Transcripts For WNCN CBS This Morning 20160825 : comparemela

Transcripts For WNCN CBS This Morning 20160825



is that two? >> holy cow! >> oh, my gosh. starbucks just got blown over. people in there. >> tornadoes leave a trail of destruction in the midwest. >> it came up so fast. >> i looked outside and complete chaos. >> i tried to push the door and the wind was blowing to fast. >> number of dead in the italian earthquake is now 247 and rescuers still searching for survivors. >> hillary clinton is a bigot who sees people of color only as votes. >> donald um bigot. >> donald trump has shown us who he is and we ought to believe him. he is taking a hate movement mainstream. >> in kabul, afghanistan, the attack on the american university is finally over. 12 people were killed by the attackers. close encounter. the u.s. navy says iran ships conducted a high-speed intercept of an american warship. >> it appears to be unfazed, unprofessional. >> u.s. soccer has suspended hope solo for six months, loser. after the match against sweden. >> shocking shoot-out in an atlanta gas station. the driver opened his door and pulled out an assault-style rifle. >> all that. >> check out what the british olympic committee issuing everyone the same bag! >> imagine people on that flight and had you a red bag too. i'm at the taxi stand. oh, come on! >> and all that matters. >> according to hillary clinton's newly released medical records, she suffers f seasonal allergies. but she just takes benadryl. >> on "cbs this morning." >> it's revealed today that the trump campaign used campaign contributions to buy 55,000 dollars worth of donald trump's own book. >> oh, my god. oh, my god. that is what he is going to use to build the wall! announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places! welcome to "cbs this morning." charlie rose and gayle king are off so anthony mason and kevin frazier are here. the death toll in italy rose to 250. new drone video shows the scope of the destruction in one medieval town, about 36 hours after the quake. a frantic search is under way for people that are still trapped. >> rescuers are pulling people from the ruins of centuries o in three towns leveled by the quake. dozens of people are missing. seth doane is one of the first reporters to make it to the village of accumoli, northeast of rome. seth, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the number of people in these mountain top villages swells during summer because they are popular vacation destinations. the population in this town nearly doubles. but that means the death toll is higher too. we joined some who were allowed to return home to salvage what they could. this woman told us she was sad and with so many after-shocks, scared too. those who lost homes or could not return to them camped out. people are half nervous and half desperate as they have lost everything. the work of an entire life. this volunteer said. overnight the search for survivors continued. though hopes dimmed as more body rescuer workers tried to resuscitate a newborn but were unsuccessful. for the moment, they keep the rescue workers going. this elderly woman was saved from under debris. from above, the random nature of the quake was clear. some towns were flattened while others were spared. ancient architecture in places spared but the structures that were centuries old were reduced to rubble. tourists replaced by rescue workers. many of these villages have become ghost towns. after-shocks continue to rattle this region. even where homes are still standing, many are deemed too unsafe to return to. >> wow. seth doane, those pictures are incredible there in central italy. string of damaging tornadoes across the midwest and 20 tornadoes were reported in indiana alone. >> dozens of homes were damaged or destroyed but no one reported seriously hurt. indiana governor, mike pence, the gop vice presidential nominee will tour the area today. jericka duncan is in indianapolis where a state of emergency is in place. >> reporter: good morning. tornado practically flattened this starbucks. it was an ef-3 which means maximum winds up to 165 miles per hour. you can imagine the fear, the terror, the people inside must have felt when they realized a tornado was headed their way. a violent outbreak of tornadoes tore through the midwest wednesday. >> right there! >> reporter: injuring more than a dozen people, ripping the roofs off of homes and leaving behind a widespread pathf rain. i didn't know what was going on. and i just looked out and went, oh, my! >> reporter: a massive ef-3 twist barreled through the city of kokomo, indiana. frightened customers inside this restaurant watched, as the powerful wind leveled a starbucks. >> oh, my gosh. starbucks just got blown over. >> reporter: no one inside was seriously hurt. >> all of a sudden, i heard a >> reporter: witnesses say it took just second to tear apart this apartment complex. kathleen marsh took cover in her bathroom. >> it blew my window out! and then that was it. i just ran downstairs. i was just so scared! >> reporter: hundreds of people were forced out of their homes in howard county and more than 35,000 people were reported without power across the state. >> we will be here as long as we need to be. >> reporter: stepping away from the campaign trail, indiana said it was remarkable that no one was seriously hurt. >> i want to say hoosiers are breathing a sigh of relief after a very tough day of weather but there is a lot of hurting families out there. and i encourage every hoosier to remember these communities in their prayers. >> reporter: governor pence will are here later to check out some of that significant damage that you saw here in the piece. plains and ohio valley. anthony? >> terrifying pictures. thank you. we are following a tropical threat that could impact weekend weather in the southeastern u.s. a storm is gaining strength. about 200 miles northwest of puerto rico. forecasters say a 50% chance it's a stronger storm the next two days. computer models so different potential paths. over the week, the storm could impact parts of louisiana, which, of course, is still recovering from record flooding. donald trump is taking name calling to a new level. the republican nominee called hillary clinton a bigot last night in jackson, mississippi. he accused the democratic party of using minority communities to pick up votes. trump was backed up by enjoy nell farage who helped lead the so-called brexit campaign in the puk. major garrett is here with more. >> reporter: good morning. mississippi, where we were it mildly, skeptical of globalization. much like the parts that vote to leave the european union. donald trump brought that to his rally last night to call for an american version of brexit. by far the biggest headline came when trump kicked up his hostility to hillary clinton, more than a notch or two. >> hillary clinton is a bigot! who sees votes. >> reporter: in front of a largely white audience in a state where he is heavily favored, donald trump continued his push for minority support. >> it's time to give the democrats some competition for african-american votes and for hispanic votes! >> reporter: hillary clinton was quick to respond, dismissing him. he is taking a hate movement mainstream. he has brought it into his campaign. he is bringing it to our communities and our country. >> reporter: before the bigot bombsh bombshell, the face of britain's brexit vote, my gem farage introduced his vote. >> i wouldn't pay for hillary clinton if you paid me. >> reporter: his campaign was accused of hiding anxiety over refuge flows and immi farage urged trump supporters by many of the same issues to ignore the polls and the elites. >> and, remember, anything is possible if enough decent people are prepared to stand up against the establishment. >> reporter: trump picked up the theme and echoed the brexit complaints about distorted immigration priorities. >> why do our leaders spend so much time talking about how to trump's own approach to deporting illegal immigrants once a guarantee continues to be a mushy muddle. >> they have to pay taxes and amnesty of such. no amnesty. >> right. >> but we work with -- >> reporter: many supporters see trump's outsider campaign as the only way to change a system they view as corrupt, indifferent or quite possibly both. just as many voters that nigel farage found in britain. >> hillary clinton plans to she also insists her work as secretary of state was not influenced by any outside sources. she said in a associated press report on her contact