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washington's basilica of the national shrine of the immaculate conception. as he walked through the basilica, the faithful who filled the aisles strained to see or even touch him. >> reporter: before he made his way where he prayed in private. then on the steps of the largest catholic church in north america at a temporary outdoor altar, he celebrated mass in spanish, his native language. unlike earlier speeches, he avoided controversial issues like immigration and religious freedom and focussed on what it means to be a catholic. go out to tell the good news, fearlessly, he said, without prejudice, superiority, and con de desengs. >> reporter: the crowd was full of young people.
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many saying they've never felt so good about being catholic and praised the pope for his nonjudgmental style. a highlight of the more than two hour ceremony was the elevation of junipero serra to saint hood. he was a mission tearary in california. it's the first cannonization mass on u.s. soil. he quoted serra's motto. keep moving forward. for him, the pope said this was the way to continue experiencing the joy of the gospel. not only did the pope speak in span spanish, but junipero serra, the new saint is from spain, and the large part of the audience was spanish. this was a big day for hispanics in the catholic church. >> thank you for much.
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serra is controversial, and carter carter evans found out why. >> reporter: junipero serra was honored, but protesters denounced him. people look at this building right here, and they see history. what do you see? >> i see pain for my ancestors and a change in our entire world. >> reporter: for corinna gould, this is sacred ground. thousands of her ancestors are buried here in unmarked graves. for her, serra left a brutal legacy in his drive to baptize indians. >> once you were baptized and you became catholic i don't recollect you lost your freedom. you become the property of the chunk. >> serra doesn't see that. he sees indians as naked and hungry, hungering for food and for salvation in christ.
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>> reporter: steven hackel says serra is seen as a founding father. his presence is everywhere. >> i think the pope is trying to open up an understanding of our american origin. it's catholic priests throughout the continent. >> father serra was european. he was white. he was not hispanic. and gould believes the church is ignoring an ugly chapter in california history. >> the mission system he brought created destruction in our culture. >> reporter: serra is the first spanish speaking saint from the u.s. the pope waived the usual rule requiring two miracles for saint hood and accepted just one. >> carter evans, thanks. our coverage of pope francis's visit continues tomorrow morning with the first papal address
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house and the senate. volkswagen's chief pays the price for cheating. the ceo who raised drug prices 5,000% has been making enemies for years. and the pope makes a virtue of social media. the cbs overnight news will be right back. geico motorcycle, great rates for great rides. we've been changing things up with k-y love. oh yeah. it's a pleasure gel that magnifies both our sensations.
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the ceo of volkswagen resigned today. he admitted that volkswagen perpetrated an ingenius fraud, rigging 11 million diesel cars to recognize when their emissions were being tested and automatically cheat on the test. vw stock has lost a third of its value, $28 billion, since monday. we're still waiting to hear from another ceo on the promise he made last night to roll back the price of a drug that is used by
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he raised the price from $13.50 a pill to $750. don dahler has been looking into it. >> reporter: the moment he announced a 5,000% increase in the price of dare prime, the internet exploded. he was called a disgusting specimen of humanity. >> i don't think there's been a lot of backlash. i think that the backlash is from people who don't understand health care very well, and hopefully i'll educate how the system works. >> shkreli's bio says he has a bachelor from baruch college. he learned about health care as a hedge fund manager. >> you see how that looks? you came from the world of hedge fund, going into pharmaceuticals. why not if not to make lots of money?
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>> it will be win win. >> reporter: his first drug company kicked him out and filed suit in august for $65 million. he's alleged to have used his control over retrophin who enrich himself and buy back investors in his hedge funds who lost millions in a bad investment. an earlier lawsuit brought by a former employee accusedd shkreli of a harassing his family. and a facebook post to his 16-year-old son, saying i want you to know about your dad. he betrayed me. he stole $3 million from me. >> that lawsuit was settled. the current lawsuit with retrophin alleges shkreli spent more time moving large amounts of money than he did developing
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that's next. baseball hall-of-famer yogi berra died last night. perhaps it's fitting it happened during a papal visit. he famously met joun the 23rd and fleetgreeted him with hello, pope. >> berra is the first batter up. >> reporter: he was 5'8" with a body one magazine said only an anthropologist could love.
