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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  September 2, 2016 7:00am-8:56am EDT

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captioning funded by cbs good morning. it is friday, second 2nd, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning.? hermine hammers the southeast after making landfall as a hurricane. 80-mile-an-hour winds and destructive storm surge pound the coast. hermine's next move will impact millions. plus, new fears that hermine could help the zika virus spread farther and faster. for the first time, mosquitoes have been found carrying the virus inside the mainland united states. and a luxury cruise liner making history this morning in canada's treacherous northwest passage. an ice breaker, two hospitals,
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polar bear used to enjoy. we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener." your world in 90 seconds. this storm is life-threatening. we are going to have significant winds, significant power lines down. we are going to have a lot of downed trees. >> hermine smashes into the southeast. >> flooding potential right up through georgia, south carolina. across eastern north carolina. >> it's pretty nerve wracking. you see the trees bending. >> he said i'm not paying for the wall and i said you are paying for the wall. >> give me a break. this is a guy born with a silver spoon in his mouth but now is choking on because his foot is in his mouth, along with his spoon. >> the first time infected mosquitoes have been found in the united states. >> in the final preseason game of the year, colin kaepernick, the 49ers quarterback, refused
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from now on. >> a mother is demanding an investigation after jetblue put her 5-year-old son on the wrong flight home. >> in florida, the spacex falcon nine rocket was preparing for a test when it just blew up. >> all that. >> in pasadena, california, bear on the loose dipping into somebody's pool and eventually they hokpped into a dumpster. what a jackpot. >> a baby >> both hillary clinton and donald trump are motivated by fear and gary johnson relvets are motivated by being related to gary johnson. >> thousands of criminal to do what they want to do. crime all over the place. >> they crime all over the
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here a crime, there a crime, everywhere a crime crime. announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. ? welcome to "cbs this morning." charlie rose and gayle king are off. josh elliott of cbsn and demarco morgan are here together. >> a good week we have had. >> off we go. >> the first hurricane toit through the pan handle after being downgrade to do a tropical storm. hermine packed a powerful storm surge and heavy rain causing significant damage to a broad area of the northeast gulf coast. >> it made landfall overnight with top wind of 80 miles an hour. the storm is now headed toward the atlantic coast. our correspondents are all over the impacted areas. mark strassmann begins our on
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good morning. >> reporter: good morning. here on the georgia/south carolina border, the residents here on hunkered down for the back half of the storm. wind gusts up to 65 miles an hour. but the real story today is going to be rain. forecasted for 4 to 8 inches here. possibly 10 inches by tomorrow. storm surge here, maybe ten feet when high tide hits in a couple of hours. potential for both coastal and inland flooding and all the sand so sandbags can be put to residents and businesses and lifeguards holding a red flag here. a day at the beach is off to a rough start. >> omar villafranca is near where the storm came ashore in florida. >> reporter: hermine made
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thousands of trees like this one were toppled over. this one happens to be 50 feet tall and now blocking this road. thousands of people are still without power and that storm surge flooded entire communities. overnight, hermine smashed into florida's gulf coast. making landfall as a category one hurricane around eastern time, dumping torrential rain. >> i can't see! oh, my gosh! >> reporter: and unleashing powerful winds of 80 miles per hour. the first hurricane to hit the state of florida in more than a decade has already knocked out power to tens of thousands of people. roads in alligator harbor have
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projected to be up to 12 feet high, are pummeling coastal areas. evacuations are under way north of tampa where water has jumped over sea walls and started to push into homes. >> i don't know if my house is flooded or isn't. it's really, really bad. like, i've never seen it like this before. >> reporter: as hermine churns northward. >> the street is completely under water. >> reporter: it's soaking parts of florida that have already seen close t governor rick scott has declared a state of emergency in 51 counts, with 6,000 national guardsman on standby and urging everyone not to take any chances with this storm. >> we can rebuild a home, we can rebuild a business. we cannot rebuild your life. >> reporter: the storm has lost some of its destructive power as it head north into georgia.
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norah? >> that is some good news. omar, thank you so much. here is a new view from nasa that shows the scope of the storm. you can see hermine stretches across much of the southeastern united states. meteorologist lissette gonzalez of wfor is tracking its path. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. hermine made landfall as a category one hurricane just east of st. marks, florida. that was overnight around 1:30 a.m. although it has weakened into a tric and north florida. even up through georgia and the carolinas. right now under a tornado watch so the threat for flooding and storm surge and tornadoes are continuing. look for the forecast and move across georgia and into the carolinas as we head into the next couple of days. into the weekend a lot of uncertainty. we could have a remnant area of low pressure just offshore. the mid-atlantic, the northeast coast. regardless, all of that moisture will provide for an additional 4
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carolinas and tropical storm force winds and rip currents and to stay on high alert and aware what happens with hermine over the next few days. >> the tropical storm could have a devastating affect on florida's fine against zika. for the first time, officials have trapped mosquitoes carrying the virus in the continental united states. the insects were found within the miami beacha officials are responding. >> reporter: good morning. the discovery of zika inside those mosquitoes confirms that the insects are, in fact, spreading the virus here in the united states. and as hurricane hermine hits florida, where 49 people have been infected by local transmission, the state's governor is bracing for the impact. >> we have got to get rid of standing water. the most important thing to do now and after this storm hits. >> reporter: in the lead-up to
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officials have been relentless removing even the smallest traces of water to stop the spread of sflzika. after inspecting nearly 2,500 samples, florida officials identified the virus in three groups of mosquitoes trapped in miami beach. a first in the continental united states. >> if there are positive traps, we know when, we know where. all right? we can identify where this transmission is occurring. >> reporter: one of those positive traps was at the miami be temporarily closed while crews remove its featured plants. the flowers collect mosquitoes where they can breed. while hurricane hermine could drop more than a foot of rain in parts of the state, scientists say its impact on mosquitoes is a double-edged sword. >> the good news about hurricanes is they can wash away mosquito populations. the downside is that the
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control and then as the floodwaters recede, we could see the reappearance of mosquitoes. >> reporter: another problem florida is facing is fighting zika is the cost. the director of the cdc said this week, that funds have almost run out. the house will consider a $1.1 billion zika bill when it returns from vacation next week. >> michelle, thank you so much. donald trump's immigration plan is getting backla supporters on the day after he promised to enforce the law and deport immigrant law breakers trump sent mixed signals. >> reporter: for donald trump, spelling out his immigration policy is proving to be more difficult than maybe even he expected, raising doubts for hispanic supporters who are key to helping him catch hillary clinton in the polls. >> this is just the start of a
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i mean, this is no different than any deal. >> reporter: donald trump said thursday his meeting with mexico president pena nieto would eventually result in mexico paying for trump's border wall. >> he said i'm not paying for the wall and i said you're paying for the wall and we will see what happens. >> reporter: the problem is that immediately after wednesday's meeting, trump claimed the payment issue never came up. and, yet, his host emphasized on twitter what he said he told the caat wall. >> mexico will pay for the wall. >> reporter: the proposal is central to the immigration plan trump laid out in phoenix on wednesday night, including a stark warning to undocumented u.s. residents. >> anyone who has entered the united states illegally is subject to deportation. >> reporter: trump's tough tone
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>> we heard a populace propaganda con artist and i'm done with with it. >> not only did he double down on his proposals but i think they are worse. >> reporter: sever members of his council took a cue to quit. one record to the republican national committee that trump's council is a scam formed simply for optics. now in two separate interviews yesterday, donald trump said, this immigration plan is a softening of o wednesday night, was so boisterous, they may have misunderstood him. still, what trump actually intends to do remains unclear. josh? >> dean, thank you. hillary clinton will have at least one more distraction before election day dating from her time as secretary of state. the associated press is reporting the state department plans now to release all of her detailed planning schedules from then by mid october.
