this wednesday. for some of you the news continues and for others check back with us a little later for the morning news and cbs this morning. from the broadcast center in new
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york city, i'm demarco morgan. captioning funded by cbs it is wednesday, december 7th, 2016. this is the krpt cbs morning news. president donald trump reveals a plan. searching for answers as investigators try to figure out what sparked this deadly warehouse fire in oakland. more victims are identified. >> volunteer you better than me? >> let's go. let's go. >> and tempers fly during white nationalists at texas a&m.
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