tv NBC Nightly News NBC February 8, 2012 7:00pm-7:30pm EST
7:00 pm
but no. that's what she got. she posted the video on youtube, thought her family and friends might get a kick out of it turns out that thous on our broadcast tonight, clean sweep. a huge night for rick santorum across three states, and a very bad night for mitt romney. this gop race is changing again. inside syria. we are there on the ground tonight as the crackdown escalates and the whole world is watching. getting through airport security. it's about to get a lot easier for a lot more travelers. the intern. more from meredithth vieira's exclusive interview with a woman who's written an explosive book about her illicit relationship with president kennedy and the summer job that changed her life. and the supper club. the women who found a startlingly simple recipe for making a difference. "nightly news" begins now. captions paid for by nbc-universal television
7:01 pm
good evening. as one veteran of republican politics put it last night, the romney bandwagon just rolled into a ditch. to view last night's results as just a story about a stumble by the gop front-runner would be a mistake. it was an extraordinary night for rick santorum, though he doesn't come out of it with any more delegates yet. he pulled off a hat trick winning primaries and caucuses in three states, stitching together a victory map that includes iowa and exceeds the number of romney wins. at least for now, this race has changed yet again after what's being called today rick santorum's breakout moment. we begin on the trail tonight with nbc's kelly o'donnell in allen, texas. good evening. >> reporter: good evening, brian. rick santorum will be dropping by this meeting of tea party activists in texas tonight. few could have imagined he would
7:02 pm
be riding so high sweeping colorado, minnesota, missouri, after that iowa win you mentioned and santorum with four victories to romney's three. making another shake-up in this wild primary season. a victorious rick santorum began his day surrounded by the prayers of a texas congregation. >> we pray you direct rick's steps as he campaigns for president. >> reporter: santorum is in his comfort zone picking on social issues and talking about faith. success is the new territory. >> one of the great gifts i had in my political career is no one ever thinks i could ever win anything. >> reporter: short on the typical necessities, money and campaign organization, santorum rebuffed presumptions that mitt romney is the republican's inevitable nominee. >> i don't stand here to claim to be the conservative alternative to mitt romney. i stand here to be the
7:03 pm
conservative alternative to barack obama. >> reporter: santorum's blue collar roots appear to prompt a new personal story from the uber wealthy mitt romney, who referred to his auto executive father's early days as a carpenter's apprentice. >> he could take a handful of nails, stick them in his mouth and spit them out pointing and forward. >> reporter: santorum's moment had the benefit of good political timing. santorum, who is catholic, has been hammering the white house over the rule that requires some religious-based employers to provide coverage for birth control, despite fierce objections from the catholic church. >> this administration, as you can tell from my reaction, has been hostile to people of faith, particularly christians and specifically catholics. >> reporter: while many republicans, including mitt romney, demand the rule be reversed, today the white house hit romney over similar requirements in his state's health insurance. >> former governor of
7:04 pm
massachusetts is an odd messenger on this. >> mr. carney needs to check his history. >> reporter: landing in atlanta, romney fought back. >> in the working on our health care plan, i worked very hard to get the legislature to remove all of the mandated coverages, including contraceptives. >> reporter: now, with romney taking fire from all sides, he has a new attack against santorum tonight, pairing him with gingrich calling them republicans who act like democrats. going after their records on earmarks and spending while in congress. if you're wondering about gingrich, he's campaigning in ohio and his dismal performance didn't get much attention, overshadowed by santorum's success. >> kelly o'donnell in allen, texas. waiting for last night's big victor tonight. thanks. where does this lead us now? that question goes to our political director and chief white house correspondent chuck todd in our d.c. newsroom. every analyst i spoke to, listened to or read today said the same thing. mitt romney has a big problem.
