tv NBC Nightly News NBC May 28, 2012 6:30pm-7:00pm EDT
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on the broadcast tonight, washout, memorial day in the northeast is swammed by beryl. >> outrage as women and children are massacred in syria. more international condemnation. study habits. research that shows college students are spending less time studying, even as the cost of that education sky rockets. and making a difference. one woman's lifetime of service and the children that keep her going strong. "nightly news" starts now.
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good evening. i'm savannah guthrie in tonight for brian. the tropical storm named beryl barreled across the northeast today, bringing winds just shy of hurricane strength as it made landfall in florida, forcing many to cancel their holiday plans. the weather is the story as another huge swath of the country has to contend with record heat. we have two reports starting with mike seidel in jacksonville beach, florida. good evening to you. >> good even. the wind is still winning the wind up the beach. what was tropical storm beryl has indeed been downgraded but it's still a cause for concern. tropical depression beryl is drenching parts of flod and georgia today, washing away holiday plans for thousands. a few brave souls attempted kite surfing and the approaching
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storm created a moment of beauty, but most vacationers headed inland. >> we decided we're going to go back to gainesville. >> red flag warnings dotted the beaches up and down the coast. lifeguards rescued more than 160 people who were trapped in dangerous rip currents. the storm hit land with 6 to 8 foot waves and wind gusts up to 73 miles per hour. look at the wind and rain from this swath of beryl, a couple miles from lafrl. we've had gusts up to 50 miles per hour. this horizontal stinging rain. beryl's intense winds up rooted trees and power lines. jacksonville's mayor canceled memorial day activities. >> we know this is a most sacred time to honor those who paid the sacrifice to defend us. >> and around the clock repairs under way. >> we have electric crews going
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out, trying to get people back on. >> water flooded neighborhood streets and homes. >> it's quite a mess. >> river looved like the ocean this morning. if look s like you have 3 or 4 foot waves out there. tourists tried to take beryl in stride, but the storm made for a disappointing weekend. >> we buthere was going to be bad weather, but as it cranked into a full tropical storm, it was a little more than we expected for memorial day. >> the storm is weakening as it makes its way north and then northeast off the carolina coast wednesday, but not before soaking the drought stricken area which desperately needed this rain. for only the third time since the 1800th have we seen two t p tropical storms form before the official start of the atlantic hurricane season which officially begins, savannah, this friday, june 1st. >> it is just beginning. mike seidel, thank you. as we mentioned, parts of the midwest and east are spending the holiday baking and another
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day of record heat. jim cantore is in st. simon's island, georgia, for us. it felt stifling to a lot of the country today. >> yeah, even here with the tropical storm coming through, temperatures got into the middle 80s. that heat wave reminds us more of july 4th weekend. yesterday, indianapolis 500 temperatures got so hot, they had to treat 700 people. they were only one degree off the all-time high. the heat relentless to. all these dots represent record highs. some of them all-time across 17 states. 95 degrees in chicago, the hottest memorial day ever in the history of weather records in the city. and gnaw too far back, the hottest st. patrick's day in march. the heat continues tomorrow. little rock, 96 degrees. pensacola, 93. thank goodness the gulf of
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mexico isn't too far away. baton rouge to midland, texas, a forecast high of 104 degrees. tropical storm beryl sweeping through this area. some power outages, tree limbs down, but all in all, people enjoyed a pretty beautiful memorial day weekend. >> jim cantore from the weather channel, thank you wroorb. elsewhere, the heat is coming from fierce wildfires. firefighters are battling the flames in six states, including a fire in upper michigan that authorities say was started by a lightning strike. the fire has burned about 17,000 acres along the lake superior coast. in new mexico, a huge fire has consumed miles of forests, wru brush, and grassland. more than 500 firefighters are battling that one which is still totally out of control. an air scare today as an air canada boeing 00 avenue that has
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taken off for canada had to turn around and make an emergency landing at debris starting falling from the plane. the pilot reported losing an engine shortly after takeoff, and the images you're about to see show what look like engine parts that fell and damaged some parked cars below but no one was hurt. in syria, the fallout continues from friday's massacre. some of the worst violence yet in that country. tonight, former u.n. secretary kofi annan is there, trying to salvage a peace deal in tatters as the violence continues. the latest from our foreign correspondent, richard engle. >> homs, syria, under attack today by government troops. overnight, syrian forces pounded homa, reportedly killing more than 40 people. the new violence came just hours after the u.n. security counsel condemned syria for friday's massacre in hula.