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>> he got it. >> reporter: he was behind the plate in 1956 when don larson pitched the only perfect game in world series history. >> yoiggi berra runs out. >> reporter: an all-star 15 consecutive seasons. he played on 10 championship teams and later managed cross town rivals the new york mets where in the midst of a slump he famously said. >> it's not over until it's over. >> he led the mets to the world series. presidents quoted him. >> when you come to a fork in the road, take it. >> we may be lost but we're making good time. >> it gets dark early out here. >> reporter: yogi said he was never trying to be funny. >> i don't know i say them. i don't know. >> it led to a second career in
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>> it's got a third less calories than i probably thought it didn't even have. >> reporter: insurance. >> and they give you cash, which is just as good as money. >> who is this guy? >> at his hall of fame induction, he thanked baseball. >> it's given me more than i could have hoped for. >> and he always thanked his wife, who died last year. behind every good man is a good woman, yogi berra also said. behind me usually was an umpire. anthony mason, cbs news, new york. >> asked once if he'd had an audience with pope john, berra replied nope, but i met with him. pope francis is meeting millions
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story, next. finally tonight, pope francis is the leader of an ancient church, but he's learned to use the most modern communication to spread the word. he's among the most retweeted leaders in the world, and he calls the internet a gift from god. from the moment the pope left the vatican embassy this morning, his every step was captured by a smart phone.
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the elusive papal selfie was the real prize. this is what you saw on this girl's facebook page. the teenager from lithuania got one of the first selfies, posting, i feel absolutely blessed. this boy was all smiles on instagram, and this girl got the pope's back, literally. this man nearly bent over backwards to get a shot. at the white house welcoming ceremony, people far from center stage and those close enough to use both pope and president as a backdrop wanted to prove that they were there. even celebrities posted from the white house lawn. actress eva longoria wrote a yearing a year ago i asked my sister who do you most want to meet in the world, her answer, the pope. and here we are. >> you could almost watch the parade from a network of cell
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those who were too much away made the best of it posting with toys, a painting or a pet dog. when else could you see a group of none tailgating. everyone wanted to be a part of the moment. one boy posted his crayon written letter. pope francis, we pray for you. we believe. that's the cbs overnight news for this thursday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back with us a little later for the morning news, and cbs this morning. from the catholic university of
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scott pelley. >> this is the cbs overnight news. >> welcome to the overnight news. pope francis continues his historic pill grammage to the united states, and he has a lot on his schedule. this morning francis becomes the first pope to address a joint meeting of the u.s. congress. he's got several stops around the capital planned before boarding a plane for new york and evening prayers at st. patrick's kacathedral. here's some of our coverage. >> reporter: tens of thousands gathered along constitution avenue to catch a glimpse of francis, the people's pope who stopped along the way to embrace small children and bask in the glow of his first american audience.
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he began his day greeting school kids gathers outside of his sleeping quarters. taking time for handshakes and hugs. then his holiness in all his humility drove in a small fiat 500 to an elaborate white house ceremony. he was welcomed by the president, mrs. obama, and 11,000 ticketed guests. >> i should explain that our backyard is not typically this crowded. in your humility, we see a living example of jesus's teaching. a leader whose moral authority comes not just through words but also through deeds. >> reporter: the holy father drew upon that moral authority to address issues more political than pastoral like immigration and climate change. >> as the son of an immigrant
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in this country, which was lastly build by such families. i find it enchurchingouraging that you're proposing an initiative for reducing air pollution. >> reporter: it was then onto a cathedral for a mass in spanish with 280 bishops. and for the first time in his visit, he spoke about one of catholicism's darkest chapters, the sexual abuse of children by clergy. he never addressed the victims directly but vowed to ensure that much crimes will never be repeated. >> reporter: sophie cruz squeezed through security barriers.
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she's put a new face on the debate over immigration reform. she traveled to washington from los angeles with her father. >> what did you do? >> i ran to the pope. >> what did you give him? this. >> reporter: in her letter, she asks francis to help all immigrant children. the secret service held sophie back but when the pope saw her, he waved her over, and blessed her. it reminded us of a moment last year when another girl from los angeles greeted the pope in st. peters square in rome. she traveled there to help her father, marrow yo. >> my dad was going to be deported. and millions of children are also suffering in my same situation, and he blessed me and told me he was going to talk
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>> not long after, her father was released, and his case is now under review. jersey was in washington today, hoping for another meeting with the pope. >> i'm passionate because of bhapd to my dad. i also want to make a difference in the world. i won't stop fighting until immigration reform happens. >> reporter: and jan crawford has been speaking to many folks who have spent hours today waiting for just a few seconds that they will remember the rest of their lives. >> reporter: for the thousands who line the streets just hoping for a glimpse, it was a moment. >> it was awesome. my heart is still beating from seeing the pope. >> reporter: they came from everywhere. >> puerto rico. >> memphis, tennessee. >> nashville. >> pittsburgh. mexico. >> reporter: many waiting for
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hours. >> you came in late last night, and camped out in. >> right here. midnight. >> reporter: milton leon and his family got in line for a spot in the front. >> i saw him very well. i was yelling francesco. >> reporter: his wife cried. >> my whole body was shaking, and my heart was just going up. >> reporter: for all the security and pageantry, it was a day when fran tis touchcis touched the people. this 17-year-old waited in line hoping to share his family's christmas card with a picture of his older brother, andrew who passed away five months ago. >> he gave almost a fatherly look that he really cared about each and every individual. it was the best moment of my life. >> reporter: making his way through the crowd, his focus was the children, even the youngest
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connected with the 78-year-old. and if given a chance, had to take a selfie. >> your finger got in the way. >> reporter: or in the case of 11-year-old walter cunningham, a shaky video on a cell phone he can't wait to share with friend. >> i'm going to tell them that i saw the pope and they should have been here. >> reporter: junipero serra was honored. but 430 miles north, protesters denounced him. people look at this building and see history. what do you see? >> i see pain for my ancestors and a change in our entire world. >> reporter: for corinna gould, this is sacred ground. thousands of her ancestors are buried here in unmarked graves. for her, serra left a brutal legacy in his drive to boopaptize indians.