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questions about the clinton foundation's access to the department. the campaign announced yesterday that 37 clinton fund-raisers in august helped bring in about $143 million for the campaign and the democratic party. the campaign has more than $68 million in cash on hand for the final stage of the race. polls show the race got tighter last month as clinton held just 19 campaign events compared to 42 for donald trump. clinton is now promising to bring reporters on her campaign plane, somethi done before. cbs news political director and "face the nation" moderator john dickerson is here. >> good morning. >> let's start with the "usa today" supporters say candidates are more motivate by fear of the other candidate than excitement about the person they are supporting. >> that's right. >> once again, a reminder this may be a referendum election? >> absolutely. 80% of trump voters are voting for him because they are scared of clinton and 62% are voting
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for some people. it's a referendum how bad the other person are and this is a election people are not motivated by. they are motivated by the fear of the alternative and what that means actually is not only is it going to be potentially continually a depressing election but how do you build a mandate for governing? whoever wins there will be a sourness to the victory and that is something you have to deal with when you get the hispanic advisory counsel pill inspect its own candidate position with regard to immigration words like con artist and scam, never good for a nominee. and w"the washington post" has story how trump got from point a to point a on immigration. it seems everybody, including the nominee, is a bit confused here. >> it's weird to be confused on this signature issue this late in the campaign. usually in this part of the campaign, a candidate is reaching out to new groups and
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core constituency. was he taking the rough edges off of it as a pitch to republican voters who found him too risky and too volatile. that has been muddled. it has been budgeded a little. he had this show event in mexico which was also aimed at those voters which got some great reviews as a pure act of theater. no substance to it. but then that has been a little bit and confusion and the reiteration of his harder positions. >> john, "the new york times" is actually reporting that trump's campaign is planning pretty heavy for his visit to an african-american church tomorrow in detroit. they are also talking about scripting answers to questions and they have been submitted in advance. >> the old donald trump said if you use a teleprompter that qualifies you for the presidency and meant you have no thoughts of your own.
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the questions but the answers for this event. this is part of the new strategy to show he is a different candidate than the one that is frightening that group of republican voters and people think the key hurdle for donald trump can he inhabit the office? does he have the judgment and temperament to inhabit the office? the show events are meant to show that he can kind of behave more like a normal candidate. >> but is it genuine? >> you mean the outreach, itself? >> yes. >> well, i think they would like to get the voters in the african-american community, i think that is not the only audience. the audience is these republicans who worry about him and it's a larger part of the electorate and trying to, again, make the notion he is kind of a traditional candidate. they are trying to make him look normal because what he is -- the old donald trump has a limited constituency. >> john dickerson, thank you. we look forward to seeing you on the late show with stephen colbert tonight and sunday on "face the nation." john speaks with new jersey governor chris christie and
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spacex says an anomaly called a dramatic rocket explosion on a launch pad. it blew up yesterday in cape canaveral, florida. a 200 million dollar satellite was on board and facebook planned to provide it for examine outer space. >> reporter: the rocket was full of fuel when it blew up. the rocket was scheduled to take off from cape canaveral on something went wrong. massive flames shot into the air on the launch pad before part of the falcon 9 rocket came crashing to the ground. in a tweet, spax spacex ceo elon mask said the following. nearly 200 million dollar satellite named was also destroyed in the blast.
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mark zuckerberg said i'm sorry to see it failed to launch our satellite. we will keep working to provide what the satellite could have provided. spacex spacex has launched successful launches. last june,no takeoff. no one was hurt. >> this is a major setback for spacex and its customers, including nasa. >> reporter: cbs news space consultant bill harwood says the latest incident could impact the international space station which partially relies on spacex to deliver their supplies. >> clearly, these rockets have to get flying again or nasa will run into problems at some point keeping the international space station supplied. >> reporter: the next space
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still unclear if that launch will be impacted by thursday's event. >> what is interesting to hear about this, that this satellite would have helped deliver internet access. >> to lots of people. san francisco 49ers quarterback colin kaepernick takes his protest of the national anthem to a military community. ahead, the crowd's backlash over his controversial stance and how he has inspired other athletes good morning to you. we are tracking closely tropical storm hermine moving across the southern portions of georgia. now, it will approach south carolina. next stop, our air, but the outer bands associated with this system already being felt. we have light rain around fayetteville, offshores portions of samson county, even steedier rain from time to time through moore and lee counties. temperatures before you head out, 73 in raleigh and durham.
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this morning" sponsored by macy's. tropical storm hermine cause damage, flooding and general misery for a wide stretch of florida. >> ahead, an update on the storm that threatens much of the east coast. the news is back in the
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? ahead, we will hear from the mother of the young boy who jetblue sent to boston, instead of new york. she says when she showed up at the airport, the airlines brought her a different boy. >> i can't imagine.
