tv CBS This Morning CBS November 21, 2014 7:00am-9:01am EST
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be a weekender and book weekeyour stay at hampton. [ music playing ] good mngorni. it is friday, november 21st, 2014. welcome to cbs "there morning." heavy rooves collapses and forces the nfl to change its plans. there morning, a new threat is on the way. the president's protection on immigration setting off a firestorm with republicans. hollywood's nice guy, tom hanks on his new role and kennedy center honor. >> your world in 90 seconds. >> i have been in there for four days. i couldn't get my door opened. i couldn't get through to anybody. re americans dick out from a
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cord storm. nearly three for more feet fell on buffalo. buildings are collapsing. >> most of the cars are buried. we have people poking with sticks trying to physical out where these vehicles are. >> for throws members of congress that question my authority, i have one answer, pa thebill. >> it's a dramatic unlawful act that will do great damage to icamera. moments after president obama finished your honor veiling his plan, a woman with a gun was arrested in front of the e white.hous pro testershe gatred in front of the ferguson police department. >> michael brown's father making a public plea for calm. >> i do not want my son's death to be in vain. >> authorities identified myron may as thesh ooter who opened fire on the florida state campus. >> i was terrified. exere was nothing in ply mind
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cept survive, survive. >> in mexico city, protestors dither to protest the sappearance 4of3 students. an suv crashes into a building, sending the building crashing to the ground. the police try to catch the driver. >> usc against duke. >> undergraduate assistant chris hoover. the intensity. >> the raidersl wil break the streak. >> and all of that matters. vice president joe biden got a special birthday overseas. >> he blew out the first two and slot out the last two with his finger guns, biden style. >> on "cbs this morning." . >> is that how you introduce your guests? >> i do sustainables, something like that will do. >> 12 more shadows. >> this morning's eye opener is presented by toyota. let's go places!
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[ music playing ] welcome to "cbs there morning." norah o'donnell is off. our good friend jeff lower re i with us. the massive snowstorms this week are now blamed for 12 deaths. hundreds of people are out of their homes, because their rooves could collapse. >> one suburb colleaguetowaga has 84 inches on the ground. cheektowaga. >> reporter: good morning, as the tough one to say out here, cheektowwaga, new york. i can tell you these bitter cold temperatures are difficult for a lot of these people here. not sovenl a lot of this snow here oak, as you can see behind
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me, it is hanging off of homes. as walls of snow continue to hammer buffalo and western new york on thursday the cleanup effort pushed on. >> i was in mexico a week ago. come home to this. 7-foot of snow. >> reporter: some people in the suburbs in nearby towns are turning to heavy machinery to clear wet heavy snow. thousands of work herbs are now streaming into the region to help. >> this is i believe the largest deployment of its kind ever, literally thousands of people from across the state coming in to help, more help is on the way. >> officials are worried that warming temperatures along with a chance of rain over the next few days will add weight to the snow sitting on rooves and that can lead to collapses. >> we know of 30 collapses reported overnight.
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>> reporter: we met janice angelone. >> this is back breaking work. >> you are you doing it? >> it's not easy, i have a bad back west virginia are you going do? i don't want my roof kashing in. >> reporter: with driving bans still in effect and temperatures hovering well below the freezing mark, the elderly remain some of the most vulnerable in this kind of weather. >> do you have all your meds, you have an oxygen tube for one day? >> yeah. >> reporter: due to limited resources, the nfl decided to move the jets game. it will now be played monday night in detroit. and this is a very expensive undertaking as you can imagine, so much so, county leaders are asking the government to step in. they are hoping to get federal aid for the rescues and cleanups. jeff. >> thank you very much. another view from a drone over west seneca now south of buffalo shows kids having some
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fun in those mountains of snow. meteorologist daniel niles is watching the weather in the east. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, everybody. we made it to the end of the week. what a shift in the weather. we are talking about a flood watch in western new york. now the flood is rain. you heard half an inch of rain is likely. either side of that added to the snow pack. if melted snow combined with warmer temperatures as well. fact, look at the warming trend. 60 degrees by the time we get to monday. we will clear off those rooves, which is going to be high ray cross the southern plains tomorrow, all the way from san antonio to the coastline. houston and spreading east to new orleans, tornadoes possible, damage wind threat as well with numerous thunderstorms as we head into tomorrow afternoon and evening. then temperatures on the east coast in the 60s and 70s on monday. president obama will try to rally support for the immigration plan he unveiled
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last night. she taking executive action to change deportation policy. it could keep millions of undocumented immigrants in the united states. major garrett is in las vegas where the president will begin selling his plan. major, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. president obama will sign the memo, sending all of his immigration policy here to dell sole high school. it was from the spot nearly two years ago, the president called on congress to pass immigration reform him knowing they are furious the president will say there is one way it can uhl all be wiped away, for congress to pass a bill the president can sign. anticipating republican charges of blanket amnesty, president obama said the current system without his changes amounts to amnesty by inaction. >> millions of people who live here without paying their taxes or playing by the rules, politicians use the issue to scare people and wlip up votes at election time. >> reporter: it was an odd complaint. the president broke a promise
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from set. all to shield the political backlash. the president's actions do the following, lift the threat of deportation from an estimated 5 million undocumented adults and children who have lived in america at least five years. adults with children born in the u.s. or with permanent legal status can also apply for a three-year work permit. >> most of these immigrants have been here a long time. they work hard. often in tough, low-paying jobs. >> reporter: it also keeps the summer surge of border patrol on the border and prioritizes the hunt for crossers to terrorism and crime. >> felons, not family, criminals, not children. gang members, not a mom who's working harold to provide for her kids. >> reporter: lastly, it simplifies the visa process and would allow longer stays for high-tech foreign workers and students pursuing science
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engineering or math degrees. for engineering activists disappointed by white house indifference, it all sound like a few day. >> it's almost unreal because for six years, we've had a different president obama. when he came into office, we believed his campaign promises. we believed he was going to make immigration a priority. >> reporter: all these changes last only as long as president obama remains in office. the next president can extend them or eliminate them. sign-ups start in the spring. there is a lengthy verification process, some may not receive this legal protection until 2016. >> that could well mean their legal status in this country will literally be on the presidential ballot. gail. >> major, thank you. republicans attacked the president's plan before it was even announced. house speaker john boehner released his prebuttal hours for be president spoke. >> instead of working together to fix our broken immigration system. the president says he's acting on his own.
