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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  January 20, 2016 7:00am-9:00am EST

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captioning funded by cbs good morning. it is wednesday, january 20th, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning." donald trump lands a big endorsement from sarah palin. ted cruz tries to brush off the big snub from his former ally. >> breaking news. terrorists storm a university pakistan. >> a dangerous zika comes to america. several people are reporting cases of the disease linked to we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener." your world in 90 seconds.
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no more pussy-footing around. are you ready for a commander in chief that is ready to kick isis isis' ass? >> when he heard john mccain, then he said you're all set. >> bernie sanders continues his surge against hillary clinton with a new poll showing the senator taking an overwhelming lead in new hampshire. >> a deadly attack at a university in northwest pakistan. the pakistani military says the attack is over. >> i am sorry and i will fix it. the buck stops here with me. >> cold moving east picking up steam and tens of millions of americans could be walloped by a foot of snow or more. >> a >> braden was an amazing young man. >> bus crash. >> people laying face down on
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>> the value day took someone's red lamborghini and during that, flames shot from the back. >> serena williams. >> jamie foxx pulled a man from a burning car. >> i just want to get your address. >> don't tell nobody my address! >> all that matters. >> growing calls to boycott the oscars for lack of diversity. >> let's look at the nominees. what is that reminding me of? i think of doing my guest bathroom in leo. >> quit footing the bill for these nations who are oil rich. we are paying for some of their >> i looked swimmer kirmish. it's what happens when squirrels go to war. skirmish. announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places.
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for president with a familiar face at his side. former vice presidential candidate sarah palin endorsed him yesterday in iowa.ork post" quickly dubbed them "ladies and the trump." >> they will campaign together today in iowa and oklahoma. major garrett is in washington and looks at palin's decision to while turning her back on former ally ted cruz. >> cruz needed palin in 2012 enate and would have loved to have her support now. trump has always been bigger than palin as a political y tv front-runner. >> no more >> reporter: sarah palin's endorsement brings energy to
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deprives his closest rival ted cruz. palin is not the political force she once was. in part the tea partyshe helped inspired has matured and moved on. at trump's side she proved capable of amplifying some familiar themes. >> are you ready for in chief who will let our warriors do their job and kick is sis as? phony conservative. >> well, trump and his -- uh, his trumpers areve enough. my goodness gracious. what the heck would the establishment know about conservatism. >> reporter: palinp for the senate in 2012. before last night events he took the blow in stride. >> sarah palin is fantastic. without her friendship and support i wouldn't be in the
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i will always remain a big fan of r: cruz also fended off attacks from another republican, long time iowa governor terry branstad. >> i think it would be a big mistake for iowa to support him. >>ise that the mode. >> reporter: cruz dismissed branstad as part of the problem. deals. >> reporter: cruz retained superior organizational strength in iowa and as the caucuses h is likely to prove as important, possibly more important than any one endorsement. in a moment out of his apprentice past, trump told histor yesterday, "you better win, or you're fired." charlie? >> thanks, major. >> yes. republican strategist rick davis is with us. he was john m in 2008. the senator became a republican
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his running mate. he is not any candidate. what does this do to ted cruz? >> i think it's a battle for sort of a dwindling carson vote. koors be carson city number one in iowa and now slip to maybe three and maybe four. i think the percentage he is sitting on, both trump and cruzike a dog salivating over a good, meaty bone. they want the people coming off carson on to their ballot and that is why the focus on i think what we saw yesterday between the visits to the liberty university and jerry falwell the nice things he said ump to the sarah palin announcement was a real targeted effort to seek the evangelicals without having to talk the talk, he is walking the walk. >> is there a downside for him endorsing him? >> not in iowa.