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discuss the election campaign. your local news is next. north carolina news starts now. >> at 7:26 this morning, we are tracking tropical storm hermine this morning. we're going to get you over to our live report. tropical storm hermine is headed our way. it's made land fall in florida as a hurricane overnight before weakening once it got over land, but the rain and flooding will be here soon. live report. a.j. >> hey, since i last talked to you, it's gotten a little bit, i don't know, for lack of a better term, not nice out. starting to rain a little bit more, and if you can see behind me, the waves have been getting a little bit more consistent, a little bit heavier rolling in. there's stilleoplout. i don't know if you can see on the pier, there arewo fishermen ess trying to get
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rolls in. there's a guy steppingp to the pier getting ready to cast. we've been speaking to officials in oak island. what they are doing today is essentially preparing for what could be the worst here. they don't have any expectations, but i was speaking with the director of emergency management in brunswick county, and what heold me was around noon today, they were going to open their emergency operations center and kind of be ready for anything. they want people to be aware of possible flooding. if you are driving around and see areas flooded, be cautious and not take any risks. i did also speak with the mayor of oak island. it is labor day weekend. this is a big weekend. about 45,000 people are expected to come to the beach for this weekend, and she says even though the storm is coming, they still are holding their labor day festivities. >> we did move our arts and craft festival to sunday just in
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buckling down, and we're paying attention, but we're not frightened. we don't think it's going to be that huge event on us, not like it's coming in on florida. >> we're going to be live out here throughout the rest of the day with more updates from oak island. i'm going to send it back to alyssa, with more about that storm. let's go ahead and start off first with the flash flood watch in effect for tomorrow morning, in effect for nearly viewing area, 2 to 6 inches of rain possible. wind advisory will also go into effect this afternoon and continue until sad -- saturday morning. sustained wind gusts around the sand hills between 15 and 30 miles per hour, gusts up to 45 miles per hour. now, that storm moving awe cross the southern portions of georgia, will move up through south carolina today, arriving on the eastern portions of north carolina around 2 a.m. overnight. the rain ahead of it starting to spread pretty light, though, right around the sand hills. 73 right now in raleigh.
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? welcome back to "cbs this morning.? we want to show you these live pictures from tybee island, georgia. tropical storm hermine is heading right now and bringing legislative wind, rain, and strong surf. >> it roared across northern florida er up to 100,000 people in tallahassee have no power. flooding is causing a lot of problems as well. emerald moro of err tampa affiliate wtfp is inhudson, flora, northf tampa.
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richey got poundedovernight. the biggt prlem is ding. every sile directi you look therisng b war. you can see how serious of a problem it is. for the ople out here ts badha crews hado pull out their emergency vehicles andtartescuing peop. far, thehave hado evacte at least now we did talk to s p in this area a theha been doing everything to reey ut a l of opggg,hen hi tt is not enough andom p here fear that they are going to lose everything. norah? >> emald, thank you so much. we are going to ctinue to follow the storm t, first, time to show of some much this morning's adline san jose mercury news reports on the jail that brock turner is scheduled to be released today. the former stanford swimmer was sentenced to six months for sexually assaulting a woman and some called the punishment
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recalling some smartphones because users said the batteries exploded during charging. the recall affects the galaxy note 7 and the company has shipped 5 million of the devices to ten countries since its release last month. samsung says it will now replace them. "the washingt post" reports its frame to kill zika mosquitoes in south carolina wiped out millions of bees. officials say notices were issued by aerial spraying some bee keepers said they didn't know. outside of charleston and they got theushile traveling outside of the united states. president obama's visit to midway to highlight conservation efforts. the remote island is par of a marine reserve northwest of hawaii. it was expanded last week to become the world's largest protected area. the esent sd warmer temperatures caused by climate
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>> it's gorgeous. "usa today" ranks the college football matchups on what it calls o of the best opening weekend in years. i have to agree. the top in tomorrow's meinthird ranked oklaha floda state faces ole miss on monday. sunday, however, number 9 not dame atexas and top ranked alabama plays come saturday, l vitrow afternoon, of course, >rs terback is staying true to his won the tional anthem. last night he refused to stand for the national anthemore a preasout hwasot caer evans has more. >> reporter: good morning. this ,layer also refused to stand. now thisas a silentprotes
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standing up andng pride ary ttpresses, he says peoe with while the national anthem nee and joined this time knelt byric reed. >> we to show more respect to t men and women who fight for this country. >> reporter: even though, the crows reaction was loud and clear. meanwhile, at another game in oakland, california, another player, seahawks defensive back jeremy lane, also sat out the anthem in solidarity with kaepernick. >> i'm very happy, i'm very proud of him for doing that. >> reporter: kaepernick's ongoing protest came the same night as a lavish ceremony to honor the military here in san diego, its home port of the majority of the pacific fleet. kaepernick joined the applause
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saluted. >> the media painted this as i'm anti-american, anti-men and women of the military. and that is not the case at all. the message is that police brutality is a huge thing that need to be addressed. >> reporter: this week, photos surfaced showing the quarterback wearing socks with cartoon pigs dressed as police. he responded thursday on instagram, i wore these socks because the rogue cops, not only put the community in danger, but also put the cops that have the right intentions in danger. ? for the land ? >> reporter: kaepernick's post has already prompted a loud national debate. >> i think certainly it's disrespectful. he shouldn't be playing football and shouldn't be doing that. at least stand up for your country. >> reporter: miami dolphins running back arian foster spoke with kaepernick and shared his frustration. >> because we drink out of a
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very american thing. >> reporter: kaepernick says he is planning on doing more than just sitting out the national anthem. he told me that he is going to donate the first million dollars he makes this year to organizations that support justice for people of color. >> carter, thank you. i'm glad he is followi i up with that sort of action but this is going to create a lot of controversy. a mother from new york is asking for a federal investigation into how her 5-year-old son was put on a wrong flight by jetblue. unaccompanied minor last month after visiting family in the dominican republic. but instead of being flown home to new york, he wonund up in boston. anna werner is here with what the mother is saying. >> reporter: it was andy martinez macado first time traveling alone. his mother put her full faith in the airline to steward the little boy back home but she was shocked when the jetblue staff brought her another boy who was
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smiles and waves as he prepares for his departure from the dominican republic on august 17th. he was booked on a jetblue flight from santiago to new york's john f. kennedy international airport. his mother, maribell rodriguez paid a fee to have her son accompanied by a flight att attend attendant. speaking through a translator on thursday, martinez said after an >> translator: i was given another boy. >> reporter: martinez said she wafrantic and it took the airline three more agonizing hours until they could tell her that her son was almost 200 miles away in and the boy preso her each had boarded flights from santiago and both had arrived at incorrect destinations. jetblue told cbs news, our teams
