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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  November 14, 2014 7:00am-9:01am EST

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good morning. it is friday, november 14, 2014. welcome to "cbs thoris mning." overnight president obama sets up a showdown with republicans over immigration. >> we talked to man who claims he kill osama bin laden. did he step into the public spotlight for public good or personal gain. >> plus one town wipes the christmas holiday off the calendar. but we begin this morning with y'todas "eye opener." >> are the roads worse than you think. >> get used to it. >> on top of the temperatures,
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some areas are also getting their first look at snow. >> president obama says that he will act before the end of the year on immigration through executive orders. >> i indicated to speaker babier that if, in fact, congress failed to act, that's going to happen. th every administration needs neis, eds that. if he wants to go off on his own, there are things he's not going to get. >> another black eye for the secret service. a devastating report describing confusion, the communication failure that allowed fence jumper omar gonzalez to get all the way into the white house. >> a newud aio message from abu bakr al baghdadi. >> another ebola patient is headed to the u.s. for treatment. >> the doctor is expected at the nebraska medical center on saturday. a flight from cleveland made an emergency landing minutes after takeoff when it likely was struck by lightning. >> are you saying you just got struck by lightning?
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>> that's correct. >> they're told to stay indoors in the suburbs of paris. they don't know where the cat came from. >> one met the duke and duchess. she said, congratioulatons t kate middleton. >> all that -- a car speeding around the corner and just like that the car hit the pole which saveosd the pedestrians. to in the end zone for the owuchdn. >> the dolphins are 6-2, miami the victor. >> and all that matters. >> new installment of a video hits. >> this time the issue is transparency. >> not good that way, jay. >> very harmful to speak that way to the president. >> on "cbs this morning." >> the republican majority is now promising to fix the law just like when you try to murder someone 50 times and it doesn't work, so you buy them a gym membership. >> announcer: this morning i's "eye opener" presented by
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toyota. let's go places. captioning funded by cbs weather welcome to "cbs this morning." gayle king is getting ready for the hollywood film awards. sharyn alfonsi of "60 minute sports" is with us. president obama wants to protect millions of undocumented immigrants from being deported. his immigration proposal would allow many of those people to work legally. >> the news is getting a furious response from republicans in congress. major garrett is in myanmar where the president raised the stakes over reform. good morning. >> good morning. he stood with aung san suu kyi on the back of her porch of her residence. speaking of the pacing of things, mr. obama said he's almost ready to sidestep
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congress and launch immigration reform by executive order. president obama emerged from aung san s aung san suu kyi's home. the gop, he said, has only itself to blame. >> they have the ability to fix the system. what they don't have the ability to do is expect me to stand be i with a broken system in perpetuity. >> the president is considering protecting up to 5 million undocumented adults, many parents of u.s. born children or so-called dreamer. children brought here illegally but grew up in america. he exaccepted dreamers in 2012. the republicans urged the president to back off. >> the president hasn beetold over and over and ore again and we're telling him again today, don't do this. we'd like the president to recognize the reality of the
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government he has, not the one he wishes he had. >> a top adviser to president obama said it's not an option. it will not intimidate mr. obama i would advise if, in fact, they want to take a different approach, rather than devote a lot of time trying to constrain my lawful actions as the chief executive of u.s. government in charge of enforcing our immigration laws that they spend some time passing the bill. >> the president awaits final recommendations from the department of homeland security, but mr. obama, who has delayed this move once knows the options well. as one top adviser put it, this isn't like the academy awards where the president has presented an envelope and he doesn't know what's inside. sharyn? >> thanks. major. we spotted joe clancy traveling with the president in myanmar. back in the u.s. his agency is dealing with a new fallout of
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the security breach at the white house back in september. that's when the secret service failed to stop a fence jumper. homeland security found a long list of errors. bill plante is at the white house where the intruder was a key figure. >> he had been known to the secret service 678 he had been questioned twice two months before he jumped the fence. on the evening he jumped the fence, they recognized him around the white e,hous but they had no reason to detain him. >> everybody out, right now. go back. >> the report says gonzalez ignored officers shouting at him as he cleared the fence and sprinted across the north lawn, setting off alarms. but cross tauk and garbled settings. they were determined lethal
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force was not needed since he appeared unarmed. a guard was in the driveway but he was on a personal cell phone call without his radio earpiece in place and was unaware of the alarms. when he did see gonzalez and ordered to attack, gonzalez ducked in front of the bushes outside the white house. outside the white house doors another officer aimed his weapon at gonzalez but saw that he appear unarmed and did not fire. by the time he realized the doors were unlocked, gonzalez was inside the white house. the female on duty just inside the door attempted to take him down but was unable to do so because the army veteran overpowered her. he then entered the east room before a uniformed officer and two special off-duty agents brought him down. the report summary includes they did not receive adequate training because of staffing
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shortages and it blames lack of raid yoerls. they're putting in place changes in staffing and intelligence gathering but members of congress are not satisfied. one of them called the episode is comedy of errors. norah? >> bill, thank you. the leader of isis calls the united states terrified and weak from new audio recordings. he also promises, quote, volcanos of jihad. the new threats come after reports that isis teamed up with a rebel al qaeda affiliate. former cia deputy mike morell, a cbs senior news contributor joins us from naples, florida. good morning, mike. >> good morning, charlie. >> is this true and what does it
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mean? >> so, charlie, right now there's just two sources reporting this agreement between a them. these two grimes have occasionally fought each other over the last year and an agreement to stop that fighting would allow them to focus more on the moderate opposition and fighting assad. it also, i think, increases the risk of a terrorist threat in the united states because it brings together el nusra's capabilities and bring it back to the united states. this is worrisome. >> i wonder how this complicates forces in syria and also if they're joining forces to defeat assad, what's assad doing to try to take them out? >> so, norah, one of the things that i think is happening right now is that the white house is going to take another look at
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our policy in syria, take another look at what we should be doing in syria. and i think they're looking at two things. i think they're looking at to what extent should we go after isis and al nusra. i thank're going to look at should we be going after isis and al nusra now. i think the other thing is should we be going after assad since he started the whole thing. >> it would be a two-part war. >> so that's what they're considering, charlie. >> we heard secretary hagel and dempsey saying in congress yesterday it's just beginning. how much do you think our involvement -- how dlolong do w stay? how much deeper do we get? >> when this whole thing started the president said this was going to take a long time.