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horrific, even by the standards of a year of fighting. more than 100 people killed, most of them women and children. new video shows the attack as it started. syrian forces appear to shell hula. people run in panic as more artillery rains down. then witnesses say, pro-government thugs went on a house to house killing spree, binding the hands of victims, stabbing them, and shooting them point blank. today, with serious tanks now in hula, u.n. peace broker kofi annan arrived in damascus. >> i am personally shocked and horrified by the tragic incident in hula two days ago. annan is credibility. syrian activists say his cease-fire is a sham, just a cover for the assad regime's relentless crack down. the deadlock goes all the way to
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moscow where british and foreign ministers met to discuss syria. the u.n. is clear. >> it's part of the behavior of the assad regime, i believe, to commit atrocities and then to try to blame the atrocities on other people. >> russia, far less so. their foreign minister blamed both sides for the massacre and opposed regime change. he called for an end of violence but after friday's bloodbath and months of killing, those words rang hollow. for now, action seems blocked by russia. analysts say moscow doesn't want to lose its last ally in the middle east. its only firm foothold in a region cast into chaos by the ongoing upheavals of the arab spring. >> nbc's richard engle, thank you. back at home, this memorial day saw the president and the man who wants to replace him honoring americans who cave
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everything for their country. with the election just five months away now, politics was pretty close to the surface, too. here's nbc's kristen welker. >> mitt romney marking memorial day with president obama's former rival and one of the nation's most well known veterans, senator john mccain. the political symbolism lost on no one. >> senator mccain, a national treasure, thank you for being here. and honoring all of our veterans. >> romney didn't miss the chance to take a swipe at president obama's foreign policy. >> i wish i could tell you that the world is a safe place today. it's not. >> today, the president hailed what he sees as his achievements, drawing down the wars in iraq and afghanistan. and at the vietnam veteran pfsz war memorial, acknowledged the war failed the veterans of that war. >> you came home and sometimes were denigrated when you should
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have been celebrated. it was a national shame. a disgrace. that should have never happened. that's why here today we resolve that it will not happen again. >> in recent weeks, the president has chrrisscrossed th country, pressing congress for tax breaks for companies who hire veterans. >> nobody who fights for this country should have to fight for a job. >> and today, he echoed those remarks. >> you shouldn't have to fight for a roof over your heads and you fought on behalf of the country you love. >> veterans who make up 13% of the electorate and trudengsally vote republican could have an impact this year. the president lost votes to mccain in 2008, and polls show he's trailing mitt romney in that group. several key swing states have
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veteran voters where every vote will matter. >> you have seen a tightening in national polling and key swingstate polls, florida, ohio, virginia, the nine to 12 states we think ultimately decide who the president of the united states will be. >> and savannah, a little bit of history. veterans picked bill clinton over george w.h. bush and george bush over john kerry, who served in vietnam. this will be the first election since world war ii is which neither candidate is a veteran. >> thank you. around the rest of the country, parades and tributes to the country's fallen service men and women this memorial day. that was the case in downer's grove, illinois, and c's kevin tibbles was there. >> on main streets in small towns and big cities, they marched. in honor of those who have
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served, in remembrnls of those who made the ultimate sacrifice. >> and lining the sidewalks, those old enough to remember and those who are not. for them, today is a day of learning. >> i think it's very important to impress upon them the sacrifices that other people make for the freedoms and the privileges that we enjoy here in the united states. >> it's important to know your history. >> in the nation's capital, the president paid tribute otthe toumb of the unknown soldier. in mt. vernon, new york, an honor guard salute and candles. in philadelphia, a ceremony for the nation's african-american veterans. >> let us always love and respect the warier doing his or her job on behalf of the united states of america. >> in downer's grove, illinois, the names of local war dead read aloud. >> tom gilbert. >> including four who lost their lives in iraq and afghanistan.