with the clinton foundation donors was misleading because it excluded nearly 2,000 other meetings. nancy cordes is in community college in reno, where clinton will speak this afternoon. >> reporter: good morning. clinton is going to argue here political movement that most americans have never heard of. first, she had to address her own controversy over that a.p. report that found many of the private individuals she met with as secretary had given to the clinton foundation first. >> there is a lot of smoke and there is no fire. >> reporter: in a phone call to cnn, hillary clinton said to do with her charity. >> that is absurd. these are people i was proud to meet with. >> reporter: bill clinton argued the foundation is being targeted unfairly. >> there is something wrong with creating jobs and saving lives? i don't know what it is. >> reporter: his wife will try to turn the focus back to trump today by taking on one of his most controversial cheering squad. >> we are going to make america great again. >> reporter: online they call work of a deportation force. ? >> the outright is sort of an nebulous, internet world of white no names. >> reporter: betsy has been writing about the at right alternative for two years but it suddenly pierced the public consciousness last week. >> hillary clinton is set to launch a full fledged the at right. >> alternative group of conservatives. >> reporter: the decision was to make breitbart chairman his new ceo. it has become what he called the platform for the at right highlighting crimes committed by immigrants and criticized for anti-muslim sentiments. is donald trump a member of the leader and like him and trump's policy they see is good for whites. >> reporter: clinton's speech here is all about sending a message to wavering republicans that trump isn't quite one of them and part of the reason she chose to give the speech here in reno, a city that is republican leaning in a battleground state. >> nancy, thank you. kellyanne conway is donald trump's campaign manager. welcome back to studio 57. >> thank you, norah! >> reporter: you just heard nancy outline what hillary clinton is doing in today tying donald trump to the alt right movement and trump is taking a hate movement main street. how do you respond? >> i'm confounded this is what secretary clinton is actually going to tell the american people after she is so scarce, no press conference in 263 days and very few interviews. one last night on a different network that didn't really go very well. and why isn't she out there, norah, talking about her vision for the next steps after obamacare, affordable care act? release and sanction cities and executive amnesty and why isn't she out there saying here is my position on energy and independence. we don't know. somebody in public life for decade and dealing with issues that americans tell pollsters including a cbs news poll. >> how would you describe the >> i'm not familiar to it. i've read it but chi we are cherry picking headlines from a website and is hillary clinton running against a website? >> would you say the trump campaign is a platform for the alt right movement? >> we never discussed it internally and isn't part of our strategy meetings and nothing mr. trump says out on the stump. again, i just am confounded by the strategy. hillary clinton is a smart woman. she is a very smart, savvy strategists around her who know conversation on substantive issues that they talk about around kitchen tables and over cappuccino counters and you're not doing that today. >> it's substantive for your candidate to call hillary clinton a bigot? is that substantive? >> have you seen what he is called by her and others on a daily basis? people get away with calling him everything in the book and people, you know, objective journalists, they will laugh at that and put it on their twitter feed. what he is saying is that her policies and the policies of many iner of major cities over a number of decades have not helped people of color. >> that makes her a bigot? >> it makes her -- well, he has called -- she is calling him that today and call him worse and everybody is covering it like it's news. >> at an earlier rally, mr. trump said that the numbers with african-americans and latino individuals are going up. he cited a poll. what poll is he referring to? and can he win with his current numbers? >> there was an nbc poll out african-americans nationwide. that really caught our eye, because mitt romney and paul ryan got 6% of african-americans. >> there is a poll. we put the full screen up. that's right. it is more than mitt romney won in the last election but hispanic voters which is the fastest growing demographic in this country as you know, 22% support. can donald trump win with 22% among hispanic voters? that is much lower than mitt romney won at the end of the hispanics -- 27, i'm sorry, 26 among asians and both not great. he needs to earn those votes. and that is why mr. trump is talking about charter school and 2.5 million children in charter schools as we speak and many african-american and hispanics. i worked with a charter school in new york city this year and it's an amazing educational system. mr. trump last week talked about immigration and how important ownership is to hispanics and how important multigenerations of family and capital access to capital and how important to have a strong community in chief. it was a wide ranging conversation. we are going to use something like that at 10:00 today again. we need to earn those votes but we will try, norah. >> thank you, kellyanne for being with us this morning. >> the taliban is expected on a deadly attack on an american university in kabul. militants say they blew open the campus. the hours-long attack killed 13 people, including seven students. no americans were among the victims. afghan security forces killed the attackers. cbs news producer ahmad mukhtar was in class when the gunfire erupted. >> i said do you feel bullets flying over my head. or my friend, none did. >> the attack is the second targeting the university in the past month. the pentagon released video of a tense encounter between a u.s. navy destroyer and four small iranian boats at the entrance to the persian gulf. >> no response. weapons uncovered. >> the "uss nitze" sounded a danger signal and warning shots after the vessels sped toward the ship. the ship tried to reach the iranian a dozen times with no response. two of the boats got within 300 yards of the destroyer before sailing away. the navy calls it harassment. jeff glor was on board a boat and shows us a big discovery that could unveil secrets about great white sharks. first, it's time to check good morning to you. here's a live picture the top of the hill restaurant in chapel hill. check out that sunrise. a little bit of cloud cover. but that sun reflectg nicely off the clouds out there. now you ash starting off with pretty comfortable temperatures. 67 in raleigh. 61 in louisburg and clayton. 65 in lillington. fayetteville this morning you're check in at 68 along with siler city. so let's go ahead and look at the 7-day forecast. high today announcer: this io we didn't invent the chicken, leslie jones of "ghostbusters" reportedly is hit again by a sexist and racist cyber attack. >> again who may have inspired hackers to post stolen photos and personal documents. the news is back here in the morning right here on "cbs this morning." >> announcer: >> announthis portion of "cbs this morning" is sponsored by kohl's. shade of blue and even polk-a-dots too! plus yes2you rewards members earn 1 point for every dollar spent. get a $5 reward for every 100 points! now that's the good stuff. kohl's. when you've been making delicious natural cheese for over 100 years like kraft has, you learn a lot about how people cook. i wish i had like four different mexican cheeses but in one super melty cheese. it does exist! if you've gone to extremes to escape your nasal allergies. try clarispray. new, from the makers of claritin. and nothing is more effective at relieving your sneezing, runny nose and nasal congestion. return to the world. try clarispray today. 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(whisper) rocket see star trek beyond in theatres. payday presents: salty covered sweetness how can i help you? finally! i've been waiting forever. i've been waiting forever. to meet you! you sweet baby angel! you sound like heaven on earth, on a phone. you sound like love feels. salty on the outside. clean food. words panera lives by. no artificial flavors, preservatives, sweeteners. no colors from artificial sources. 