7:05 pm
if you're running his campaign, what do you do now? >> reporter: he's got a message problem. that's the problem. it's with conservatives. it's been this issue for nine months. i can tell you this. they are in a bit of a regrouping phase. they know they need to improve their messaging, if you will, to use campaign lingo to the base conservatives. remember who showed up to those caucuses. these are the true hardcore activists of the parties. the ones that make the phone calls, will knock on doors and they showed up and didn't vote for mitt romney. expect him to do a little regrouping. he's not going to go as negative on santorum and gingrich as he has previously during other setbacks, but try to refine his own economic message. he set a big speech later this month in michigan at home of the detroit lions. a big new economic speech. we can expect to hear bolder plans from him that appeal to the tea party wing of the party. as for the calendar, rick santorum will plant his flag
7:06 pm
this month in michigan. newt gingrich will camp out heavily in ohio. super tuesday in ohio will be the next place where we see all three candidates try to compete in the same state. >> chuck todd from our d.c. newsroom. thanks. from domestic politics overseas to syria, where president assad's forces unleashed the heaviest shelling yet on towns and neighborhoods held by the opposition forces who want him out. reports say as many as 50 more people died overnight. the rest of the world, while watching, seems helpless to stop it. nbc's ayman mohyeldin has our report. >> reporter: daybreak in homs. shattered by explosions. five days of relentless indiscriminate shelling. no one is safe, not even children. this boy says he was shot by a sniper. doctors unable to tend to the wounded as the war rages on all
7:07 pm
around them. "we are treating patients in their homes. what can we do," this doctor cried? on the street, more pleas for help. >> where is the u.n.? where is humanity? where is america? are we animals here? >> reporter: in the case of global inaction, syrian military has gone on the offensive across the country, snipers taking positions on roof tops. a poorly-equipped band of military defectors known as the free syrian army is fighting back, claiming to have captured these government soldiers. for many, a humanitarian disaster, say activists. long lines for food, dwindling supplies of medicine and food in the harshness of winter. yet the people are undeterred, despite the danger, protests continue across the country, while homs, city under siege, braces for what could be a full-on invasion. ayman mohyeldin, nbc news. not many journalists able to
7:08 pm
get into syria since the uprising started. bill neily, veteran correspondent for our british broadcasting partners itn has gotten in and is on the ground in damascus tonight. i know when journalists are able to operate there, they are accompanied. what have you been able to see and what can you describe tonight? >> reporter: brian, as you can see here in damascus, lights are on. it all seems perfectly normal. there is certainly no shelling. in homs, as you've seen, it is very, very different indeed. there have been another day of bombardment there. president assad is over in his residence there. 24 hours ago he promised toned toned the killing. he didn't say how he would do that and it seems he is determined to end it by killing anyone who takes up the gun against him.
7:09 pm
clearly diplomacy isn't doing anything and diplomacy doesn't seem to be working. the air is filled with recriminations and with the cries of people from homs. one man told me today, one activist said, at the beginning in places luke homs, we tried to use social media, but all that's showing is our suffering. we hope the arab league would help, but they didn't. we hoped the u.n. would help, but they haven't. now we're on our own. he said 6,000 people have died. to stop now would be to dishonor their sacrifice. we're not going to stop. >> bill neely in damascus. bill, we are curious to see the reporting you're allowed to do while there. back in this country now, the era of shoes off and belts off travel may be coming to an end for more the most frequent fliers at more of the nation's busiest and biggest airports, including some of the airports where the 9/11 attacks were launched in the first place. nbc's tom costello is at reagan national airport with us tonight with more details on this.
7:10 pm
tom, good evening. >> reporter: hi, brian. this is really an expansion of an existing tsa program in which elite frequent fliers, specifically on american and delta, give their information to the tsa in advance, and that allows them expedited travel through the security lanes at just seven airports. what we can tell you, they are now looking at expanding that, specifically by year's end united as well as alaska and us airways will join in at least 28 of the nation's busiest airports, and as you mentioned, somewhere 9/11 hijackers originated, and they will also be in this program. passengers who opt in and are selected for precheck on that flight by the tsa may be directed then to a special screening lane. >> they will undergo expedited screening. this could include no longer having to remove shoes, laptops, jackets or belts. >> reporter: as we mentioned, a total of 28 airports by the end
7:11 pm
of the year, a full list of all those airports on our website, but brian, again, this is an expansion of the tsa's precheck program. it has been for elite program travelers, now it's going to be everybody. >> tom costello, thanks. as we continue this evening, the never-before-told story of an affair between president kennedy and a 19-year-old intern at the white house. tonight, more from meredith vieira's exclusive interview. meredith will be with us to answer some of the questions it's already raising. later, a simple idea around the dinner table making a difference. making a difference. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 let's talk about that 401(k) you picked up back in the '80s. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 like a lot of things, the market has changed, tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 and your plans probably have too. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 at charles schwab, we'll give you personalized recommendations tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 on how to reinvest that old 401(k). tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 so talk to chuck tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 and bring your old 401(k) into the 21st century. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 rollover your 401(k) or ira and receive up to $2500.