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country people are scratching wake up saying what is he thinking? i think he has made a bet if he can win iowa he has a shot at >> running the table? >> running the table. >> do you think that this ends up being a contested battle at the eah. . i honestly spent a lot of time looking at the delgs positioned in these republican states. three are battling is out right now. the sort of outsider segment landed on donald trump and really happy with what they have got and about a third of the vote. of the vote on movement conservatives. they sit squarely in there with ted cruz and they are not going anywhere right now.o cruz. then there is the establishment. that is another third to a little bit more. they are spread over five or six candidates. and sodates, and it probably will the first three or four states, you have three
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and if they continue to win at how you get to a point where you have one person, you know, with the necessary delegates to be the presumive nominee. >> not a good day for iowa. the out against him and the headlines are with donald trump and sarah palin. >> you lose and win every day at stage down to the wire. a big win day for trump and big losing day for cruz. >> if trump pulls offmpshire there and south carolina, it could be moving towards the nomination. >> well, in the old schedule, that was the case, right? stopped you. >> right. >> this time, there is a two-week period of time right after south carolina where it's all proportional primaries and everyone sort of gets spreadhout the south and southeast. what happens is nobody really wins or lose ons. you just collect delegations. >> right. >> it is an opportunity to reset
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juggernaut, i think you see people saying, wow, especially on the establishment side we have to have someone win florida the 15th of march and next bigl state and they rally around either a rubio or a christie or a bush and say, we got to stop the trump movement. >> it's interesting to watch every single day. >> we thank you for coming in >> thank you. the latest poll in new hampshire finds the democratic primary there is turning into no contest at all. bernie sandersclinton by 27 points in that survey released yesterday. the first in the nation primaries less than three weeks away. but the vermont senator is ational polls. nancy cordes is covering sanders big surge in new hampshire. nancy, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. yes, 60-33 is an enormous lead. a ad, you might say. the campaigns like to say they don't pay much attention to the polls but sanders was celebrating those numbers at each of his campaign events in saying that they
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>> if you run into people and say i like what bernie stands for, but i think he can't win, is really not the case. >> reporter: the clinton campaign shot back in a statement saying, senator ake a case on elect ability based on meaningless polls. and they said sanders is gaining because republican groups are talking him up, him because they would rather run against him than against clinton. naturally, ted cruz did say last night, he was asked would prefer to go up against sanders this clinton because he thinks a socialist would be easiest to beat. clinton, you'll recall, won in new hampshire int going up against an opponent next door back then. sanders is from neighboring vermont and historically candidates from borderinglways win in new hampshire. >> thank you, nancy. breaking news. a terror attack on a university
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at least 20 people are dead. gunmen opened and staff early today on the campus in the northwestern part of the country. dozens are wounded. holly williams is following developments from istanbul, od morning, holly. >> reporter: good morning. the group of armed men stormed bacha khan university30 a.m. local time after classes had begun attacking students and staff members in classrooms and also a dormitory. witnesses reported heard gunfire from the campus. a pakistani military spokesman said people wereter they moved in. wounded are carried to the hospital. this university is in a loyalist region of pakistan a long haven for militants.ack memories on a assault in a school in the same area in 2014 in which 150 were
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children.tani taliban claimed responsibility for that massacre, but it's still unclear who is behind today's attack. >> holly williams reporting, > health officials in this country reporting new cases of a mosquito-born virus linked to birth defects.has three cases of the zika virus. yesterday, two women tested positive there and texas and hawaii confirmed g a baby born with a birth defect. elaine key is here with r: a travel alert over the virus warning pregnant women to avoid the most popular american vacation destinations. in the handful of confirmed cases in the u.s., traveled outside the country and tested positive once they got home. zika virus is transmitted by aetermined women
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babies causing birth defects. the carbon dioxide if you have symptoms, if you're pregnant, get tested for an infection. all of the zika cases in theoreign traveling. a florida victim traveled to colombia. a baby was born with birth defects in hawaii aftere a trip to brazil. a texas man was diagnosed after he returned from el salvador in two cases cases we have in illinois are in individuals who traveled and came back and were diagnosed. because the mosquito that ne we have in illinois we believe the risk to illinoisans is. >> reporter: cases in latin
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advising pregnant women to travel. they are are asking pregnant women to wait to hold off until they -- to get the virus under control. there is no course of treatment for the zika virus. a british biotech firm is trying to fight the virus by genetically the insect. >> michigan's governor vows to do whatever it takes to end the water problem. he says he would released his 2015 e-mails showing when he knew about the lead contamination in flint, michigan. hu outside the statehouse called on snyder to resign. adriana diaz is in flint where the governor is employing more than a hundred additional members. good morning, adriana. >> reporter: good morning.
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governor snyder said that no one in flint would go without clean se cases you see here will be gone by mid-day. so far, nearly 40,000 cases of out, that is nearly a million bottles. >> hey hey!ho. snyder must go. >> reporter: protesters endured outside the statehouse below freezing temperatures as they called for the governor'ssignation. rick snyder began his address with a renewed policy to the people of flint. >> government failed you. federal, state, and local leaders by breaking theced in us. >> reporter: he also had a message for the agencies he said contributed to the city's water disaster. >> let me be perfectly clear to all of state in situations like this, they must come to my desk immediately, no delays, no
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>> reporter: snyderartment of environmental quality and federal, e pa didn't address the knew about it last year. before protesting at the statehouse, this couple showed us their corroded pipes. >> it's almost like we are in a third world country. that don't work. i don't care what they say, people, these filters, they do not work. >> reporter: governor snyder is now the target of several class action lawsuits. the aims to stop flint from all water shutoffs for people who haven't paid their bills. this lady helped identify lead levels. >> there is no safe level of lead in a child, none. it is irreversible potenceoxins. >> reporter: lead poisoning in children can cause the following. >> it was highly preventable. these kids did nothing wrong.
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was almost bankrupt and this was a cost-cutting move. >> reporter: the gover is asking state legislators for 28.5 aid. the mayor was in washington, d.c. yesterday and met with president obama. the president will be in detroit today, but the white house says he's not expected to stop in >> adriana, thank you. more 50 million americans are bracing this morning what could be a monster went storm. crashes were in kansas city yesterday because of the slick threat. sounds like our turn. >> this looks to be the first significant winter storm for the east coast. a winter that wasn't but i believe that is changing. you take a look at the current situations. currently getting snow. we do have winter weather advisories out there.