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that's absolutely right. i think we're looking at years. >> thanks. michael morell this morning. well, it is warmer this morning in barrow, alaska, than it is in much of the united states. snow is on the ground from coast to coast. heavy snow fell around philadelphia last night as commuters tried to get home. up to a foot of new snow is also causing problems for drivers in the eastern part of ohio. some parts of wisconsin will receive 40 inches this week. that snow is headed toward the rockies this morning. meteorologist danielle niles of our cbs station wbz is tracking it all. danielle, good morning. >> good morning, charlie. good morning, everybody. haep friday to you. the big story is the snow. we've got freeze warnings down to the golf states. areas of pink, winter storm warnings with snow expanding east through the day today and into the morning hours tomorrow
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all the way from south dakota back down through kansas again another blast of snow coming in. this will slide east tomorrow afternoon, impacting chicago, stretching back over detroit, over the course of our saturday evening night and a few inches will be expected sunday night across the northeast. there may be 6 or more inches that will impact through the rockies. after that, another blast of cold air comes in. 30 degrees below normal for a lot of next week into the midwest and northeast. norah, over to you. >> danielle, thank you. another american will be treated for ebola in the united states. sources tell cbs news a plane is on the way to sierra leone to pick up a doctor who is a patient there. he would be the hospital's third ebola case. a top nato commander said russian tanks and troops are moving into eastern ukraine. moscow denies those claims. the development comes after they announced new air force training
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exercises near the united states border. david martin is at the pentagon with the military's response. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. when russia's defense minister announced plans for these new long-range bomber controls, he linked them specifically to tensions over the ukraine telling the u.s. in effect, if you meddle in our backyard, we'll meddle in yours. u.s. mill tai say russian bombers flying over the caribbean and over the gulf of mexico would be more of an in-your-face message than a military threat. it's never happened before. during the cold war soviet flew reconnaissance missions but never bombers capable of carrying nuclear weapons. once in 2008 and again in 2013 blackjack bombers flew to nicaragua and venezuela but those were window dressings for high depgations. the announcement comes as
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president obama and russia's president putin are set to attend the same summit this weekend in australia. both know having them circle around to the u.s. doesn't make much military sense. they could be tracked all the way across the atlantic leaving plenty of time to scramble the jets. >> plitt ericly it's important. it shows that russia is trying to show its relevance and poke its finger in the u.s.'s eye, look, we're still here, you have to deal with us rm we didn't plan for it. >> once last year a russian bomber came within 50 miles of california. there's no indication yet when these new patrols would begin or how often they would be conducted. norah? >> all right, david. thank you. the price of gas dropped again overnight. the national average of a glol is $2.91.
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that's 70 cents lower than in june when it was $3.68. jericka duncan is in new jersey with more potential savings ahead. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. drivers here are paying $2.83 for a gallon of gas. now, the key is oil prices have fallen below $80 a barrel and as consumers continue to see a drop, analysts believe that will have a trickle down effect on everything from food to groceries. gone are the days of $4 a gallon gas. since the summer consumers have watched fuel prices plunge to levels not seen since 2008. tom is an analyst. >> when you're using heating oil, they're looking at a winter where they may spend $500 less than last year and gasoline they're saving somewhere on the order of $50 to $60 a month. >> he says they're also
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beginning to save in other ways. companies are now removing the fuel surcharges passed on to customer back when gas prices were rising. just this last month taxis dropped their fuel surcharges. and shipping giant matson announced they would lower shipping charges by 5%. >> anything not breathing we pretty much will move it. >> he's with a freight company in new york that moves 6 mill yion a day. allowing the retail market to ease up on charges normally passed on to shoppers. >> it really impacts the people who need it most. people who live paycheck to paycheck are the ones that get some sticker shock on the way up
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and they're the wins that are the greatest beneficiaries on the way down. >> reporter: and barclays bank is already forecasting that american consumers could have more than $17 billion to spend next year because of savings on gas. sharyn? >> all right, jericka, thanks. a months-lond standoff. amazon and hachette announced a deal. elaine quijano shows us the settlement could benefit authors and amazon commerce. good morning. >> that's correct. some say that's given the company tremendous power to negotiate tough terms with publishers. authors say watching this symbolizes the big bat the book business. the fight between amazon and the publishing company hachette
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which featured popular authors is now in the books. in a joint statement amazon and hachette announced a multi-contract how they should be pried and how they should set the price. they'll give incentives to keep the price low. he said sales of his new book "blue lab rinneth" were affected by amazon's elaborate decision when the two companies kaud. agree it. >> they often have pages that would ee drelktd buyers to another book. >> he has used his popular comedy show to mock the ongoing fight. >> i'll tell you what, amazon.