100% of our food will be clean by year's end. good morning thanks for watching it's 7:26 i'm stefan chase. this is a story we've been following for you all morning long. a barn full of hay and fa equipment going up in flames in nash county. >> the call came out around midnight near the intersection of race track and caster store roads. they blocked road to fight the fire. no reports of injuries and investigators are looking into how it starred. >> assistant fire chief says he expects the fire to burn for days but says it will not spread. today the greenville man accused of killing his girlfriend and three children howard and the three girls to death with a army before taking off and leaving town. he's now officially charged with murder of the three girls and he will face charges today in court. police in durham are looking for the suspect who robbed two students at gunpoint at a dorm room. somebody knocked on the door at the room at new residence hall, forced their wear in and restrained them and took several items. no one was s here's the forecast with storm team meteorologist alyssa corfont. good morning stefan and good morning to you at home as well. 6degrees as we start our day. actually looking at pretty clout skies. i will tell you other viewpoints will have more sunshine than anything else. take your sunglasses with you. it will still be a bit bright on the morning drive in. 65 in durham and henderson. sandhills we have six in fayetteville. so here's a look at your forecast for the day ahead by 8:00 a.m. 84 at lunchtime. still pretty comfortable and then 90 our afternoon high. this so far will be the hottest day this week. >> but it looks like it's hotter tomorrow. we could reach 92. most of us staying dry. the weekend the low 90s returning with a small chance for storms in the afternoon. good morning, a bunch of crashes out there in the raleigh area. right to them, one that's stalling things on beth sides of 440 the eastbound side is where the crash is but delays o on wilmington street at enabled street second crash there. and on triangle drive at u.s. 70 glenwood avenue an area that's pretty well traveled this time of the day. i-40 inside lane closures those start around 9:00 a.m. on an already busy 40 on beth sides of the highway between 306 and 309 exits. travel through garner could be difficult today. big heads up to you there. ttevil ?? from the mountains... to the beaches... the piedmont... to the sandhills... north carolina is possessed of spectacular natural beauty. [ sea gulls crying ] [ man vocalizing ] run! ?? ? i'm up against the sky ? ? i said i'd taken it all in ? ? to make the good life ? ? and i don't feel like i'm falling ? ? i'm up against the sky ? it's ours to preserve... because we're only borrowing it from our children. ? if you're a member of the british olympic team you should get a medal for just finding your luggage. members of the great britain team arrived back in the uk yesterday with the same identical red bags. everyone eventuall >> usually a red bag sticks out on the luggage carousel but not here. >> i have one of those black bags and i switched mine to tie a red ribbon on mine. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? hackers reported stole jones. breakthrough in great white shark birthing place. jeff glor went on the water in the north atlantic coast to find out what they are learning. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. the "orlando sentinel" reports on a report that the two hospitals that treated victims in the pulse nightclub shooting will not bill patients. more than 50 people needed medical attention after the attack in june. the hospitals will write off about $5.5 >> that is a great gesture. "the new york times" reports on a peace deal that could end the longest war in the americas. colombia reached an agreement are the revolutionary armed forces of colombia after 50 years of fighting and give the leftist group a voice in government. some 220,000 people have died in the conflict. colombia's president wants a referendum on the deal. down her website afteran online document. photos and documents were posted of the actress and last month she took a brief hiatus frtwitt. michelle miller is here with more. >> reporter: the fbi confirms to cbs news that it's aware of the purported attack or hack, we should say. reports say the hackers, not only got into her personal icloud or iphone attack. it's an attack that appears to take online harassment to a new level. >> you truly scare me. i want to let you knee. >> reporter: there are reports of a new cyberattack against "gu "ghostbusters" star laeeslie jones. >> reporter: they also allegedly cincinnati zoo gorilla who killed a child after it entered his enclosure. >> not only is she a woman, she is a black woman and i guess she also has the nerve to be a darker skin woman. >> reporter: this isn't the first time jones has been the victim of racially charged online harassment, a series of offensive and obscene tweets were directed at jones last month. >> hate speech and freedom of >> reporter: some of the tweets were traced back to comments sparked by conservative journalist milo yanopoulos and he was permanently banned from twitter because of it. >> suspected that one or even one of those followers took actions against leslie jones by hacking her. >> i think what you're seeing is an phenomenal of we as black >> reporter: gabby douglas was also the victim of some racist tweets as she was criticized for not putting her hands over her heart during the playing of the national anthem at the olympics. the reported hacking of jones' website appears to take harassment to a new level. >> i think the depth to which it went where you're actually fishing for someone's personal information, that is a fairly new phenomenon. it's disturbing, it really is. >> reporter: this kind of online harassment can have a chilling effect. when we reache o refused to do interviews on this topic because they were, quote, too dangerous. she said when she has spoken out in the past, she has threatened the next day. >> wow. that is awful! >> that is horrible. just horrible. the u.s. women's soccer team came home from the rio olympics without a medal. now the world cup winners will be without their star goalkeeper. u.s. soccer suspended hope solo for six months and terminated knocked the u.s. out of the olympics. vinita nair is here with the fallout from the decision. >> reporter: good morning. hope solo is one of the most decorated women players in american history. she has been an irreplaceable force in the net for team usa since she burst on to the scene in 2005 but the latest tickup might be a hint that the team is moving after america was bounced out of the olympics, u.s. goalkeeper hope solo told reporters after the game, we played a bunch of cowards. the best team did not win today. >> hope solo needs to grow up. >> it's ridiculous and classless. >> what concerns me is not just that hope solo said this, but the reaction of her teammates. >> reporter: solo's long time her disappointment. on wednesday, the u.s. soccer federation agreed, suspending the 35-year-old for six months. in a statement, solo said i am saddened by the federation's decision to terminate my contract. i could not be the player i am without being the person i am, even when i haven't made the best choices or said the right things. despite solo's on-the-field success, her checkered off-the-field record is less in 2014, solo was arrested on assault charges for allegedly attacking two family members. and in 2015, she was suspended for 30 days by the team after her husband was arrested on drunk driving charges while they were both in a team van. >> i don't think you can overlook her off-the-field issues when they came to this decision. she was basically fired. she met with the coach. she pretty much knew the writing was on the wall. players association said it believes that the discipline is excessive and in violation of solo's first amendment rights. the union also questions whether or not this action would be taken against a male player. we obtained a copy of the termination letter, which says solo will get three months severance play. the players association plans to appeal this ruling. >> are they saying they terminated because of the past issues or because she called another team coward? >> what we do know there was a lengthy meeting an t other issues were brought up, but it seems as though it might be the culmination. no way to know for sure if it's the isolated event. >> a lot of people with talking about this and say look what happened to hope solo but ryan lochte is "dancing with the stars." treated differently. >> new developments in a story you've been following as well. this is a big story about that outcry over the soaring costs of a life saving drug. the company mylan is doubling the eligibility level for patient assistance which helps uninsured and underinsured patients and cover up 20 $300 out-of-pocket cost at the pharmacy and that is 50 cent off the list price. a discovery off the coast of new york. jeff glor was there. >> you think you find the birthing site? >> definitely the nursery and the biggest discovery we have made on the ocean. >> how they are making strides and helping the world understand great white sharks. if you're heading out the door, watch us live on your digital device. don't miss a look at the closest earth-like planet detected. we will be right back. undry det. the winner - persil 2 in 1, didn't only beat tide... switch to persil proclean 2 in 1. #1 rated. which you are you? 