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and ice is a concern as well. the bigger storm is not even a storm yet. this is the area. a piece of energy and has atate it's traveling over and things it's encountering as it pushes to the east but here is how the computer models are handling it. this area pushesd-atlantic and about as far out as the models go and friday at 3:30. worst case scenario outer banks up the eastern seaboard over metro areas pounded with that. right now, the current track is pushing it inland a bit so the bull's-eye right now looks over the mountains and possibility of two feet of snow. a foot of snow from trenton, new jersey, to charlottesville, virginia. "the washington post" released video of jason rezaian fe. he is three americans receiving care at a u.s. military center
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former marine amir hekmati said he mane and unjust pressures. elizabeth palmer was there. now? >> right now, i feel great. energy. like i said, i feel alive for the first time and then hearing about some of my fellow marines ave me the strength to put up with over four years times that me and my family went through. >> how are you feeling now? >> all of the marines out there. >> the white house says there is robert levinson is no longer in iran. the former fbi agent vanished there nearly e ahead, how >> samantha: good morning to you. we track snow moving in from the west.
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the time it's all said and done later today into tonight? up to an inch at most. now, out towards mentor, jefferson, the snowbelt where we may see lake enhancement later today, that may get us closer to two inches, but this isn't a major snow event. up prepared for snowshowers throughout the day, an announcer: this portion ofred by american made weather tech car mats and floor liners.
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ago breaking profits. >> ahead, why passengers are finding no relief from rising fares and fees. n the morning right here on "cb this morning." announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by voya financial.hink of retirement. rns. of saving for the future. so you're sort of like a spokes person?etaphor. get organized at voya.com. get 10% off major appliances $396 and more at lowe's. ers has changed. weight watchers all-new beyond the scale program puts the focus on you
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>> tia: good morning. i'm tia ewing. ikent state history professor is to isis. the fbi and department of homeland security have been watching associate professor julio pino for the last year and a half. investigators say pino was trying to recruit students to join the terror group. kent state tells us they are cooperating fully with this ongoing investigation. here for a look at your chilly and possibly snowy forecast is meteorologist sam roberts. hey, sam. >> samantha: hey, tia. good morning. good morning to you. i hope that your wednesday is off to a pretty start. of course, we've got snow moving in from the west. expect snowshowers in cleveland mid to late morning, and then everything will continue to move off to the east. highs today in the lower 20s, periods of mainly light snow for today. an inch or less in the daytime forecast, and then tonight as the lake enhancement takes over
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last week, an interview on youtube where the biggest debate was who would win in a battle between kendrick remember when obama, heshow about getting cars and getting coffee. how is this like the president in the white house getting legislation passed through both houses of ll these tv appearances, i got to say obama could be nominated for an emmy. he really could.
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for that, you have to be in ao, you have to be white. >> i was wondering where he was going! where is he going with s cordon? >> i thought it was a take on american politics. >> i was wondering who did he choose between that battle. i want to know the answer to that question.bs this morning." the or oscars is gains attention to george clooney.es are making record profits and so many customers and cheaper fuel, why are passengers still facing price hikes and fees? that story is ahead. some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. "the washington post" says a record number of airport drones crashed in major accidents last year. 20 large drones were destroyed or suffered at least $2 millione. the accidents included ten reapers, the most advanced killer drones.
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blamnts involved older predator drones. "the new york times" confirms isis leader was killed jihadi john. the u.s.itary is reasonableably certain he was killed. among his ist james polyand peter kassig. ensitive programs. some related to american drone strikes. the clinton campaign says the e-mails weren't classified when they were sent or the san jose mercury news reports a bus driver might have fallen asleep before a greyhound crash. on its side on
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the passengers say theed to be nodding off before the crash. millennials are losing interest in driver services. listen to this. in 1983, nearly 92% of 24-year-olds held a license. that plunged to 82% by 2008 and fell to less than 80% in 2011 and dropped in 2014. people are walking and riding or whatever it may be. >> when i turned 16, i went to the dmv on my birthday.uldn't wait to drive! >> i know! >> absolutely. freedom. >> did you pass, charlie? >> round? >> i did not. >> how many times did it take you? >> it only took me twice. >> was at the time driving or the actual test? >> parallel h, parallel parking always kills me. >> i'm better now, norah.
