tv World News Now ABC November 17, 2015 1:07am-4:30am CST
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the other four including a child were found in a pond nearby. the chief says the suspect william hudson and the victims did not know each other. a woman who managed on to survive the attack by hiding in the woods identified the suspect. the federal government has joined on an investigation into police shooting in minneapolis. jamar clark is brain dead after being shot sunday night. there are conflicting accounts whether clark was handcuffed on when shot and wheth he resisted arrest. hundreds protesting the shooting shut down interstate 94 last night i in minneapolis. more than 50 people were arrest prfd some extreme weather ststartingith tornadoes in texas. as. as a dozen twisters were reported to in the texas panhandle. the severe storms lef houses of people without power. golf ball sized hail came down in some parts, as well. a halliburton plant was heavily damaged and part of a train railed on in the winds. localized flooding was reported. winter is still over a month
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away but you wouldn't know that by looking at these scenes from the rockies. the snow continues today with areas around denver expecting a fofoota a half. blizzard conditions will last well into this morning. wind gusts are expected to reach up to 60 miles an hour. blizzard warnings in effect for parts of kansas, nebraska, as well as new mexico. >> today's weather maps to th east all that snow will be there. also heavy rain across the middle of the cotry. violent storms along the gulf coast. heavy rain in the northwest. dry and sunny along most o of the east coast. >> only 50 degrees here in new york city. significantly cooler than yesterday. and also in the 50s in the midwest. 80s along the g gulf coast. 673 in l.a. and a high of 52 in beautiful great falls, montana. >> how about some fast food news. taco bell getting on the animal welfare bandwagon. the chain is the latestt to commit to using only cage free eggs and they're making the fastest switch yet.
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the choice also make a difference in the cage free egg industry. taco bell has more than 6,000 u.s. restaurants and buys more than a million and a half eggs every year. can you get egg whites? >> i think you can. i haven't been to a taco bell in awhile. speaking of breakfast because researchers have found even more benefits in that cup of morning joe. cup of joe. scientists as the harvard discovered on people who drank three to five cups of coffee a day had a 15% lower risk of dying prematurely and that includes decaf coffee, as well. they tnk it might have thing to do with chemical compounds found in coffee beans. >> remind me again, y youon't drink krng coffee, right? >> i do, not enough but still i'm alive. well and healthy. >> a couple of paren in i'll wa have three little reasons that they might be awake and watching an us right now. give them the coffee.
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>> the boys are two weeks old today. >> wait a minute. is that mama? she looks too bright eyed on and bushy tailed. >> she looks indicate middletonesque. >> since they've been home, their mom says it's been a 24-hour cycle of feeding, changing and dressing them. they were born without the use of fertility drugs. >> so exceedingly rare, the doctor doesn't know what the odds are of it happening. all three are healthy and happy and they have interting names. of mack rory and two of the three first names are traditional irish names. >> interesting. cute little babies. >> coming up in "the skinny," th's how they sound about now, steven spielberg, barbra streisand and yogi barry will soon have something in common. >> charlie sheen's private health concern going public. the latest on his condition.
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>> later, an uproar over a $50 charge to see a shopping mall santa. how parents fought and won all in the spirit of christmas. you're watching "world news now." >> "world news now" weather, brought to you by easy off oven cleaner.s and back seat chefs have all assembled to look inside your oven. but you've cleaned off all the baked-on business from meals past with easy-off, so the only thing they see is that big, beautiful bird. "mmmmm" go ahead. let 'em judge. i take prilosec otc each morning for my frequent heartburn because you can't beat zero heartburn! ahhh the sweet taste of victory! prilosec otc. one pill each morning. 24 hours.
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wait, what?! you realize i have gold status? do i still get the miles? new mucinex sinus-max liquid gels. dissolves fast to unleash max strength medicine. start the relief. ditch the misery. let's end this. . >> well, this was the the scene yesterday here in new york as hundreds of peopleathered on at ground zero to honor the victims of the paris terror attacks. one by one people filed by to place tributes at the 9/11 survivor tree. among the speakers france's counsel general and former ambassador to france craig stapleton.
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>> as the manhunt intensifies for the alleged on eighth attacker, we'rere hearing new details about the so-called mastermind behind the attacks. >> it comes as authorities believe one of the attackers posed as a refugee to slip in undetected to europe. abc's brian ross has the latest. >> reporter: he is only 27, but he's risen rapidly through the ranks of isis to mastermind some of their biggest terror plots in europe. in this propagaganda vid, abdelhamid abaaoud asks, is there anything better than jihadism t than martdom? officials believe he planned the paris attacks from isis headquarters in syria. carrying out the direct orders of top isis leaders, who have set up a new unit to launch terror attacks in the west, with recruits separated into brigades by their nationality and language skills. >> this was planning a complicated operation, infiltrating trained personnel to do it and pulling it off across borders. >> reporter: the isis mastermind sent one of its attackers from
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syria, posing as a refugee, presenting this forged passport to greek officials just five weeks ago, and then making his way across europe to paris. other attackers were hand-picked in the masteind's hometown in that brussels neighborhood of moleeek, where he traveled often. narrowly escaping a police raid just this past january before he returned on to syria. >> the mastermind selects and trains and motivates the suicide bombers, but he never kills himself. >> french authorities say ty had no advce word of the attackck but at least two of the gunmen were known to french intelligence and one had actually been charged with terror coned on crimes and allowed to go free clearly the french government lost track of both of them. brian ross abc news, new york. and intelligence officials say part of the reason why it was difficult to track all of this is because they use pel jan as a staging ground as opposed to france where they arere searching for all of these people.
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meantitime from paris, fittingly you would say gray and rainy morning there in the capital. >> and as the country mourns we know the french military announcing just a short time ago at least 16ombs were used on in the latest campaign. they had had targets, command centerand even training centers. action clearly being taken by the government even overernight. we'll be right back.
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stations.tttt0w!tz'h3%4@-hi4 tt0w!tz'h3! el@-bnx tt0w!tz'h3! ed@-dl< tt0w!tz'h3% )8h-$2@ tt0w!tz'h3% kzh-9]< tt0w!tz'h3% n-h-l40 tt0w!tz'h3% 0ph-rs( tt0w!tz'h3% s"h-b!h tt0w!tz'h3% ueh-ac8 tt0w!tz'h3% 7hh-]al skinny, so skinny okay. so topping our headlines this morning for "the skinny," some devastating news from actor charlie sheen. >> hollywood publicist howard bragman also a consultant for abc news has confirmed he's been told that sheen has been diagnosed as hiv positive. >> he says while he didn't talk directly to sheen about his hiv status, sheen's people have told him that he is getting treatment. >> s some mor uplifting news here. president obama last nad on this year's class of recipients of the presidential medal of freedom. >> 17 people have been named for the nation's highest civilian honor including barbra streisand. her philanthropic research have advanced research of heart disease in women.
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the usc foundation dedicated to overcoming intolerance and bigotr through the use of visual history testimon >> and being honored on posthumously yogi berra who put his professional career on hold to join the navy where he fought on d-day and earned on a purple heart. > what a eat group of folks to hononor. >> next to the viral video that triggered on a run on patti labelle's an sweet potato pies. >> they are being sold at walmart at the rate of one per second all because of this guy in chicago, kendis. >> you turn into patty after eating this. mm, patti, how is it that you people.
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who laugh together and love together sometimes patti. when you've been playing feels like heaven mm, mm mm. >> this is your vorite video. >> that's great. there is a follow-up where he was out of the pie, by the way. his name is james wright. and his video has been viewed on more than a million times including by patti herself who called on him to thank him for the over the top review. walmart says it's looking for 2 million sweet potato pies to replenish its supply. >> finally we have a "dancing with the stars" update. >> a big night with the stars performing three dances. bindi irwin dancing boat inside and outside a box, swinging a lighted rope a aund her neck. >> carlos pane vega showed on
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go long. you'd better watch out. you'd better not cry you'd better not pout i'm telling you why >> why not? e music's great but santa claus has already come no a town in cherry hill, new jersey but he endededp causing a huge controversy. >> it allll started with a cherry hill mall decided to amp up the santa sbeerns and the price tag. wpvi's sarah bloomquist has the story. >> the visit to santa's lap is a holiday tradition but when for the second year in a row the mall decided to give shoppers a hi-tech experience social mediaia
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because of the price. this yearhe mall s started charging $35 to $75 to see st. nick. gail's post on facebook was typical. it's an absolute disgrace you're charging so much money to get in to see santa. outside the mall the same. >> i don't think people should be charged for santa claus. mo way. >> why not? >> it's christmas. come on. what's the real meaning? >> reporter: the occur to santa attraction is one of only 12 like it in the cotry. mall management was surprised on by the negative reaction. >> we never want anybody to feel like they're excluded or they can't come here. they got the message and dropped on the required prepurchase of a photo package. >> you can come in and visit for free. you'll no longer havavto make a minim photo package pururchase and you can visit with santa instead. >> gianna and her sister paid to see the attraction prior to the policy change and thought it was
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>> i like when we go on the sled and you see it's like you're actually moving in the sled. >> still shoppers were glad to hear seeing santa is free again. perfect. >> do you think that's right? >> ablutely. give more children the experience. >> okay. you ca see sit on his lap for free. photo will cost you $30 to $70. >> did you like it sitting on santa's lap when you were a kid or an adult? >> wow. >> what is that smirk? >> that smirk is santa, i have been ver nice. >> but you look pretty naughty there. oh, boy. >> the filter has applied on. >> i was just saying you're really holding back there. i'm trying the filter now. >> don't miss our updates on fabook at wnnfans.com. >> coming up, more newsrom abc.
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two decades. goo morng. i'm kendis gibson. >> i'm reena ninan. here are se of the top headlines we're following this morning on "world news now." on the warpath. france unleashing a second round of air strikes on an isis stronghold in syria. raids lead to 23 arrests and the alleged on mastermind of the paris attacks has been identified. he's jt 27 years old. full coverage in a moment. >> p police in rural texas say they have no motive for the murder of six people at a campsite. they say a man who lived on the neighboring property has been arrested on for the killings, but he did not know the victims. a 41-year-old volunteer firefighter from mississippi has been given what's being called the most extensive face transplant ever. his donor a 26-year-old bike mechanic from brooklyn
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ironically himself always wanted to be a firefighter. >> harvard researchers say drinking up to five cups of coffee a day could decrease the risk of dying prematurely. those are se of our top stories on t this tuesday, november 17th. from abc news, this is "world news now." good morning. we begin with the french crackdown on terror taking aim at isis overnight dropping 16 bombs on targs in syria simultaneously destroying a command center and a training center. >> as paris struggles to return to normal in the wake of the deadly attacks, one of the alleged d on attackers is zil eluding capture. these live pictures of the eiffel tower as we get more from elizeth hur. >> police thought they had him cornered on but the target has slipped on their grasp for the second time.
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and now the manhunt for the suspected on eighth attacker sa la is intensifying. police say he fled paris friday night abaoning the two cars he ntedhen making a run for belgium driving a third car with two other passengers. police stopped him at a roadblock saturday but let them go andhey madad it across the bord. those two passengers now under arrest and charged on. authorities have identified this man abdel hamid abboud as the mastmind of the massacre. his plan included having one of the attackers let in among the tens of thousands of syrian refugees to sneak his way into paris. fears of another deadly ruse have governors of 25 states resisting president obama's plan to resettle up to 10,000 syrians in the.s. >> slamming the door in their faces would be a betrayal of our values.