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i've got a little pack an for you. wait a second. here it is. >> reporter: it's giving it significant leverage in negotiations. it affects hard cover sales which in turn hurt bookstores. >> they want bookstores to exist. amazon wants bookstores to disappear. >> both amazon and hachette had similar assessments to come to an agreement. both companies have had less than inspiring earnings in recent months. >> all right, elaine. thank you. it is 7:19. the american cal cardinal tasked with cleaning up the
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robert o'neill said he shot osama bin laden three times. >> ahead, why he broke his code of silence to share the story. >> the news is back in the morning on "cbs this morning." stay tuned for your local news. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by mcdonald's. i'm lovin' it.
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officials believe it may be getting hungry. the big cat was spotted yesterday near a supermarket parking lot and this morning it crossed a major highway. officers are tranquilizer guns are hunting near disneyland, paris, but it's not known where it came from. >> notice the song. >> very clever. >> very, very clever. >> very clever. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, school holiday become a time of controversy. words like "christmas" disappear. did a school board go too far in a search for compromise? >> plus, he's the point man on
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child sex abuse. we talk with cardinal o'malley on the churches who covered up the crimes and those who escaped justice. "the wall street journal" reports the justice department is collecting information from americans' cell phones. ice the result of a secret service program. they have equipped small planes with a device called dirt box. it scanned tens of thousands of cell phones looking for suspects. the program lets authorities pinpoint a suspect's location. the saeeattle p.i. says the seized some from the damaged power plant. it was found in northern california in august. they say it poses no danger. japan is struggling to clean up
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its disaster three years later. >> the 45-day ban is punishment from south korean authorities for last year's deadly crash. three passengers died and more than 180 others were injured. a u.s. investigation blamed pilot error. the airline says it will appeal. and "usa today" says japanese airbag maker takata is under investigation by a federal grand jury. company executive are also scheduled to testify before the u.s. senate commerce committee next thursday. a fifth death has been linked to the defective takata airbags that might explode. up to 17 million cars worldwide have been recalled. former navy s.e.a.l. robert o'neill said he fired the shot that killed osama bin laden. he plans to rebuild his role. those plans were foiled when he leaked it last week. he was angry over o'neill's intent to talk. he sits down with margaret
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brennan and tells why he is talking and if he fears consequences. margaret, good morning. >> they were sworn to secrecy, part of the lifelong pledge taken by the elite force but one highly decorated vet has taken the controversial threat of revealing his identity and role in the historic mission. >> the chances of us dying were good, the chances of us not coming back were really good as far as we were concerned. >> reporter: former navy s.e.a.l. robert o'neill says he killed the world's most famous man. >> i turned and walked into the next room and was looking at osama bin laden. that's when i shot him. >> how many shots? >> three total. >> where? >> i fired him in the face three times. >> you believe you fired the kill shots. >> i fired them, yes. >> details of the raid were clats feed. only known by those at the top. >> how do you keep that secret? >> i think it's a difficult
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secret to keep. everyone was proud. >> within a year o'neill no longer wanted to carry a gun. >> why did you then choose to leave the military? >> like a lot of guys that are there now, i stopped getting adrenaline when people were shooting at me. if i'm not afraid of that, i might do something thinking i can't get hurt. >> he was honorably discharged but his early discharge caused him a pension so he launched a career as a motivational speaker. after a few years and tough times he decided to share his story. a controversial decision he made after meeting with families after the 9/11 attacks. >> the critics say you're cashing in. what do you say? >> i'd say if i was cashing in,& i would have written a book as soon as i got out. i'm not writing a book. >> you know one of your teammates did write a book.