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parallel parking in a lot of >> once you got in your car, you did a lot of parking? >> so right! george clooney. >> what did you say? wait! rewind. i know we got to go! i know we got to go. >> charlie. >> you take that back, charlie rose! i did a lot of parking? whatmean? i'm serious. what do you mean? >> i meant it gave you freedom to go somewhere with someone you cared about and be on your own. that's what i mean. parking! like in watching a movie? that is where his mind is. >> am i right or wrong? >> you're wrong. >> okay. i went to foster's and got a you were a late starter. >> i was. >> i was precocious. >> don't project!alk about hollywood. george clooney is among the
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the academy picture of arts andces and saying it is time the oscars woke up about diversity and having every acting nomination go to white performers is part of a larger frazier with our partners at "entertainment tonight" is in los angeles. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. hollywood heavyweights like george clooney and whoopi now joined the conversation and they echo the sentiment there is a lack of recognition on one of hollywood's bix ggest nights,ve it's an industry-wide problem. >> the nominees are. >> reporter: as the outcry over this year's oscar nominations e clooney is the latest to voice his frustration. what the hollywood icon is widening the blame and accusing the entire industry of movingn. in a statement to "variety" clooney says i don't think it's a problem of who you're picking,any options are available to
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in quality films. we need to get better at this. >> plenty of celebrate actors of color, actresses of color. to miss last year is one thing but for that to happenr, is unforgivable. >> when you're dealing with a movie that cost a hundred million or more, you don't want to take chances. it's more based last year and what worked five years ago, let's do it again this year. and so you're seeing that lack of imagination, which also means lack of his has not been a plethora of black movies made because people believe we don't want to see movies with black people in r: whoopi goldberg, an actor and producer, said production companies should lead the charge. >> this happens every year, so made with people of color so that
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>> how -- >> you get the people ompanies to hire. you make them think all year, not just once a year, but all year. >> reporter: others including actress jada pinkett-smith and pike lee aret months's award show to show their frustration. >> these protests have been going on for decades. what i'm hoping there is more >> reporter: but film mogul and actor producer tyler perry says transparency is the answer. >> if the academy,y if they are -- vote. if you look at a movie like straight outta compton and it tes, is that racism or is this how the >> reporter: nyounga went to
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gram the following and says should ab diverse reflection of the best of what our art has to offer today. i want to add also that george y, while he is speaking out, and that is important, i also want to say in the last four movies he has directed, he failed to prominently feature a person of color. so it's an interesting se george clooney has so much power. >> closer scrutiny, indeed. kevin frazier, thank you. >> good he is engaging in the conversation, george clooney. him speaking up and tyler perry had something interesting to say. oscar winning actorxx is receiving praise this morning with for his actions off screen. he helped pull a man from his burning truck outside of his home in hidden valley, quick action, they say, aes 's life.
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know, you just had to do something. >> reporter: actor jamie foxx embraced the father of the man he car monday night. >> it's good. you good? >> he didn't have to do a thing.said earlier, i think we all hope we could do something when the time is there. the question is do we? do we act or do we fear our own linot. >> reporter: police say 32-year-old brett kyle was speeding and driving under the influence when he swerved off the road and hit a drainage ditch. his car flipped several times, flames, right in front of fox's home. the oscar winning actor heard the crash and found kyle trapped in his car. your son and we are good now and the fears that he has, you know, this is -- it's a out the right way.
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captured the scene of what was playing fox x's home. a driver pulled over to help foxx and, together, they pulled the victim out of the car beforegulfed in flames. >> as i'm getting him out, i said you have to help me get you out. you have angels around you. as we pulled him out, five the truck goes up. >> reporter: kyle's father watched surveillance footage of the rescue and noticed how people drove past his son's he thanks fox for having the courage to save his son's life. >> it doesn't matter to me, whatever they do for a living, just the did that is so much more than that i fathom. >> god bless you, man. more to fly despite airlines' record profits. you're watching "cbs this morning." come on in pop pop.
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report record profits from 2015. delta on tuesday revealed a huge surging 42% from 40% drop in fuel costs. kris van cleave is at reagan national airport why travelers reaks on air fares. >> reporter: good morning. it's a great day to fly if you're an airline. fuel is cheap and that is not theing in big-time. but if you talk to flyers, you hear a lot of frustration. >> all of these fees is tacked on after the e for them to pass the savings back on to the customer. >> reporter: despite the industry ranking near the bottom when it comes to customer airlines are having no problem finding customers. in the first three-quarters of last year they made almost $18 billion in profit ande on pace to past 2014's
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bag fees.es flu through 85% full on average. tuesday, delta reported a record fourth quarter, an annual income of $5.9 billion and daysnd four other carriers raised fares. >> given the price of gas, i don't understand whyes is so high. >> reporter: united airlines will bring back free snacks for most passengers. want a meal free in first class you have to pay up. one of the big complaints from passengers online is leg room or the lack of it. want more space? for that too. >> i think it's very hard for passengers to understand why fares aren't going down when airlines are making so much ey have to remember that airlines are a business and the bottom line is the bottom line. >> reporter: the airline business is boom and bust. since 1990, the industry has landed in the red 11 times. in 2005 nearly $28
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>> what is a good flus for consumers when the airlines are profitable, customers and communities and investors and employees win because they are ack into the business. >> reporter: now the airlines say they created 10 thousand on thousand new jobs and on average took possession of one day last year. they also say air fares dropped about 2% in 2015. >> got it. thank you. sions process could be facing a huge shake-up. ahead, why test scores may carry less weight than they used to. plus, don't mess with woman who s >> samantha: good morning to you. we track snow moving in from the west. how much are we going to get by the time it's all said and done later today into tonight? up to an inch at most. now, out towards mentor, jefferson, the snowbelt where we may see lake enhancement later
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two inches, but this isn't a major snow event. up prepared for snowshowers throughout the day, an announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. james drove his razen wilderness. the scent of his jerky attracted a hungry wolfpack behind him. to survive, he had to remain fearless. he would hunt with them.pand their territory. he'd form a bond with a wolf named accalia... ...become den motherr young. james left in search of his next adventure. how far will you take the all-new rav4 hybrid?