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hollande led his nation in a moment of silence. the e eiffel tower glowed on with the colors of the french flag for the first time since friday. e fugitive's brother was questioned on and released on. heays he had no idea. both of his brothers were terrorists. again, one is still on the run attacks. kendis and reena? elizabeth what, do we know about the air sikes in syriaover night. >> reporter: the french military confirmed the news overnight. the latest round involved the command centers and the training centers as you noted earlier in the city of raqqa known as the is capital in the syria. of course, we should note this is coming on the heels of the french president declaring france is now at war with isis and his words france will destroy isis. >> francois hollande saying they will be pitiless. thanks for joining us. >> the attacks in paris sluk sparked on a bitter debate over
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america's refugee program now opposed by half t nation's governors. the gop p presidentl candidates. >> president obama who just arrived in the philippines for the big apec summit is standing his ground on welcoming the refugees. here's abc arlette sands. >> on capitol hill a moment of silence for the attacks in paris. >> in memory of the terrorist attacks victims in france. >> a break from the heated rhetoric on the campaign trail. >> is this a trojan horse? >> we've got a cub scout for nder in chief. >> he candidates blasting president obama for his plan to admit 10,000 syrian refugees to the u.s. concerns mounting over whether one of the paris attackers entered france as a refugee. >> at least one and probably more of the killer, the animals that did what they did in paris came out of the migration. >> reporter: more than two dozen
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in syrian refugees and some 2016 candidates want to prioritize allowing christians into the u.s. >> our focus ought to be on the christian who have no place in ria anymore. >> reporter: but president obama says that's un-american. >> when i hear political leaders suggesting there would be a religious test for which person be who is fleeing from a war torn country is admitted, that's shameful. that's not american. that's not who we are. >> reporter: across the u.s., are security on hig alert. inashington, d.c., security heightened on at monuments, k-9 teams in the metro system just as a new isis video promises an attack on the nation's capital. >> i want you to know that our city is coordinating at the highest levels. >> reporter: the intelligence community says there's no specific imminent threat against the u.s., but cia director john brennan has warned isis may be preparing attacks following the tragedy in paris. >> arlet, we're getting rhetoc
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about this from the politicians. go o do governors can have the right to block refugees from entering their states? >> reporter: the answer is essentially no it's actually the federal government, not the states that determes whether a refugee can be admitted to the country. so those twos dozen governors n't have a legal right to keep refugees out of their states but experts a the governors can try to make it difficult for refugees by either cutting funding or denying services to them. kendis and reena. >> arlet sands reporting live from washington. thank you so much. as elizabeth hur mentioned on earlier, the french air force is conducting a seconds round of air strikes on the isis strong hold of raqqa in syria, of course. one of its aircraft carriers will soon be positioned off syria's coast. martha raddatz takes us inside the campaign. >> reporter: the response from the french air force has been strong and swift. french fighter jets pounding targets in the isis stronghold
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recruiting center. but this is not a realncrease in bombing. these are isis targets that may have already been on a list or strike package for weeks. so, why not strike when they were first on the list? >> they would wait for them to be populated, to have a class there in training, to have a group there being recruited. >> reporter: but when paris was attacked, the u.s. stepped a aside and let the french go after the targets as retaliatory strikes. it's not known whether there were isis fighters inside. as for the overall military strategy, nothing is changing. the president adamant about not adding combat ground troops. >> we have the right strategy and we're going to see it through. >> reporter: isis is believed to have between 20,000 to 30,000 fighters and oil fields that generate about $40 million per month. for ot first time the u.s. targeted on isis fuel trucks. more than 100 of them, used to
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but those, too, have been onon the target list for a while. martha raddatz, abc news, washington. >> our coverage of the attacks on paris continues in a few minutes with a look at the piano player in the french capital trying to heal the city with one famous melody later in this half hour. >> investigators have given up their search for the black box from the ship el faro. they're still hopeful they can find out what happened to the ship without the recorder. the fighter sank october 1st during a hurricane. everyone on board was killed. the pilot of a small plane managed on to make an emergency landing on a north carolin highway without injururing anyone. it landed on on the median and crossed on two lanes of traffic before stopping on the shoulder. the pil said he was having mej problems and trying to make it to an airport. >> extreme weather starting with tornadoes in texas. as many as a dozen twisters reported in the panhandle.
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golf ball sized hail came down in some parts. a hilary clinton plant in the-- halliburton plant was damaged. localized flooding was reported. in colorado a major snowstorm hitting areas around denver expecting a foot and a half blizzard like conditions will last well into this morning. wind gusts are expected to reach up to 60 miles an hour. blizzard warnings are in effect for parts of kansas, nebraska and new memexico. winter closing in in northern china. that means they're getting the pandas ready for the cold. the enclosure for the panda has been outfitted with a heating bed. i need a heating chair for the show. they want to make sure she is warm enough. she arrived a month ago and the experts say the change of climbs can be tough. >> her area has a built-in in heating system in the ground.
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comfortable time this winter. >> you would think their fur would ke them nicely warm for the winter but i guess not. >> you would think the blubber would help keep her insulated. >> she's a growing girl. eating lots of carrots, steamed on bread and apples. that sounds like a diet, not for a growing girl. >> paleodiet for pandas. . > coming up, if you're hungry for details about t the next hunger games," stay tuned. >>he single song from a piano player to h heal paris after the terror attacks. we're hearing from the musician who is striking a chord. >> new pictures taken inside the bataclan theater. our coverage continues after our look at today's forecast map. you're watching "world news now."
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back now to our top story. the attacks on paris. french president francois hollande is now saying france is at war as he vows to destroy isis. >> as frencharplanes strike in syria, he's calling for bold moves on the home front. abc's david muir is in paris with the latest. >> reporter: for the first tim it, the moments before paris was forever changed on. these photographs emerging from inside that concert hall taken from the stage befe the attack. so many smiling faces, their hands in the r. and now we know what would come next. the gunfire breaking through the music. >> we're also getting our first look at this video of the immediate aftermath.
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sirens blaring, voices cing out. two officers peering through those doors. president obama saying the u.s. had no intelligence this attack was coming. >> there were no specific mentions of this particular attack that would gives a sense of something that we need -- that we could provide french authorities, for example, or act on ourselves. >> reporter: while here in france, president hollande stood with students in a moment of silence across the country. a short time later in front of a joint session of parliament, he declared on france is atar with isis calling for an extension. he wants a three-month state of emergency here in france. saying the attacks were "planned in syria, organized in belgium and perpetrated in france." his country continuing its military response from those air strikes thanking america for
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an aircraft carrier to the eastern mediterranean on thursday off the coast of syria. the world now wching as that international manhunt plays out. the alleged on eighth attacker on the f front pages of newspapers across the globe. a massive anti-terror crackdown across france. these images of officers entering a building detaining a man in toulou. 168 raids in all. 23 arrested on, computers, harard drives seized. 39 weapons found him among them bullet proof vests kalashnikovs and a rockets launcher. people under house arrest here in france. as you travel through paris, all of the places where the carnage unfolded. there were 19 different tionalities among the dead. a survivor holding a ticket from the concert. this woman showing photos she took inside the concert hall with friends standing this close to the band. she hid in the dark inside a closet for three hours.
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>> all we could hear at that point was a stampede. people running and screaming. gunfire and thuds which could only have been people hitting the floor, their bodies. >> reporter: and we metro man renuel, who lived near two of the restaurants targeted. he told me it was his responsibility to be there with the victims who were dying. why did you kneel down beside them? >> what could i do? ignore them? just do what you can. you're not a doctor. you can't help. you can just show feelings to people, don't let people die alone. so, you do what you can do. you just watch, you just try to ease pain, but what can you dodo? >> andhe french government also trying to do what they can do. a short time ago, the interior minister announcing 128 raids have taken place overnight. they've added 115,000 police to conduct patrols in france, as well. and as we take a look once again at the growing memorial
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the six locations that were attacked on. you can see things are starting to get back to normal. at least people are going about ththeir busiss this morning there in paris. .coming up, one man's musical message. >> they're also the chords of peace. the musical tribute from another time. "world news now" conties
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stations. imagine all the people, living life in peace you may say i'm a dreamer >> they're the notes from another era, another time and another war. >> when john lennon wrote the music and the words to that song, they never thought it would become an icon of peace for its time. who could have possibly envisioned they would have such a powerful impact more than 40 years later half a world away. here's abc's juju chang. >> reporter: amidstt it the horror and grief, a moment of hope. davide mortello outside the
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far tune, john lennon's "imagine." >> music goes directly into your heart. you have a moir moir in front of you and you're reflecting yourself in this music. >> reporter: after the infamous attacks, the musisicianrove 400 miles from germany to play at nearly every site where innocents lost their lives. >> my hope is thatll the musicians all around the world are playing music for peace. this is what the world needs right now. >> reporter: around the globe echoes of support, monumentses a wash in the colors of the flag, this ige trending worldwide and in paris, a symbol of hope in a city tossed on but not sunk. >> so beautiful to hear his words and the music and that song is just so touching even a generation later.
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it went to number one on the billboard charts. you can see exactly why. >> it's quite fitting. >> we'll be right back.50 to 85. write down this number now. right now, people are receiving this free information kit for guaranteed acceptance life insurance with a rate lock through the colonial penn program. if you are on a fixed income, learn about affordabable whole life insurance that guarantees your rate can never increase for any reason. if you did not receive your information, call this number now. yourur acceptae is guarantnteed, with no health questions stanby to learn more. >> i'm alex trebek, here to tell you about a popular life insurance plan with a rate lock that locks in your rate for life so it can never increase. did you get yoyour free formation kit? if not, please call this number now. this affordable plan through the colonial penn program has covege options for just $9.95 a month. your rate is locked in
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so hello from the other side i must have called on a thousand times to tell you i'm sorry for everything that i've done but when i call you never >> it is t minus three days to the release of perhaps the most highly anticipated hunger games" installment ever mocking jay part deaux. >> fans are asking what's going on with the fashi forrd effie trinket. elizabeth banks opened on up to rachel smith. >> everyone's either going to want to kiss you, kill you or be you. >> far from the districts in the
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heart of times square -- lies the hunger games" exhibition. >> what do you make of all of it? >> it's remarkable. it's a walk down memory lane for sure. >> eyes right, chins up, smiles on. >> where i met u with the capital's favorite fashionista effie trinket, aka elizabeth banks. here she is. ose are works of art. >> i want to say they were designed by an architect. it wasas a collaration between an architect and a shoe designer. >> what are you doing? >> i'm a political refugee. >> she reflects on her surpring return in part 2. >> the films were a departure from the book where effie was mia. >> i think everybody disagreed was sort of a fan favorite and she had a real connection to katniss. you couldn't really see it in the books. >> you look lovely as ever. senator now for a littltle lightning round, maybe the odds be ever in your favor.
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>> a game we're calling what are effie's odds? >> what are the odds of her wearing sneakers? >> low, very low odds. unless they become a big deal in the capital. >> she really likes the heal. >> what are the odds of effie being on social medi >> high odds. effie understands the power of a great media presence. >> with the games coming to a close, she says effie will always have a place in her heart. >> are you going to miss this character? >> very much. i loved on her. she's really iconic and there's a lot of creativity within effie. i'll miss that for sure history was made here. . >> abc news, new york. >> you excited about this one, huh. >> yeah, it opens this friday. many say it could make up to $120 million this weekend.
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hour. this morning on "world news now," the world's most wanted man. >> the police raids and manhunt for the mastermind in the paris atcks. any acblisses how did they get away. new details on the search and how world leaders are reonding. homeland threat. latest message from isis vowing g to attack washington, d.c. leaders in the nation's capital taking no chances. murder mystery. developmentsts overnight from the texas where six people were found dead at a campsite. the new clues coming in. and later revolutionary surgery, the most extensive face transplant ever a the injured firefighter who will get to go home for thanksgiving after an operation like no other.