7:12 pm
tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 see schwab.com for terms and conditions. [ smack! ] [ smack! smack! smack! ] [ male announcer ] your favorite foods fighting you? fight back fast with tums. calcium rich tums goes to work in seconds. nothing works faster. ♪ tum ta tum tum tums is the pain reliever orthopedic doctors recommend most for arthritis pain, think again. and take aleve. it's the one doctors recommend most for arthritis pain. two pills can last all day. ♪ then i found new pronutrients omega-3. it's from centrum. it's a smaller minigel. with two of the best omegas to support my heart, brain and eyes. new pronutrients from centrum.
7:13 pm
[ laughs ] [ mayhem ] please continue to hold. the next available claims representative will be with you in 97 minutes. [ laughs ] ♪ and if you've got cut rate insurance, there's nothing you can do about this. so get allstate. the only insurance company that guarantees your claim experience won't be mayhem... like me. [ dennis ] introducing the claim satisfaction guarantee. only from allstate. dollar for dollar, nobody protects you from mayhem like allstate. a woman has written a book out this week that unveils an affair from 50 years ago with president john f. kennedy. the woman is 69 now, a grandmother. and in the story as told by her, she was 19 then, a college intern when this happened in the kennedy white house and elsewhere. the full story and interview airs tonight on "rock center." it has already generated a lot of attention.
7:14 pm
meredith vieira is here with a preview. welcome. >> reporter: thanks very much, brian. mimi alford was just 19 years old when she went to work as an intern in the white house press office. a summer job that would change her life. she has written a book about her experiences there, including an 18-month secret affair with president john f. kennedy. >> i had to write this book. >> reporter: why did you have to? >> why did i have to? it started out feeling that i couldn't leave this story as a paragraph, this experience i had as a paragraph in somebody else's book. so i really wanted to take one control of it myself. >> reporter: alford says her secret began in the summer of 1962, when she started what she says was an 18-month affair with president john f. kennedy. >> i was sort of swept into this web, the handsome president, his charisma, his magnetism. >> reporter: after losing her
7:15 pm
virginity to president kennedy on her fourth day on the job, she says they began an affair, spending evenings together in the private residence as often as twice a week. >> reporter: you're 19, he's 45. what did you talk about? >> we didn't have a lot of time to talk. he was president. what we talked about was not world affairs. the president was very boyish and playful with me. >> reporter: sometimes mimi would even travel with the president, flying on the support plane in her role as press office intern. on one occasion, she attended a lavish party for the president at bing crosby's house. on most, her job was to remain holed up in the hotel, waiting for the president to summon her. that's where you started something you called the waiting game. >> i did, yeah. waiting in the hotel room. >> reporter: did you feel at all, you know, like i'm being used here? it's almost like you were a call girl to him. >> but i never felt that. now looking back, i can see it's not a good place for a
7:16 pm
19-year-old to be, in a relationship that's so imbalanced and with such a powerful person, and an older man and at their beck and call. i see how sad it was. but that's not how i felt at the time. >> reporter: can you give me an example that would say to me, this is more than just being a mistress? >> just the way he was. the way he smiled with me. i feel that he did. i feel that he actually cared about me. >> meredith is back here in the the studio with us. as you well know, based only on the snippets people have seen, we've already received a lot of response, a lot of e-mails. people with the upbringing sounds like a lot of us with the picture of john f. kennedy in the house when we were kids, wondering, why do this now? why tell her story now? >> reporter: people need to realize she did not reveal her secret initially. he she was outed by historian robert dalleck. who wrote about her in his
7:17 pm
biography of jfk that generated a firestorm. the press caught on to it. her name was revealed. that's when she issued a written statement and disappeared. in the years that followed, she saw her story being reduced to paragraphs in other people's books and decided she wanted to claim it as her own. also, she wanted to unburden herself of this secret that she had kept for so long because it was, in her estimation, really destroying her life and her relationships with men moving forward. for her this book was a catharsis. >> i'm glad you'll be with us tonight to talk more about this as questions arise. >> reporter: there will be a lot of them. >> there will be. thank you, meredith, for being with us. there will be much more tonight on "rock center" at 9:00/8:00 central. when we come back after the break, is your doctor giving you the whole story? >> what we are able to see from up there. whole story? >> what we are able to see from up there. [ male announcer ] imagine facing the day
7:18 pm