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ouse, on thanksgiving day and i have a massive heart attack right in my driveway. the doctor put me on a bayer aspirin regimen. be sure to talk to your doctor begin an aspirin regimen. go talk to your doctor. you're not indestructible anymore. we offered women a mystery beauty treatment. right now?ounds great! could they guess what it was? very rich and smooth. really creamy. i keep touching my face. so what had we used? what?! wait! water was added to this?
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>> brian: good morning. i'm brian duffy. former ohio governor ted strickland will hold a roundtable in lorain to address the recent layoffs there at republic steel. strickland will talk about his commitment to defend jobs and getting nearly 200 laid-off steel workers back on the job. meteorologist sam roberts tracking more snow for us. sam, another big notice event coming? hopefully not. >> samantha: not today, brian. the snow on the way is mainly light snow. we're not looking at heavy, pouring lake-effect for today or anything like that. we have a little system coming through and it will drop about an inch or less during the day. temperatures are around 22 with the snowshowers moving through. now, tonight the snow from the morning system will be gone, but
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over out to the east. you may pick up east of cleveland up to an additional inch of snow tonight, and then
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s wednesday, january 20th, 2016. welcome back to "cbs this moring." there is more real news ahead, including a plan tothe college admissions process. first, here's a look at today's sarah palin's endorsement takes more from ted cruz and adds to donald trump. >> are you ready to thump for trump? >> battle of carson vote. trump and cruz look at thatg salivating over a bone. >> sanders was celebrating those
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the group of armed men bacha khan university and attacking students and class members in classrooms. >> the governor says flint will clean water. all of these cases you see of water will be gone at the end of the day. >> the system is pushing to the east. >> george clooney andgoldberg echoed the sentiment there is a lack of recollection initiation on one of hollywood's biggest nights. >> once you got your car, youarking? >> what do you mean? >> you went to go somewhere with somebody you cared about and be on your own. that's what i mean. >> oh, parking! mind is. >> am i right or wrong? >> you're wrong. >> okay. you were a late starter. >> i was. >> i was precocious.uncer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by liberty mutual insurance. >> ready. hit it off.
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>> i'm charlie rose with norah o'donnell. the inaugust ration of the president takes place one year tiering. donald trump says if he wins the white house there will be a pace for sarah palin in his cabinet. that is a let-down for ted cruz as he is battling with trump for-establishment vote in iowa on tuesday, sarah palin -- >> they are ontario front-runner. now would the left ever, dnc ever come after their front-runner and her supporters? no, because they don't eat theirand can't afford to see the status quo go. otherwise, they couldn't slurp off the gravy train feeding them all of these years.
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this ideology cal give me a break. how about the rest of us? proud slingers of our guns and our religions and our tell us we are not red enough? yeah, coming from the establishment? right. >> you may remember that ted cruz won a senate seat in 2012 pport. he says he will always be a fan of hers, no matter who she endorses. campaigning in new hampshire, cruz kept pushing his nt message. >> conservatives are uniting behind our campaign and we will see like the empire strikes back, the establishment will strike back, because they don't the cronyism and the gravy train from washington. >> a recent poll found 52% of likely republican voters in iowa prefer an candidate and another poll in iowa found 57% feel betrayed by republican party politicians. a new poll of democrats is adding to the drama inatic race that shows bernie sanders with a commanding lead over hillary clinton in new hampshire.
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points. clinton still leads in national polls in iowa on s said that voter turnout wins elections and his campaign will be able to better deliver against republicans. >> any objective look at ournd the energy and the excitement that it is generating with young people and with working people, compare that to secretary clinton's campaign.e conclusion that if our goal is to have a large voter turnout, we are the campaign that can do that. >> sanders will campaign hampshire. clinton will spend just one day there this week and four in iowa. a new report coming out this morning could fundamentallyollege admissions process. administrators from top colleges and universities are launching the document turning the tide. it comes from a harvard graduate
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system and offers improvement. frank luntz looks at the growing concern in his new article and this book. we are pleased to have him back welcome. >> good to see you. about written about before? >> yes. >> what is changing in the report? >> the report can't command d off and endorsed by so many people at top universities and clearly indicates a desire and an intention to do things ink what is going to happen you'll see over bits and pieces the coming years the admission process less to the metrics used so far. already you have a lot of schools saying as they teases optional and schools not impressed by a huge load of courses. they are trying to get kids away from a script high school and figure out a way to judge them. >> i think this is exciting and
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you said it could put an endthat resume packaging that so many have done in the past and levels the field for kids who can't afford the tutors. >> it will pay attention to civic of the things this report goes into great length is it's telling administration officers let's stop being impressed by organization a kid has worked through and find a way through essays and finds out how the charity works forjust checking off another box. this is what they want to see in cambridge or -- >> to that point specifically, the report addresses the issues. >> yes. >> it says many middle and upper income communities, rates of depression, saab stance abuse and anxiety is why is that?