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>> yes. >> he goes by the name of mike owen. he spoke to my colleague scott pelley. he used a pseudonym. he disguised himself. >> mm-hmm. >> why not you? >> having someone there being honest, telling the truth, giving them closure. >> reporter: the two former s.e.a.l.s give different accounts of the mission. o'neill claims he fired the kill shot. owen claims they both did. >> i can't speak for him and i can't say what he saw. i think he's saying what he saw. i think it can be foggy. all i can tell you is what i saw, my end of the story. >> but the closures may have legal consequences and top officers at the special naval command warned other s.e.a.l.s to stop talking. >> the pentagon told us they're listening to what you're saying publicly, monitoring it, they're ready to challenge you legally. >> mm-hmm. >> are you afraid of that? >> no. i would rather that didn't
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happen. everything i've done has been with them in mind and with the pentagon. >> i think it's hard for people to reconcile the idea when you're saying it's not about me when you're the only name and the only face they have. >> mm-hmm. >> isn't that about you? >> no. like i said, it's my part of the story. i'm not trying to make it about me. >> o'neill's new vision is to help vets start over in life. he started a charity. >> a lot of people say it's more stressful gets out of the navy than going into combat. with combat you know exactly what to expect. >> he hopes it will provide a platform for advocacy, but being identified as the shooter has its perks and risks. he may become a target himself and now travels with personal security. >> why is he doing this? >> he says he didn't talk about the raid until two years after
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and that it was this moment with the 9/11 families after he donated his jerseys which sits in the 9/11 museum and revealed to them. >> and to those who say he's seeking celebrity? >> he denies that, but there's a lot of resentment there among other seals and those who say you just don't talk about these things. he says he's not making money off of it as a motivational speaker. there are plenty of detractors. >> there's more to this story. margaret, thank you so much. pope francis has set up a commission as part of his goal to transform the image of the catholic church. it will handle appeals by priest discipline. it's to help deal with a backlog of cases. cardinal sean o'malley is in charge and he gained notoriety for his zero tolerance sexual
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abuse. we sat down with him during "60 minutes." >> reporter: it is o'malley's work to reform the church on child abuse where he's made the biggest impact. >> for many people outside the church and inside the church, the biggest scandal isn't the priests. it's the bishops who lied about them and moved them from parish to parish. and many of these predators have been prosecuted. but the bishops have not. why is that? >> one of the first things that came up is the importance of accountability. and we're looking at how the church could have protocols as to how to respond when the bishop has not been responsible for the protection of children in this diocese.
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>> i want to ask you about robert finn who is the bishop in kansas city st. joseph. as you know, he pleaded guilty for not reporting one of his priests to authorities. bishop finn wouldn't be able to teach sunday school in boston. >> that's right. >> how is that zero tolerance that he's still in place? >> what does it say to catholics in. >> it's a question that the holy see needs to address urgently. >> and there's a recognition. >> from pope francis. >> from pope francis. >> the cardinal's careful candor isn't limited to the churches mishandlerling of the abuse. take the vatican's crackdown on american nuns for focusing more on social issues than issues like abortion and contraception.
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>> it looked like a crackdown from man at the vatican. >> a disaster. >> a disaster. >> should there be more women in positions of power in the curia? >> yes, i thing there shouk the and hopefully there will be. >> when? >> well, i can't tell you what time, but hopefully soon. >> i mean it's really interesting to hear his candor and there's more on "60 minutes" and the unique way he km communicated with pope francis when he's in boston, not in rome. that's on sunday night. >> he says he talks to the pope by telephone often. >> they're very, very close. if you want to understand pope francis, look to cardinal o'malley. a school shuts down on religious holidays but soon it will not say the name.
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>> that was like a punch in the face. it came out of nowhere. it was very, very insensitive to our christian and jewish neighbors. >> ahead, the controversy over wiping religious holiday off the school calendar. dove bar for 7 days?
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district is facing criticism for changing the school calendar next year. it mentions no religious holidays even when the schools are closed on that day. >> the muslim community is the only one that has to choose between education and religion. >> reporter: she looks forward to her holiday every christmas. the 11th grader also takes her studies seriously. >> she's astudent. if she misses one day of school, she has a panic attack. >> reporter: school officials in montgomery county, maryland, say
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their policy is to give excused absences to for holidays. they want to be more inclusive and include eid as an official holiday off school. >> i think we touched a couple of third rails. >> reporter: phil kaufman is the board's president. >> that's what many other school systems in new york, miami, chicago, lapgs, dallas, atlanta, it's really the norm. >> reporter: still the decision has upset parents of all religious faith. >> we did not ask for christmas to be removed. we did not ask for the jewish holidays to be removed from the calendar. >> reporter: the reality is we're still closed for christmas and yom kippur. >> reporter: it's just that the names will no longer be on the school calendar asking equality seekers something very different than what they asked for. >> it's something like a slap in the face. it came out of in where.