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from abc news, this is "world news now." >> we do say good morning to you this tuesday. it is a busy one. i'm kendis gibson. >> i'm reena ninan. let's get right to the intense crackdown on terror in paris and beyond as the scope of flied's grisly attacks begins slowly sink in. >> a live picture right now of paris of the e eiffel ter which reopened on f the first tim yesterday following the attks on fday. some flowers are piling up at memorials all around thatity honoring the 1239 people that called on that city home while police conducted more than 150 raids and arrested on nearly two dozen people.. a key suspect and the alleged on mastermind remain on the loose. our coverage beginwith elizabeth hur. >> reporter: police thought they had him cornered on but the target has slipped on their grasp for the second time. and now the manhunt for the suspected on eighth attacker
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salah deslam isntensifying. the 26-year-old on the run after police say he fled pararisriday night, abandoning the two cars he had rented then making a run for his native belgium driving a third car with two other passengers. police stopped them at a roadblock saturday but inexplicably let them go and they made it across the border. those two passengers now under arrest and charged on. police identified this plan as the mastermind of the paris massacre. his plan included having one of the attackers b blend in among the tens of thousands of syrian refugees to sneak into paris. fears of another deadly ruse have governors of 25 states resisting president obama's plan to resettle up to 10,000 syrians in the u.s. >> slamming the door in their faces would be a betrayall of our values. >> in pair pris, francois
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hollande led his nation in a moment of silenc in the meantime, the fugitive's brother was questioned on and released on. he says he had no idea both of his brothers were terrorists. again, one is still on the run and the other died on during the attacks. >> of course a lot of people reacting to this attack. what are we hearing from our lawmakers on capitol hill? >> to honor the victims they observed a moment of silence yesterday and house speaker paul ryan requested on an all-member briefing from the administration, bottom line he says he wants to know what happened. and make sure what happened. paris doesn't happen here. >> we know now also, that syrian refugees have become a huge campaign issue especially for donald trump. >> the donald. elves at a rally last night in tennessee. and he told his supporters there if elected, he would deport all
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going to borders, we're going to have a corrupt again. right now we don't have a country." president obama, we should note he just landed in manila for the asian pacific summitits. he's already made his position clear fornyone denying the syrian refugees the ability to resettle here, hee said that is shameful, not american, not who we are. basically, yes a divisive issue an a debate already brewing. definitely a change in the dialogue for the presidential race. lesz thank you for joining us. >> as law enforcement steps up security here at home isis released on a new video vowing washington will suffer the same fate as paris. here of here's abc's pierre thomas. >> reporter: french police in a shootout, exchanging gunfire with terrorists outside the bataclan concert hall. three hours of terror. isis quickly claiming credit for it all, saying paris is only the beginning. and in this video, isis issues a
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warning to america. an attack on the nation's capital is coming. "as we struck in france in the center of its abode, in paris, then we swear that we will strike america at its center, in washington." >> we are always at a heightened level of security because of our locale. >> reporter: the cia director says the attacks in france should serve as a wakeup call for americans. >> their agenda is to kill. pure and simple. >> reporter: across the country, security is being ramped up. there's a heavy police presence in times square. and new york city's police commissioner said that isis tactics in the paris attack deeply conce him. >> the idea that all of them, all of them were equipped with these suicide vests. >> reporter: u.s. officials are also worried that the killers in france may have used encryption technology to hide their computer and cell phone communications. so-called going dark. belgian offificials spect the killerin france also used on
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gaming systems like playstation to communicate offgrid. even though there's no specific credible isis threat to the homeland, the fbi is intensifying surveillance of their suspected sympathizers in all 50 states. more than 70 prospective supporters of isis arrested in the last two years alone. some witith deadlyntentions. security across this city stepped on up and across this country more than 900 terror investigations under way. pierre thaws, abc news, washington. >> france's fierce military spse to the terror attacks now includes an aircraft carrier. the carrier charles de gaulle heading toward syria. they were apparently on a hit list. why didn't they strike before? >> they would wait for them to be p populatedo have a class there in training, to have a group being recruited. >> as for the american response, presidenobama says nothing has
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to put boots on the ground. yesterday, the u.s. did bomb more than 100 isis fuel trucks. >> secretary of state john kerry made a surprise visit to paris on monday-inning the u.s. ambassador jane hartley for a ceremonial lighting at the american embassy. the building was flooded with light in the blue white and red colors of the french flag. this morning kerry will meet with francois hollande that america shares in the resolve to defeat extremism. >> coming on the heels of brutal attacks in lebanon, iraq and elsewhere, it is an assault on our collective accepts of reason and purpose. >> kerry also said that the attacks would not demamaterial paris from hosting the u.n. climate change conference and than president obama is looking forward being there himself. our coverage of the attacks on
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paris and the impact worldwide continuing all mning long get the latest on americans who escaped on and the student who did not laterhis half hour. another major headline we're following a suspect charged on with the murder after six bodies were disvered on in rural texas. two victims were found in a travel trailer on land they just bought for camping and hunting. the other four including one child were discovered on in a nearby pond. the suspect william mitchell hudson lived on the adjoining property. prosecutors have not identified a motive. . we enlisted on thehe help of the texas rangers and our district attorney. >> a a woman w survived to the attack was able to describe the alleged on killer to the police. >> the fbi and justice department joining forces into a investigation of a police shooti in minneapolis. jamar clark is brain dead after being shot sunday.
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conflicting reports whether h was handcuffed on when he shot. hundreds protesting shut down the highway last night in st. louis. >> tornados in texas. as m many a a dozen reported in the texas panhandle. the storms left thousands of people without power. golf ball sized hail came down in some areas. a halliburton plant in the area was powerfully damaged. flooding as reported. you wouldn't think the starter of winter is still a month away. seei scenes like this areas around denver expecting a foot and a half. we're talking blizzard conditions lasting into the morning. gusts expected on to reach up to 60 miles an hour. blizzard warnings for parts of kansas, nebraska and new mexico. >> so this is huge. marriott is buying starwood
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hotel company in the world. the deal brings together brands raising from luxury to budget. the combined company will control about 5500 properties and more than a million rooms worldwide. >> what does this mean for my points? >> no longer do you have to use between starwood and marriott. i'm a geeking about you're a sayi no one's going to g get lost in the point system whether you're marriott or starwowood. >>yeah, somehow. and for those of us who need fewer facebook friends, this is national unfriend day. kimmy kimmel came up with the holiday as a joking in 2010. yes, there is a national unfriend page on facebook. among the friends who the runs who overshare, reveal the endings of tv shows and those who is asks silly questions which could be answered easily ononliline. oh, kimmel. that's not nice.
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i used to have a bthday on trending because it gives you a reminder of somebody's birthday. >> so you don't get the reminder agagain? >>o, or even know who thehey are. >> when's your birthday. >> monday night football was not a thg of beauty last night but produced on a result almost no one saw coming. >> the bengals had a 6 oil 3 lead when houstonbackup quarterback here t.j. yates find dion drail hopkins. then receiver of a.j. green and the texans recovered on. e bengals suffered their first loss of the seseason. houston wins it 10 oil 6. it was an offensive showdown there. really. all right. of coming up in the mix an endorsement for barbie dolls from a boy.
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>> the revolutionary operation for severely burned on firefighter given only a 50% chance of surviving the mt extensive face transplant ever. the remembrances and the emotional stories being shared. >> and remember to look for us on instagram. abc, wnn. you're watching "world news now." that's my game bank you never heard of, that's my name haa! thanank you. uh, next. watch me make your interest rate... disappear. there's gotta be a better way to find the right card. whatever kind you're searching for, creditcards.com lets you compare hundreds of cards to find the one that's rightht for you just search, compare, and apply at creditcards.com. a one, a two, a three percent cash back let's get these dayquil liquid gels and go. but these liquid gels are new. mucinex fast max. it's the same difference.
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four days after the deadly terrorist attacks in paris, worldwide support casting a new beacon on the city of light. >> but as the shock wears off, grief is taking its place clududing her at home, of course, as we learn more details about the american victims caught in the chaos. brandi hitt with more. >> reporter: family and friends of 23-year-old know emmy gonzales gathered on at this vigil struggling to understand why her life was cut short in paris. the senior studying in a semester abroad is seen here on social media cecelebratina birthday in 2012. she was shot and killed by terrorists in a restaurant.
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everyone el's heart, too. >> another target the bataclan concerhall as the eagles of death metal performed on. nick alexander, the band's merchandise manager was killed along with 90 ear others here. hisirlfriend wrote you are and life. the were close calls for many others. >> we heard bang-bang, bang-bang bang-bang, like five shots. >> airbnb software engineer brian moriarity was trapped in a restaurant surrounded by gunfire and and shane and jami also took cover near the concert hall into it feels selfish in a way to be here. >> 16 additional college students were studying with gonzales. california state california long beach confirms they are all safe. >> glad to hear that. coming up next, the firefighter with a new lease on life.
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his dramatic transformation after being severely burned in a house fire. it's being called on the most extrensive face transplant ever. >> the later the christmas controversy in new jersey. why so many angry moms took to facebook over that mall santa. that's in our next half hour on "world news now." "world news now" continues stations.kids is hispanic. that means many of the future doctors who will care for us, the enginrs who will build our cities, the scientists and entrepreneurs of our country can be your kids. we all know how hard it is for you to send them to college. this is why we want you to know you are not alone, and every day, more peoplee supportou to make it happen. many support you, and the hispanic scholarship fund helps you prepare, plan, and pay for your kids' college education.
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> it's bng called on the most extensive face transplant ever. a firefighter whose face was burned on in a house 14 years ago now has a new lease on life. >> his new face is now that of a 26-year-old brooklyn bike mechanic. mallory hoff has this remarkable story. >> reporter: mississippi volunteer firefighter patrick hardison suffered devastating burns to his face when he ran into a home to see if anyone was trapped on in the flames in
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from that point forward, he disguised on himself wearing sunglasses. >> i'm hear going to nyu for the face transplant. >> reporter: now the husband and father is the recipient of the most extensive face transplant worldwide to date. >> lips nice and normal. >> he's doing very well today only for day 93. he'll require other procedures. >> reporter: it was performed on at nyu in august. dr. rodriguez led a team of over 100 people during the6 hour surgery. >> wead an emotional exchange when we took him to macy's to buy clothes. no one stared on at him and lookeded on at him. >> a friend urged on him to you send his medical recordsre. he placed those files in the hands of dr. rodriguez. in 2012, they began their journey together.
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identifying the ideal donor, a fair skinned on light hairs. >> helen irving is the ceo of the organ recovery organization live on new york. she welcomed on the challenge. more than a year after the search began are, there was a doaner. >> david had beeneclared on brain dead following a bicycle accident. his mother immediately sai yes. there was no hesitation in her mind. her son-always wanted to be a fiman. >> in death he would give a new face and new day t a man who traded in his reflection when he ran into a burning home. >> mallory hoff, channel 7 eyewitness news. >> imagine if the doctor told you you only have a 50% chance of surving the surgery. >> those were his chances. >> now he can get his vision back and do something as bake as drive. >> afterer spending 1 14 years like that, you can kind of understand
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dissolves fast to unleash max strength medicine. let's end this. time now for "the mix." we're all about gender neutral toys. >> of course. >> you know who is getting on board with that? barbie. this new ad featuring a boy talking about how much he loves barbie. >> >>. >> moss chino barbie doll sold out within an hour for $150 is the price you'll pay for that one. seems to mayorer thehetyle of moschino designer jeremy sct. he's come out saying he loves barbie and thinks she is the ultimate muse. >> interesting. i wonder what some people would say having this kid, this male
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>> they should all get on board. gender neutral. girls can play with trucks, boys can play withbarbie. >> i'm still playingng with my buddy doll from the 1980s. >> okay so around this time of year we always get the word of the day from the oxford. the word of the day is i can't even pronounce it. this is the word of the year rather. >> what is that? >> it's an emotety con. they said ts is the word of the year. it would not be an old fashioned string of letters like we know. instead it's this picto, acknowledgemenent of how popular theseictures have become in our digital a daily lives. >> so that's the emoji for lol? >> it is. crying, laughing. >> okay. >> and the lol is laughing out loud? >> yes. and then there's -- >> that is theive someny yak. i'm so tired i can't feel my face anymore.