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you became catholic, you lost your freedom altogether. you become the property of the church. >> serra sees indians as naked, as hungry, as hungering, literally for food and for salvation in christ. >> reporter: this history professor says for many hispanics in california, serra is seen as a founding father. >> i think what the pope is trying to do is open up an understanding of our american origin. it wasn't just anglo-american assistants but catholic priests throughout the continent. >> he was white. he was not hispanic. >> reporter: gould believes the church is ignoring an ugly part of the system. >> it created destruction of who we were as a people and our culture.
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>> david gilmore sold more than 200 million records as a guitarist for pink floyd. he kept the floyd alive for 30 years but now insists the band is done. he has a new solo album out and a tour planned for next year, and he sat down with anthony mason for cbs this morning. >> reporter: an his own and with pink floyd, david gilmore has been making music for more than five decades. in the process of a birth and a performance of a song, what's the most thrilling part of it for you? >> when you realize that you have a little germ of an idea that is -- has, i suppose, i can
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magic. there are lots of exciting bits. the first time you hear one of your tracks on the radio. >> >>. >> reporter: this still thrills you. >> you have this idea there are millions of people listening to it at the same time as you, and that little, strange telepathy of feeling that you're sharing something live with all those people. >> reporter: with his first solo album in nine years, gillmoregilmore's music is over the air waves again. how does it work when you start writing? >> mostly, i record a track, a song, without words. >> reporter: gilmore, he lives in an english seaside town, then shares his music with his wife.
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she has written most of his liarics for 20 years. >> i walk for miles with it on repeat on headphones. the more i walk and listen, things start emerging, and the music is suggestive. david speaks with the my guitar. >> reporter: they have eight children between them and first connected through mutual friends. >> they sat us together at a dinner party on more than one occasion. >> for about two years. >> reporter: trying to make something catch? >> didn't catch. >> took a while. >> reporter: what finally did catch? >> he needed someone to write the words? >> reporter: he first asked her to write for pink floyd's album, the division bell. she wanted to do it anonymously. >> reporter: you didn't want your name on it? >> no. >> didn't you know? >> reporter: you didn't want to be a target? i didn't want to be a target.
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roger waters. >> reporter: but she filled them. in the title of the new album, she took inspiration from milton's paradise lost. what did you think when you heard it? >> terrific. when she finally told me what it was all about. >> reporter: another song, a boat lies waiting, emerges as a tribute to pink floyd keyboardist, rick wright to died in 2008. >> we miss rick as a friend and person, and it was at that point you realized exactly what you lost in terms of music, 50 years of reading each other's musical minds. >> you develop a sort of telepathy. >> yeah. i do miss that. >> gilmore was 2 1 when he was asked to join pink floyd because
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had experimented with drugs was exhibited increasingly erratic behavior. >> reporter: you'd been friends for a while. >> yeah. >> reporter: that must have been hard to watch. >> it's very hard to watch someone deteriorate like that. it was a funny guy. we had hitchhiked around the south of france and stayed in camp sites and basked on the sea front and been arrested for our troubles, and so we'd spent a lot of times. friend from about 14. >> reporter: how did you feel as that was going on? >> it felt tragic that someone was -- because it felt permanent. it felt that what was happening to him was a rapid detier youruation of his mental macfaculty faculties faculties.