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it's very insensitive to our christian and jewish neighbors. >> reporter: the district says the days designated as holidays are not based on religion. they're separate of church and state. they have to shut down on days shown. >> we don't know the religion of the teachers or students. we don't collect that data. >> reporter: hannah's mom says this has the potential to bring together people of all faiths. >> instead of separating us, the communities apart, it might just be that we're going to be now united together. >> reporter: school officials say that they'll review the policy ahead of next year's vote and they also say that they're work to talk to other districts around the country who have closed for the eid holidays to see what criteria they use. norah? >> all right. julianna, thank you. and from nobel prizes to touchdowns, a technology powerhouse known for great minds, well, it's doing something amazing on
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it is friday, november 14th, 2014. welcome back to "cbs this morning." real news ahead including exercise surprise. dr. tara narula explains a new study about working out and your weight. but first here's look at your "eye or"pene at 8:00. >> mr. obama said he's almost ready to sidestep congress and launch immigration reforms by executive order. >> membefrs o consgres are not satisfied. one of them called the episode a comedy of errors. >> if it is true, it is very significant because it also, i think, increases the risk of a terrorist threat in the united states. >> the big story is the cold is the snow. we've got freeze warnings all the way down to the gulf with
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snow expanding east. >> both amazon and hachette have an agreement. we're heading into the lieura k it shopping season. >> the agreement is you're cashing in. what do you say? >> if i was cashing in, i would have written a book as soon as i go out. >> should ether bee mor women in position in power in the curia? >> yes, i think there should be. i think there will be. >> when? >> a tiger is on the loose and officials fear it may be getting hungry. the big cat was spotted yesterday near a supermarket parking lot. >> developers are working on a new app that gives you a 10-second warning before the earthquake. the app is called "too late." >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" at 8:00 is presented by benefiber. >> i'm charlie rose with norah o'donnell and sharyn alfonsi. gayle king is getting ready for
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the hoyle fille the hollywood film awards in los angeles and she'll join us in a moment. congress says he wanted to protect illegal immigrants raised in the united states from being deported. his plan could protect up to 5 million adults. house speaker john boehner said republicans will fight the president tooth and nail. the president spe in myanmar this morning before flying to australia for a weekend summit. >> next year's republican led congress will have the same leader as this year. gop members on thursday chose mitch mcconnell to be senate majority leader and john boehner to continue as speaker of the house. the democrats are expected to keep harry reid and nancy pelosi as their leaders. the former house speaker toon offense when asked if there should be changes. >> what was the day that any of
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you said to mitch mcconnell when they lost the senate three times in a row, lost -- making progress and taking back the senate three times in a row, aren't you getting a little old, mitch, shouldn't you step aside? it's just as interesting as a woman to see how many times that question is asked of a woman and how many times that question is never asked of mitch mcconnell. was. that a curiosity that when republicans win, boehner is on the front of "time" magazine. when mitch mcconnell wins, he's on the front of "time" magazine. as a woman, it's like, is there a message here? is there something that we're missing? >> for the record, nancy cordes did ask senator mcconnell in the past if he would step down after republicans failed to gain control of the senate.
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the nba commissioner is showing his support this morning for legalized sports gambling. adam silver wrote a piece for "the new york times." it reverses the nba's 20-year opposition to gambling. silver wrote, i believe we need a different approach, sport bettings to be brought out from the underground and into the spotlight where it can be moderated and regulated. nevada is the only state that permits bids on all sports. the engineers at the massachusetts institute of technology made a historic breakthrough this fall. the school's football team is undefeated this season for the first time ever. vladimir duthiers is at steinbrenner estadium at the campus of mchlt i.t. >> reporter: they've never been very good. in fact, they once lost to yale, 96-0.
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but this season these whizzes are champions of the grid irn. m.i.t. is home to some of the best and brightest with programs ranging from nuclear physics to atmospheric chemistry, these halls have produced an astounding 81 nobel laureates and been prominently featured in movies. but this semester, the forces of mass and energy are being applied outside the classroom. everyone on campus is paying attention to the engineers. >> i don't know too much about it. >> well, sort of. >> i feel like we're so focused with other things that we don't keep track of our athletics. >> the last time m.i.t. made headlines on the football was in 1982 when brainsters halted a yale/harvard game. but this year their team is serious, winning their first conference championship in history and heading into the
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deviatid division iii playoffs, 8-0. >> there's something special about this group. >> chad martinovic is their coach. >> where there's athletics, research, clubs, ak activities, whatever it is they do, they look to excel. >> they're overachievers right? >> absolutely, absolutely, absolutely. >> reporter: most players ace their s.a.t.s. these two men are engineering majors. >> we joke around that the hardest thing during the week is not your game but the test. >> you're going to have brutal weeks knowing you're going to win on saturday that makes every week that much more fun. >> reporter: both men have nearly perfect grade point averages. >> how do they balance that? >> some weeks they don't get a lot of sleep.
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we'll adjust our practice schedule. we'll excuse them for practice so they can focus on academics. >> it never happens at florida state or penn state. >> this is m.i.t. >> is it out of the realm of possibilities that they can play in the nfl. >> it's probably a better chance of these kids owning an nfl team than playing for one. >> they haven't received any offers from the nfl, the players that we've spoken to. but they have received offers to work for fortune 500 companies. >> vlad, what great story. >> fantastic. i was looking at the schedule. the u.s. coast guard academy. they're not playing alabama to be clear. all good lovely teams. but they are the kimgs. good for m.i.t. >> i'll take it.
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>> all right. ahead on "cbs this morning," can exercise have reverse effects? dr. tara narula on a study that i'm very dubious about, tara. she's in the >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" at 8:00 sponsored by benefiber. the clearly healthy fiber.
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ahead, island dreams turn into a dark history. >> i'm peter van sant of "48 hours." yvonne sandelly leaves the u.s. to head off to panama with the man of her dreams. weeks later he returns alone and remarries another woman. what happened todded to what happened todded t yvonne dedy. that story next on "cbs this morning." "america's next top model."