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think outside the box colgate optic white toothbrush plus whitening pen for 5 shades whiter teeth. brush, whiten, go! no mess, no waiting, no rinsing. colgate optic white toothbrush i'm hillary clinton and i approve this message. there's a race going on right now. the world's clean energy super power's either going to be germany, china, or us. and i'm going to make sure it's us. from 500 million solar panels installed by the end of my first term, to precision manufacturing. we can do this, millions of jobs right here in america. week in the waters off long that's my plan. island, new york. the team of fishermen and is say they have found the first known birthing site for great white sharks on the coast. they have fitted nine sharks with locator tracks and allows researchers to track their movement. jeff glor is back from the water. the store you're only seeing on "cbs this morning." >> reporter: good morning. they say after 26 expeditions this is the most significant discovery they have made. a birthing site that includes the famed water off montauk long finding one shark. on this trip, they seem to be everywhere. >> it's a baby white! yea! >> reporter: as soon as the shark is steered on to a hydraulic lift, scientists and researchers rush in. by now, the process of tagging is routine but the particular goal of this trip is not. this trip is a bit different? >> it's like step two in the science, right? expedition leader. >> when we started this you were in 2013. the question is where are the grate white sharks off the atlantic is giving birth and that is where the sharks are most vulnerable. >> for researchers finding the north atlantic birthing site with lead to policies and far more scientific knowledge. why is this work in this spot to importanfor you? >> it's a life stage that really shan't been sdied >> reporter: harley newton says the fear over sharks, actual facts remain scant. >> this is an incredible opportunity. this is my first opportunity seeing a white shark, ever. very exciting. >> reporter: and you've been studying them for how long? >> 16 years. the first one was very exciting. and actually every single one so far has been very exciting. >> reporter: this is the third young white shark we have seen brought on this lift just today. among the other work being done here, muscle biopsy, blood all-important tags are being applied. the goal is to have the shark on and off the lift inside of 15 minutes. >> we found it. >> reporter: you think you found the birthing site? >> definitely the nursery and likely the birthing site. i think the most significant we have ever made. >> reporter: team will discover if these sharks are the off-spring of their first encountered off cape cod. >> the strategy at the time was get a tag out on big mature animals and when you get one on a big female, 18 months later, grail of the research, the birthing site. >> reporter: in 2012, "cbs this morning" was there. a 2,000-pound female named jeanne became the first-ever great white successfully spot tagged in the north atlantic. some people see these baby sharks and they are not big. are they hurt? >> if we thought they were hurt we wouldn't do what we are doing. we don't know if we don't let them go. the fact of the matter we have >> reporter: this week, ocearch has tagged and released nine great white sharks, including a female aptly named gratitude. she was anxious to get off? >> she was. she is gone but now everybody can follow her. >> reporter: the gps locators worn by the nine shark pups are activated when the fin breaks the surface. five of them, including gratitude, are transmitting their locations off on t of long island. gratitude just pinged in for the first time last night and likely stay in that area for at least 20 years until they reach maturity. the theory is that they are mating off the coast of cape code and swim a little bit south and give birth off of long island. >> good in the hood out there. >> fascinating. i know you've been covering this story for years and we are learning so much. >> it's sort of step-by-step and chris fisher calls this step two in the process. can't wait for three. >> what is three? what happens next? find is a mature male shark. a larger male shark which they have not found yet. >> jeff, thank you. >> sure. after the olympics, katie ledecky proves she is no fish out of water. ahead, how the swimming great handed over her medals when she was honored with a ceremonial first pitch! she has to take them off one-by-one! that is a lot to hand over! first, it's time good morning to you. 67degrees. mo camera east. those clouds will gradually break up this morning. by lunchtime you'll see sunshine. 65 in durham and henderson right now. also the mid-60s in south hill. we work our way south, 68 in fayetteville and 67 in raeford. high today of 90. that would make today the warmest day so far this week. >> b announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places! thanks, bro. later, mom. thank you. have fun. thanks, dad. thanks, mr. smith. hurry in for toyota's annual clearance event, where you can find 0% apr financing for 60 months on the 2016 rav4. offer ends september 6th. for more great deals, visit toyota.com toyota. let's go places. ? 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good morning. it is thursday, august 25th, 2016. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? there is more real news ahead, including proof of a planet that is similar to earth. as my daughter would say, it's closer to us tha expect! first, here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. the number of people in these mountain top villages swells during summer, but that means the death toll is higher too. this tornado practically flattened this starbucks. imagine the terror, the people inside must have felt. the hackers not only got into jones's professional website but also her personal icloud or iphone account. >> hope solo is one of the most decorated women players in may be a hint that the team is moving on. substance for your candidate to call hillary clinton a bigot? >> have you seen what he is called by her and others on a daily basis? >> clinton had to address her own controversy over the a.p. report that found many of the private individuals she met with as secretary had given to the clinton foundation first. require a prosecutor, immediate, immediate, immediate. >> trump believes summon special prosecutors like the candy man. immediately, immediately, immediately. woo! i'm norah o'donnell can anthony mason and kevin frazier from our partners at survivors from italy's massive earthquake. can you imagine this? a 10-year-old girl was pulled to safety after being trapped upside down for 17 hours in a collapsed building. the death toll rose dramatically overnight. the number is 240. we have a new sense of the scope of the destruction. >> this is amatrice before the earthquake. this is what that row of buildings looks like now. take a look at what the quake did to another building. now you after the facade tumbled down. more severe storms could impact the midwest today after damaging tornadoes ripped through the region. at least 21 twisters were reported in central indiana yesterday and they caused widespread destruction and dozens of homes were damaged or destroyed and 35,000 homes lost power across the state. indiana governor and republican vice presidential nominee mike pence will tour the damage was seriously hurt. donald trump is still pushing