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things in a very certain way.e dropped at many top schools and they are getting admissions and parents need to step up here they are getting a message if they don't get into a certain kind of school they have failed in life and forever more behind the 8 at message is so destructive and seen the high rates of mental illness of kids in high school but every university is reporting record numbers of kids coming in for treatment to their mental health and that is becoming a bigger problem. >> the bottom line they are looking at how do you look and make sure that you're not leaving behind some really terrific kids. >> right. privilege that other kids have? >> which is key. the context of this is we are living in a country with yawning income andtion is asking, very appropriately more than ever what is our part in social mobility and how do we remedy that? one of theschools step aside from
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research what does standardized tests judge is income of your family. what are the markers that spot potential and don't respect privilege. >> paying attention to a kid who help the family or a part-time job because he has to help the family and not be engaged in community >> so how realistic is this that you think this will actually happen? >> i don't think we will see an e in one administration cycle. but when you look at the fact the news conference today in new york, someone from yale is of admissions and someone from m.i.t. and michigan you're clearly seeing a signal that admission officials are making some changes. i think the next five years we >> you write about a 2014 survey of 10,000 middle and high school students about what they thought was important and what did they find? >> the author of thisperson who did this search
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most? individually chief achievement or happy for caring for others.ked. when you get a question like that you know you're supposed to say. you're supposed to say something high minded and you're admitting off the bat, others, i kay about my achievement. >> did that anything to do with background? >> i don't know if they broke it down that way. what they are report is what extent does the college admissions process bring about those values and exacerbate the problem ofus on individual achievement and where do i rate and what is my status in society? >> thank you, frank ent joe biden lost his son to cancer and now he is leading the mission to come up with a cure. our dr. david agus will reveal t told him >> samantha: thanks so much, gail.
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now, this is pretty light stuff, but it may slow you down the farther west you go out towards sandusky and norwalk. it's knocking on your back door. mansfield sees light snow down into mount vernon. east. you may see a few flurries in the greater cleveland area, but commute for you. an inch or less of snow announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by liberty mutual insurance. whole new
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you already know about uber and air bnb and it's about access. it includes some of today's most start-ups. these are companies with a global annual revenue of $15 as of 2015.
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more than that the next decade. with more. >> reporter: kristen hundred sakerpt the apparel service with a company that rents everyday clothes to women >> you can buy and own your basics and staples. for rental you want those things you wear once or twice that are statement. er knowledge after woman's wardrobe, ceo kristen hunsaker started n ohio after studying the numbers. >> if you look at it simply from a financial or a business perspective, you got 75% of theulation is size 10 or above.
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traditional retail has ignored cally underserved these women. >> reporter: when she started ago her dining room was the company's warehouse. were you nervous? i think some people might say a formal dress is one thing. ew. >> absolutely. that was our biggest concern. rent clothing? when you take and say airbnn is renting your bed. you can't get no more athan renting a stranger's bed or sleeping in a stranger's bed. >> the sharing economy began as something the millennials did, ig part of the economy right now. >> reporter: jason is editor at large at wired and says technology is driving. >> we are seeing a big shift
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paying a subscription fee to access a whole category of ter: the company has grown, kristen has developed her own methods for quality control and that includes washing and ing each garment and inspecting it at least three times before it's packaged. >> what we are looking for any kind of feedback, holes, rips, that, anything that didn't get out in the cleaning process. every single garment has gone through, as you can see. >> you can smell it too. >> the clothing has to come intion like new. >> reporter: we wanted to test that so we set up an account and randomly ordered some clothes. they arrived looking and smelling renting, you only access it when you need it and then everyone else can access it as well. you're splitting the cost amidststomers, so in a lot of ways, it's a lot more efficient. >> i think you've got an entire
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now that are all about smarterion and how can i make my dollar stretch fs and for less things. >> reporter: she is pushing for shipping more boxes. where do you want it to be? >> we want it to be a place where imagining wardrobe is the way people interact with clothing. >> reporter: the most prescription plan charges $70 a month to rent three items at a hese start-ups, they are want. they told me in addition to buying plus size clothes they have their own designer and gapsle saying we want that and can't find it, they will design it for them. >> if they love it, can they buy? >> they have that option. it's very well thought ut making it new when it arrives in the box? >> it is incredible how much nt to outsource the cleaning and
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the dry cleaning is all proprietary. >> i love looking at the earliered to where she is now. i like her. >> an impressive woman. >> i think so. on to something. >> thank you. a wildly popular new video fight to save an morning." when cigarette cravings hit, all i can think about only nicorette mini has a patented fast-dissolving formula. it starts to relieve sudden cravings fast. i never know when i'll need relief.choose nicorette mini. what's going on here? i'm val, the orange money retirement squirrel from voya. acorns. you know, to show the importance of saving for the future. so you're sort of like a spokes person?
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ll victory in the battle to save the eastern black rhino. 70,000 facebook views of this after a 15-month pregnancy. 15 months!male came into the world saturday night. >> you thought nine was long. >> i thought it was a long time. at this zoo in africa, they say the eastern blackne os are in dang little guy will become an ambassador for the species and i think he will. our dr. david agus is one of the world's leading cancer is in switzerland this
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he is there with vice president joe biden. what they discovered for a er your
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>> samantha: we have a few snowflakes flying around cleveland, but the steadier snow is out to the west. look at ottawa county, seneca, sandusky and then south into mansfield, mount vernon, pretty steady snow here. it is light. this isn't heavy snow, but it may reduce your visibility for a brief time as you drive through it. go slow as it moves off to the east. eventually by mid-morning it will move into the near west side, the 77 corridor and then points off to the east as we get towards late morning/early afternoon. snowshowers are the forecast for today. on the order of an inch or less of accumulation area-wide for today, but tonight if you're out in the snowbelt you may pick up a little bit more than that. two inches total from today
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out to the east, because we'll have the snow moving through this morning, and then we get the lake-effect going for tonight. that impacts my snowbelt folks.