with less chronic osteoarthritis pain. imagine living your life with less chronic low back pain. imagine you, with less pain. cymbalta can help. cymbalta is fda-approved to manage chronic musculoskeletal pain. one non-narcotic pill a day, every day, can help reduce this pain. tell your doctor right away if your mood worsens, you have unusual changes in mood or behavior or thoughts of suicide. antidepressants can increase these in children, teens, and young adults. cymbalta is not approved for children under 18. people taking maois or thioridazine or with uncontrolled glaucoma should not take cymbalta. taking it with nsaids, aspirin, or blood thinners may increase bleeding risk. severe liver problems, some fatal, were reported. signs include abdominal pain and yellowing skin or eyes. tell your doctor about all your medicines, including those for migraine and while on cymbalta, call right away if you have high fever, confusion and stiff muscles or serious allergic skin reactions like blisters, peeling rash, hives, or mouth sores to address possible life-threatening conditions. talk about your alcohol use, liver disease
7:19 pm
and before you reduce or stop cymbalta. dizziness or fainting may occur upon standing. ask your doctor about cymbalta. imagine you with less pain. cymbalta can help. go to cymbalta.com to learn about a free trial offer. the amazing alternative to raisins and cranberries with more fiber, less sugar, and a way better glycemic index. he's clearly enjoying one of the planet's most amazing superfruits. hey, keep it down mate, you'll wake the kids. plum amazins. new, from sunsweet. but my nose is still runny. [ male announcer ] truth is, dayquil doesn't treat that. really? [ male announcer ] alka-seltzer plus fights your worst cold symptoms, plus it relieves your runny nose. [ deep breath ] awesome. [ male announcer ] yes, it is. that's the cold truth!
7:20 pm
impact wool exports from new zealand, textile production in spain, and the use of medical technology in the u.s.? at t. rowe price, we understand the connections of a complex, global economy. it's just one reason over 75% of our mutual funds beat their 10-year lipper average. t. rowe price. invest with confidence. request a prospectus or summary prospectus with investment information, risks, fees and expenses to read and consider carefully before investing. in more ways than ever. and our networks are getting crowded. but if congress frees up more wireless spectrum, we can empower more people to innovate, create jobs, and put momentum behind our economy. and a spectrum auction could raise as much as 30 billion dollars to help fund the payroll tax cut. it's simple. more spectrum means more freedom. for everyone.
7:21 pm
we've been showing you a lot of the insanely spectacular northern lights this winter, the nighttime light show from europe to new england to the upper plains to canada, a result of that intense solar activity. now we know what it looks like above thanks to our friends on the international space station. while the video is accelerated, it takes 90 minutes to orbit the earth. at one point, clearly flying right over detroit and chicago, and along the way enjoying the view so few of us will ever get to see in our lifetime. fellow space geeks can see a ton more on our website. they are spectacular. the nasa family, in fact, is dealing with bad news today. word of the death overnight of janice voss, a veteran astronaut who flew five shuttle missions, one of six women to fly at least five times on the shuttle, a proud product of purdue and m.i.t. she logged over 49 days in space, 18 million miles
7:22 pm
traveled, circled the earth 779 times. she lost her battle with cancer at the age of 55. it's official. the job approval rating of congress is at an all-time low of 10%. americans have never held their elective represents in lower regard than they do right now. 10% number is the lowest in the history of the gallup polling organization. may be a harbinger of big changes coming in november. here is a sign of our real estate times and the economy in general. if you know the atlanta skyline, you know the bank of america tower at over 1,000 feet tall. it's been auctioned off on the courthouse steps just like a used farm tractor. winning bid $235 million, more than half what the former owners paid for it back in '06. it reminded some folks today of the sale of the washington, d.c. headquarters of the national mortgage bankers association a couple of years back. also a sale that brought in about half what the owners paid. what does it all tell us about the real estate market? the inventer of the atomic
7:23 pm
fire ball has died. more than that, nello ferraro was the founder of chicago's ferraro pan candy company. brought us lemon heads, red hots and the boston baked beans. his son said he came up with the idea for atomic fire balls while serving in the u.s. army war crimes tribunal in post war japan. he was 93 years old. what does this tell you about your family doctor? a new survey shows more than half of all doctors admit they haven't told patients the whole truth when discussing a prognosis. instead, making things seem a little bit bigger than they know them to be. the author of this survey a harvard researcher doesn't think doctors are trying to be dishonest at all, but trying to give people hope. unless your physician is one of those give it to me straight types, be sure to ask your doc if it's okay to make plans for the weekend. up next tonight, changing one meald one meal at a time. my dad and grandfather spent their whole careers here.