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took steps to assist the children in reaching their correct destinations. ile thhildrenere alway unr the c and supervision of jetblue crewmembers, we realize the situation was distressing for the families. >> for three hours, she pleads - >> reporter: attorney rubenstein is representing the family. >> we reached to the faa requesting an independent investigation. >> reporter: martinez said she will never send her son on another solo f reunited. >> translator: and pride becau i had hiin my tha god. >> reporter: jetblue is promising a review of this incident. the airline refunded the family's flights. while it gave them a $2,100 credit toward future jetblue flights, martinez says she doubts she will cash in on that offer. >> i feel like we are missing another headline, however. there is another child to be
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the other family now. we don't know their story and what happened to tir child. >> i did not you could let a 5-year-old travel alone. >> i didn't either. i guess that is why the hundred dollars she played extra to have a flight attendanthepherd her child was important with >> really nice color with your dress. >> you too! ha ha. >> the memo was received! >> i called her this morng, come on! >> red day. the country's oldest catholic a addresses its painful past. ahead, georgetown'sew commitment to theescendts of 272 slaves that the school once sold. if you are heading ohe door, take us with you. you can watch us live through the cbs all-access app onour preferred digital device. you won't want to miss peter greenberg's report that a cruise ship is making history by
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i'm roy cooper, and you deserve the truth about the cre lab. when i became attorney general, we discovered a backlog of more than 5,000 dna test kits but what governomccrory isn't telling you is that we cleared the backlog. we also solved over 2,000 crimes and put killers and rapists in prison from cold cases. we fixed the problems at the crime l,
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? georgetown university is offering an act of contrition for its complicated past. the nation's oldest catholicnd jeit college announced yesterday it will give preference in admissions to descendents of 372 slaves it sold nearltwo centuries ago. at the time, the sale helped pay the school's debts. errol barnett is at the could now help lnch a national conversation. errol, good morning. >> rorter: good mornin on thursday the faculty here at georgetown university moved to reconcile its past and really make amends for what its president described as this country's original evil. >> this communy participated in the institution of slavery. this original evil that shaped
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d d joya acknowledged the history of slavery and he offered atonement. >> our moral agency must be channeled to undo this damage. >> reporter: and that effort creating an institute to stu slavery's legacy. georgetown will also re two buildings on campus, including one for a n- s nadisaa the university still has the document of $30 for his capture. the biggest offer may be the status to the descendents to the 27soldlaves andt could affect tens to 15,000 people. >> these are the faces. eporter: a small group o descendewe od thursday's uncent. >> i thinkacknowledge is power. the re you know andt your family and your
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stand, the more pride you have in yourself and the more you can speak yourself your people. >> reporter: these two came to washington from louisiana wh their ancestors reseled nearly two centuries ago. h how ou feel with this joo apology and reconciliation? >> i thi ajos aood place to begin. georgeto is reallyosd to really be a role model and how you have these types of diic a member of the working group that looked into the school's painful st. he says plenty of work lies ahead. >> this is the first good step on behalf of georgetown iversity. i'm really looking forwardo futu initiatives and further commitments of resources that the university has to reconcile the legacies of slaveries still today. >> reporter: now, currently, there are no plans to offer scholarships to those descendents but keep in mind,
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nation's few -- schools and the president explainso undergraduate is prevented from attending due to financial aid. >> i'm a georgetown graduate so i know that they have been working on this issue and i think they have done a beautiful job in handling being a role model. >> the woman said it, the best place to start is with an apology and acknowledging it. when a helicopter gets stuck in the mud, you don't call a tow truck. ahead, the high flying rescue
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the mud. fortunately, a massive chinook hospital able to lift it out. it took two attempts and adjustments of the cable. both helicopters were soon on their way back to base and no reports of injuries. i love chinook's. >> that is impressive. a storm moves up the coast after smashing through south florida. coastal towns are flooded and have no electricity. the latest when we come back. (chuckling) good luck with that, dave. ? you made the most of your retirement plan, ? ? so you better learn to drive that rv, man.? ? so many things you're doing in your life. ? ? ? nationwide is on your side. ? this is my body of proof.
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hillary clinton: i'm hillary clinton and i approve this message. bob kidder, owner, new england shirt company: this over sixty people here making shirts labled made in america. but donald trump's brand of shirts come from china, his suits from mexico, his coats from india. trump's products have been made in twelve other countries because he says there's no place in america that he can make them. well there is. you know donald trump says he'll make america great again while
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? it is friday, september 2nd, 2016. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? more real news ahead, including tropical storm hermine aim on teast coast after roarin on the gulf coast of florida last "eye opener" at 8:00. >> residents here are hunkered down for the back half of the storm. wind gusts up to 60 miles per hour. the real story today is rain. > thousands of people are still without power. that storm surge flooded entire communities. although it has weakened into a tropical storm, it is still drenching portions of
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florida and 49 people have been infected by zika transmission. trump's policy is proving to be more difficult than maybe even he expected. this poll shows supporters of both candidates are more motivated by fear than exciment about the person they are supporting. >> that is why this election feels so depressing to people. jetblue is promising a review of this incident. the airline refunded the family's flight. f there is another child to be accounted for, no? >> right. we are waiting to hear from the other family. >> i didn't know you could let a 5-year-old travel alone. >> unbelievable. >> really nice color with your dress, by the way. >> isn't that nice? and i like yours too! >> the memo -- >> i called her this morning, and said, come on! ? i'm norah o'donnell with
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charlie and gayle are off. tropical storm hermine is no longer a hurricane but still a threat and it hit florida's panhandle overnight 80-mile-an-hour winds and heavy rain. tens of thousands are without power. >> governor rick scott declared a state of emergency in 51 counties and national guardsmen troops on standby. mark strassmann is on tybee island north of sfaeavannah. >> we are between band of rain but they say more rain is on the way. take a look at this churning surf. high tide is a couple of hours away. storm surge could reach ten feet in this part of georgia and along the south carolina coast. and coastal flooding and inland flooding remain real worries all the way north to the state of maryland. here could get 4 to 8 inches of rain, maybe 10 inches by
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breakup over sea. this is a real worry all weekend long. hermine has clearly busted into everybody's labor day weekend plans here. >> mark, thank you. hermine's eye came ashore in st. marks, florida, south of tallahassee and caused significant damage in a state that hasn't seen a hurricane in 11 years. omar villafranca is in panacea, florida, where the storm made landfall. >> reporter: good morning. the storm strassmann up there in georgia. we are 15 miles away from where the storm made landfall and this is what we are seeing. a 50-foot tree is knocked over and blocking the road. thousands of people are still without power. the storm surge swallowed entire communities. the storm made landfall as a category one storm around 1:30 a.m. eastern time.