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, our dr. david agus met with vice president biden in switzerland to explore the white house's shot to battle cancer. he is standing by to talk about the renewed fight. there he is! >> is in our green room. his new novel explores impact on a family and the new issues the that is ahead. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe.
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toxins in algae that may cause brain similar to alzheimer's. the toxin to monkeys after 140 days their brains had tangled withease. monkeys fed amin that acid had less slack. >> mercury, venous, mars andgning in the southern sky from the left to the right. all five planets were visible to the naked eye this morning. if you looked up you could see the planets every day. now until february 20th, you have a chances to see it. in miami a mansion once owned by colombia drug lordobar is now in rubbles. he bought the home in 1980. the home was likely used for a en and a landing site for cocaine. u.s. government seizes the mansion in 1987. the current owner will likely
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>> "time" making a new version of game mind craft for use in the addition of the world building game is based on a version tweaked by teachers and they are interesting students in stemguage and many other subjects. it was bought for $2.5 billion and very popular with the kids. "the washington post" reports on thesswords for 2015. the past two years, these top the list. the other commonly used password including different sequences qus plus football and baseball and qwerty. if yours is on the list, it's time to change. >> change it to baseball 1! there you go. nme, the british magazine, says that david bow onny shot
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song. coldplay's drummer told a british magazine that they reached out to bowie because their song had a david bowey type >> i think chris said and he came back and said, not a very good song, is it? so he was very discerning. he wouldn't put his name to anything so i give him credit for that. >> they said they were all incredibly sad by david bowie's world lost a musical hero. >> vice president joe biden went to switzerland to attend the world economic forum in dabos yesterday. >> our goal is make an advance in five years, instead of ten and eventually end cancer as we know it. >> president obama put biden in charge of what he control at last week's state of the union biden enlisted the top
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agus leads the westside cancere university of southern california and with us now from dabos. david, good morning. >> good morning, charlie. >> tell us what you believe now about the moon talked to the vice president. >> so when i initially heard it from president obama, i was somewhat u know, there is not going be was an allotment of dollars for this and when biden spoke, he e reasonable. we talked about what were the big obstacles blocking kansas . he said this isn't a one-year project for him. this is his post vice presidency product the rest of his life and came from a personal side which i people had a personal story in addition to joe biden and many people on the
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member to cancer.eement on the panel, david? >> amazing to me. you had a diverse panel.c and sloan-kettering and several other large constitutions and we said what the big impediment we can address and all of us said making data with the same terms. you call it a broken leg and i call it a fractured leg. we have to get better at sharingthing as simple as that is reachable. big data is going to give us the answers. we saw just this year, an amazing study that if you had ancer and on one particular blood pressure medicine, you lived much longer. that is the tip of the iceberg. >> isn't a company like ibm and cancer? >> watson is more about using data.
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domain data that a research publisher puts out for the world to see.bout is the data that resides in your medical records. the data that reside in a sample. so historically those have beened and people have been scared about sharing their data and hospitals say i don't want to sue the data because i can be sued and we have to change that. peple have to step up and a part of the solution, not the problem. i want be to be part of the cure hopefully, myself but if not me for my children and e is my data. >> would the effort against cancer happen quicker if the federal government spent more money? >>t's a money issue as a collaboration issue. right now, there's so many different effort across the country. one here. if we all started to work together with a leader, i i think we are going to make staggering process. so i think biden stepping up, inzing fashion, and
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the next decade, this is what i care about. i lost my son to this horrible disease and i got to seee said, that the inadequacies of our satisfactory and data doesn't help us. we can't transfer from one doctor to aric some treatments are and use that emotion in myself to help others. i think that is powerful and we need it in our state. >> this marks the one-yearniversary that they have been in office. realistically what do you think they can get done in that time? >> i think start to put the free the data and we can be part of that solution. at the same time, they can work with regulatory agencies. the fda, some of the medicareork them to get things done quicker. we could develop one drug and fountain in the future develop more drugs.
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and many other cancer doctors across the country to make a difference. >> david, the vice president paid you a compliment about your explain science. here is that video. >> you're speaking plainly, straightforwardly, that everybody can understand important in the examples you've given. go ahead. >>vilege to be here. when you have the vice president of the united states coming to a world forum and saying cancer is a disease that hasthe united states but around the world and we are going to take a leadership role to ease the suffering and to be able to be on that panel was truly, you know, special to me and i think special to everybodyhank you, david. >> the vice president coming and giving you a shout-out, david, that is pretty nice. we already know that that is true. good to see you. >> good to see you, dr. david
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sports writer mike >> samantha: we take a live look now at radar. most of us don't have issues today. east siders, a much better commute for you. out to the west we have light snow stretching from sandusky south into mansfield and mount vernon. this is moving off to the east. mid to late morning into the afternoon we have snow around. by the time it's all said and
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t two of them games. them. try to walk out of here 1-3.y third game here.