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we know in the cyber world, threats are always evolving. at first, we were protecting networks. then, we were protecting the transfer of data. and today it's evolved to infrastructure... ♪ ...finance... and military missions. we're constantly innovating to advance the front line in the cyber battle, wherever it takes us. that's the value of performance. northrop grumman. exercise puzzle. a study reveals how some people
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lose weight from working out and others put on the pounds and they're not coming from added muscle. our dr. tara narula joins us. explain this study. >> they took the women who were overweight. they asked them not to change a single thing about their diet but instead put them on a supervised program where they walked on the treadmill 30 minute three times a week. they found overall as a group there was no significant change in their weight. they increased thash aerobic fitness which was interesting but when you looked more closely, what was interesting is 77% of the women actually gained weight and that weight was not muscle. it was fat. >> what did we learn from that then? >> so we tried to figure out why that might be. it doesn't make logical sense. the theory by exercising these women may have been doing more, eating more and moving less outside of the exercise. by eating more, they may have
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eaten more -- >> in the bottom line, there's nothing that's an indictment of exercise. >> no, no. >> it's something about going out and eat more. >> i think unconsciously people may be eating more and the appetite hormones may be stimulated and that might make them eat more. the other thing is if they move less at home because they exercised, maybe they sit on sofa a little longer or take the elevator instead of the stairs may add up. >> i know i've done that after i've worked out. now i can have a cheeseburger because you're feeling proud of yourself. >> right. >> you can't underestimate it always comes back to diet and exercise. >> you need three things. diet, exercise, and behavioral modification. those are the three things proven. exercise alone is not the only thing. you need to exercise more to maintain weight. the recommendations are 150 weeks a minute of moderate.
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>> you can be a little bit overweight and still be fit. >> and that's really the big point. i think the take-home message is there are benefits to exercise regardless of whether you lose weight. those include decrease in your rate of death, decrease in heart disease, stroke, improved mood, strengthening of bones. there's a lot of positives. >> okay. so walk, just don't walk to the drive-through. a woman disappears from a dream decemberty nation but police say her boyfriend killed her. "48 hours" shows what he did when he returned from paradise that raises questions with the victim's family. that's next on "cbs this morning." >> announcer: cbs "morning rounds" spon southern plainsed by purina. your pet, our passion. ♪
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we'll be able to extend those to more people. comcast and time warner cable. together is better for more people. well, a southern california woman moved with her boyfriend three years ago to a tropical island in panama, but when he came back and she didn't her family began investigating. we've been following this case along with "48 hours" since the beginning. peter van sant takes us to a place the woman's family calls devil's island. here's a preview of tomorrow night's "48 hours." >> reporter: in the fall of 2011 it seem s like they had finally
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found their piece of paradise here on this island in panama. >> yvonne's e-mails were exactly what her life was like. i could picture it. >> reporter: but right around thanksgiving of 2011 yvonne's happy e-mails suddenly stopped. her father says she vanished. >> you feel like you're reading a book, a terrible mystery or murt mystery. >> reporter: brian brimager told yvonne's family he returned to southern california after she ran off with another man in costa rica. within weeks he stunned the family when he got back with his old girlfriend and got engaged to her. >> our life will never be the same. >> reporter: she was a white house analyst under president bush. not believing brian's story,
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yvonne's family rushed to panama. they printed flyers, scoured the neighborhood where the couple lived, and even ventured into the unknown. >> we are in central america in some jungle in some swamp looking for yvonne. >> reporter: then in the spring of 212 pan main miami authorities found that yvonne was the victim of foul play and brian was the main suspect. >> let's go, guys. okay, are you rolling? >> reporter: it was time to confront brian to get some answers. >> brian? peter van sant with cbs news. we'd like to ask you a couple of questions. >> reporter: federal investigators were soon talking to brian, arresting him for obstructing yvonne's murder investigation. >> you killed miss baldelli and disposed of her body in an unknown location. >> reporter: in 2013 yvonne's remains were spotted in a jungle
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not far from where her family was searching. finally two years after she vanished, panamanian officials charged him. >> i always knew we'd get justice for her. we'll see he gets justice no matter how long it takes. >> wow. quite an investigation. peter van sanlt is with us. two years you've been working on it. >> more than two years. we went down there a couple of times, made our way on this swampy island in tear a nair voe and chased down the bad guy. >> where is brian now? >> he's in a jail in san diego. he's been charged with obstruction of justice and tampering of evidence but he's expected to be charged with murder in the united states sometime in the next couple of weeks. he's been charged with murder in panama but they're trying to sort that out. officials would like to have him shipped up here for the actual trial. >> would this have happened if the family hadn't been so
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urgent? >> no. this family led the investigation. the fbi then got involved, but they made this critical link that brian brimager had been using yvonne's computer to send out phony e-mails that i ran off with a man in costa rica and it was the family who discovered this. they're the real heroes in this case. >> you can watch that tomorrow night at 10:00 p.m., 9 central and another episode at 9:00 p.m., 8:00 central. the hollywood film awards up next. gayle king got there first. >> hello, hello, hello, you guys. let me tell you. this is a big deal. i had no idea. when you say lights, camera, action, i feel like saying
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"hooray for hollywood".
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and we're getting ready for a big party tonight and you're invited. here's a look at the hollywood palladium where they're putting final touches on tonight's hollywood film awards and gayle is standing by with a preview of the a-list awards program you have never seen on tv until tonight. ♪ these are the good times >> gayle, you're on tv. gayle, you're on tv. >> hello, hello, hello. >> we'll talk with gayle in just a minute. buying your way into the ivy league. guaranteeing admission into top schools. that's ahead. >> right now it's time to show you some of this morning's headlines from around the globe.