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evacuations are under way in areas north of tampa where water has jumped over sea walls and started to push into homes. as hermine moves north wart and drifting parts of florida have already seen close to two feet of rain the last three days. there is a silver lining with this, we have not heard of any fatalities yet in this storm but we are keeping an eye on that and we will let you know if anyone was killed in this storm. >> omar, thank you so ch wfor is tracking hermine as it moves toward the northeast. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. yes, hermine has weakened to a tropical storm as it's interacting with land and moving across georgia. however, still soaking central and north florida and it is forecast to continue moving towards the northeast as we head throughout the next few days. now we see a tornado watch is in place for portions of the coastline here of georgia and
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a threat for flooding and storm surge and tornadoes. here is the latest 8:00 a.m. advisory. 60 miles per hour winds and moving to the east and forecast to move across georgia and carolina coast and a tropical storm storm. as we head into the weekend the cone is a lot of uncertainty where this could go but could be an area of love offshore the mid-atlantic northeast. however, the impacts will be at heavy rainfall up and down the atlantic seaboard and we could see an additional 4 to 6 inches of rain for portion of florida. even up through the carolas warnings in place for florida and also we have tropical storm watches up through the jersey shore. back to you. >> lissette, thank you. airlines are dropping change fees this holiday weekend because of hermine. all four of the biggest airlines, american airlines and delta and united and southwest are using flixible rebooking policies for storm affected passengers. jetblue and silver and spirit are waiving any change fees.
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policy he is causing confuse what he could do as president. he said this on wednesday after deporting undocumented immigrants who have not committed a crime. >> anyone who has entered the united states illegally is subject to deportation. that is what it means to have laws and to have a country. >> but then trump was asked yesterday about undocumented immigrants with no criminal all the bad players here. the gang members, the and gang leaders and after that takes place, we are going to sit back and we're going to assess the situation where we are. we are going to set back and assess the situation and make a decision at that time. >> also yesterday, several members of trump's hispanic advisory council quit.
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republican national committee calling the council a scam formed simply for optics. for the first time, hillary clinton plans to share her plane with reporters covering her campaign. it starts on monday when she will be campaigning in iowa, illinois, and ohio. the last time clinton answered even one question from her traveling press was on august 16th, two and a half weeks ago. we asked her running mate senator tim kaine about that yesterday. >> she is not allowing journalists the campaign plane. this is something that has been standard since i've covered presidential campaigns. why is that the case? do you believe in transparency? do you think this will clang? >> well, i mean, i'm going to use my own example. i'm traveling too. and i travel on a small plane and the press travels in a plane with me. we are not on the plane together. that is going to change in about a week. and i think that is fairly common. >> "the new york times" calls clinton's plan to keep reporters
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how presidential candidates have dealt with their dedicated press corps since at least the early 1960s by which point journalists were regularly traveling with them on their planes, end quote. donald trump has also kept the reporters off his plane. he had 42 campaign events last month, compared to 19 for clinton. still to come, we will see if water is the next big thing in electricity generation. the untapped resources that could eventually provide
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cruise ship passengers get paid joney.d e trip throughhe arctic made possible by climate ange.
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the first person to survive alzheimer's disease is out there. and the alzheimer's association is going to make it happen by funding scientific breakthroughs, advancing public policy, and providing local support to those living with the disease and their caregivers. but we won't get there without you.
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? the united states could soon tap into energy from unexpected urces. the solar industry says there are more than a million individual solar panels
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which could mean it's a real missed opportunity. cbs news science and futuristic contributor chio kaku i here explain why. >> good morning! >> it used to be solar energy we were talking about. i know there is something to be excited about particularly regarding sea water? >> yes. trek." for thoseeople who follow science fiction, you know that fusion power is what drives the enterprise and the federation of planet and stuff like that. the french, the european union are using a factor based in uthe france and 2020 home t turn it on and by 2027 hope to generate power and the fuel eventually comes from sea water,
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sdown, but it's not diant. we hopwiin10,-yrime frame, we could be entering a fusion era. >> it's not theoretical. this is going to happen at some point? >> the europeans hav snt over 10 billion dollars building the reactor. it has cost overrun. it's been delayed. but when it's up andrunning, it thk about e-cng. almost energy for free. dream number eight when it comes to energy efficienc behd countries like germany, italy, japan, france, and uk and china. what is happening overseas that isn'happening here? >> well, first of germany and switzerland are even phang out nuclear power and even then they are beginning to meet the energy needs of a growing economy. energy efficiency, solar, wind power. wind power is huge in europe. because you see europe doesn't
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have. we have gas guzzlered and we are addicted to oil and oil has been cheap in this country but not in europe. you go to europe and you have sticker shock when you get your bill and you realized how expensive oil is in japan and europe. that is why they are gung ho in wind power and solar power. >> facebook recently tested a drone that runs on solar power, right? how will that cnge too? they wanted to provide internet access around the world. how do you see that >> well, you see, solar power is for free. you cannot meter the sun. and in developing nations where they have a hard time generating the power for the internet, why not have solar drones. simply get sunlight from the sky. and so that could be a game-changer in the third world. mang the internet almost for free and available for everyone from sunlight from the sky. wow. >> what about tesla's new battery?