for minority support, while speaking in front of largely white audiences. he also accused hillary clinton of bigotry and in mississippi last night, trump went a step further. >> hillary clinton is a bigot! who sees people of color only as votes, not as human beings worthy of a better future. sh african-americans. she is going to do nothing for the hispanic. >> trump promised to fight crime and create jobs in america's inner cities. he did not say exactly how he would accomplish that. hillary clinton told cnn last night that donald trump is showing who he is. >> he is taking a hate movement mainstream. he has brought it into his campaign. he is bringing it to our and, you know, someone who has questioned the citizenship of the first african-american president, who has court white supremacists, who has been sued for housing discrimination against communities of color, is someone who is, you know, very much pedaling bigotry and prejs and paranoia. prejudice and paranoia. >> trump was asked about she foundation owners. >> my work as secretary of state was not influenced by any of the outside force on. i made policy decision based on what i thought was right, to keep americans safe and to protect u.s. interests abroad. no wild political attack by donald trump is going to change that. the foundation is a charity. neither my husband nor i have ever drawn a salary from it. you know more about the trump's wealth, his business, his tax returns. >> clinton plans a speech in reno, nevada, today on trump and the so-called alternative right movement. >> mark leibovich is chief national correspondent for the "time" magazine and a cbs news political contributor. what do you make of the speech from hillary clinton coming up today about the alt right movement? >> it's a term most people don't know and haven't first, other people haven't known it until recently. she is trying to have a term and notion of white supremacy into the argument in a way that come out and say he is working closely with some pretty extremist forces in our society. i think, clearly, the message behind this is that the person is not acceptable. this person is outside the norms of what we usually consider appropriate in our political dialogue. she is giving. >> what is the movement? >> it's a movement that people go behind the bound. it's associated with racist movements, white supremacist movements. it's a kind of edginess, it's a kind of dialogue that has been, you know, essentially enlivened by the internet. people have associated things like the breitbart news organization with the alt right. again, it's a very loaded term and basically they are both trying to define it point. >> kellyanne conway, trump's campaign manager said trump's campaign wasn't for the alt right and she wasn't familiar with the alt right. >> steve bannon who is the new cohead of the trump campaign until two weeks ago was head of breitbart news and one of the news organizations that is readily associated with the so-called alt right. yeah, that is going to be a lot of pushback here and there. >> does that ring true to you she wouldn't be familiar with >> not necessarily. it's a word. a new word and people are trying to define. >> let's talk about another word. yesterday, donald trump called hillary clinton a bigot. what was he trying to achieve? >> well, i mean, it's part of an -- not ongoing strategy but, lately, we have been seeing her use terms like -- or him using terms like racist and bigotry and maybe trying to sting on the other side to preempt charges against him. i don't really know. the audience. i don't know. that is going to stick either. >> trump says he is going to announce something soon on immigration. it's 11 weeks until election day. >> it is. he said he was going to do a major speech last week. >> i'm still unclear myself. you know i'm someone who digs into the details about what exactly his immigration policy is. i can only attribute to what he has said in the past. >> it's something i think a lot of people are puzzling over especially this week where there seems to be not a pivot but a approach to immigration both in his rhetoric and whatever his policy is but, again, we don't really know. >> your magazine says people like kellyanne conway here earlier shows donald trump in the polling data with him following off with suburban college educated whites and mitt romney won by double digits and he seeing that and reacting to that. >> they have lost a lot of republican voters since the re not black and hispanic voters but the ones that might traditionally vote. . the problem he has built his campaign or cornerstone of his entire campaign you risk losing and really angering a lot of the base and according to some of the early reaction to this has been, you know, quite striking. >> mark leibovich, thank you for being here. >> thank you. this was a scene two years ago today moments before the accidentally shot and killed the instructor. he is the man you see next to her. now his family is suing the company behind that wrongful death. the kids gave their only interview to "cbs this morning" and our phoenix affiliate kpho. >> i hope that this will, like, teach them a lesson. i think someone need to learn something from what happened in this situation. somebody needs to take accountability. >> the children said a 9- to automatic guns like uzis. thor called bullet and burgers changed his policy to only allow as i said 12 and up to shoot automatic weapons with their legal guardian. bullets and burgers is is not responding to our request for comment. first on "cbs this morning," the nation's top doctor. surgeon general, vivek murthy is here to fight his plan for the good morning to you. we're certainly seeing more sunshine right now. this is a view from the top of the hill restaurant in chapel hill. as we lack out to the east. now as far as the temperatures are concerned, more of you reporting temperatures in the 70s right now. raleigh and siler city both at 70. 71 in fayetteville. durham right now at 68. roxboro and henderson, 67. south hill you're reporting 65. be prepared for the 90s later ahead, the social media secret teenagers are hiding from their parents. why they believe facebook is for older people and how they are using instagram and snapchat. you're watching "cbs this morning." nexium 24 hour introduces new, easy-to-swallow tablets. so now, there are more ways, for more people... to experience... complete protection from frequent heartburn. nexium 24hr. the easy-to-swallow tablet is here. the enamel on my teeth was weakening. the whiteness wasn't there as much, my teeth didn't look as healthy as others. my dentist said that pronamel would help protect my teeth. pronamel is giving me the confidence to know that i'm doing the right thing thank you. my advice for looking younger, longer? 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>> i think we have to do something with speed and. >> we have done so many stories on this. who is to blame? is it in part for the doctors for prescribing painkillers unnecessary and people get hooked on this and hen heroin? >> if we look at this all of us have a role to play in this. practitioners were urged to treat pain years ago without the tools and training to do and pharmaceutical companies were aggressively marketing medications to doctors and we have had a problem with policy makers not supporting enough funding for treatment programs enwhy over a million people who need treatment antican't get it so this is a final for all us of to come together and be a part of the solution. >> two married parents coming in saying i have a teenager with a football injury or a daughter with a track injury and the do doctors bear some responsibility as the nation's top doctor? what should we be telling our practitioners out there? >> a letter that i'm sending today to 2.3 million health care practitioners, we are urging them to do a few things. number one is to sharpen their prescribing practices to make sure we are treating pain safely and effectively and connect people to treatment who need it. we have a major treatment gap in this country we need to close. thirdly, we are asking clinician to country thinks about addiction. far too long it's looked at as a character flaw but not true. addiction is a chronic disease of the brain. we have to treat with it the same skill and capacity as we would any other chronic illness. >> the letter is asking for measures that are voluntary. are doctors going to react to this, do you think? >> i think they will. their profession to improve the lives of other people