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that's not now the country works t. president said before he is not a king and an emperor. he is sure acting like one. >> nancy hill is on capitol, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, it runs the gambit from republicans who say the president is waging a war on democracy and to those who say that they actually support some of the measures he is proposing but that it is congress' place to pass the bill. many republicans believe you have to tackle border security first before you can address the status of people who came to this country illegally and universally, republicans like for orin hatch say it will make republicans less likely to compromised with this president. >> i think a lot of them will be upset and irate. it leaves some who are more
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radical in a better position to stop true immigration reform. >> reporter: what happens now? some republicans want to sue the president. others want to try to cut off the funding for agencies that are going to implement his plan. practically, that's difficult. the citizenship services is virtually self funded. it gets most of its money from fees charged to those entering the country. the president got praise from most democrats who say he is doing this out of necessity. that it will help the economy. for some they wish he had done even more. >> thank you very much. rising tensions from ferguson, missouri led to a new confrontation overnight. cbs news saw several demonstrators arrested outside the police department t. city is waiting for a grand jury to decide if a white police officer should be indicted for killing an unarmed black teen. mark straussman is in ferguson this morning. good morning to you. >> reporter: good morning, those overnight scuffles help us explain why the mayor of st.
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louis has requested 400 additional guard troops. they should be in place today. hours ago, police from several actions scuffled with demonstrators. three dozen protestors last night chanted and taunted police outside headquarters. when demonstrators moved into the streets and blocked traffic, police responded. protestors are demanding officer darren wilson be indicted for killing 18-year-old michael brown. his father, michael brown, sr., released this video statement pleading for peaceful protests. >> for hurting people and destying property, it's not the answer. no matter what the grand jury decides, i do not want my son's death to be in vain. >> we will be peaceful, but we will not be orderly and we will not be nice. >> reporter: michael mcpherson is one of the leaders of the coalition, one of dozens of groups gearing up for demonstration, once the grand jury makes its decision.
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>> reporter: you expect it to go wrong? >> yeah, i do. i do. i'm concerned, i'm concerned when we have a state of emergency before there is an emergency. >> reporter: 1,000 local police have gone through added training in how to deal peacefully with protestors. along ferguson's streets, demonstrators are also getting ready. >> i'm saying let me take a picture of your hands. i don't know what it will do here. >> reporter: a local artist with a project called all hand on deck. he is plastering images of raised hands along the boarded store fronts the scene of last using's protests. >> the fact that it's a lot of different people and a lot of different hands of different ages, different races, it's a call to other people to show that we need everybody. >> reporter: missouri governor jay nixon was giving a speech yesterday at a kansas city high school. a half dozen students walked out with their hands raised, a gesture of solidarity for the
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ferguson protests. >> mark, thanks,. this morning, police are still trying to physical out why a gun monman fired at florida state university. hours1hnf later, one student out how close the gunman's bullets came to him and a warning on the campus in tal halls see. anna, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, yes. police are still trying to being out a motive for the shooting that happened on campus just of pld night thursday morning. what they do know is in the months leading up to the shooting the man who opened fire appeared troubled and thought the government was out to get him. >> there has been a shooting. >> repr:orte cell phone video shows students at florida state library minutes after the gunman opened fire. >> i turned around very slowly and saw the gunman take two more shots at another person. >> reporter: hours later, a senior realized just how narrow his escape was. after he got home, he found
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bullet slulgs lodged into the heavy books stuffed inside his backpack. >> i was terrified. there was nothing else except survive, survive, survive. >> reporter: the shooter has been 50i6ded as 31-year-old myron may, a 2005 fsu graduate who until last month was employed by the district attorney's office in los cruzs new pittsburgh colorado he was described as a well respected member of the community. >> he didn't ever hurt anyone. he would give you the shirt off his back if he had to. >> reporter: new mexico police reports obtained by cbs news showed in october, may's former girlfriend complained he was harassing her. she said he had developed a severe mental disorder and he believes that the police are after him. in september, myron may reported to himself that he was being watched and observed and could hear voices coming through the
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walls. law enforcement sources confirm may sent ten packages through the mail to friends throughout the country. all have been told to call authorities when the packages arrive. >> he expressed fears of being target and he wanted to bring attention to there issue of targeting. >> reporter: may resigned from his position as an associate trial attorney in new mexico last month. he moved back to florida about three weeks ago, friends say, to gain new life. gail. >> all right, an narcs thank you. protestors clashed with police in members do city overnight they are furious over the disappearance and apparent murder of 43 college students. we are joined from dallas, manuel, good morning report. good morning. it's been eight weeks since the students disappeared and we saw protests almost daily in mexico. last night's demonstration was meant to gather people from all
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over that country in one spot to make a point. some demonstrators turned violent, crashing with violence police in mexico city, tearing down barricades and throwing molotov cocktails. earlier in the day, tens of thousands had gathered in the capital city's main square to deliver a more peaceful message that the movement against government corruption and violence is growing. in downtown los angeles, the message was the same. hundreds of activists marched to the mexican consulate general calling for the removal of the mexican president and counting to 43, the number of students who have now become symbols for change in mexico. those 43 students disappeared september 26th after boarding a bus to the town of igua wheth h.