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game-changer. you realize why don't we have a solar a? few ars, we talk about it but it never comes. the bottleneck is the battery. this is where tesla motors come in. they are not marketing a new battery given the fact that prices have be droppg 7% per year in the battery. now a hundred years ago, thomas edton and henry ford had a bet, would gasoline or the battery power the future? we all know that henry ford won the bet, but edison may have the energy efficiency is now making the battery competitive with fossil fuel technology. watch for it. th battery. peopleorget that. that is the bottleneck for renewables and wind power and solar power. when the sun don't shine and the winds don't blow, you're out of luck! that's where the battery comes in. >> i wish i was srt as you! thank you for cong . >> tnk you. ahead, the l mother teresa is aboutoecome a
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hillary clinton: i'm hillary clinton and i approve this message. bob kidder, owewshy: this over sixty people here makingsh. suits from mexico, his coats from india. trump's products have been made in twelve other countries becaus ss
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? mother teresa who spent much er l hng t poo suay.
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>> she wasn't aware of her own greatness. feike tappinhern the shoulder and say don't you al volunered ath sa's missionaries. >> the home of the dying i rticular was a place where those of you had health and strength and served those at that who were weak and 1997 and
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missionary work which drew attention to india's slums. wintry sple personaround the of alleviating some of the misery >> reporter: another volunteer metimes added to the misery. gonzalez now runs his own aid group in calcutta, but spent two months in 2008 working with mother teresa's organization. >> i saw nuns washing needles with tap water and reusing them
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as i was saying at the beginning, we have an obligation to look at them and so we answer them as well. >> reporter: father brian was also tasked with betting the so-called miracle required for sainthood. in this case, it was a brazilian man's inexplicable recovery from a potentially deadly brain infection after his wife prayed to mother teresa. >> doctors are only asked their medical opinion. we don't kif do you ink it's a michelle. he is the informati there any explion explaslly? the two so-called mirks are needed for sainthood. she cured a woman stricken with tumors in calcutta and another miracle is needed for sainthood. seth doane, thank you.
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wh pedro nk partly cloudy news in fact tarts now. ? hell ho. yus about an hour from now, we're expecting to hrm leaders abt prep raegsing across thea. we eel carr that 9:30 news conference leave on cbs north carolina and wncn toikt. tropical storm her i know mine made land fall in na hurricane overnight and weaken dz runs over land. yus in a few hours from now, cbs north carolina a.j. is live on oak island this morning. a.y. we eve been checking in with you all morning long. >> russ, it's getting a little bit more wet out. it's definitely starting to rain a l mor what's nice though is the winds have not picked up. it's been py, i guess, nor mall, so to say, if you were
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up the coast. you might think it was a rainy day. that being sai the ar a lot ofeople making their way up and down the beach, sght seers taking pictures. i'm going to step out of the way. you guys see the pier right here. there's about three fishermen up there chl one of them is getting read cast ght now who have been out here for a few hours chl they said that the storm isn't going to keep them away from the ocean. that being said, though, they to know there is a tropical storm on the way. i spoke to one new resident of the area w she's out sight seeg she is definitely preparing for what could be coming. >> we have water. we have gas stove so if we have to cook anything, we have everything picked up so if everything gets blown around. >> that's just iend of the overall idea sentiment for this entire area. oak island was spoking to officials from the both the town
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at brunswick county. what they say is they are preparing for what could be the worse, but they are just preparing as of right now. brunswick county will have extra hours for its emergency operations center around midday today. they say their main focus right now is just the possibility of flooding and the extra thousands of people that are here for labor day weekend just to kind of be aware of the dangers and possibilities of what coul come. we are going to be out here for the rest of the day keeping you up to date on what this storm over to alyssa with more information about the weather. hi, there. thank you for that update. certainly starting to see that rain move into oak island. as far as the updated track on the storm, it just came in. winds at 60 miles per hour. it's continuing to weaken. still moving t the north-northeast, though, about 14 miles per hour. that puts it over eastern north carolina near mill wing ton saturday morning at 2 a.m. winds about 45 miles per hour then it
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to -- back to the atlantic ocean outside of the outer banks. weakening considerably off the coast of new jersey, delaware, and maryland areas later this weekend. so flash flood watch in effect for nearly the entire viewing area through saturday morning, 2 to 6 inches of rain expected. also have a wind advisory that will go into effect later today. sustained winds closer to 30 miles per hour. gusts as strong as 45 miles per hour. this system still across the southeastern portions of fwa ga across south carolina getting the brunt of this heavy rain. that rain also moving into southern portions of our vug area. cum berland county, samson county, wayne, heavier rain across portions of moore and lee county. that's where we are seeing a flood advisory this morning. 73 in raleigh and fayetteville. 69 in henderson. we'll work our way to 78 later this afternoon. right now i'll hand it over to ally who has the latest check on
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adelle: at first, i was so happy to teach in north carolina. but we've fallen to 41st in teacher pay, 44th in per-student spending, and a lot of us even have to buy school supplies. governor mccrory talks about raising our pay, to its lowest budget share in over 30 years. like over two thousand other teachers, i'm having to move to another state so i can do what i love and make ends meet.
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? one surfer defied storm warnings and took to tybee island in georgia this morning. this is clearly not recommended in tropical storm conditions. strong tidal could hit the area today. >> somebody is always going to try. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? clim change climate change is helping a cruise ship make history in canadian arctic and sailing through the northwest passage, an area once covered in ice most of the year. ahead, why the ship is accompanied by an ice breaker and two helicopters. plus, hunting for the world's most notorious king ping. new season of "narcos" is out
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escobar. pedro pascal will take us inside the series' film in columbia time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. a class action lawsuit against pop warner, the nation's largest youth football league. it claims the organization knowingly put players in danger by ignoring the risk of head trauma. the suit also accuses usa football, the youth football arm of the nfl of failing to protect young players. pop warner says the complaint. usa football did not immediately respond. alternative nondrug ways to relieve pain. i thought an interesting piece. a government review said apparently effective ways to manage back, knee, and neck pain including acupuncture, yoga, tai chi and massage therap relaxation techniques also.