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>> what is your emoji there. >> mine is give me me candy corn and coffee. >> please. >>ell, a dad was given a veo camera to document a trip. problem was daddy put it on selfie mode and then this happened. >> so did you know it was on selfie mode? >> no, he went to vegas on his trip. his son said dad, take this camera and document your trip. yeah. but what daddy didn't realize was he put it on selfie mode. so everything, every shot has him in it. >> so you never get to see all that is. >> and his son posted on facebook. i gave my dad a gopro while he was in las vegas. i didn't instruct him how to use it and he didn't know the point of the effing thing. >> that is the worst vegas video yet. that's onef the things that happens in vegas that should
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>> that's this morning on "world news now" world's most wanted. the police raids and intense search for anyone responsible for the paris terror attacks. new developments in the manhunt. and new this half hour, details emerging about the 27-year-old mastermind. >> from isis headquarters to the french capital. what investigators are uncovering about the young man's plans to terrorize paris. >> political firestorm. the presidential candidates and dozens of governors fighting to o stop any influx of syrian refugees. president obama's response. >> and later in "the skinny"", charlie sheen's diagnosis. his very personal healtlth disclosure going public and w what we learned about his condition. it's tuesday, november 17th. from abc news, this is "world news now." >> we do say good morning to you on this busy tuesday morning.
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i'm kendis gibson. >> i'm reena ninan. we begin with the war on isis. france, ready to join forces with the u.s. and russia vowing to triumph over the enemy after ose bloody attacks in paris. >> first live pictures right now from paris. take a look as dawn breaks there in the city of lights. the victims came from at least 19 nations manof which are now stanng in solidarity with france. a 27-year-old belgian has been identified as the mastermind of e attacks. the french military has launched on another round of punishing air strikes on isis targets in syria. and more than 150 raids were conducted across france leading to nearly two dozen arrests. >> as the manhunt is still under way for thelleged on eighth attacker, coverage begins with abc's terry moran. >> reporter: police moved in swiftly cordoning off streets, surrounding an apartment building, scaling rooftops. they warn neighbors to stay
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inside, away from windows. then they moved on in. but their target was gone, and the manhunt continues for the gunman who got away. 26-year-old salah abdeslam suspected of being one of the shooters that hit cafes and restaurants in paris. police say he fled paris friday night. ey found the cars he'dented.d. one left outside the theater. the other abandoned in this suburb. then, driving a ird cacar with two other passengers, he headed toward belgium, stopped by police a at a adlock on saturday morning, but not and they made it across the border. the two other people in that getaway car, picked up by police later, now charged with participation in terrorism. and the fugitive's brother, also detain, but later released, saying he had no idea that both his brothers -- one died during the attacks -- were terrorists. "they were normal brothers," he said. this gritty neighborhood, molenbeek, a breeding ground of terrorism. while we were on the streets here, we spoke to one man, he didn't want his face shownwho o
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young here are radicalized. three of your neighbors went t syria? >> yeah. >> reporter: a french police union has even said that i isis has taken over here and that the belgian government has lost control of this neighborhood. terry moran, abc news, brussells. >> france is using mility power to fight back against isis. the aircraft carrier charles de gall set say say on thursday for the coast of syria. the french air force conducting a second night of air strikes on the isis strohold of raqqa syria. they have taken out recruiting centers and an ammunition warehouse. >> back here at home, members of the house of representatives will receive a classified on briefing on the paris attacks later today. last night, speaker of the house paul ryan led the chamber in a moment of silence to honor the victims. today's closed door meeting will have members only briefing on the attacks will be by fbi chief james comey and homeland securirity chiefeh johnson. >> the islamic state is making
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it clear that paris is only the beginning as they seek to go global. a new isis video is warning an attack on washington, d.c. could be next. in the 12-minute video, the terror group vowing to strike america at i its art saying countries taking part in air strikes against syria will suffer the same fate as france. >> we are always at a heightened level of security because of our locale. >> their agenda is to kill, pure and simple. >> security has been beefed up across the countryry but offials are concerned thatat the terrorists may have used an encryption technology in gaming systems like playstation to hide their commmmunicatio. >> and then there is this debate. attacks have sparked on a wave of anti-fugee sentiment across the united states. at least half of the country's governors are now refusing to take in syrian refugees. but some americans disagree like these students in charleston, heckling senator ted cruz over his opposition to the refugee
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program. we get more now from abc's jon karl. >> reporter: president obama declared on amera has a moral responsibility to allow some syrian refugees to settle here in the united states. >> many of these refugees are the victims of terrorism themselves. slamming the door in their faces would be a betrayal of our values. >> reporter: republican presidential candidates are attacking the president's plan to allow up to 10,000 syrian refugees into the u.s. >> president obama and hillary clinton's proposal to bring to america tens of thousands of syrian muslims is nothing short of lunacy. >> reporter: the president's plan says nothing about the e religion of the refugees, but senator cruz says, quote, there is no meaningful risk of christians committing acts of terror. he and jeb bush insist the emphasis should be on allowing syrian christians into the u.s. >> they' being beheaded, they're being executed by both sides. and i ink k we have responsibility to help.
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>> reporter: the president called that un-american. >> when i hear political leaders suggesting that there would be a religious test for which person who is fleeing from a war torn country is admitted, that's shameful. that's not american. it's not who we are. >> reporter: president obama also said that any syrian refugees coming into the united states will be thoroughly vetted to ensure that no terrorists slip in. republicans just aren't buying that. in fact, some of the republican presidential candidates are saying that's just not possible. jonathan karl, abc news, the white house. our coverage of the attacks on paris and its far-reaching scope does not end here. on "america this morning" and "good morning america." prosecutors in rural texas are searching for a motive this morning in the murder of s six people. the bodies of two victims were found in a travel trailer on property they just bought.
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were found in a pond nearby. the police chief says the suspect, william hudson, and the victims did t know each other. a woman who managed toto survive the attack by hiding in the woods identified the suspect. > the fedel government has joined an investigation into a police shooting in minneapolis. jamar clark is brain dead after being shot sunday night. there are conflicting accounts whether clark was handcuffed when shot and whether he resisted arrest. hundreds protesting the shooting shut down interstate 94 last night in minneapolis. more than 50 people were arrested. some extreme weather starting with tornadoes in texas as many as a dozen twisters were reported in the texas panhandle. the severe storms left houses of people without power. golf ball zed hail came down in some parts, as well. a halliburton plant was heavily derailed on in the powerful some localized flooding was alalso reported. in thehe meantime, winr is still over a month away butou
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wouldn't know that by looking at these skis. this is from the rockies now. the snow continues today with areas around denver expecting a foot and a half. blizzard conditions will last well into this morning. wind gusts are expected to reach up to 60 miles an hour. blizzard warnings in effect for parts of kansas, nebraska, as well as new mexico. >> today's weather maps to the east all that snow will be there. also heavy rain across the middle of the country. violent storms along the gulf coast. heavy rain in the northwest. dry and sunny along most of the east coast. >> oy 50 degrees here in new york city. significantly cooler than yesterday. and also in the 50s in the midwest. 80s along the gulf coast. 73 in l.a. and a high of 52 in beautiful great falls, montana. >> how about some fast food news. taco bell getting on the animal welfare bandwagon. the fast food chain is the latest to commit to using only cage-free eggs and they're making the fastest switch yet.
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the choice will make a difference in the cage-free egg industry. taco bell has more than 6,000 u.s. restaurants and buys more than a million and a half eggs every year. can you get egg whites at taco bell? >> i think you canan. i haven't been to a taco bell in awhile. speaking of breakfast because researchers have found even more benefits in that cup of morning joe. cup of joe. scientists at harvard discovered on that people who drank three to five cups of coffee a day had a 15% lower sk of dying prematurely and that includes decaf coffee, as well. they think it might have something to do with chemical compounds found in coffee beans. >> remind me again, you don't drink coffee, right? >> i do, not enough but still i'm alive. well and healthy. >> a couple of pents in iowa have three little reasons that they might be awake and watching us right now. give them the coffee. they have identical new triplets.
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today. >> wait a minute. is that mama? she looks too bright eyed and bushy tailed. >> she looks kate middletonesque >> since they've been home, their mom says it's been a 24-hour cycle of feeding, changing and dressing them. they were born without the use of fertility drugs. >> their dococtors say so exceedingly rare, he doesn't even know what the odds are of it happening. the most importantoint is all three are healthy and happy and they have interesting names. crory is onend two of the three first names are traditional irish names. >> interesting. cute little babies. >> coming up in "the skinny," that's how they sound about now, steven spielberg, barbra streisand and yogi berra will soon he something in common. >> charlie sheen's private health concern going public. the latest on his condition.
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>> later a social media uproar over a $50 charge to see a shopping mall santa. how parents fought and won, all inhe spirit of christmas. you're watching "world news now." >> "world news now" weather, brought to you by easy off oven cleaner.weather, brought to you by easy off oven cleaner.s and back seat chefs have all assembled to look inside your oven. but you've cleananed o all the baked-on business from meals past with easy-off, so the only thing they see is that big, beautiful bird. "mmmmm" go aheadad. let 'em judge. i take prilosec otc each morning for my frequent heartburn because you can't beat zero heartburn! ahhh the sweet taste of victory! prilosec otc. one pill each morning. 24 hours.
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wait, what?! you realize i have gold status? do i still get the miles? new mucinex sinus-max liquid gels. diolves fast to unleash max strength medicine. start the relief. ditch the misery. let's end this. well, this was the scene yesterday here in new york as hundreds of people gathered at ground zero to honor the victims of the paris terror attacks. one by one people filed by to place flowers and tributes at the 9/11 survivor tree. among the speake france's counsel general anand former ambassador to france craig stapleton.