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the "washington post" tells us about the smithsonian plan for a $2 million makeover. entrances and connections to the museums and galleries will be designed to be more welcoming and it will take 20 years to complete the plan if it's all approved. cleveland's plain dealer says lebron james does not let his two sons play football. that's according to them. he allows his sons ages 10 and 7 to play basketball, baseball, and soccer. he's concerned about the physical demands of football. james played when he was in high school but stopped before his senior year. a welch soldier who died got a nice farewell. the church feared the pews would be empty so they turned to facebook. people answered the call. many showed up. they had to gather outside the
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church. and a florida woman became a new mom and grandmother on the same day. heather and her daughter destiny martin gave birth at the same hospital three hours apart. doctors induced both women tuesday for medical reasons. they said it's like having twins without carrying for twins. los angeles will play host to the hollywood film awards. now for the first time it will be televised and you can see it only on cbs. gayle is at the hollywood played yum where she'll have an exciting role in the show. gayle, good morning. >> i am so psyched, norah. >> yeah. i saw your instagram feed, all of the stars that are going to be there. >> i know. this is the thing. on the way out here i was asking people, have you heard of the hollywood film awards, have you heard of the hollywood film awards. to a tee everyone said, nope, i have no idea what it is. that's going to charge tonight.
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believe me. in hollywood they know it's a very big deal. the reason i was so psyched about it, when i arrived i saw what a big deal this is going to be. i'm going to be holtzing the live red carpet coverage, the countdown to the hollywood film awards. me and mo rocca. we got here and figured out camera angles. for those of you not familiar with it, it's the official launch of the awards season. it's attracted the biggest stars for the past 17 years. some say there are more celebrities packed into this room than for any other event. >> the hollywood film awards has been one of the more under the radar but important stops on the award season circuit. >> matthew bellamy, executive editor for the "hollywood reporter" says this first show is a first big step for establishing the playing field for the oscar race. >> nobody does anything in this
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town unless you feel like it's important. so the fact that people attend this show is a good prognosticator of who's going end up being the candidates. >> recognizing their art is a tradition rooted in hollywood history. the glamor has been part of that showbiz culture since the oscars were born 85 years aeld. other shows including the "golden globes" followed until it became a hollywood frenzy. >> it's crazy until you find out people say you look great in a skirt. you get invited to all the parties. >> last year leto and mcconaughey were nominated. both went on to win oscars. in fact, the majority of hollywood film award resip
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yenltss have gone on to earn oscar nods. >> as you can tell, i'm a bit overwhelmed by all na pita luon. in entertainment tonight nancy o'dell hosted the event. >> she was shaking and crying backstage. sure enough they were saying are we pronouncing her name right. and sure enough she won. >> sit dow so we can serve drinks. >> the hollywood film awards allowed celebrities to table hop. >> it's a really nice award. it's all friendly. they have a couple of drinks and everybody mellowsut o. there's not a whole lot of pressure. everyone seems to enjoy it. >> with that laid back atmosphere, you never know what will happen. >> one year julia roberts walked
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on stage barefoot. she said i'm tired of being in my shoes all night long. that's the kind of event it is. >> they're trying to keep the loose vibe where it's not so formal so you're going to have those interactions that people watch these shows for. >> the other main attraction, of course, is what the stars will be wearing as they walk down that award staple, the red carpet. >> i think because it is the first award show of the season you're not going to see as many risks. they want to come out as very classy, very regal, very elegant, because that's what an oscar winner is supposed to be. >> norah, this is funny. yesterday during rehearsal one of the crew guys asked me does norah have a particular side she likes to be shot from? i said, look, she's good from all sides. charlie, you'll appreciate this. no matter where i go people will stop me and ask about charlie rose. for the first time a guy walked up to me and said is the dimple in charlie rose's dimple real?
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i said, i don't know. i never touched it. but i assume that it is. >> it is. >> i look forward to seeing both of you. >> we've not had any work done yet. we've not had any work done yet. thank you, gayle. >> he doesn't need work. i'm looking forward to seeing you guys later on. >> so excited. you can see the hollywood film awards only on cbs. be sure to see gayle and mo rocca hosting the pre-party show. that's followed by the awards show and then charlie, gaylend and i will bring you a one-hour special with highlights and interviews. it is only on cbs. coming up, they call him the -- i'm laughing, i'm sorry. they call him the college whisperer. he guarantees he
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board show costs of college has increased again but at a slower rate. the average price at private institutions rose 14%. the first step for high school students is getting in. john blackstone introduces us to a man who says he can get students into a top tier school for a price. >> what do you think it means? >> reporter: for students spending hours after school in a
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think tanker are looking for an edge that will get them admitted to the nation's most competitive colle colleges. think tank ceo matthew ma. >> have you cracked the code? >> i think i have cracked the code. >> you can tell. >> i can tell. >> ma, a math whiz and hedge fund analyst came up with his own algorithm to see the odds of admissions to top ranked schools. ma compare as what he does to the film "money ball" where statistics are used to predict a winning team. >> so "moneyball" is the first time someone's youthed a mathematical model to study what would otherwise be perceived as a highly objective human is in tick judgment. >> reporter: the prediction is that of college officers. .