and reduce suffering. and there is no clinician in america who walks around wanting to do harm to their patients. in fact, when i talk to clinicians, as i have as i've traveled the country in our the tide tour, i've encountered people who want to do better who see a crisis in fronts of them and are often wondering what they can do to help address it. so i have found clinicians are eager to help and we want them to be a part of the solution and one of the purposes of our single day. will there be a penalty eventually on doctors or will they play a part in paying or somehow being responsible for these deaths? >> what we have seen is the following. number one, many states are starting to pass laws requiring that physicians use prescription drug monitoring programs. these are tools which can help doctors understand whether the risk really in prescribing opioids to their patients. but we are also seeing is more practices as they understand what it is that they have to do. i'll just tell you personally, when i look at problems of this opioid or others, we have a tendency in our country to look to blame, first. without thinking about how to constructively bring people together to be a part of the solution. this is our opportunity to look at how to bring people together around the country, not just clinicians, but policymakers, parents, people throughout our communities to understand how they can help us address this epidemic. >> we want to get we run here. we are are looking at 43 locally transmitted cases in florida. your own wife i think decided not to go down there because she is pregnant, correct? do you think enough is being done in florida to deal with this? >> i think there is a lot that is being done right now in florida in collaboration between the cdc at the federal level and the state of florida and those measures have included public education efforts, mosquito control efforts, as well as testing of pregnant women and absolutely, we need to address more in addressing the zika problem because one thing we are missing right now is a vaccine to zika. we have started phase one clinical trials. but without additional funding to support the zika response. >> 1.9 billion the president has asked for? >> exactly. we will not have the funds to continue a vaccine development effort. what i want to see us do as a country is invest early and make sure we are focusing on prevention whenever possible. >> dr. murthy, sorry. we have to honors for an american astronaut who spent nearly a year and a half in space and ahead, how his wife will determine how much longer he can go! you're watching "cbs this morning." at golf for as long as i can. new patented ensure enlive has hmb plus 20 grams of protein to help rebuild muscle. for the strength and energy to do what you love. new ensure enlive. always be you. we invited women to a spa to test a new body wash. dish soap. you may not feel it, gentlest cleansers. it just made me feel good. this is dove. 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>> 190 days in me? the question is not for me. that's for my wife. >> ain't that the truth? williams is expected to return home in less than two weeks. >> come home, buddy. you've done a great job. thought. the amazing discovery that is raising new questions about the hello good morning i'm russ bowen and here's what's making headlines. fayetteville police are trying to track down the three people who kidnapped, beat and raped a woman. police say this happened monday 90 the boyne dan subdivision. >> police say the vic still was walking -- victim was walking the car. this was the car the suspects used. she was taken to an abandoned house. police are trying to figure out if she was targeted. durham county sheriff's office is searching for thieves. the breakin at kemp road in broad daylight. there's the surveillance pictures right there. the homeowner took us around to the side other house. he says when the suspects couldn't make et through the home has been targeted. >> you would like to think that everybody around you can respect your things. because those -- you treat others the way you want to be treated u. auto mean, i guess they want their things stolen and broken to i don't know. >> fortunately, this time around he says his alarm system went off before of before they stole anything. if you have any information call authorities. a fort bragg sergeant expected in court to face additional rape chaes. police say 27-year-old justin indecent liberties with a child. yesterday they charged him in connection with a rape of a child in 2014. he's behind bars with bond set at $900,000. alyssa, another glorious morning. >> we certainly see much hotter temperatures more humid conditions. right now 70 degrees and rather cloudy. don't you worry, i do expect temperatures we're at 68 in durham k 67 in henderson and roxboro. lee county, sanford, 64. nearby lillington, at 69. we have 71 in both fayetteville and raeford. upper 60s around wayne county towards goldsboro. 90 this afternoon, that's so far the hottest day this week but it won't beat hottest of the entire week because look at tomorrow. expecting us to reach 92. most of us stay dry. as we head into the upcoming weekend, the heat and humidity also a small chance for a few showers and storms both saturday and sunday afternoon. as we head into early next week 90 on monday. >> back to school for many students around the area. most of us should stay dry for monday and the next tuesday and wednesday, as well. 8:27 right now. let's get a check on your commute with ali. good morning. extremely busy at 8:27 through the raleigh area. a stalled car that just came in wilmington street. three problems we've had there today. avoid. area if you can. >> seems to be a problem spot. also have a crash on old u.s. 1 highway at friendship. best bet around this take u.s. 1. weaned do have a crash causing pretty heavy delays on i-440 eastbound right near exit one. now that one has just been cleared. unfortunately, delays remain. also on 440 westbound at i-40, you have a crash there that's causing delays. let's take you a lit closer to the west, i-40 inside lane closures today from wake county into johnston county from 9:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m., we're going to see a lot of crews out there for maintenance work between exits 306 and 309 as you travel through garner. so heads up to you there. through fayetteville nothing like that to worry about. roads look pretty good. a lot better than raleigh. a live look at your eastbound drive times, 16 minutes from glenwood to 64. hillary clinton: i'm hillary clinton and i approve this message. bob kidder, owner, new england shirt company: this over sixty people here making shirts labled made in america. but donald trump's brand of shirts come from china, his suits from mexico, his coats from india. trump's products have been made in twelve other countries because he says there's no place in america that he can make them. well there is. you know donald trump says he'll make america great again while he's taking the shirts right off our backs. ? ? the ford freedom sales event is on! our biggest event of the year just got better! ? ? announcing zero for seventy-two across the entire lineup of ford cars, trucks and suvs. plus, tagged vehicles now get a thousand smart bonus. that's freedom from interest... and freedom to choose with ford. america's best selling brand. ? ? now get 0% financing for 72 months across the entire ford lineup, ? welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, the rules teenager set for each other and their parents on so m green room from crushes to comments on photos. see what young people taught her about their online sharing habit. plus, a planet that may support life much closer than we thought. the discovery being called a dream come true for astronomers and how it changes our understanding of the universe. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. t"the san francisco test and it looked at 70 genes associated with the risk of cancer recurrence. they say nearly half of high clinical risk cases can be treated as effectively without chemotherapy. the study is not perfect but it advance the field of personalized treatment of breast cancer. >> "usa today" says amazon may be planning a new service called click and collect. it calls for the building of drive-up grocery hubs. users shop for food onlin a pick it up. that could reduce the amount of perishable goods that amazon delivers. the company is considering test sites in the california cities of san carlos and sunny vale and home base in seattle. the minnesota home of prince could become a mutual by early october. officials in the minneapolis suburb where paisley park is located must approve the plan. the singer's sister says prince always planned to offer tours of his compound. it includes recording studios presley's graceland will manage it. >> the arizona republic reports on a national hockey league milestone. dawn is believed to be the first male coach in the league's 99-year history. she wille the arizona coyote's skating coach. the nfl's first-time assistant coach was hired last year by the buffalo bills. the nba has two female assistant coaches. the "new york post" reports on bruce springsteen longest u.s. concert on record, the boy along with the e-street band performed nearly four hours in his home state of new jersey tuesday night. he closed with a song "jersey girl" and his first show in the states before returning after two months. his longest concert was in 2012 in helsinki. four hours and six minutes. bring a lunch if you go to one of his concerts. >> that is impressive. >> the last time i saw bruce the performer of all time. >> he's had great shape. he has to be to play four hours and the way he does. "the new york times" reports on the discovery of an earth-like planet one solar system away. this image shows how the surface of the rocky planet might look. it is the closest potentially habitable world ever detected outside of our solar system. charlie d'agata is in london and shows us why astronomers are so excited. >> reporter: good morning. 'in two deal breakers. there has to be stars that act like the sun and some of this. they think this planet has both and it's been sitting under their noses all along. turns out, the next star over in our privileged little corner of the galaxy, has a planet that looks a lot like ours. at a mere 4.2 light years away, astronomical doorstep. huge step? just ask hitch yo kaku. >> this is a dream come true for astronomers. naj the holy grail of astronomy is find a twin to the earth and a ganger in outer space and now we have it. >> reporter: what we have is a planet that is a bit more massive than earth. out 11 days and that is only sun but that star is a red dwarf, a lot cooler than our sound which means surface temperatures is likely to fall between freezing and boiling and habitable and smack dab in what the scientists call the goldilocks zone. this stint on the team discovered the new world. >> i think the planet, itself, may very well be covered in water. i think it might be what we call an ocean water or water world. >> like ours? earth-like planets like this out there, but none so tantalizingly close but it would take our spaceship tens of thousands of years to get there but the thought of life on a planet that is so nearby, significantly ups the odds of life forms further away. >> you really begin to wonder are they really out there? and, if so, how come they don't visit us? how come they haven't landed on the white house lawn? it makes you wonder. >> reporter: how difficunow dif aside the race is on to reach that star system. the likes of mark zuckerberg and steven hawkings are building a spaceship that might do it in under 20 years but the problem is, it's than is size of this quarter. >> so cool. thank you, charlie. a new survey of teenagers and parents find 60% of teen internet users have created online accounts that their folks suspect their teens have secret accounts. >> it's something, saints it? in the new issue of "wired" magazine, contribute oar marry h.k. chao meets five teams across the country to learn how high schoolers use social media. in her article "like ghosts flirt." she writes teens are strange and magical. . who saw facebook coming? twe teens and same with twitter and snapchat now. it makes them one generations to people who want to scrutinize them. mary, good morning. what don't wend about what teens are doing with social media? >> oh, man. teens are mysterious and social media is mysterious as well. we think of them living in the future. but the rob is we end up talking about them a lot and not necessarily to them. >> yeah. >> that is what i wanted to change with this "wire" story about how they use social media and their unique relationship with their phone." how has it changed the way teenagers socialize? >> there is a audience based aspect to it because public record people can see what you're up to. the other thing is there is a quantifiable corollary, i suppose, to popularity. a kid that is famous at school. so they are a jock or whatever. they will tend to have more followers on instagram than, like, say, a nobody, sad you're talking about emojis. you were surprised about the way that teenagers used emojis. i have learned a lot learning what some of these emojis mean. >> this is teens i've to to and anecdote to them. the smiley face for a death mail for flirtation. i have no idea. it's a polite thank you, but no thank you. >> yeah. here is some of the indications what all of these mean. personal pat on the back for i didn't know that signals fomo fear of missing out? i thought that was lying crying so funny, l.o.l. >> l.o.l. is different and different generation. >> you think differently? >> yeah. the moon emoji, that is my favorite catchall. that is just awkwardness. it's like, oh, no. >> it's so interesting to me that there is a very distinct set of rules here. >> yes. >> and you write when you have the tools seemingly aloof person wins. >> absolutely. so it's almost like the staring match. it's called thirst. that is the phenomenon you're doing too much and betraying your own interest in someone as opposed to being casually cool about it and cool has been around since the dawn of time. hence, sunglasses. >> people putting this stuff out there it's uncool if you're too independence. >> absolutely. unbridled enthusiasm. it has to be, oh, hey, i see you. >> thirsty. >> yeah. >> a study said 60% of parents have checked their teens social media profiles. i'm sure it's not higher than that. what should we be looking at? >> when we think about secret accounts, it feels like, oh, no, this is happening! there are secret accounts. a lot of teens' instagram accounts are private and within that they have an e of their friends they can see them doing elicit activities. >> can parents monitor their teenagers? >> oh, good luck! >> is it possible these days? >> you know what? it is. the thing i found really reassuring to talking to the teens not only them but with their patients is be well-versed on the platform you know what you're doing. you occasionally. >> with snapchat it disappears. >> it does, indeed. hence, don't take snapchat screen grabs as a faux pas. >> very bad. >> it's not done. >> this is a really good article. >> great article. >> my favorite is the guide to the emoji which to use for flirting. >> e momojiemojis! >> whatever! >> that is >> thank you. go to cbs this morning.com to find out more the experience mary had with the teens and social media. you'll appreciate it. do cargo shorts have to go? >> what is wrong can cargo shorts? these are comfortable. i think they look nice. >> up next, jamie wax looks at one of the hottest fashion debates of the summer and the good morning to you 70 degrees a live picture from the raleigh durham international airport. a pretty quiet start to our thursday. let's get a look at the temperatures. 68 in henderson and durham. 64 in louisburg. 68 in clayton. upper 60s in goldsboro. few more of you added to the 70s club. 71 in clinton and 73 in raeford. 