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>> "usa today" says the comic geneus of gene wilder will be back on the big screen this weekend. this is phenomenal news. what a tribute. 55 amc theaters nationwide will show "blazing saddles." and willie wonka and the chocolate factory." tickets cost just five bucks per show. wilder died early this week of alzheimer's complications at age 83. a luxury cruise liner is making history by sailing through the once impassible nortes the crystal serenity will be the largest passenger ship to successfully navigate the frigid arctic waterway between the pacific and atlantic oceans. the ship is now en route to new york city. travel editor peter greenberg shows us how years of preparation and the changing climate made the journey possible. peter greenberg, good morning. >> good morning. ever to the northwest patch had
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voyages of delusion but over the global climate change, the ship may be the first in its kind to try it and it likely will not be the last. it's been smooth sailing so far. as the crystal serenity glides through the once eye-choked waters of the canadian arctic. >> this is where we can start seeing a little bit of ice. >> reporter: but captain volland and his crew have spent years panning this wedge. did people say don't do? >> people say, really, you doing very difficuecause this area is frozen of ice for most of the year. >> long ago when explores sailed west why europe in their wooden ship, they sought a northwest passage. >> reporter: one expedition was discovered. in 1906, this norwegian explorer the first to navigate the
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and took him three years. the crystal serenity will do it less than 32 days. as times have changed, so has our climate. ice cover hazards have receded dramatically since satellites kept a continuous record. nasa calls it the new normal. i suppose the good news you can do it but the bad news is the reason you're able to do is because of climate change. >> there is climate change, no doubt about that. the temperatures are higher. the ice melts more. and small window in late able to be navigated for two to three, five weeks of the year. >> reporter: the cruise liner is accompanied by a boat and two helicopters. >> we have sonar image and imaging one dedicated to radar and ice system. >> you look a volkswagen sitting below the surface.
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>> reporter:eff is with the canadian coast guard which is closely monitorsing the 900-mile journey. are you concerned about it at all? >> with an appropriate level of planning and judgment and right experience around you, it can be done safely and can be done successfully but make no mistake, this isn't sailing a cruise ship out of miami. >> reporter: roughly a thousand passengers each paid a minimum of 22,000 dollars for the privilege. crystal serenity said it sold people paid a lot of money to do it. worth it? >> i guess if i could afford it, i would certainly be interested. >> reporter: the route goes through the bering strait and taking them through villages who have seen few outsiders. >> thank you for being here. >> when we first heard about it, we thought it was tremendous, it was something an area that were so few people will ever go. it's great to read about it. it's great to watch it on a video or in a movie.
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question the potential cost to this untouched region. the world wildlife fund told "cbs this morning" that while the serenity has done some things right, we do not have the rules necessary to reduce risks to wildlife and people. nor the infrastructure needed to respond to accidents. it would be ironic if the tourism promoting a chance to see arctic wildlife before it >> we will there there to minimum mize any impact and burning high great fuel and take our garbage with us. >> they have to go into the arctic knowing it's one of the world's great pristine environments and they owe it to themselves, to the people who live there, and to all of inhabitants to protect that environment. it's humorous and humility. a little bit of humility goes a long way in these as soon as.
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in greenland and the cruise line is selling tickets for their cruise there next year and that is weather permitting. another cruise line region seven seas which had been promoting theirs cancelled it because the ice patterns next year they predict are going to be huge. >> $22,000 for a ticket? >> yes. >> that would be worth it. >> how many days? >> 32 days. but they are midway now. >> don't touch. >> beautiful. >> peter, than the netflix series narcos" goes into the drug kingpins and the drug agents chasing them. one of the stars, pedro pascal is in our green room.
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frnltsz closer look at home, rain continues to fill in around the sand hills, some light rain but steady rain around fayetteville towards clinton and samson county moving up towards portions of wayne county, as well, then some heavier downpours from time to time across lee and moore county. speaking of moore county, 73.
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you learn this during your years in the fighting business? i always drink before a fight. >> it could get you killed. it could get me killed. >> today is not the day i die. >> actor pedro pascal stars in the hbo series "game of thrones." you saw there, he battled a mountain in that trial by combat and didn't end so well.
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"narcos" the second season is out today. it is the rise to power in colombia in the late 1980s of pab row escobar. hearing of escobar's escape from prison, talks to a person who may be able to help in the manhunt.
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>> good morning! great to have you here. >>hank you for having me. >> when we last left hees, pablo escobar's escape from a prison of his own makad pushed in with an escobar rival in an effort to perhaps bring him to justice. a googleea sges does not end wel for he are we headed? >> well, we are headed to the inevitable, i would say. googles t. he does d 1993. how he dies, who kills him, is -- i mean, it's a mystery. no one -- no one -- you'll get so many dierent answers in termof lik who fired the shot or shots. we have our interpretation and now that it's streamingsf aveork and just go start watching it rig now!
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how the show will handle escobar's final moments ive?now metiung and they st the scene actually where the actual escobar died. >> really? >> on the roof of his ho so i can tell you that, that it's probably the most autntic portrayal that we will have ever seen of escobar's death. >> there were people in his own family bel h suicide, ght? >> yeah, i've heard that. narcos doesn't believe that. i can tell you that much. dea doesn't believe that as well. this is your first spanish speaking role. >> yes. >> and you speak spanish but you had to bshp didmuch my spanish doesn't usually involve conversations about investigating drug cartels. it's usually complaining to my sister that my dadasn' called
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>>t's good to begin with. >> but it's much better now. >> and also the training. on-the-job stuff with the dea. >> and the actor humiliation. >> as the son of socialist political refuges, this was a very interesting research. >> i'm not going to lie. it was. was very self-conscious in that environment because i wasn't a bad kid but i had some fun. >> you were not a bad kid but had a little bit of fun? >> you know? i lived my 20s. and quanti felt like i was goin get trouble for the thoughts that was going through my mind but they were really true guys. they wanted us to have a gd time and they wanted to teach us loads of things, which they did. andhis was weeks before we started shooting the first season, so it was an amazing way to prepare for it. and i found out i was pretty
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the undercover tactical simulation that we had to do. and it was all fear-driven, but it worked. >> awesome. >> great. >> we loved you in "game of thrones." continued success and thank you so much for being here. >> thankou foravg me. >> i'm writingy w up already. >> the rain will mean a lot of people are watching! season two of "narcos" is available now on netflix. up next, a look at all that mattered this week. you are watching "cbs this morning." ? i'm hillary clinton and i approve this message. there's a race going on ght now. the world's clean energy super power's either going to be germany, china, or us. and i'm going to make sure it's us. from 500illion solar panels installed by the end of my first term, to precision manufacturing. we'll beat the competition and create new high wage jobs.