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time when i was playing his parts and singing his words. i don't know how long it took for me to find my own sort of voice. >> reporter: did you know when you found it? >> i can remember a moment when i suddenly started liking my own voice. that was weird. you know that thing when you hear your voice. >> reporter: gilmore went onto become one of rock's most acclaimed guitarist racknked 14 of the all time greatest list. but after the success with dark side of the moon and the wall, gilmore and roger waters battled for control of the band. >> how did you get around it? >> you pretend they're not there. we certainly don't face up to them in an adult way, if that's what you mean. >> reporter: waters quit pink
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floyd in 1985. a bitter legal battle followed, and he wouldn't play in the group again until 28 years later. gilmore and waters have since reunited at charity concerts. >> you played together a couple years ago. are you guys okay? >> it's a funny old thing. you know, it's now ten years ago that we did live eight, and that was good to be on a more or less friendly basis again after years and years of difficult times. the charity gig we did, we sat up half the noise laughing and drinking. that was good. there's not -- we don't talk to each other very much. >> you don't? >> no.
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out on a new solar tour, he insists pink floyd's 2014 album, the endless river, is their last. you're finished with pink floyd? >> yeah. i have been for a long time. it's impossible to go back and do that without rick, and there would be no great joy in it. it ran its course in a wonderful way, and -- i don't miss it. >> reporter: you don't? >> no.
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side of manhattan have been waiting for a subway line. their dream is finally close to becoming a reality. >> reporter: it's no longer just a pipeline. ten stories under ground, nearly two miles of track have been layed. platforms build and three stations taking place. the work is about 85% complete. >> the next 15% are probably the toughest. we're talking about integrating a brand new line with something that goes back 100 years. >> reporter: michael oversees the project for the mta authority. for many new yorkers it feels like this has been going on for 100 years. >> i have been told i am at least 86 years behind. >> reporter: cbs this morning hired a drone company to survey
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what's the biggest challenge? >> the anobstacles. >> reporter: the second avenue subway was proposed in the 1920s but funding was derailed by the great depression and world war ii, the 70s financial crisis, and the cost of maintaining the world east largest subway system. the subway line became a punch line. >> when they finish the subway, there value will quadruple. railroad >> reporter: phase one is on track, but the original plan called for a subway that is 8 and a half miles long finished by 2020. a former mta planning manager doubts more stations will open during his lifetime. >> the whole thing when it's done, they'll need another $6 billion for the next phase, and
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they don't have the money. >> reporter: phase two? >> we don't have the funds. >> reporter: where will the funds come from? >> at this point, we are actually working with the state. >> reporter: you think the state is still committed to finishing this project? >> i believe so, yes. >> reporter: the cash strapped mta has a $14 billion hole in its capital program, but phase one isn't to blame, unlike other huge public works like boston's big dig, this one is expected to come in under budget. right now the east side of manhattan, home to about 650,000 people, more than the entire population of nashville, has just one subway line. >> it carries more people than boston and chicago and san francisco combined. it's so crowded that when people try to get on the train, they crash into the people getting off the train. >> reporter: do you ever think
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be right back.ng pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing pc- cbs caption test !!! maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 67890 cbs caption test !!! maint. testing pc-17 f1 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 12345 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 678 it's ryan's cell phone. gibbs: isolate calls from psy-ops, government-issued lines. there's five or six different numbers here. cross-reference with incoming calls to banks over the past month. when the engines failed on the plane i was flying,
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i knew what to do to save my passengers. but when my father sank into depression, i didn't know how to help him. when he ultimately shot himself, he left our family devastated. don't let this happen to you. if you or a loved one is suicidal, call the national suicide prevention lifeline. no matter how hopeless or helpless you feel, with the right help, you can get well. [music] narrator: of all the things you've done with your bike, donating it to goodwill may be the most incredible of all. your donations help fund job placement and training for people in your community. which means your stuff can be more powerful than you think.
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a dozen years after his death, artist al hershfield continues to bring rave reviews. there's a new view of his art stretching across seven decades. we have a look for sunday morning. >> i found myself growing more and more in line and less and less in color, and i developed an affinity for line that hasn't left me. >> reporter: bottom line, he became the legendary caricaturist. all captured elegantly with the stroke of a pen. >> i like to think it's like poetry, where the writer finds just the right word to summon up a whole lot of things, and
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he wanted every line to count. >> reporter: david lleopold is the curator of the exhibit. >> reporter: wall to wall caricatures of hollywood stars. >> nothing about the emmy or tony, they're all wonderful. performers like to win them, but the thing they have in the center of their living room is his drawing. when they got drawn by him, they knew they had arrived.
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hershfield passed away in 2003. by that point he had drawn thousands of images, earning the nickname the lion king, but as he explained shortly before his death, the power of those simple lines was a mystery, even to him. >> suddenly some kind of magic takes place, and there's a drawing, and it looks pretty much like you had in your mind, and when it works, it does. you know? the drawing begins to look more like the person than the person really looks like, you know? >> that's the cbs overnight news for this thursday. for some of you the news continues. for others, check back with us in a little while for the
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