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>> and as the international manhunt intensifies for the allege d eighth attacker, we're hearing new details about the so-call d mastermind behind the attacks. >> it comes as authories believe one of the attackers posed as a refugee to slip in undetected to europe. abc's brian ross has the latest. >> reporter: he is only 27, but he's risen rapidly through the ranks of isis to mastermind some of their biggest terror plots in europe. in this propaganda videoeo, abdelhamid abaaoud asks, is there anything better than jihadism, than martyrdom? officials believe he plalanned the paris attacks from isis headquarters in syria. carrying out the direct orders of top isis leaders, who have set up a new unit to launch terror attacks in the west, with recruits separated into brigades by their nationality and language skills. >> this was planning a complicated operation, infiltrating trained personnel to do it and pulling it off across borders. >> reporter: the isis mastermind
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sent one of its attackers from syria, posing as a refugee, presenting this forged passport to greek officials just five weeks ago, a and then king his way acss europe to paris. other attackers were hand-picked in the mastermind's hometown in that brussels neighborhood of molenbeek, where he traveled often. narrowly escaping a police raid just this past january before he returned to syria. >> the mastermind selects and trains and motivates the suicide bombers, but he never kills himself. >> french authorities say they had no advance word of the attack but at least two of the gunmen were known to french intelligigence andne had actually been charged with terror connect d crimes and allowed to go free. clearly the french government lost track of both of them. brian ross, abc news, new yorkrk. and intelligence officials say part of the reason why it was difficult to track all of
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belgium as a staging ground as as opposed to france where they are searching for all of these people. some live pictures in the meantime from paris, fittingly you would say gray and rainy morning there in the capital. >> and as the country mourns we know the french military announcing just a short time ago at least 16 bombs were used on in the latest campaign. they had he targets, command centers and even training centers. action clearly being taken by the government even overnight. we'll be rightht back. being taken by the government even overnight. we'll be right back. "world news now" continues
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stations.tt0w!tz'h3! %4@-hi4 tt0w!tz'h3! el@-bnx tt0w!tz'h3! ed@-dl< tt0w!tz'h3% )8h-$2@ tt0w!tz'h3% kzh-9]< tt0w!tz'h3% n-h-l40 tt0w!tz'h3% 0ph-rs( tt0w!tz'h3% s"h-b!h tt0w!tz'h3% ueh-ac8 tt0w!tz'h3% 7hh-]al skinny, so skinny okay. so topping o our headles t this morning for "the skinny," some devastating news from actor charlie sheen. >> hollywood publicist howard bragman also a consultant for abc news has confirmed he's been told that sheen has bebeen diagnosed as hiv pitive. >> he says whilele he didn talk directly to sheen about his hiv status, sheen's people have told him that he is getting treatment. >> some more uplifting news here. into president obama last named this year's class of recipients confident presidential medal of frdom. >> 17 people have been named for the nation's highest civilian honor including barbra streisand. her fill lan floppic works having advanced research of
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heart disease in women. >> also steven spielberg founded the usc fodation dedicated to overcoming intolerance and bigotry through the use of visual history testimony. >> and being honored on posthumously yogi berra who put his professional career on hold to join the navy where he fought with allied forces on d-day and earned a purple heart. >> the rewards will be presented at the white house next tuesday. >> whaa great group of folks to honor. >> next to the viral video that triggered on a run on papatti labelle's sweet potato pies. >> they are sold exclusively through walmart. this weekend they y were being sold at the rate of one per second all because of this guy in chicago, kendis. >> you turn into patty after eating this. mm, patti, how is it that you people
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together sometimes patti. when you've been playing feels like heaven mm, mm, mm. >> this is your favorite video. >> that's great. theris a follow-up where he was out of the pie, by the way. his name is james wright. and his video has been viewed on more than a million times including by patti herself who personally called him to thank him for the over the top review. walmart says it's looking for 2 million sweet potato pies to replenish its supply. >> finally we have a "dancing with the stars" update. >> a big night in the ballroom with the stars performing three dances filling the void after tamar braxton's exit over health issues. bii irwin dancing both inside and outside a box, swinging a lighted rope around her neck. >> carlos penavega showed off
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let's end this. if you're approaching 65, now's the time to get your ducks in a row. to learn about medicare, and the options you have. you see, medicare doesn't cover everything - only about 80% of your part b medical expenses. the rest is up to you. so if 65 is around the corner, think about an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan, insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. like all standardized medicare supplement insurance plans, they help cover some o of wh medicare doesn't pay. and could save you in out-of-pocket medical costs. so don't wait. call to request your free decision guide. and gather the information now to help p you choo a plan later. these types of plans let you pick any doctor or hospital that takes medicare patients. and there's a range of plans to choose from, depending on you needs and your budget. so if you're turning 65 soon, call now and get started. because the time to think about tomorrow...is today.
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go long. you'd better you'd better watch out. you'd better not cry you'd better not pout i'm telling you why santa claus is coming to town >> why not? the music's great but santa claus has already come to a town in cherry hill, new jersey but he ended up causing a huge controversy. >> it all started with a cherry hill mall decided to amp up the santa experience and also amping up a heavy price tag. wpvi's sarah bloomquist has the story. >> reporter: the visit to santa's lap is a holiday tradition but when for the the second year in a row the mall decided to give shoppers a hi-tech experience social media wewent wild d nonot in a gd way
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this year the mall started charging $35 to $75 to see st. nick. gail's post on facebook was typical. it's an absolute disgrace you're charging so much money to get in to see santa. outside the mall the same. >> i don't think people should be charged for santa claus. no way. >> why not? >> it's christs. come on. what's the real meaning? >> reporter: there the adventure to your santa attraction is one of only 12 like it in the country. mall management was surprised by the negative reaction. >> we never want anybody to feel like they're excluded oror they can't come here. >> reporter: the mall got the mess allege and dropped the rerequired ppurchase of a a photo package. >> you can come in and visit for free. you'll no longer have to make a minimum photo package purchase and you can visit with santa instead. >> gnna and her sister paid to see the north pole attraction prior to the policy chae d thought itit was wor the price. >> i like when we go on the sled
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and you see it's like you're actually moving in the sled.d. >> still shoppers were glad to hear seeing santa is free again. >> perfect. >> do you think that's right? >> absolutely. give more children the you opportunity, the experience. you can see sit on his lap for free. photo will cost you $30 to $70. >> did you like it sitting on santa's lap when you were a kid or an adult? >> oh, hadal low. wow.w. what is that smirk? >> that smirk is santa, i have been very nice. >> but you look pretty naughty there. oh, boy. >> the filter has applied. >> i wasust saying you're really holding back there. >> i'm trying the filter now. >> don't miss our updates on facebook at wnnfans.com. >> coming up, more ns from abc. >> thiis abc's "world news
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two decades. good morning. i'm kendis gibson. >> i'm reena n ninan. here are some of the top headlines we're following this morning on "world news now." on the warpath. france unleashing a second round of air strikes on ansis stronghold in syria. raids lead to 23 arrests and the alleged on mastermind of the paris attacks has been identified. he's just 27 yea old. full coverage in a moment. >> police in rural texas say murder of six people at a campsite. they say a man who lived on the neighboring property has been arrested for the killings, but he did n not know e victims. a 41-year-old volunteer firefighter from mississippi has been given what's being called the most extensive fac transplant ever. his donor a 26-year-old bike mechanic from brooklyn ironically himself always wanted
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>> harvard researchers say drinking up to five cups of coffee a day could decrease the risk of dying premarely by 15%. they think it's linked to chemical compounds found in the beans. those are some of our top stories on this tuesday, november 17th. from abc news, this is "world news now." good morning. we begin with the french crackdown on terror taking aim at isis overnight dropping 16 bombs on targets in syria simultaneously destroying a command center and a training center. >> as paris struggles to r return to normal in the wake of the deadly attacks, one of the alleged tackers is still eluding capture. these live pictures of the eiffel tower as we get more from abc's elizabeth hur. >> reporter: police thought they had him cornered but the target
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second time. and now the manhunt for the suspected eighth attacker salah abdeslam iintensifying. police say he fled paris friday night abandoni the two cars he rented, then making a run for his native belgium driving a third car with two other passengers. police stopped him at a roadblock saturday but let them go and they made it across the border. those two passengers now under arrest and charged. authorities have identified this man abdel hamid abaaoud as the mastermind of the paris massacre. his plan included having one of the attackers blend in among the tens of thousands of syrian refugees to sneak his way into paris. fears of another deadly ruse have governors of 25 states resisting president obama's an to resettle up to 10,000 syrians in the u.s. >> slamming the door in their faces would be a betrayal of our values. >> reporter: in paris, president
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francois hollande led his nation in a moment of silence. the eiffel tower glowed with the colors of the french flag for the first time since friday. the fugitive's brother was questioned and released. and he says he had no idea both of his brothers were terrorists. again, one is still on the run and the other died during the attacks. kendis and reena? >> elilizabeth, at do we know about the air strikes in syria overnight? >> repeporter: t french military confirmed the news overnight. what we've learned so far is that this latest round involved the command centers and the training centers as you noted earlier in the city of raqqa which h become known as the isis capital in syria. of course, we ould note this is coming on the heels of the french president declaring france is now at war with isis and his words, france will destroy isis. >> francois hollande saying they will be pitiless. elizabet thanks for joining us. >> thank you.
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a bitter debate over america's syrian refugee prorogram now opposed by half the nation's's governors and the gop presidential candidates. >> president obama who just arrived in the philippines for the big apec summit is standing his ground on welcoming the refugees. here's abc arlette sands. >> reporter: on capitol hill, a moment of silence for the attacks in paris. >> in memory of the terrorist attack victims in n france. >> a break from the heated rhetoric on the campaign trail. >> nothing shohort of lunacy. >> is this ajan horse? >> we've got a cub scout for mander in chief. >> reporter: republican candidates blasting president obama for his plan to admit 10,000 syrian refugees to the u.s. concerns mounting over whether one of the paris attackers entered france as a refugee. at least one and probably more of the killers, the animals that did what they did in paris came out of the migration. >> reporter: more than two dozen governors are refusing to take in syrian refugees and some 2016
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allowing christians into the u.s. >> our focus ought to be on the christians who have no place in syria anymore. >> reporter: but preresident oma says that's un-american. >> when i hear political leaders suggesting there would be a religious test for which a person who is fleeing from a war tornountry is admitted, that's shameful. that's not american. that's not whoe are. >> reporter: across the u.s., security is on high alert. in washington, d.c., security heightened at monuments. k-9 teams in the metro system just as a new isis video promises an attack on the nation's capital. >> i want you to know that our city is coordinating at the highest levels. >> reporter: the intelligence community says there's no specific imminent threat against the u.s., but cia direrector joh brennan has warned isis may be preparing attacks following the tragedy in paris. >> arlette, we're getting
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politicians. but do governors have a legal right to block refugees from entering their states? >> reporter: the answer is essentially no. it's actually the federal government, not the states that determin whether a refugee can be admitted to the country. so those two dozen governs don't have a legal right to keep refugees out of their states but experts say the governors can try to make it difficult for refugees by either cutting funding or denying services to them. kendis and reena. >> busy's arlet sands reporting live from washington. thank you so much. >> as elizabeth mentioned a little bit earlier, the french air force is conducting a second round of air strikesn the isis stronghold of raqqa in syrah, o of course. one of its aircraft carriers wi soon be positioned off syria's coast. martha raddatz takes us inside the campaign. >> reporter: the response from the french air force has been strong and swift. french fighter jets pounding targets in the isis stronghold of raqqah, bombing an isis
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recruiting center. but this is not a real increase in bombing. these are isis targets that may have already been on a list or strike package for weeks. so, why not strike when they were first on the list? >> they would wait for them to be populated, to have a class there in training, to have a group there being recruid. >> reporter: but when paris was attacked, the u.s. stepped aside and let the french go after the targets as retaliatory strikes. it's not known whether there were isis fighters inside. as for the overall military strategy, nothing is changing. the president adamant abt not adding combat ground troops. >> we have the right strategy and we're going to see it through. >> reporter: isis is believed to have between 20,000 to 30,000 fighters and oil fields that generate about $40 million per month. for the first time, the u.s.
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than 100 of them used to smuggle oil to finance military and teterrorist erations. but those, too, have been on the target list for a while. martha raddatz, abc news, washington. >> our coverage of the attacks on paris continues in a few mites with a look at the piano player in the french capital trying to healal the citwith one famous melody later in this half hour. >> federal investigators have given up their search for the black box from that sunkal cargo ship el faro. the ntsb says they're still hopeful they can find out what happened to the ship without the recorder. the fighter sank october 1st during a hurricane. everyone on board was killed. the pilot of a small plane managed on to make an emergency landing on a north carolina highway without injuring anyone. the aircraftanded on the median and crossed two lanes of traffic bere stopping on the shoulder. the pilot said he was having engine problems and trying to mamake it ton airport. >>xtreme weather starting with tornadoes in texas. as many as a dozen twisters were reported d in the tas panhandle. the severe storms left thousands
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of people without power. golf ball sized hailame down in some parts. >> a halliburton plantn the ea was heavily damaged. some localized flooding was also reported. in colorado a major snowstorm hitting areas around denver expecting a foot and a half blizzard like conditions will last well into this rning. wind gusts are expected to reach up to 60 miles an hour. blizzard warnings are in effect for parts of kansas, nebraska and new mexico. winter closing in in northern china. that means they're getting the pandas ready for the cold. the enclosure for a 2-year-old giant panda has been outfitted with a heating bed. i need a heating chair for the show. >> they want to make sure she is warm enough. she arrived from a nature preserve a month ago and the experts say the change of climates can be tough. >> her area has a built-in in heating system in the ground. no doubt, she's in for a
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>> you would think their fur would make them nicely warm for the winter but i guess not. >> you would think the blubber would help keep her insulated. >> there is that is, as well. >> apparently she's only two but she's a growing girl. eaeating lotof carrots, steamed bread and apples. that sounds like a diet, not for a growing girl. >> paleodiet for pandas. coming up, if you're hungry for details abouthe next "hunger games," stay tuned. >> the single song from a piano player to heal paris after the terror attacks. we're hearing from the musician who is striking a chord. >> and newly released pictures taken inside the bataclan theater during the attacks. our coverage continues after our ok at today's forecast map. you're watching "world news now." "world news now" weather, brought to you by sheila g's brownie brittle.