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our thanks to elltt and demarco morgan for jning us this week. >> an honor. >> we had a lot of fun. >> thank you, guys. as we leeyou, let take a look back at all that matrs is week. have a great labor day weekend.
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100%. >> donald trump reset his tou st on immigration going back to whe he stted. >> the polit differential in mexico city. border walls and nasty. >> tall, powerful, beautiful southern border wall. >> they say trump chickened out when he got south of the border. >> look the mexican president in the eye. >> you see the trees bending. >> hermine made landfall as a category one hurricane. >> this separation i've been told is brewing for a while and the two had been living separate lives. >> the top aide is married to someone who does things on the internet. >> gene wilder was an actor who
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into a loveable on-screen persona. >> you love those characters who you hope with live forever. >> we have no information to support russia's claim that killed an isis leader. >> this is flight 387. it will be the first commercial flight to cuba since 1961. >> the rumors are true. >> a tv legend is stepping away from the anchor chair. charles osgood, a beloved figure here at cbs news, announced he is retiring. >> the time has co. ? ? they don't love you like i love you ? >> i'm outside the cbs broadcast center inside the ford race car. >> jetblue temporarily lost a 5-year-old boy. he wound up in boston. mrs. morgan would be locked up right now. >> throw it up in the air. >> there it is! they did it! they did it.
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lal lads, the little league world champions. >> how does it feel? >> the best. >> the best, guys, the best! >> beyonce performing part of her 16-minute set at the mtv music awards. >> always good show. ? >> i still believe it. high school soccer match in colorado! >> oh, my >> i couldn't stick that landing. >> i'm ross duffer. >> i'm matt did you haver. >> yeah, we created "stranger things." we knew or thought it would appeal to the people who grew up in the '80s. >> really nice color of your dress, by the way. >> yes! i like yours too! >> taylor swift skipped the mtv music awards to attend jury duty in tennessee.
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us. us. >> yes, err they donald trump facing new criticism - he appeared to mock a reporter with a disability. "you gotta see this guy. 'uhhhh i don't know what i said, i don't remember.' he's going like 'i don't remember'." "putting a wife to work is a very dangerous thing. i don't want to sound too much like a chauvinist." "you have to be wealthy in order to be great. i'm sorry to say it." "he's a war hero because he was captured. i like people that weren't captured."
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el hently at 1:00 this afternoon. middle school at 1:30. hoek, moore, and wayne countie also will release kids early today chl we will continue to update additional closings on wncn.com. also, this morning, governor pat mcrory plans to discuss updates on hermine's impact and state preparations in just about a half an hour. cbs north carolina emma wright joins us live with more. emma, what can you tell us? >> well, the governor, along with emergency management officials and members of the highway patrol are all expected to address this impending storm that's not only hitting the
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some serious rain fall here to the raleigh area. we did talk with emergency management yesterday. they say they've been in touch with fema. they've also been in touch with the national hurricane center. they say they've asked local municipalities to ready themselves for some type of severe weather event. they are getting their vehicles ready. the ones that do the swift water rescues in case those need to happen. highway patrol says they're concerned about potential oo hitting the road for labor day weekend. they are asking anyone who may not need to be driving later this afternoon to please stay off the road. they are also reminding folks to take it slow, pay attention. again, governor mcrory and members of emergency management staff here for the state of north carolina will speak in just about a half hour here. we will carry that online and, of course, you can find updates on the news at noon. reporting live in raleigh, i'm emma wright.
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conference live on cbs north carolina. we'll also carry it on wncn.com. let's check in with alyssa. you've been very, very busy on social media and television all morning long. >> the latest just in from the national hur kaun center about an hour ago. winds about 60 miles per hour: still moving north-northeast about 14 miles per hour. this puts this over the southeastern portions of georgia. we'll continue to move in a northeasterly direction late as we head into our area late tonight early tomorrow morning is when that tropical storm is expected to be aroun the wilmington area. winds still close to 45 miles per hour, and then it will continue to move towards the outer banks, back into the op atlantic as we head towards sat afternoon quickllosing a lot of tropical characteristics off the shore, looks like delaware, maryland, new jersey. so what does this mean for us? we are going to see a lot of rain chl we could see gusty
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flood watch from later this afternoon here in the triangle until tomorrow morning. this is already in effect down around the sand hills. 2 to 6 inches of rain possible. wind advisory also in effect later today for these few counties around the sand hills. gusts could be as strong as 45 miles per hour. that rain really spreading across sk sshg. we are starting to see light rain, but rain fall rates certainly going to pick up later today. i think it's this afternoon into this evening where the heaviest rain will move through. ra 73 in fayetteville. temperates n ming a whole lot today. high of only 78. we've got trouble on t roadways in durham. we do have a crash on the northbound side that's been out there for quite a while. it is causing heavy delays. also, a raleigh map spotted with crashes. you can see here in san ford, you are dealing with wet roads espeal oi on u.s. 1. that durham crash we just showed you backing things up on the freeway. left lane is blocked by exit 8.
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>> judge judy: she wasn't happy in your house, and she wanted to go back to her mother's. >> announcer: a troublemaker on the move. >> judge judy: had you h a argument with your daughter? >> she was hitlly lying me over the whole time that she was living with me. >> judge judy: that's probably why she wasn't getting along with her mother. >> announcer: can these pares regain the peace? >> judge judy: this one is gonna use you and then she's gonnase her father, 'cause all she's doing is manipulating the two of you. it's not a new story. you are about to ent dge judith sm of the people are real. thses are real. the people are real. thses are real. the rulings are final. captions paid for by cbs television distribution joshua chuning, for the cost t replace his granddaughter'sxoon

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