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it can change year to year. if the students at think tank follow ma's advice, he says there's a 93% chance they'll get into the school of their choice. teen college admissions officers find it mystifying. >> yes. >> but you have demystified that. >> i think so. but they would like to deny that. >> reporter: ma is so confident he even offers a munnback guarantee. >> that's what led victor chen to it even though he seemed like the ideal college applicant. >> your parents were worried you wouldn't get into the college you wanted to. >> yes. >> chen's parents, immigrants from china, paid $10,000, seeking the guarantee he would be admitted to the university of california berkeley. >> your mother was saying this is where you're going go, i'm
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going to make sure you get there. >> sounds like the tiger thick. >> it does. >> he needed a significant internship to fill out his resume. >> it's more the thought that you have all the steps on paper but people who have steps on paper don't necessarily get in. >> reporter: chen did get in. he graduated in 2012 and is now working in san francisco in finance, but they tank's guarantee worries denise pope, a stanford educator and co-founder of challenge success, an organization that works to make the college admissions process less stressful. >> it's become a business that is really preying on the fear of parents and kids and often preying on the fear of immigrants or first generation college folks who don't know the system here and are misunderstanding it. >> ma says most are asian who live in the san francisco area. >> it's very much a stigma that
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we capitalize on fear. i sincerely believe we give hope to people. >> reporter: the lower the odds of admission, the more ma charges. he said one family put up $600,000 so he would work with their son who is failing and about to be expelled from high school. with ma's mentoring, he now attends syracuse university. >> we turn an an unsuccessful kid to a kid who's now very successful and on a path to more success. >> it's path that 12,000 students are trying to follow in 12 think tank facilities. lisa's getting tutoring every week. >> i was stressed out. i think competitively every student out there has a counselor. >> she believes the guidance her kids get at think tank gets on the right track. >> i would love my daughter to
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go to an ivy league. what parent wouldn't want. >> with so many families worried about college admissions, the odds of success are in his favor. for "cbs this morning," john blackstone, "cbs this morning." san mateo, california. up next, the most unforgettable moments of the week. you're watching "cbs t
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physical activity. but keeping that mix balanced, isn't always easy. so coke, dr. pepper, and pep are joining your efforts to find balance with the new initative called mixify. coming together for the first time to talk to teens about balancing what they eat and drink with what they do. and helping them think about when they've had too much,
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or maybe when it's time for a treat. supporting your efforts, with our message. balance what you eat and drink with what you do. that's how you mixify.
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that does it for us, but, first, thanks, shaven. >> good to see you. >> see you tonight. >> do you want to know what i'm wearing? >> i don't. i really don't. >> something sparkly. >> i love you too. see you guys. >> see you, gayle. >> and as we leave you, we tack a look back at the week that
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was. have a great weekend. president obama and chinese president xi jinping ironed out some key issues but could not have been farther apart. >> i described to him why it is so important for us to speak out for the freedoms that we believe are universal. >> a foreign country should not interfere. >> the spaceship from earth lands on a moving comet 300 million miles away. >> it's on the surface. >> oh, yes, it's very cold. >> a school bus was attacked by local police and none o has heard from them or seen them since. s>> alow moving river of lava in hawaii swallowed a house. >> dr. craig spencer has been
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cured of ebola. >> the scaffolding was dangling 68 stories in the air. >> you go. >> i like to multitask. what can i say. >> what do you want to do? >> i don't know. what do you want to do? do you want to get out of here? ♪ >> i tell you this concert had something for just about everyone and all of it was focused on our nation's veterans. >> this is a wild bald eagle. he's trying to kill me. >> thunder law broke the record for the longest backward shot. >> have you ever wanted to be in the guinness world record as a kid? >> to do what. >> to do something better than most. >> i need to be more ambitious.
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>> oh, my god. the mornings i wake up and feel like a total loser -- don't you ever wake up feeling like a total loser? >> no. no, i don't. >> good for you. >> how does this sound? bush, clinton, bush, obama, clinton. >> he came up behind me and said i don't want to scare you. i'm going to take a picture. i said you're the one that ought to be scared. i've got a gun. >> shake your shoulders. you know how to do that. >> i know how to do that. >> remember to pray, do yoga, eat well, and wear condoms. under your clothes. >> just this morning as i was checking out of the hotel. >> you're saying because he looks like steven spielberg. >> oh, spielberg. i've never gotten that. >> comer of the my house. >> are you inviting gayle over again? >> oh, the places i could take that one.
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♪ ♪
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they may not be the most handsome of body parts. yet, there they sit on the sides of our heads. for the world to see. but what happens when they stop hearing? should we stop doing? should we stop living? not today. esteem. the hearing implant.
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>> 3, 2, 1. camera ready. co if it's happening we are ngveri it. >> on the doctor's friday news f.eed kim k bears her butt and breaks the internet. >> what's coming between her and her calvins and sparking major controversy? >> the crew that could have you winning our million dollar healthy home? and, a first look at the dr. phil exclusive interview with momma june and honey aboutoo-bo honey boo-boo! ♪ ♪ doctor, doctor gimme the news ♪ ♪ >> hello and welcome to the doctors friday news feed. we are gog to start with -- going to start with a look at dr. phil

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