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. the officers opened fire and turned the students ever over to a drug gang which killed them and burned their bodies. this one escaped. >> i hid under the bus and played dead, he said. he is one of only 14 who got away. "at first we were afraid to speak out." even though i'm alive, i feel dead. i don't fear death anymore. this man's son is one of the 43. "they have no heart," he said of the kid nappers" it's like the people that did this have no fathers, no mothers, there is nothing else i can say about the rage i feel" mexican authorities say ashes found in a bag in a river have been send to a lab in europe to see if they match the students' dna. those results are still pending. >> thank you very much. there morning, many senators are unhappy about the answers they got on capitol hill about
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airbags that have been linked to six deaths. the affected backs by takata can explode. one senator asked the takata executive if this country is ready to take the blame. >>ly ask you now, does takata take full responsibility for this defect? >> all products in this accident worked normally. so that's caused accident, yes. >> so far more than 11 million veeblgs in mostly southern states have been recalled. federal regulators are demanding a nationwide recall. it is now 7:19, ahead, "60 minutes" investigates how a disaster like there in minneapolis could happen again? stev
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we can build a keystone pipeline creating thousands of temporary and millions of permanent jobs. >> the ceo that runs the pipeline says there will be 35 permanent jobs. >> somewhere between millions of jobs and 35. so let's just say the keystone pipeline will create some jobs with a margin of error of almost all numbers. >> it's a big discrepancy. details, details. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, if you are headed out to door to work, you might want to wait a
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second. you could be driving into danger. skreef croft is in studio 57, they'll show us why the government is very worried about the safety of 70,000 bridges. plus, secrets about the men new york city trusted during the recent ebola scare. he said he had nearly two decades of experience for the job. see what happened when the journalist put the hazmat specialist under the microscope. the "wall street journal" says the director of the nsa expects a dramatic cyberattack on the united states in the next decade. michael rogers testified yesterday before the house intelligence committee. he said china and win or two other countries are capable of an attack that would shut down our power grid. new orleans says there were no leaks this morning after an oil platform explosion in the gulf of mexico. one person was killed, three were injured there yesterday. the platform is located 11 miles from new orleans.
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it's operated by feel wood energy. it was not in production at the time. a woman with a handgun was arrested outside the white house. the secret service took her in custody around the president's immigration adress on wednesday, a man with a rifle in his car was arrested t. agency is under scrutiny after a fence jumper got into the house in september. peter adrian says never to use a switch again to discipline a child. he says he is back in touch with the four-year-old boy. he is very upset from an actation is from commissioner roger goodell. peterson says, don't say i'm not remorseful. i regretted everything that took place. i love my child more than anyone could ever imagine. this sunday "60 minutes" taous abt bridges and roads and railways are crumbling, the nightmare scenario unfolded 13
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years ago. several people collapsed on the bridge in minneapolis. steve croft traveled to pittsburgh, that is where three rivers and 4,000 crossings and engineers have transportation secretary ray la hood nervous. >> according to government there are 7,000 bridges deemed structurally deficient. what does that mean? >> it means that there are bridges that node to be really either replaced or repaired in a very dramatic way. >> they're dangerous? >> i don't want to say they're unsafe, but they're dangerous. i would agree with that. >> if you were going to take me some place, any place in the country, to illustrate the problem, where kould would you take me? >> there are lot of places you can go. can you go to any major city in america and see roads and bridges and infrastructure that need to be fixed. today. they need to be fixed today. >> reporter: we decided to start in pittsburgh, which may have
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the most serious problem in the country. our go ahead was andy herman, a past president of the american society of civil engineers. >> from up here, can you see why they call it the city of bridges. >> yeah. >> between the highway and the railroad bridges, there are mr. of them. >> most of them old. >> most of them old. >> reporter: there are more than 4,000 bridges in metropolitan pittsburgh. 20% of them are structurally deficient, cluck one of the city's main arteries. >> this is the liberty bridge ahead? >> yes. >> an important bridge for pittsburgh. >> a very important bridge for pittsburgh, a connection from the south to the city, itself, then to the north. >> reporter: it was built in 1928 when cars and trucks were much lighter. it was designed to last 50 years ago. that was 86 years ago. every day in pittsburgh 5 million people travel across bridges that either need to be replaced or undergo major repairs. >> one of these arch bridges has