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back now to our top story. the attacks on paris. ench president francois hollande is now saying france is at war as he vows to destroy isis. >> as french warplanes strike in syria, hollande is also calling for some bold movesn the who i am front. abc's david muir is in paris with the latest. >> reporter: for the first time it, the moments before paris was forever changed. these photographs emerging from inside that concerhall taken from the stage before the attack. so many smiling faces, their hands in the air. and now we know what would come next. the gunfire breaking through the music. >> we're also getting our first look at this videoeo of the immediate aftermath. sirens blaring, voices crying out.
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those doors. presidenent obama ying the u.s. had no intelligence this attack was coming. >> there were no specic mentions of this particular atck that would give us a sense of something that we need -- that we could provide french authorities, for example, or actct on oursves. >> reporter: while here in france, president hollande stood siside b side with students in a moment of silence across the country. a short time later in front of a joint sessioion of parament, he declared france is at war with isis calling for an extension. he now wants a three-month state of emergency here in france. saying the attacks were "planned in syria, organized d in belgi and perpetrated in france." his country continuing its military response from those air strikes thanking america for providing assistance to sending
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a warship, an aircraft carrier to the eastern med terrainon on thursday right off the coast of syria. the world now watching as that international manhunt plays out. the alleged eighth attacker on theront pages of newspapers across the globe. a massive anti-terror crackdown across france. these images of officers entering a building detaining a man in toulouse. 168 police raids in all. 23 arrested, computeters, hard drives seized. 3 weapons found among them bullet proof vests, kalashnikovs and a rocket launcher. people under house arrest here in france. as you travel through paris, all of the places where the carnage unfolded. there were 19 different nationalities amonong the de. a survivor holding his bloodstained ticket from the concert. this woman showing photos she took inside the concert hall with friends standing this close to the band. she hid in the dark inside a closet for three hours. >> all we could hear at that point was a stampede.
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people running and screaming. gugunfire anthuds which could only have been people hitting the floor, theheir bodiehitting thfloor. >> reporter: and we met roman renuel, who lived near two of the restaurants targeted. he tolme it was his respononsibilityo be there with the victims who were dying. why did you kneel down beside them? >> what could i do? ignore them? just do what you can. you're not a doctor. you can't help. you can just show feelings to people, don't let people die alone. so, you do what you can do. you just watch, you just try to ease pain, but what can you do? >> and the french government also trying to do what they can do. a short time ago, the interior minister announcing 128 raids have taken place overnight. they've added 115,000 police to conduct patrols in france, as well. and as we take a look once again at thehe growingemorial that is growing outside one of
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attack add. yocan see things are starting to get back to normal. at least people are going about their business this morning there in paris. coming up, after the chchaos, onone man's sical message. >> they're also the chords of peace. the musical tribute from another time. time. "world news now" continues
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stations. imagine all the people, living life in peace y may say i'm a dreamer >> they're the notes from another era, another time and another war. >> when john lennon wrote the music and the words to that song, they never thought it would become an icon of peace for its time. who could have possibly envisioned they would have such a powerful impact more than 40 years later half a world away. here's abc's juju chang. >> reporter: amidst the horror anand grief, moment of hope. david martello outside the bataclan theater playing that familiar tune, john lennon's
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"imagine." >> music goes directly into your heart. you have a mirror in front of you, and you're reflecting yourself in this music. >> reporter: after those now infamous attacks, the 34-year-old musician drove 400 miles from germany to play at nearly every site where innocents lost their lives. >> my hope is that all the musicians all around the world are playing music for peace. this is what the wororld needs right now. >> reporter: around the globe awash in the colors of the flag, this image trending worldwide and in paris, a symbol of hope in a city tossed but not sunk. >> so beautiful to hear his words and the music and that song is just so touching even a generaon later. it was written in his home and it went to number one on the
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you can see exactly why. so hello from the other side i must have called a thousand times to tell you i'm sorry for everything that i've done but when i call you never >> it is t minus three days to the release of perhaps the most highly anticipated "hunger games" installment ever, "mocking jay" part 2. >> fans are asking what's going on with the fashion forward effie trinket. elizabeth banks opened up to our rachel smith. >> everyone's either going to want to kiss you, kill you or be you. >> reporter: far from the districts in the heart of times
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square, lies the "hunger games" exhibition. >> what do you make of all of it? >> it's remarkable. it's a walk down memory lane for sure. >> eyes right, chins up, smiles on. >> reporter: where i met up with the capital's favorite fashionista, effie trinket, aka elizabeth banks. here she is. >> t those areorks of art. i want to say they were designed by an architect. it was a collaboration between an architect and a shoe designer. >> what are you doing?g? >> i'm a political refugee. >> she reflects on her surprising return in part 2. >> the fil were a departure from the book in theense that is in the books effie was mia. >> i think erybody disagreed was sort of a fan favorite and she had a real connection to katniss. you couldn't really see it in the books. >> you look lovely as ever. >> reporter: now for a little lightning roround, mayhe odds be ever in your favor. a game we're calling what are
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effie's odds? >> what are the odds of her wearing sneakers? >> low, very low odds. unless they become a big deal in the capital. she really likes the heel. >> reporter: what are the odds of effie being on social media? >> high odds. effie understands the wer of a great media presence. >> reporter: and with thee games coming to a close, she says effie will always have a place in her heart. are you going to miss this character? >> very much. loved her. she's really iconic and thers a lot of creativity within effie. i'll miss that for sure. history was made here. >> rachel smith, abc news, new york. >> y excited about this one, huh? >> yeah, it opens this friday. many say it could make up to $120 million this weekend. >> that's a lot. that's the news for this half hour. >> that's a lot.
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hour. this morning on "world news now," the world's most wanted man. >> the pole raids and manhunt for the mastermind in the paris attacks. and any accolices. how did they get away? new details on the search and how world leaders are responding. homeland threat. latest message from isis vowing to attack washington, d.c. leaders in the nation's capital taking no chances. murder mystery. developments overnight from rural texas, where six people were found dead at a campsite. the new clues coming in. and later revolutionary surgery, the most extensive face transplant ever and the injured firefighter who will get to go home for thanksgiving after an operation like no other.
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"world newews now." >> we do say g good morng to you this tuesday. it is a busy one. i'm kendis gibson. >> i'm reena ninan. let's get right to the intense crackdown on terror in paris and beyond as the scope of friday's gris attacks begins to slowly sink in. >> a live picture right now of paris of the eiffel tower which reopened on for the first time yesterday following the attacks on friday. some flowers are piling up at t memorials all around that city hohonoring t 129 people that called that city home, while police conducted more than 150 raids and arreststed on nely two dozen people. a key suspect and the alleged on mastermind remain on the loose our coverage begins with elelizabeth r. >> reporter: police thought they had him cornered, but the target has slipped on their grasp for the second time.
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suspected on eighth attacker salah abdeslam is intensifying. the 26-year-old on the run after police say he fled paris friday night, abandoning the two cars he had rented then making a run for his native belgium driving a third car with two other passengers. police stopped them at a roadblock saturday but inexplicably let them go and they made it across the border. those two passengers now under arrest and charged. police identified this plaas the mastermind of the paris massacre. his plan included having one of the attackers blend in among the tens of thousands of syrian refugees to sneak into paris. fears of another deadly ruse hahave goverrs of 25 states resisting president obama's plan to resettle up to 10,000 syrians in the u.s. >> slamming the door in their faces would be a betrayal of our
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>> reporter: in paris, president francois hollande led his nation in a moment of silence. in the meantime, the fugitive's brother was questioned and released. he says he had no idea both of his brothers were terrorists. again, one is still on the run and the other died during the attacks. >> of course a lot of people reacting to this attack. what are we hearing from our lawmakers on capitol hill? >> to honor the victims they observed a moment of silence yesterday and house speaker paul ryan requested on an all-member briefing from the administration, , bottom le he says he wants to know what happened. and make sure what happened to paris doesn't happen he. >> we know now also, that syrian refugees havave become huge campaign issue especially for donald trump. > the dond. he was at a rally last night in tennessee. and he told his supporters there if elected, he would deport all
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going to bordeders, we'rgoing to have a country again. right now, we don't have a country." president obama, we should note he just landed in manila for the asian pacific summits. he's already made his position clear for anyone denying the syrian refugees the ability to resettle here, he said that is shameful, not american, not who we are. basically, yes, a divisive issue and a debate already brewing. definitely a change in the dialogue for the 2016 presidential race. thank you for joining us. as law enforcement steps up security here at home, isis released on a new video vowing washington will suffer the same fate as paris. here of here's abc's pierre thomas. >> repeporter: fnch police in a shootout, exchanging gunfire
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outside the bataclan concert hall with terrorists. threree hours terror. isis quickly claiming credit for it all, saying paris is only the beginning. and in this video, isis ises a warning to america. an attack onhe nation's capital is coming. "as we struck in france in the nter of its abode, in paris, then we swear that we will strike america at its center, in washington." >> we are always at a heightened level of security because of our locale. >> reporter: the cia director says the attacks in france should serve as a wakeup call for americans. their agenda is to kill. pure and simple. >> reporter: across the country, security is being ramped up. there's a heavy police presence in times square. and new york city's police commissioner said that isis tactics in the paris attack deeply concern him. >> t the idea at all of them, all of them were equipped with these suicide vests. >> reporter: u.s. officials are also worried that the killers in france may have used encryption technology to hide their computer and cell phone communications. so-called going dark. belgian n officialsuspect the killers in france also used
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gaming systems like playstation to communicate offgrid. credible isis threat to the homeland, the fbi is their suspected sympathizers in all 50 states. more than 70 prospective supporters of isis arrested in the last two years alone. some with dedeadly inttions. security across this city stepped up and across this country, more than 900 terror investigations under way. pierre thomas, abc news, washington. >> france's fierce military response to the terror attacks now includes an aircraft carrier. the carrier charles de gaulle will set sail toward syria. taeting command posts and recruiting centers. they werere apparely on a hit list. why didn't they strike before? >> they would wait for them to be popopulated thave a class there in training, to have a group being recruited. >> as with the american
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nothing has changnged and he does not nt to put boots on the ground. to put boots on the ground. yesterday, the u.s. did bomb more than 100 isis fuel trucks. secretary of state john kerry made a surprise visit to paris on monday, the u.s. ambassador jane hartley for a ceremonial lighting at the american embassy. the building was flooded with light in the blue white and red colors of the french flag. this morning kerry will meet with francs hollande that america shares in the resolve to defeat extremism. >> this is an assault, not just on france, but coming on the heels of brutal attacks in lebanon, iraq and elsewhere, it san assault on our collective sense of reason and purpose. >> and kerry also said that the attacks would not deter
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paris from hosting the u.n. climate change conference and than preresident oma is looking forward to being there himself. our coverage of the attacks on paris and the impact worldwide continuing all morning long. get the latest on americans who escaped and the student who did not later this half hour. another major headline we're followining a suspt chard on with the murder after six bodies were discovered in rural texas. two victims we found in n a travel trailer on land they just bought for camping and hunting. the other four including one child were discovered in a nearby pd. the suspect william mitchell hudson lived on the adjoining property. prosecutors have not identified a motive. >> we sheriff's office is small, so we enlisted the help of the texas rangers and our district attorney and their office. >> a woman who survived the attack was able to describe the alleged killer to the police. thfbi and justice department joining forces into a investigation of a police shooting in minnnneapolis. jamar clark is brain dead after being shot sunday.