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even on a hot, balmy monday in each andarve community across this nation, young and old stood together as the buglers played. ♪ >> it's the hardest 24 notes in music that i have ever had to play. >> because of themotion? >> yes, sir. >> taking time to reflect, remember, and say thank you. kevin tibbles, nbc news, downer's grove, illinois. >> and when we come back, word that college students are spending much less time studying. are they slacking off or is there something else going on? and later, a member of the greatest generation still making a difference, and showing us all how it's done. measure commitment by what's getting done. the twenty billion dollars bp committed
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has helped fund economic and environmental recovery. long-term, bp's made a five hundred million dollar commitment to support scientists studying the environment. and the gulf is open for business - the beaches are beautiful, the seafood is delicious. last year, many areas even reported record tourism seasons. the progress continues... but that doesn't mean our job is done. we're still committed to seeing this through. my name is sunshine and i have three beautiful girls. i like taking advil® for a headache. it nips it in the bud. and i can be that mommy that i want to be. ♪ [ male announcer ] take action. take advil®. make that new stouffer's steam meal so tasty. actually, the milk from my farm makes it so creamy, right dad. dad can see... boys! don't you think stouffer's steam perfect bag should get some credit? my carrots. my milk. [ female announcer ] new from stouffer's. farmers' harvest steam meals taste so good we'll bet the farm on it. do you really think brushing is enough to keep it clean? while brushing misses germs in 75% of your mouth,
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what if we told you that college kids are studying less than ever before? that's what some new research shows. and while you mieth be tempted to say it's a lack of discipline or perhaps too much fun during those four years, as our chief education correspondent rehema ellis found out, it is a sign of the times. >> many college students spent the last few weeks hard at work studying for final examines. dan calls it crunch time. >> basically, you're in the
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library, not sleeping at all. it kicks up. >> margie is a neuroscience major and rack said up lots of study hours. >> between 25 and 35. >> but research shows that's more the exception than the rule. the national survey of student engagement reveals college students are actually studying less than they did 50 years ago. back then, the average study time was 24 hours a week. that's dropped to about 15 hours. >> time might be an overly simplistic pleasure. >> julianne has spent more than a dede studying study habits. >> what students put into their college education is a good measure of estimate of the value they get out of it. >> today, those measure mentds are often equated with cost. some wonder, shouldn't studying time be up, too. while some might think college is easier today, students we
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talked to disagree, saying they just study more efficiently. >> 15 hours teaching yourself material for four or five classes is perfectly adequate. >> others credit the modern age, saying technology reduces time spent in the library reading and writing. >> it's easier now, i would say, finding information. >> cynthia says like many students across the united states, students at cal state northridge say students have more. >> the vast majority are working and working far more than the 20 hours a week we suggest. >> junior lauren grazer juggles nor than a full course load. >> full time student, full time job. >> this new generation of students finding new ways to learn in and out of the class room. when we come back, the golden gate bridge, even more
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you are looking at and listening to the spectacular celebration last night as the golden gate bridge capped off its 75th anniversary celebration with a fireworks and laser light show. and san francisco's famous fog held off to make for a perfect night to view that big finale. at the movies this holiday weekend, "men in black 3" knocked off the "avengers" from its perch at number one movie in america. the will smith/tommy lee jones reunion took in an estimated $70 million at the box office to the a"avengers" $sfoert million. the astronauts on the international space station are spending this holiday working,
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unloading the cargo delivered by the private, unmanned spacex capsule. the astronauts are spending today and tomorrow with the payloeld, unloading food, clothes, and science experiments. a grandmother making a difference in her community, memorial day and every day. companies have to invest in making things. infrastructure, construction, production. we need it now more than ever. chevron's putting more than $8 billion dollars back in the u.s. economy this year. in pipes, cement, steel, jobs, energy. we need to get the wheels turning. i'm proud of that. making real things... for real. ...that make a real difference. ♪ spending the day with my niece. i don't use super poligrip for hold because my dentures fit well. before those little pieces would get in between
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we leave you this memorial day with a story of a woman hooz live has been all about service. from pitching in to help her country during world war ii up to the present day, volunteering to help kids. irma klatt has never stopped making a difference. here is mikheil almaguer. >> irma klatt hasn't lost a step. most days, you'll find her in the class room in big sky elementary in billings, montana. at age 84, irma is a full-time volunteer, what is known as a foster grandparents tending m t mostly to second graders with special needs. 4 times 4. >> to these students, she's just grandma. >> i care for children and they
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keep me young and healthy. and i couldn't think of a better job. >> grandma irma has always loved children, maybe in part because of what she went through as a child. at age 4, she became a foster kid. >> can went from one foster home to another because my father couldn't take care of me. >> she bounced between eight homes during the height of the depression. at 16, forced to give up school, irma answered her country's call to duty. while the men were away fighting in world war ii, she helped build and repair battleships. >> that's pretty tough work for a 16-year-old. >> i didn't think of it that way. i just did it. >> are you thoprovide of that t? >> absolutely. >> this great grandmother knows sacrifice well, her family spans five generations of military veterans. >> this is my grandfather, a civil war veteran. >> today her ground daughter carries on the family tradition.
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>> i think i pick up a lot of my independence from her. she's kind of a little fire cracker. >> and an inspiration. irma captures the hearts of students. and the admiration of staff. >> her whole life has been a life of service in one form of another. but just because you're 84 doesn't mean you have to stop. >> now in her 16th year in the classroom, the riveter who never graduated high school leads by example. do you ever think about retiring? >> no, never. >> a foster grandmother who continues to serve after decades of sacrifice. miguel almaguer, nbc news. billings, montana. >> and that's our broadcast for this monday evening. thank you for being with us. i'm savannah guthrie. brian will be right back here tomorrow evening. and as we leave you on this memorial day, images of how america remembered those who gave everything for the country they loved. have a good evening.
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