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a structure back in a minute under it to catch falling concrete. >> that's amazing. >> it all comes down to funding. right now, they can't keep up with it. 300 bridges become structurally defwisht each year in the state of pennsylvania. that's 1% added to the already 23% they have. they can't fix it fast enough. >> good morning, charlie. >> it suggests it came down to funding. >> yeah. >> what happened to the funding? >> most of it used to come from the highway trust fund, which is funded by the gasoline tax and the federal gasoline tax 18 cents a gallon. it hasn't been raised in 21 years, 1973 was the last time. >> how worried are cities like this? >> i think the engineers in pittsburgh are really woimpltd i think the mayor of pittsburgh and the people the public officials know how bad the situation is. i'm not so sure the public knows
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how bad the situation is. >> they will. >> they certainly will. >> i covered the british bridge collapse from 1983. people were so shocked a clunk of bridge can fall so cleanly. was there anything that surprised you when doing this story? >> just how bad the situation is. >> all over? >> i knew it was bad. i didn't know there were 70,000 bridges, one in nine in the united states, that's a lot of bridges. >> is there a fix, an easy fix? >> there is not an easy fix. that's why it has not been the done. i think congress knows, it's a terrible problem. first of um the first thing that probably needs to be done and nobody needs to do the gas tax needs to be raised. it's a sure formula to get beaten. in pennsylvania, tom corbett, a republican governor, had the courage to raise the gas tax in pennsylvania. he was the only republican, major republican who lost in the election. >> you talk about things beyond bridges, what else? >> we are talking about ports, we are also talking about rail
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and water mains, water treatment plants, old gas lines in the cities that go back 100 years, not necessarily a federal problem, but it's a state and local federal problem. >> should we be worried when we are in a car driving across a bridge? >> i don't think it's that bad. a lot of things can happen to you when you get in your car and turn it on. i don't think the worst thing is that a bridge collapse, a bridge could collapse. >> thank you very much. you can catch steve's full report sunday on "60 minutes." the tired little bridge amtrak calls its achilles heel. it could take down traffic along the east coast. >> that is sunday night on cbs. he was the ebola king, he's not who he claimed to be that's next. we rethink where you do your holiday shopping. plus, fighting hackers and much more, that's monday. you are watching cbs this
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. >> he was a guy that seemed like a hero, someone who risked his personal safety to clean up during the ebola scare in new york. but a week's long investigation by buzz feed news uncovered a dodgy pass. we dove into the latest controversy. >> good morning, it was the first case of ebola in new york. police turned to one man to clean up the contaminated waste. his company had 20 years of experience dealing with hazardous situations. the only problem, sam wasn't who he claimed to be. >> we are the most highly trained company out there that has done this, everything from anthrax to mrsa to ebola. >> reporter: on the tv and radio. >> for 20-plus years we have
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cleaned up the most remarkable sixes this country has ever seen. >> reporter: sal payne was the face for cleaning up ebola. >> anywhere, anyone willing to give him oxygen, he was there talking up his experience, claiming he and his company were the right folks to do the job. >> reporter: his company, biorecovery corporation had decades of experience. it was tapped by new york city to decon tam nate craig spencer's apartment and the brooklyn bowling alley he visited. >> this is exactly what we do. >> reporter: an investigation found sal payne had only been cleaning up hazardous waste for one year. reporter learned payne, a convicted felon, got into the industry by convicting an unsuspected sister to sell the business, a well regarded cleaning company. she says she was duped. so the company exists, he just was never a part of it? >> exactly. biorecovery corporation up until 2013 was owned by somebody epor
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the center of controversy before. back in 2008, during the height of the financial crisis, he started two loan modification companies. they were a scam and new york state sued him. payne was held liable for more than $12.5 million. he has only paid back about $62,000. >> a few months later he bought the biorecovery company. >> reporter: he had been slapped on the wrist and did wit the biorecovery company? >> exactly. >> reporter: last month, they alerted officials to his legal problems, causing new york city to quickly cut ties with biorecovery. the new york city department of health and mental hygiene admitted they were unaware of his background but defended their decision to hire biorecovery. in a statement to cbs news, they vigorously reviewed all of bio-recovery's cleanup work and decide it was successfully
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performed. sal payne denied misrepresenting himself. he refused an on camera interview t. attorneys call buzz ed's stories slanderous and replete with misstatements, lice and outright falsehoods. new york city is look nook payne's latest claims. he has not been charged with any crimes. how does one guy con so many people? >> he comes across as persuasive, even in our sort of brief discussions with him, he is very persuasive at times and can be very charming, too. >> reporter: and that's how you think he got people? >> i think that's how he had to be a part of it. >> making misleading statements, sal payne exists saying when speaking of professional experience, he was speaking for the company, not himself. in reality, there is nothing illegal about that. >> we were saying it is always surprising to me somebody has a murky past would be so front and center on tv talking. >> it's interesting, he changed the spelling of his last name.