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was handcuffed when he shot. hundds protesting the shooting, shut down the highway last night in st.louis. tornadoes in texas. as many as a dozen reported in the texas panhandle. e storms left thsands of people without power. golf ball sized hail came down in some areas. a halliburton plant in the area was powerfully damaged. and a train derailed in the local storm. localized flooding was reported. you wouldn't think the starter of winter is still a month away. seeing scenes like this areas around denver expecting a foot and a half. we're talking blizzard conditions lasting into the morning. gusts expected to reach up to 60 miles an hour. blizzard warnings for parts of kansas, nebraska and new mexico. all right, so, this is huge.
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hotel company in the world. e $12 billion deal brings together brands raising from luxury to budget. the combined company will control about 5500 properties and more than a million rooms worldwide. >> what does this mean for my points? >> t this is great news for your points. no longegero you have to choose between starwood and marriott. i'm geeking about that. >> youou're saying no one's going to get lost in the point system, whether you're marriott or starwood. >>eah, somehow. and for those of us who need fewer facebook friends, this is national unfriend day. jimmy kimmel came up with the holiday as a joke in 2010. yes, there is a national unfriend page on facebook. among the friends who the runs who overshare, reveal the endingngs of tv ows and those who is asks silly questions which could be answered easily online. >> oh, kimmel.
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>> it is good. ii used to have a birthday unfriending because it gives you a reminder of somebody's birthday. >> so you don't get the reminder again? >> no, o or even kw who they are. >> when's your birthday. "monday night football" was not a thing of beauty last night, but it produced a result almost no one saw coming. >> the bengals had a 6-3 lead over the texans in the fourth quarter, when houston, backup quarterback here, t.j. yates find finds hopkins. then receiver of a.j. green and the texans recovered. the bengals suffered their first loss of the season. houston wins it 10-6. it was an offensive showdown there. really. all right. coming up in "the mix," an endorsement for barbie dolls from a boy.
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buzz. also ahead, the revolutionary operation, severely burned firefighter given only a 50% chance of surviving the most extensive face transplant ever. and the student who l lost her life. the remembrances and the emotional stories being shared. >> and remember to look for us on instagram. abc, wnn. you're watching "world news now." thank you. uh, next. watch me make your interest rate... disappear. there's gotta be a better way to find the right card. whatever kind you're searching for, creditcards.com lets you compare hundreds of cards to find the one that's right for you. just search, compare, and apply at creditcards.com. a one, a two, a three percent cash back let's get these dayquil liquid gels and go. but these liquid gels are new. mucinex fast max. it's the se difference.
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four days after the deadly terrorist attacks in paris, worldwide support casting a new bebeacon on e city of light. >> but as the shock wears off, grief is taking its place including here at home, of course, as we learn more details about the american victims caught in n the chao abc's brandi hitt with more. >> reporter: family and friends of 23-year-old nohemi gonzalez gathered at this vigil struggling tunderstand why her life was cut short in paris. the senior studying in a semester abroad is seen here on social media celebrating a birthday in 2012. she was shot and killed by
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>> she's always in my heart and she's always going to be in everyone else's heart, too. >> reporter: another target, the bataclan concert ha, as the gles of death metal performed. nick alexander, the band's merchandise manager was killed along with 90 others here. his girlfriend wrote you are and always will be the love of my life. there were close calls for many others. >> we heard bang-bang, bang-bang bang-bang, like five shots. >> reporter: airbnb software engineer brian moriarty was trapped in a restaurant surrounded by gunfire and shane and jami also took cover near the concert hall. >> it feels selfish in a way to be here.
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>> 16 additional college students were studying with gonzales. california state california long beach confirms they are all safe. >> glad to hear that. coming up next, the firefighter with a new lease on life. his dramaticransformation after being severely burned in a it's being called the most extensive face transplant ever. and later, the christmas controversy in new jersey. why so many angry moms took to facebook over that mall santa. that's in our next half hour on "world news now." "world news now" continues after this from our abc statns. who will care for us, e engineers who will build our cities, the scientists and entrepreneurs of our country can be your kids. we all know how hard it is for you to send them to college. thiss why we want you to know you are noalone, and every day, more people support you to make it happen. many support you, and the hispanic scholarship fund helps you prepare, plan, and pay for your kids' college education.
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it's being called the most extensive face transplant ever. a firefighter whose face was severely burned in a house 14 years ago now has a new lease on life. >> his new face is now that of a 26-year-old brooklyn bike memechanic. mallory hoff has this remarkable story. >> reporter: mississippi volunteer firefighter patrick hardison suffered devastating burns to his face when he ran into a home to see if anyone was trappein the flames in 2001.
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from that point forward, he disguised himself wearing prosthetic ears, a hat and sunglasses. >> i'm hear going to nyu for the face transplant. >> reporter: now the husband and father is the recipient of the most extensive face transplant worldwide to date. >> your lips are nice and normal. >> he's doing very well today only for day 93. he'll require other procedures. >> reporter: the transplant was peormed at nyu in august. dr. rodriguez led a team of over 100 people during the 26 hour surgery. >> we had an emotional exchange when our team took him to macy's to buy clothes. for him, it was so remarkable that no one stared at him and looked at him. >> reporter: a friend urged him to send his medical records here. he placed those files in the hands of dr. rodriguez. in 2012, they began their journey together.
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>> we did have challenges identifying the ideal donor, a fair skinned, light hair. >> reporter: helen irving is the ceo of the organ recovery organization live du jour. she welcomed the challenge. more than year after the searchegan are, there was a doaner. >> david had been declared brain dead following a bicycle accident. his mother immediately said yes. there was no hesitatioion in her mind. her son-always wanted to be a fireman. >> reporter: in death, he would give a new face and new day to a man who traded in his reflection when he ran into a burning home. mallory hoff, channel 7 eyewitness news. >> imagine if the doctor told you you only have a 50% chance of surviving the surgery. >> those were his chances. >> now he can get his vision back and do something as basic as drive. >> after spending 14 years like that, you can kind of understand
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dissolves fast to unleash max strength medicine. let's end this. we're all about gender neutral toys. >> of course. board with that? barbie. look at this new ad featuring a boy talking about how much he loves barbie. >> i love barbie. moschino barbie doll sold out within an hour for $150 is the price you'll pay for that one. it seems to match the style of moschino designer jeremy scott. he's come out saying he loves barbie and thinks she is the ultimate muse. >> interesting.
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ild advertise this. >> they should all get on board. gender neutral. girls can play with trucks, boys can play with barbie. it's a n era. >> i'm still playing with my buddy doll from the 1980s. okay. of course, you know around this time of the year, we always get the word of the day from oxford. and the word of the day is -- well, i can't even pronounce it. this is the word of the year rather. >> what is that? >> it's an emoticon. they said this is the word of the year. it would not b be an oldashioned string of letters like we know. instead it's this pictograph, acknowledgement of how popular these pictures have become in our digital and daily lives. >> so that's the emoji for lol? >> it is. crying, laughing. >> okay. >> and the lol is laughing out loud? >> yes. and then there's -- >> that is insomnia. i'm so tired i can't feel my
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emoji. >> what is your emoji there? >> me is give me more candy corn and coffee. >> please. >> well, a dad was given a video camera to document a trip. problem was daddy put it on selfie mode and then this happened. >> so did you know it was on selfie modode? >> no, he went to vegas on his trip. his son saidad, take this camera and document your trip. yeah. but what daddy didn't realize was he put it on sfie mode. so everything, every shot has him in it. >> so you never get to see all that is -- >> and his son posted on facebook. i gave my dad a gopro while he was in las vegas. i didn't instruct him how to use it and he didn't know the point >> that is the worst vegas video yet. that's o of the things that happens in vegas that should stay there. >> it's funny. >> that's the news for this half hour.
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st making news in america this morning, breaking overnight, more raids across europe. hunting down those responsible fothe attacks in paris. plus, new air strikes taking out isis targets. we're live in paris. chilling promise. isis calling out its next target threatening washington, d.c. and a new battle brewing. take refugees growing by the hour. also breaking right now, severe weather, a powerful system spawning dozens of tornadoes, an oil refinery leveled creating a hazardous situation this morning. plus, making history and changing a man's life. the firefighter going from this to this after an extensive face
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what's next for him. good tuesday morning, everyone. we're going to get started with the relentless response from france launching nearly 130 additional raids overnight as more than 100,000 police patrol the streets. >> it was another busyight for french fighter jets dropping 16 bombs on isis targets in syria simultaneously destroying a command center and a training center. on capitol hill, members of the house will receive a classified briefing today on the paris attacks. following a moment of silence last night to honor the 129 people who lost their lives. >> as france struggles to return to normal, the alleged mastermind of the attack has been identified, and the international manhunt is still under way for the alleged eighth attacker. our coverage begins now with abc's marci gonzalez joining us from paris. marci, good morning. >> reporter: hi, guys. good morning. in those raids here ernight police were again trying to track down anyone with ties to
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most wanted suspects. [ rens ] this morning, the mastermind behind the paris attacks and one of the terroristpolice say carried out the deadly plan still on the run. a day of raids and a siege on this artment building in belgium where police thought they had salah abdeslam cornered turning up empty. this town molenbeek also home to abdelhamid abaaoud, the isis militant accused of planning the foiled paris bound train shooting earlier this year as well as friday's attacks. >> the mastermind selects and trains and motivates the suicide bombers, but he never kills himself. >> reporter: this morning the french military responding again announcing another round of aiair strikes destroying several isis targets in syria while here in europe, no sign of either of these accused terrorists, but the evidence of their devastating impact still emanates. e memorials at the scenes
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different cotries died to the somber, silent moment sharedy thousands. secretary of state john kerry here in paris vows the u.s. will continue standing shoulder to shoulder with this grieving nation. >> no one should doubt that the light still shines in the city of light and that darkness will not ever, never overpower it. >> reporter: and people still out he paying their respects while trying to return to so normalcy. after so many cultural institutions re-opened yesterday, we just learned that tomorrow the christmas market will open here but with added security. kendis and reena. >> marcici, are weearning anything more this hour about how the attackers communicated? >> reporter: well, u.s. officials are concerned that the killers here may have used some kind of encryption technology to hide their computer and cell phone communications, and officials in belgium suspect
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something like a playstation communicate off the grid. back to you guys. >> all right, marci gonzalez on the search for answers in paris. marci, thank you. well, president oba, in the meantime, has arrived in manila overnight for the apec summit, a meetinof 21 asian and pacific nations. the meeting will focus primarily on ecomic issues, but member nations are also preparing a statement ofof solidary for the people of france and victims of terrorism. and breaking news from russia where the first time ever an official is actually saying that the plane crash in egypt was a result of an act of terrorism. the head of russia's secity service says traces of explosives were found in the wrkage. he concludes that a homemade explosive device blew up on the aircraft. the plane went down on october 31st killing everyone on board. u.s. intelligence suggests isis or an isis affiliate planted the bomb on at plane. and isis is making it clear that paris is only the beginning as they look to go global.
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that an attack on washington, d.c. could be next. in the 12-minute recording the terror group vows to strike america at its heart saying untries taking part in air strikes against syria will suffer the same fate as france. d.c.'s mayor says security is always high. the fbi is intensifying surveillance of suspected isis sympathizers in all 50 states and ere are more than 900 terror investigations under way right now. and the link to syria and the ris attacks has sparked a backlash here in the u.s. half of the nation's governors now say they refuse to take in syrian refugees. >> as you know, president obama says that's a betrayal of american values. abc's kenneth moton joins us now from washington, d.c. good morning, kenneth. >> reporter: good morning, kendis and reena. republican governors across this nation are revolting and presidential candidates are weighing in. overnight donald trump promised to kick out any syrian refugees. president obama called it all
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shameful.. closing state borders to the syrian refugee crisis. >> the people who are fleeing syria are the most harmed by terrorism. >> reporter: it's a movement frustrating president obama and gaining speed across the u.s. led by repubublican gornors. half the states in the u.s. have told the federal government in the wake of the paris terror attacks, no more syrian refugees allowed. >> it is imperative that texas do everything we can to sure that we don't have a syrian refugesneak into the state of texas who can pose a similar terroristic danger. >> reporter: since the start of the civil war in syria, the u.s. has taken 2100 refugees, but 85,000 are expected next year. the state department says refugees are the most highly vetted and do not pose a real reat. >> we are going to be robust in ouour inspecon of thosthat would apply. >> reporter: it is believed the isis terrorists in the paris attacks including the mastermind have ties to syria.