90 our high today. this afternoon, 92 tomorrow most of us ?? from the mountains... to the beaches... the piedmont... to the sandhills... [ man vocalizing ] run! ?? ? i don't feel like i'm falling ? ? i'm up against the sky ? ? i said i'd taken it all in ? ? to make the good life ? ? and i don't feel like i'm falling ? it's ours to preserve... because we're only borrowing it from our children. ? go through a man's closet or dresser and you're likely to find items that are more about comfort and function than fashion. that is why a fiery debate erupted after a recent "wall street journal" article sleep on the sofa. a cargo short jamie wax is here with what is driving some couples apart. >> good morning. >> reporter: we took to the streets and hauls of high fashion to see if we could fine the definitive answer and some experts say time for them to go, many men say keep your hands off of my shorts! they come in army green or camouflage. they can be over the knee or just above it. but if they have that side pocket, they are cargo shorts. shorts? these are comfortable. i think they look nice. >> reporter: you like the cargo shorts? >> i do. when i don't want to carry a purse, he is my purse! he is my lipstick and mascara and my cell phone and driver's license! my money! he is everything! >> reporter: how did cargo shorts infiltrate men's fashion? they trace their roots back to the military. according to drexel university professor joe hancock who wrote his ph.d. thesis on cargo pants. military did not like the soldiers putting their hands in their pockets so they got the idea to move the pockets to the side of the garment and keep pockets in the back of the garment but none in the front. so that became the first four-pocket cargo pant. >> reporter: at what point did the cargo pants become the cargo shorts? >> there is a cargo pant that historically in the military that was a zip-off pant. >> zipped off at the knee? >> it zipped off at the knee, to the cargo short. >> reporter: there you have it, ladies and gentlemen! instant cargo shorts! the multipocketed shorts have been gracing the racks in stores like old navycpenney for years and today they account for 700 million dollars in sales in the u.s. and much to the chagrin of "gq" marco green. decade now. cargo shorts have pockets on your thigh so when you stuff them it looks like you have really big thighs! and so for, you know, a guy, unless you're in peak physical condition, it just is very unflattering. >> reporter: what do we do with all of that stuff? >> you shouldn't carry that! why do you need all of those things? you need your wallet and your phone. everything else, you know, get a briefcase? >> reporter: can you show us what you do have in the pockets, >> oh, no. i didn't make sure everything was here. my keys. my wallet, my headphones. various parts that i couldn't fit into my overstuffed wallet. this cup. i got a sample. who knows i need a cup? and over here there is a water. >> reporter: while there are -- >> they have been banned in my household since my husband turned 30. >> reporter: the majority of these people we spoke to love their according owe shorts. street journal" article apologized for igniting the cargo shorts wars. >> here is a great example of updated cargo pocket short. >> reporter: keon is vice president and men's fashion director at macy's where cargos have been on full display all summer. he says the modern, more fashionable cargo short has a slimmer fit and smaller pockets. >> so it's really about the update to the cargo pocket short but it will never, ever die. >> reporter: and that is the long and the short of it. maybe now the national debate important, like jorts that are jean shorts and i'm guessing they are not as controversial. i think everybody has a consensus on those. >> it's very interesting. like, you go to europe and the only people you see in cargo shorts are americans. i'm one of them rocking a cargo short so i don't have a problem with them. >> you hate them, don't you? >> no. what about fanny packs? can we wear those? >> i don't think so. >> with your cargo shorts? a world war ii vet hears an old familiar song and dozens of sailors come to his house to sing it. this inspiring story is next on z23aoz zi0z ? ? h >> this is amazing. two dozen navy chief petty officers serenaded one of their own in southern california with the navy's march song anchors away. 98-year-old ernest thompson served on the battle ship "mo "missouri." he doesn't travel much now so the petty officers came to him to serenade him. >> that is great. on that note, that does it tonight with scott pelley. see you tomorrow morning on "cbs this morning." ? i'm hillary clinton and i approve this message. he wears it like a crown. "make america great again". but trump made his shirts in bangladesh. and his suits in mexico. in fact, the real donald trump outsourced his products and jobs to 12 different countries. so don't believe the hat. you can't make america great again, if you don't make things good morning everyone i'm russ bowen and here's what's making headlines this morning. district four incumbent caroline sullivan is not get sag port from the wake county board of elections. now she had been vying for one of the newly created districts which were thrown out when a court deemed them unconstitutional. she had a chance to run for reelection and asked the court to deny all of her requests. two new polls show roy cooper is ahead of governor pat mccrory in the governor's race. he's lead big a whopping nine points. >> that poll has a margin of error of five points and was drawn from a survey of 400 likely voters. nuff said mccrory. the voters weren't weighed fairly. a new poll from cn 9 finds cooper is leading by six points. this has also been criticized for the strange fact it was to richard pat mccrory that's not his first name. the typo was only in the press release and not in the poll itself. mccrory will get a little help from an old friend today. nikki haley is expected attend a benefit today. we will be there to cover it and bring you mr. this evening. alyssa, what have we got today? >> well, russ, it is going to warm up. we're looking at temperatures back in the 90s for the first time this week. right now, though, i want to start with a live picture from prestonwood country club in cary where we are seeing a mix of sun and clouds. getting brighter as we pregress throughout the morning. 75 in raleigh. 72 in lillington t. 77 in fayetteville. more of us now in the 70s. 95 corridor. 70 in south hill. lunchtime today, warming up nice mix of sun and clouds 84. we make it to 90 this afternoon. again, that's the first time we'll hit 90 this week. >> but we could hit 90 or 92 again tomorrow. then as we head into the upcoming weekend heat and humidity in full blast. 93 high on saturday. 90 on sunday. both afternoons a very small o chance for a late day shower storm. army next week, of course, kids heading back to school on monday, temperatures as they're getting on the bus stop on mud -- or on the bus, rather, 70s, later en the afternoon, 90. 90s will continue as we had towards tuesday. back into the upper 80s closer to seasonal bib the middle of next work week. 8:56 let's check in with ali. good morning a lot better than it did about 20 minutes go. we still have crashes out there. still out there near friendship road. u.s. one your best route around this. i-40 inside lane closures starting in 4 minutes if you're heading between wake county and johnston county. 70 a good option here. again, that's between exits 306 and 309. also had a fire that happened overnight causing some lane closures at racetrack road and caster store road a big heads up to you there. let's take you down into fayetteville now. no problems to report to there heading through this area. through 95, local roads moving well. your drive times heading west to rtp, 25 minutes on 540 from 64. slowing down to 27 from u.s. 70 on 40 and 540 toll road u.s. 1 to rtp 6 minutes there. harrison aknew a lot of company out there with you. we will see you again at noon there is a grocery store, it is right down the street like 2 miles, and i will drive past it... ...every time i go grocery shopping, because right past it there is a publix. i wouldn't shop anywhere else. they always go out of their way for me so i don't mind going a little out of my way for them. the people are always friendly, always helpful, they don't just point to aisle 7, and say good luck... they literally, they will walk you there. they're just nice. they treat you like a friend there. you don't get that everywhere. >> announcer: it worked for one roommate... >> judge judy: after she signed the lease, you moved in your girlfriend. >> i did. >> announcer: ...but... >> my boyfriend would be coming home from afghanistan. i was giving him a place to stay. >> announcer: ...it didn't work both ways. >> she wanted to move a married military service member into my apartment. >> judge judy: i don't think -- who made you the moral police? are you and your girlfriend married? >> no. >> judge judy: no. you know that there are some people that think that's disgusting. not me. i'm -- i'm liberated. you are about to enter the courtroom of judge judith sheindlin. the people are real. the cases are real. the people are real. the cases are real. the rulings are final. captions paid for by cbs television distribution 24-year-old brandon parks is suing his former roommate, 21-year-old hillary smith, for breaking their lease. hillary claims brandon told her to move out.

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