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daughter leah is fighting cancer, herself. the two ohio athletes have become friends over the past month. after the jersey exchange, he tweeted just was surprised after practice by a really good friend. lauren hill, and she brought her game jersey! got to get this framed asap. >> fwlies to see they have a bond. ahead, tom hanks reveals why he thinks for rest gump is a great movie. where does he sit with you forrest gump for you in your tom hanks' repertoire? where is he? >> it was a magic confluence of so many things and a kind circumstance. >> hanks talks about his extraordinary career in hollywood and what paul newman taught him about being self conscience. that's ahead on cbs "this morning." ♪ it's a marshmallow world in the winter ♪
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. it is friday, november 21st, 2014. welcome back to "cbs this morning." more things happen when you cross the line to social and binge drinking. it was in for millions of americans, first, here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. >> not onl ay lot of snow is here oak, as you can see behind me, it is hanging off of homes. >> we are talking about a flood watch in western new york, because now the threat is rain, yielded to the weight of the snow pack. >> there runs the gamut from republicans saying the president is waging a war on crdemoacy.
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>> the president will say there is one way it can all be wiped away, for congress to pass a >>ll the president can sign. se tho overnight scuffles explain why the mayor of st. louis has requested 400 additional national guard troops to keep the peace. >> they know the man appeared troubled and feared the government was out to get him. >> there is a lot of places you can go. can you go to any major city in america and see roads and bridges and infrastructure that need to be fixed. today. >> there shouldn't be any doubt in our minds that there are nation's states and boots out there that have the capably to do that, to shut down or stall our ability to operate our basic infrastructure. >> justin bieber has supposedly met with a rabbi to explore judaism. after meeting with justin bieber, the rabbi is exploring aitheis
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aitheism. >> i'm charily rose can gayle king, norah o'donnell is off. the big weather threat is changeing from snow to rain. officials are now talking about flooding after a week of massive snowstorms that left 12 people dead. >> the two latest victims were being moved out of a nursing home, where the roof was in danger of happening. theresa duncan is in cheektowaga, new york, near buffalo, with 7-feet on the ground, hello. >> reporter: good morning, gay him, that's right. after several days of non-stop snow here in western new york, it has finally stopped. take a look at what it has done to some of these homes as this carport collapsed because of the weight of the snow t. massive snowfall has left rooves collapsing and dozens of homes cracking. some people have turned to heavy machinery to remove the mounds of snow, but things could get worse before they get better. this region is also bracing for a big melt. forecasters are expecting warmer temperatures along with rain this weekend. officials are warning residents that flooding is on the way with
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tons of snow blanketing the buffalo bills stadium, the nfl has decided to move sunday's bills-jets game to monday night t. driving ban, a lot of them still are in effect this morning. >> thank you very much. president obama will be in las vegas today to rally support for his immigration reform plan. he announced thafrt night about 5 million undocumented immigrants could be shielded from deportation. that includes kids brought to the united states illegally t. president also put pressure on congress to act. >> to those members of congress who question my authority to make our immigration system work better or question the wisdom of me acting where congress has failed, i have one answer, pass a bill. i want to work with both parties to pass a more permanent legislative solution and the day i sign that bill into law the actions i take will no longer
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will be necessary. >> he addressed the nation with a video from house speaker john boehner. >> instead of working together to fix our broken immigration system, the president says he's acting on his own. that's just not how our democracy works. the president had said before that he's not king and he's not an emperor. but he is sure acting like one. >> president obama says that every commander-in-chief for the last 50 years has taken executive action on immigration. sunday on "face the nation," bob schieffer talks with michael mccaul and louis gutierrez and raul labrador and bill deblasio. >> sounds like a good show. this morning, a woman in florida is the latest to claim that bill cosby drugged and raped her. >> that makes seven women to go public saying the comedienne attacked them. cosby blasted what he called...people coming out of
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the woodwork with unsubstantiated stories about my complievenlt this is utter nonsense. he performed last night rat a fundraiser in the bahamas and did not address the issue. it was his first public event since three media companies cut their ties to him this week. strollers are being recalled. federal regulators say a folding hinge on these graco strollers can pinch a child's finger. in some cases, it can lead to full and partial amputations, the recall includes 11 different models since august of 2000 and september 2014. graco will have free repair kits early next month. aaa says the improving economy is leading us to go away this thanksgiving. it predicts 46 million americans will travel at least 50 miles during the holiday weekend. the most since 2007. drivers will find the lowest gasoline prices in five years. the average price for a gallon
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of regular is 43 cents cheaper tan it was for thanksgiving last year. arguably the smartest football team in the country is getting ready for a new challenge. we told you last week about the m.i.t. engineers. they will play the first post-season game if school history. the division 3 engineers have their first undefeated season since 1881. they're hoping to keep it going when they take on the university eagles tomorrow in banger, maine. go engineers! >> go engineers is right. ahead on "cbs this morning," a couple torn apart by parent abuse and drug use. was a husband's self-defense murder? we will preview the . ]]