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>> you know what i mean. >> no, i don't! >> no, wait. you played two games and you add one, that means -- >> that's three games! >> yeah.d 1-3. >> if we win! >> one four three? >> that's what i meant. >> usc, baby! really good friends! that is kyle lowery of the toronto raptors giving his a hard lesson. he hopes to improve his games played in london but his math, he said it was a bit off. >> fore lupica has covered will every sport and authored 22 sports theme knowledge for young sold five million copies of his book oip the extra yard" is his newest novel about an eighthth
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the book is published by a division of cbs. great to have you here. what happened to the other eightm just kidding. >> really? >> we have the playoffs. peyton manning and tom brady. break it down. >> the funny thing is you always hear about brady versus manning. i always thought about it as manning versus bill belichick. they are not guarding each other and not in the low post in basketball. interesting to watch peyton play now and to go to another sport, is like somebody who is a greater in baseball and now throwing melons and cantaloupe. he clearly can't throw the ball and he is getting by on guiel.y have on sunday, i think, is that the game is in denver instead of foxborough foxborough. >> how about theirefense, i believe, has been the most formidable in the sport this year. we saw what happened when brock
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against the patriots before andr broncos defense beat brady. it's hard to do that twice in the same year. >> you're predicting the patriots? >> i do. only for my own twisted amusement. patriots make everybody so crazy, outside of, like, a six-state area in new england. so they are always being accusedt love the fact that it makes most of the country this passionate. >> your twisted amusement is fun to watch.t column about the nfl coin toss and you're not a fan because? >> a billion dollar industry, the biggest we have ever had in sports in this country, often comes down to a flip of the ll me another place in sports -- then they don't use a real coin! >> the question whether it's flipped or not as we had this past weekend. >>u can make a case that aaron rodgers might be the best player in football. two years in a row, because of a
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touch the ball in overtime. bone-headed system. >> right. what would you replace it with? >> in the regular season, charlie, i see why they have to keep the line moving to televiame is resolved. certainly play an extra quarter. where do they have to be? nowhere. >> let's talk about your new yard." >> look at the dedication to your agent. >> agent to the stars and me. >> it's about an eighth grader, what are some of the underlying themes in this book? >> norah, i got into this world because one year i took all of the kids who got cut in my town and started a team of my own and gave them ao give back. i didn't know what i was doing. my wife now says in retrospect, honey, you writing insideear-old seems like pretty much a perfect fit! but if you start reading my book, you know i'm going to ask
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without a father because of a divorce and his father lives on the other side of the country. you would think he would be thrilled when his father comes back into his life. easy. this is a book that kind of tips the whole father/son and sports thing. >> you coached all of your kids?o screw them up but let me tell you something. these books are written in that spirit. there's not a time, norah, when i go by a field or a gym where ildn't give up a zillion dollars to have one more friday night or saturday afternoon back. >> who is the audience for your books? >> oh, it starts in middle grade.like, 8 to 15. and the great thing is once i get them, they stay with me. i was telling gayle before the show today, i'll be out in public now and i'll see somebody a mom and coming towards me. i know they are not going to want to talk about my dopey newspaper column or tv. they are are going to tell me a kids to want to read.
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get tired of hearing that. i said, not at all! >> mike, what is so goodok in this particular book, you have boys talking to each other. you never see boys talking to each other about their problems and their vulnerabilities.mportant message to send to young boys. >> i have three sons and they were like that. i mean, our dinner table mes sounded like a counseling session. people would say the kids in your book sound real. i think they ought to because iteat of my car, our dinner table, sidelines, and locker rooms. >> do you want your kids to play football? >> man i tell you what, charlie. i would have to think long and hard about that.y, my sons were all pacifists and his uniform never gotife never had to wash it. >> bottom line, you have reservations? >> with cognitive difficulties
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>> thank you, we mention the book one more time? >> yes! >> it's called "the extra yard" and on sale now. congratulations, mike. he spent nearly 12ous and frozen in a snow bank. next, that remarkable recovery that allowed the college student
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an incredible recovery last february for this boy. penn state student lost consciousness after falling in a snow bank in subzero his dad found him nearly 12 hours later. >> he was laying face up like this. he was lifeless. beat and pulse and nothing.
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investigation. >> medical team performed cpr him up to a machine to warm his blood. he woke up 15 days later with no (church bell) (bear growls) r(burke) smash and grub. r seen it. covered it. we know a thing or two because we've seen a thing or two.
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>> samantha: we told you on cleveland 19 news this morning that it would take a little bit for that snow to make it to cleveland. hey, heads-up if you're in lorain, elyria and norwalk into worcester, medina. through about 10:00 you have snow moving in, and then by about 10:00 it should move into cleveland, if not sooner than that. you can see this is all moving out to the east. so my east side communities will be impacted this afternoon, and this afternoon into the evening it you're in the east side you may have to run into a little bit of lake-enhanced snow. total snow accumulations for most of us are about an inch. snowshowers are the forecast for today with temperatures topping out around 22. i'd mentioned those snow accumulations from today through tonight. again, for most of us especially
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inch, an inch in cleveland. snowbelt counties primary snowbelt potentially up to two inches of new snow.
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