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speaker paul ryan and the full house will receive a homeland security briefefing on t attacks today. national security has taken center stage in the 2016 presidential race. donald trump at a tennessee rally last night. >> anybody that's brought into this country frorothe migration is going to bebe out. we're not going to do it. we're not going to do it. >> reporter: the state department and federal law says states can't legally stop the flow of refugees after the u.s. gigives themegal status. reena and kendis. >> all right. kenneth moton there in washington for us this morning, thank you. our other major story, thismorning, severe weather hammering the middddle of th country with snow, rain and even tornadoes. a dozen tornadoes being reported in the texas panhandle including one estimated to be a mile wide. that twister leveled an oil refinery causing chemicals and gas leaks. the strong winds pushed at least one tractor traileler on itside and left thousands of people in the dark.
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golf ball-sized hail came down in some areas, and there was some localized floodining.g. here's the radar. you see the storm system moving east across the rest of texas and oklahoma. most of the deep south and gulf coast will feel its wrath today, as well. some areas there could see up to five inches of rain. and still ahead, just in time for thanksgiving travel, gas prices heading into territory not seen in years. and survival story, a man's account of the attacks in paris hiding in a closet for three hours. plus, historic surgery, a firefighter injured in the line of duty with a new face after an extensive transplant. there's no one i'd rather... hit the road with. no one i'd rather have dinner and a movie with. no one i'd rather lean on. being in love is an amazing thing. being in love with your best friend... ...is everything. introducing the ever us two-stone ring. one diamond for your best friend...
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blocked an interstate last night in minneneapolis flowing a police shooting this weekend. dozens of arrests were made. the fbi and the justice departments civil rights division have joined the investigation into the shooting of jamar clark. witnesses claim clark was handcuffed at the ti of the incident. police say he was shot during a struggle. prosutors in rural texas are searching for a motive this morning in the murder of six people. the bodies of two victims were found in a tractor trailer on property that they just bought. the other four including a child were found in a pond nearby. the police chief says the suspect william huntson and the victims did not know each other. and the pilotf this small plane managed to land on a north carolina highway without hurting anyone the aircraft came down on a median then crossed two lanes of traffic. the pilot says he was forced down because of engine trouble. the attacks in paris are having little effect on the world's economy. on wall street the first trading session since the attacks ending in positive territory.
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the nasdaq 56 and the s&p 30. stocks were expected to drop. becoming, quote, more immune to these types of events. well, the experts at aaa predict that the average price of gasoline will fall below $2 a gallon probably by christmas. since 2009. the average price now stands at $2.16 a gallon, down 6 cents in a week and down 73 cents from >> i shouldn't have flown. >> you shouldn't have flown. you should have driven. >> if own i i knew. when we come back, devastating diagnosis. charlie sheen revealing a deadly health crisis. and a mall on the naughty list. people being charged to sit on st. nick's lap? why let someone else have all the fun? the sometimes haphazard, never boring fun.
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zero due at signing, zero down, zero deposit, and zero first months payment on a new tiguan and other select volkswagen models. take a look at this. the snow coming down right now in colado, and it'll continue into this afternoon. some areas around denver can get to a foot and a half of snow by the time it's all over. blizzard warnings so in placeses li kansas, nebraska and new mexico. >> okay, so if you're driving,g, pect blizzard conditions from colorado into the plains, further east roads will be wet from the great lakes to ththe gulf coast. wet also in the northwest and parts of florida. if you're flying, airport delays possible in denver, dallas, houston, minneapolis, memphis, new orleans and
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chago. well, france is intensifying its crackdown on terror launching a fresh night of overnight raids across the country in the aftermath of th deadly attacks on paris. >> for the second straight night thfrench military also took aim at the isis stronghold of raqqah, syria, dropping at least 16 bombs and wiping out two key targets. the alleged mastermind of friday's attacks has been identified as abdelhamid abaaoud a 27-year-old belgian believed to be in syria. we're hear ging more eyewitness accounts. gripping detail, a woman from scotland who was standing near the front of the concert hall when the gunfire erupted says she ran backstage with a friend and huddled in a closet for three hours. >> all we could hear at that point was a stampede of people running and screaming, gunfire and thuds, which could onl have been people hitting the floor, their bodies hitting the floor. >> a man who lived near two of the restaurants
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that came under fire knelt down near some of the victims. he said he did not want them to die alone. >> a serious story about actor charlie sheen you'll be hearing about today. he's reportedly about to go o public about being hiv positive. hollywood publicist howard bragman who is an abc news consultant says he's been been aware of the diagnosis for some time now. bragman says that while he didn't talk directly to sheen about his hiv status, sheen's people have e told himhat he is getting treatment. much more on "good morning america." well, a medical milestone this morning. it's being called the most extensive face transplant ever. patrick hardison was a firefighter severely burned during a rescue mission, but 14 years after that fire, this is what he looks like now. the result of a surgery that he was given only a 50% chance of surviving. dr. eduardo rodriguez who led the transplant team describes the remarkable results..
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when our team took him to macy's to buyuy clothesand for him it was so remarkable that no one stared at him, no one looked at him. >> the donor was a 26-year-old man fromom brookly who died in a bike accident and who ironically always wanted to be a firefighter. hardison is still recovering after the august surgery and will undergo more surgeries to perfecect his neface. pretty remarkable technology. >> but he is expected to be home by thasgiving, so good for him. lots of football news to tell y about. the coach of the denver broncos has benched peyton manning for the game against the bears. >> as for last night's action we get our highlights of course from our guys at espn. john buccigross and john anderson in our beautiful, l luxurious "sportscenter" studio. >> abbreviated sports highlights. mondayight game, texas, texans and the bengals, brian hoyer sidelined late third quarter. hits de'andre hopkins great catch. great body control. great feet down, all kinds -- his only touchdown in the game.
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a lot of field goals. texans up, 10-6. andy dalton has got a chance to rally his crew, crew, oh, a.j. greene had it for a first down and then the ball is knocked out, fumbled. texans recover and win, 10-6. >> if you didn't notice, college basketball has returned. george washington/virginia, malcolm brogdon and number six virginia are good on the road ainst g.w. virginia's defense struggling early. kevin larson double-teamed. no one rotates and tyler cavanaugh, easy dunk and later george washington leads by four. should be a big win for them if they can get it. larson double teamed and eventually joe mcdonald is going to get it. joe mcdonald had a three. e-i-e-i-o. leads at the half. cavanaugh again and george washington storm the court, why don't you, they win, 73-68. as you see, i had more
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material prepared. unfortunately, we don't have time. i believe that's jesse palmer's fault. >> blame it all on jesse. >> what. well, up nexin "the pulse," squashing stereotypes, a first for barbie breaking the gender barrier. and trimming your r time lin the growg annual event encouraging people to narrow down their facebook friends list. the fever. an even bigger deal? everything you miss out on... family pizza night. the big game. or date night. why lose out to the flu any longer than you have to? prescription tamiflu can help you get better 1.3 days faster. that's0% sooner. call your doctor right away. and attack the flu virus at its source with prescription tamiflu. tamiu is fda approved to treat the flin people 2 weeks and older whose flu symptoms started within the last two days. before taking tamiflu tell your doctor if you're pregnant, nunursing ha serious health conditions, or take other medicines. if you develop an allergic reaction, a vere rash, or signs of unusual behavi,
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welcome to crock country. you can't t predict the market. but through good times and bad... ...at t. rowe price... ...we've helped our investors stay confident for over 75 years. call us or your advisor. t. rowe price. invest with confidence. okay, time now to check "the pulse" beginning with an extraordinary sign of the times. this year's word of the year is not a word. >> it's actually an emoji, specifically this one, a happy face with tears of joy, a visual version of lol perhaps. the folks at oxford dictionary say it was this year's most used emoji worldwide accounting for 17% of all of the emojis used in
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>> and do you know what's cool about it? >> what? >> is that it means the same thing in every language. >> oh, you know, you're right. >> spanish, french, english. >> oka >> i'm sticking with my words, though. >> like the words. all right. so, feeling a little unfriendly today? this is actually national facebook unfriend day. a holiday our own jimmy kimmel started as a joke actually in 2010 and, yes, there is a facebook page for unfriend day. >> among those you should unfriend, kimmel says, are the ones who give away the endings of tv shows. those who overshare, and those who ask questions easily answed online. sometimes i'm guilty of that, i admit. >> i'm amazed that i'm anyone's friends after all of those. well, breaking boundaries when it comes to barbie, not the doll herself but a commercial for it. >> the ad for the traditionally girl's toy features a boy. this young kid right there. in it he says the new w moschino barbie is so fierce. >> he also winks at the camera
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to her cell phone is for her. and the news moschino barbie is a new hit. it sold out and it'll cost $150. it's a doll for the upper 1%. the social uproar sparked by a new jersey shopping center accused of putting a price tag on santa claus. >> the cherry hill malall was charging up to 7$75 for its high-tech santa experience, and kids who wanted to simply sit on santa's lap were required to buy a photo package. ter outraged shoppers threatened to boycott, the mall decided to drop the fee and th photo purchase requirement. >> okay, so a visit with santa and the interactive santa ride attraction is now free yet
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overnight the french destroyed two more centers in syria dropping 16 bombs in a second night of air strikes and they responded to paris attac on another front lalaunching new round of overnight raids across the country. the isis link to syria sparking a backlash against refugees here in america. the governors of 27 states say they will refuse to take them in thoughhe federal government controls the program. > for the first time a russian official is saying the plane crash in egypt was the result of a terrorist act and that traces of explosives were found in the wreckage. isis is suspected. violent storms move into the deep south. heavy rain also expected today. and finally this morning the most recognizable sight in paris bouncing back in patriotic
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glory after those deadly terror attacks. >> after going dark, the eiffel tower was brhtly dressed in blue, white and red, the colors, of course, of the french flag honoring the dead and wounded. abc's david muir caught up with me americans in paris as the attacks conjure up memories of 9/11. >> reporter: on our way to the eiffel tower driving through paris, we noticed the famed ferris wheel, the rue de paris lit in the blue, white and red ofhe flag. as we get closer to the tower a reminder how tense the city is. officers on patrol. but when we arrive the tower lit up in the colors of this country and right in the shadow of the eiffel tower, the americans paying tribute. michele saline just moved her family herere two mohs ago from california. she, ocourse, remember ss 9/11 in the u.s. and now the terror attacks here. >> back then we were on our way to work. over here we were on our way to sleep and two day, just completely turns you inside out anwe have to continue on with life. we can't hide. we can't stop our lives.
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>> reporter: and this couple celebrate her 40th birthday at the top of the eiffel tower friday night when th learned of the terror attacks. >> we were at the top when we heard about it. >> the top of the tower. >> the top of the tower, yeah, and the news, all our family members began to send us text messagesare you safe, are you safe and we didn't know why. >> reporter: tonight as they prepare to go back h home to texas, they wanted to return to the eiffel tower lit up. >> just so incdible. >> absolutely, and coming up this morning on "gma," david is going to be live once again in paris, and, of course, there's gog to be an interview, as well, with that indiana pastor whose wife was killed, but we have these images coming in from paris, as ll. the memorial growing. and a lot of -- more developments, of course,e'll be following throughout the day on the latest on these parisis attacks, and tt's what's making news in amemerica thi morning. stay with us for "good
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