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weekend, except two weeks of qudrow. >> you got to crack up when they get that mean in our morning rounds, we look at a surprising new government study on alcohol use. it finds that eastern though one in three american adults drink excessively. most are not considered alcoholics. dr. holly phelps is with us to translate and explain. what is the definition of excessive drinking? >> definitely the most surprising aspect of the study was how many people drank excessively. excessive drinking is two things. it includes binge drinkings, which is four or more in one sitting, five for men and heavy daily drinking which is eight or more drinks a week for women or 15 for men. what the study pointed out, though, is 90% of people that drink the way are not considered alcoholics. >> i know, i'm just sort of stunned, how can you be a binge
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drinker and not be an alcoholic? what's the difference between the two? >> there is a subtle difference. alcohol is a medical condition. it has a number of criterion, heavy drinking is one of them. it includes heavy drinking despite it taking a toll on either your work life, you continue to drink even if you have legal trouble. it has to do with controlling your consumption, some people that start can't stop. that sort of thing. >> there were findings about who is doing the drinking? >> exactly. younger people, particularly men are more likely to do it. people with higher incomes are more likely to binge driving i drink, people with lower incomes are more likely to become dependent on alcohol or technically alcoholics. what i found the biggest take away here, you know, we hear a lot of people say, yes, i drink, but i'm not an alcoholic. what these researchers are saying is we acknowledge that, you are probably right, but in terms of your health and in
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terms of the to him on society, that may not matter. >> the total society is one thing. but your health. what exactly does it do that's detrimental to your health if it's moderate drinking? >> they point to 88,000 deaths from excessive drinking, not alcoholism, related to increase in heart disease, increase in breast cancer, increase in liver disease. >> alcohol connected to breast cancer? >> yes, it is, very connected. >> how is that, the medical connection? >> women who drink alcohol are, in fact, more likely to get breast cancer than women that drink to cholesterol at all. >> so it about. s like smoking does in terms of cancer? >> you know, they both have their own. they affect different orkin systems of the body, but both really raise our rick of disease overall. >> dr. homilly philips, thanks, once again. >> it's always about moderation. >> it always is. 48 hours with the woman who
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♪ >> therese grissom is sorry her ex-husband is dead. she has no regrets of killing him. support herbs from akron, alabama say she was a battered woman defending herself. others call her a cold blooded killer. erin moriarty either stat down with grissom with her only tv interview. here's a preview of tomorrow night's report. >> in the beginning, it was good. >> tracy and hunter grissom seem to have it all. they were partners in business. at home, they were raising two children. >> we had a friendship just your normal honeymoon phase marriage. >> how would you describe hunter grissom? >> he was fun and hefrls attractive. >> reporter: but as tracy tells it, hunter using drugs. she filed for divorce. her troubles didn't end.
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>> in september, 2010, that's the first time he physically hit me. it got progressive i worse. he made a comment if i told anybody he would kill me. i believed him. >> reporter: the couple dworlsed in october, 2010, one month later hunter grissom was arrested for boating and raping tracy. he didn't live long enough to face the tharnlgs. >> what's your first thought when you look back on may 15, 2012? >> i wish i had kept driving. >> grissom stated she had shot her ex-husband until the gun was empty and then called 911. >> where is he? >> he was on the ground. i'm sorry, i pulled up and i shot him. i can't take it no moriarty. i can't take it no moriarty. >> he's walking toward you? >> yes. >> where were his arms? >> he had his arm like he was going to bust through the
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window. it happened so fast. >> i shot him, i shot him, i shot him. >> reporter: tracy says she pulled her husband in self-defense. you don't regret pulling the trigger? >> no, because if i had not done that, i would be dead and i believe that 100%. >> reporter: but hunter grissom's family says her entire story is a lie. >> she has a way of making everything she has done look right. my son died running, running for his life. i know there is no telling what went through his mind. i hear him say, mama, mama. >> people who think that i murdered him in cold blood either don't know the whole story or don't know everything that's happened. >> erin moriarty joins us now.
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>> i went there, i had been told that she was a battered woman. she said that she had been abused and actually raped by her ex-husband and later 18 months later killed him because of that, she had ptsd. i thought it was an interesting cover. be tumor i was on it, some of the everyday we uncovered seemed to raise real questions about her story. >> tell us for a moment you suggested because of smartphones and things like that, it is much easier to do the job you are trying to do. >> actually. she took abuse on a phone like this, an iphone, but there is this amazing metadata, it's digital information. there are some of the pictures there. there is digital information that says where you take the picture, when you took the picture. >> and what time you took the picture. >> exactly. it doesn't exactly match the story she tells, in fact, it tells a different story. >> alabama las a stand your ground law.
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did she use that? >> actually, again, i thought that would be interesting. no, she had actually got an restraining order against him because she said of his prior abuse, but to go down and shoot him, she actually violated her own order, she can't use stand your ground. >> tomorrow night on "48 hours" at 10:009:00 central on cbs. coming up, our conversation with the one and only tom hanks. >> tom hanks, where is your insecurity? so many actors are so insecure, where is yours? i don't see it, honest to god. >> do you see how charming and witty i am? this is purely a self-defense mechanism. this is purely to get good somehow. >> a man who is one of hollywood's most bankable and nicest actors you will ever meet. >> a good question, a good answer. >> yeah.