7:24 pm
[ charlie ] we're the heartbeat of this place, the people on the line. we take pride in what we do. when that refrigerator ships out the door, it's us that work out here. [ michael ] we're on the forefront of revitalizing manufacturing. we're proving that it can be done here, and it can be done well. [ ilona ] i come to ge after the plant i was working at closed after 33 years. ge's giving me the chance to start back over. [ cindy ] there's construction workers everywhere. so what does that mean? it means work. it means work for more people. [ brian ] there's a bright future here, and there's a chance to get on the ground floor of something big, something that will bring us back. not only this company, but this country. ♪ it's bring your happiness to work day. campbell's microwavable soups. in three minutes -- the deliciousness that brings a smile to any monday. campbell's -- it's amazing what soup can do.
7:25 pm
with thermacare heatwraps. thermacare works differently. it's the only wrap with patented heat cells that penetrate deep to relax, soothe, and unlock tight muscles. for up to 16 hours of relief, try thermacare. how do you know which ones to follow? the equity summary score consolidates the ratings of up to 10 independent research providers into a single score that's weighted based on how accurate they've been in the past. i'm howard spielberg of fidelity investments. the equity summary score is one more innovative reason serious investors are choosing fidelity. get 200 free trades today and explore your next investing idea. than these gas relievers. these you take after food gives you gas, you take beano before, so you don't get gas. and if you don't get gas, maybe you don't need these. take beano before and there'll be no gas.
7:26 pm
7:27 pm
country helping women and girls half a world away. the story from nbc's kristen dahlgren. >> reporter: it's girls night out in san jose, california. good food. giggles. some glasses of wine, but this ladies' night isn't this these women as much as these. a group of girls in guatemala living in extreme poverty. >> basically, a group of people get together to share a meal and learn about a grassroots nonprofit organization. >> reporter: dining for women started small, almost a decade ago. >> i invited 20 of my friends for dinner and we raised over $700 and we started meeting every month. >> reporter: there are now 8,000 members in more than 38 states. the women figured you would spend a lot for a spread like this in a restaurant. it's not required, but most make a donation, whatever they think they would spend for a night out.
7:28 pm
>> the average donation nationwide is about $33. so it's not a lot, but when everybody does that, it turns into $42,000. >> reporter: every month, they send that money to a new charity. they helped hundreds of girls escape sex slavery in nepal, save lives with sterile birth kits in tibet, support an embroidery business in afghanistan and sponsored a girls school in kenya. they transformed the lives of up to 500,000 women and girls, and in empowering them, they do the same for themselves. >> i learn a lot. i learn an incredible amount. it expands my life. that's the thing. >> reporter: pot luck with a purpose. >> together we continue to make a difference with each meal we as a group of friends share. >> reporter: a simple meal making a significant impact. kristen dahlgren, nbc news, san jose, california. that's our broadcast on a wednesday night. thank you for being here with us. i'm brian williams. of course, we hope to see you
7:29 pm
177 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
WRC (NBC) Television Archive Television Archive News Search ServiceUploaded by TV Archive on