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>> welcome back to "cbs this morning," coming up, tom hanks is one of this year's kennedy center honorees. he comes to tell us about his real life insecurities and why he is a big fan of whoever invented that selfie. why companies are taking quess from queues like "the hunger games." . the new york post says amazon will unveil a new video streaming service early next year. it will be supported by ads. sources say the service will be separate from amazon prime, which includes video. some people believe it could be a net flicks killer. all right, new york's daily news shows you what not to wear if
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are you an american reporter covering the duke and duchess of cambridge. prince dumb william and kate will be in walk next month. buckingham pam las is reminding the press of the proper dress code. >> that means, no jeans, no sneakers. if you are a man, you must wear a jacket. you think they are worried about how the americans will show up? >> can we undress our shirts? >> make sure you have on your jacket. nfl player jack johnson, his parents say he squanderred his money. he has made $18 million in his career. he will make $5 million. the parents managed his money. if paper says johnson's mother borrowed $15 million in his name. >> his mother? >> apparently. >> letting mom and dad have it. tom hanks' films grossed $8 billion with a b world wide. now, there is another accolade
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for him. he is one of five performers name as the 2014 kennedy center honoree. we talked with mr. hanks about his amazing career. >> what a life you've had, tom hanks. thomas jeffrey hanks. this is your life. >> oh, bring it on! >> reporter: tom hanks was born in 1956 in concorde, california, after his parents divorced when he was 4, he spent his childhood moving from one town to another as his mother and father each remarried several times. he took to acting on the stages of sacramento and at the great lakes theater festival in ohio. we first came to know tom hanks in 1980. on a sit-com about cross dressing roommates called boso buddies, that led from one thing to another to another, right? >> without a doubt, it was the greatest thing that ever
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happened. the people on it were fantastic. >> hanks' future was in the movies. soon after his show was cancelled, he landed the scaring role in "splash" his second feature film. >> is this the big secret you were keeping from me? >> he would get a nomination for playing a kid's body in "big." his first oscar win came five years later. for his role as a dying aids patient in the film "philadelphia, " his second oscar aim i came one year later as hanks played the unfor gettable forrest gump. >> my mama always said, life is like a box of chocolates. you never know what you gonna get. >> where does he sit with you, forrest gump? >> it was a magic confluence of so many things that it remains a
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one of a kind circumstance. >> why are you >> i just felt like running. i just felt like running. >> i view it as a lot of great mountain ranges in this world and in the grand tetons, there is one peak more majestic and that is what forrest gump is. >> houston, we have a problem. >> "apollo 14." "saving private ryan" "castaway" the list of hanks' hits is seemingly endless, making him one of hollywood's most bankable actors. but this is the thing, tom, you have had so many iconic roles, then there is that classic larry crown. >> i love that man, i ride a scooter to this day. >> my point is you have a wide variety of things, most of them hits. not everything has worked out to your liking. >> that's all right. >> you don't go home and beat
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yourself up, i'm wondering? >> oh, dear, no, look, the understanding has to be that you can be one of the greatest baseball players on the planet earth, you are only going to play in two or three world series. there is no crime in baseball. there is no crying in baseball. >> but tom hanks, where is your insecurity so many actors are so insecure? where is yours? i don't see it, honest to god. >> do you see how charming and witty i am? this is purely a self-defense mechanism. this is somehow to get food somehow, gayle. we are fraught with insecurities and moments of self doubt that can lead into a self loathing and that's a part of the battle, not to drop names, but i'm going to, paul newman, oh, look, there is a name on the floor, let me pick up that name? >> let's drink to danfully's honor. >> we were working on "road to
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perdition." paul newman made a drink with illegal alcohol. when it was done, paul said you always feel self-conscious the first time out, don't you? if mr. paul newman feels that way, maybe there is a place for me and everybody else here. >> hanks has been married to act tres and singer rita wilson for more than 26 years. it's his second marriage. the couple have two children and hanks has two others from a previous marriage. it could be, in part, because of the every man roles he plays that hanks has a reputation of being a hollywood good guy. i get a big pick i kick of watching you playing with the people who respect you, you photo bomb pictures. you really do. you play with the people. i love that you do that. >> well, there is a diplomacy involved. sometimes it's easier to grab that phone, put it in selfie mode and snap away and keep moving on. sometimes that's the fastest way in order to expedite your day.
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>> okay. >> there was a period. >> fair enough. >> there was a period of time when it's like i curse the man who invented this phone thing. i crush him. because it never stops and wherever you go, there it is, but i kind of like the guy who invented the selfie. >> all right, tom hanks. so when was the last time you were -- >> give plea second. well, it's not like i don't collect these moments, i don't celebrate them. >> i only need one. >> per se. you know, it wouldn't be being in the eyes of the beholder? you have to ask around. you know what, here it is, what is your website? what is your #gayle king? >> cbs this morning. >> send it into cbs this morning the time you had an experience with me in which i was a -- let's find out what that is. because i'm not about to broadcast it. i think the people box populi, ask them. >> i'm teaseing you.
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we will never put that on. >> you should trkt top ten times. i say you lead with it. >> no. >> so what did you learn from tom hanks? >> that was so dam, good, gayle. >> number one, he has a great sense of humor, his connections, he hassal green, patricia mcbride and sting. he was a hotel bellman in hotel california. he helped al green and lily tomlin. >> what was the paul newman? >> we are dropping, he was playing with me, paul newman says it's always tough the first time, isn't it? i am really so smitten with him. he gets uncomfortable as you know when you say how great he is. he doesn't want to talk about that. congratulations to tom hanks. visit cbsthismorning.com. you can see him and all the honorees when cbs brings you the 37th honors. tuesday 9:00/8:00 central.
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they are catching in on the catness tough girl trend. >> reporter: 12-year-old jill calderon and her friends have a hunger games club. they get together and act out the intense battle scenes from their favorite book and series. >> i love catness' player, how she has always been kind of not the one to mess with r. hero inns like "hunger games" are redefining what it means to play and fight like a girl. >> i love the excitement of them going through and living that game. i enjoy how it's her story and how she breaks through from that kind of society. >> reporter: the movie's box office successes, and emphasis on fearless female warriors have convinced toy companies like
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hasbro' to adapt to their audience. >> when you look at the typical toy aisles for boys, you see variety of play actions from action physicals to construction. none seems to be offering this opportunities for girls to play actively. [ music playing ] >> reporter: after two years of research, including the help and insight of 1,200 girls, hasbro launched their nerf line of pink and purple blastings last fall, sending sales soaring. it grew by 26% and reached a billion dollars in revenue for the first time in hasbro's history. >> i think girls see no barriers, whether it's in toys like these or sports or really across all aspects of our cullture. >> amy, what did you think when the kids started playing hunger games? >> i think women don't take as many risc, because they aren't used to playing games that they fail. it's a good way for girls to
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realize you can have challenges, can you compete. you don't win all the time, that's fine. >> reporter: shannon ice, a toy experts says girls are ditching the princess role playing. >> we are seeing a fundamental shift in the way girls want to be perceived and how they act that out in play. they're ready to be the hero. >> reporter: despite the girltual sure revolution, many say there is a divide when the mu products continue to wievend up in the pink aisle. >> if it is pink, sometimes it's custom for them. it feels like it's more of a welcomeing experience to them. >> reporter: but like her role model catness, jill knows it's not really about the weapon. it's about the spark the game creates. >> i think that most of the girls who will want a bow won't be drawn to a pink one. most kids want to be someone who is strong and powerful and can be anything they want.
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>> the debate over girls' toys is often a heated one. just there week, barbie makers matel face scrutiny for a book "barbie, i can be a computer engineer." it seems for many to be sexist. they pulled that book from amazon. >> i just wanted a barbie greenhouse the girls today are playing very differently. >> i wanted barbie's body, which seemed tough to achieve. >> the most unforgettable moments of the week coming up, you are watching g
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when schools connect with technology... a 5th grader's world opens up. and when a worker connects to online degrees... his opportunities multiply. the at&t aspire initiative. helping students and communities across america. . before we go, we want to say thank you to our facebook followers. they led the charge. a social media expert. any time anywhere log on to cbsn, you can watch the digital
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network of cbs news.com. take a look back at the week it was. >> a snow tundra in buffalo, new york. >> there is so much snow, it's like plowing a brick wall. >> it's absurd. i've never seen anything like this before. >> reporter: we are in one of the towns hit hardest by that lake effect snow. this is just the begin zblk for over 20 hours on the bus, we were flushing our water and rationing our food. >> the sound of gun slots as the shooter opened fire. >> there was nothing else in my mind except for survive. >> they worship hatcheted. >> reporter: security has been intensified across jerusalem. >> isis we leased a video with the former army ranger. >> al qaeda? >> it was al qaeda. >> i'm an infidel, would you have tried to kill me? >> of course. >> those members of congress who question my authority, i have one answer, pass a bill. >> instead of working toke, he's acting on his own.
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>> janice dickinson says bill cosby raped her 20 years ago. >> i remember bill cosby unbuttoning his robidas and getting on top of me. >> is there anyone you would like to thank for this honor? >> my parents for this honor. >> i wouldn't kick him out of bed. >> glad i joined the discussion today. >> oh, hi, jeff. >> thank you very much. [ music playing [ music playing ] >> let's bring this drone down. >> that was pretty magical, the hands there, well done. >> what is the most extraordinary thing about it? >> the most extraordinary thing about space, being weightless, trying to learn, any spare time you have, you get to go down to the greatest window humanity has everybody known. >> the question is, do we have the will and the capacity to influence the events as we used to? >> our sxaft different because -- our capacity is
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different because the threats and challenges are far more diffuse. >> coming in here, it's a little like "beautiful mind." you have all the ideas and creativitys pinned up on the wall. you do a little hula dance, as gayle would say, when president obama came out, i think the hula dance turned up a nortch. >> life is like a box of chocolates. >> since the time you had an experience with me in which i was a [ bleep ] let's find out what that is. i say you leave with it. >> my kids used to ask me, daddy, did you want to be a tv reporter when you were a little boy? i had to say, they didn't have tv within i was a little boy. >> he had no answer when eli black asked this, when will charlie rose and you come clean about your obvious relationship? so. >> he he he. a lot of people say you can't
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>> 3, 2, 1. >> camera ready. >> if it's happening we covering it on the friday news feed. >> the latest in the sex scandal rocking hollywood. and what started as a health scare. i >> would physically have to shake him to start breathing again. >> turned into a true health emergency. >> and crypt keeper toes? >> i have been to multiple dctors, none of them could refigu out what's going on. >> can the doctors fix her feet. >> this is an extreme case. >> ♪ doctor, doctor gimme the news ♪ ♪ doctor, doctor gimme the news ♪ ♪ [ applause ] ♪ >> hello, everyone, and welcome to the need -- friday news feed. for decades he was america's favorite tv fa
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