the little man turned 2. >> happy birthday to jack. we begin with a case of second college coach accused of child sexual abuse. bernie fine, an assistant basketball coach at syracuse, for 35 years, was fired on sunday after new evidence was made public. as susan mcginnis reports, the evidence actually comes from his wife and it is on tape. >> hi bobby how are you. >> reporter: in an explosive phone conversation secretly recorded in 2002 by alleged pedophile victory bobby davis, laurie fine recounts a shocking conversation with her husband, syracuse assistant basketball coach bernie fine, about his appetite. >> you know what? go to a place where there's gay boys. find yourself a gay boy. >> reporter: bobby davis went on to ask laurie fine if she remembered the abuse he had suffered at the hands of her husband. >> it's about [ bleep ] know that. so you're just i'm telling you for your own good you're better off staying away from him. >> reporter: in a newly released phone call laurie fine does not appear to deny of bernie fine' allegations. davis says he had sex at 18 with laurie fine. syracuse fired fine sunday saying his employment has been terminated effective immediately. in another development, a third alleged victim, 23 yered zach tomaselli told syracuse police fine mow lessed him at a pittsburgh hotel. >> he put his hand down my shorts and started to fond me. >> we will let this thing play out. >> reporter: syracuse coach jim boeheim said on facebook, i deeply regret any statements i made that might have been insensitive to victims of abuse. susan mcginnis, cbs news, washington. >> want to get you the latest on the occupy wall street movements. the showdown in l.a. this morning, protesters ignored the city's order to evacuate at midnight local time. >> no sign the largest occupy tent protest is about to be cleared out by force. bill whitaker is at the scene. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, jeff and erica. i would say that the scene here right now is calm, but tense. now, the mayor and the police set a deadline for just after midnight to clear out the occupy l.a. encampment around city hall but, so far, they have not done so. now, the police have surrounded city hall and they have cut off the streets leading to city hall but they have not swept through the encampment or made any arrests as they said they would. the protesters said they are not going to leave so, right now, we have a standoff. now, the police have been very insistent that they are going to clear the streets around city hall before rush hour in a couple of hours and most people have done what the police have asked and gotten off the streets, but there is still a small group that says the streets belong to the people they are not going to get off the street. so we still have the possibility of a confrontation. now, the police here are very aware of how things have gone horribly wrong in other cities and they say they are determined that is not going to happen here. their buzz word is peaceful. they say if they have to move the protesters, they are going to do it peacefully. the protesters say they will resist peacefully. one officer said if there is violence, it won't be started by them. jeff? erica? >> bill whitaker in l.a., thanks very much. shopping was not always peaceful over the black friday weekend. >> but the numbers were good for a lot of stores. >> despite the sluggish economy, americans did open their wallets and purses on black friday and the days surrounding it and broke sales record. >> the average shopper, get this, spent nearly $400 over the weekend. that is up $33 over last year. correspondent michelle miller takes a look at the surprisingly good numbers. >> reporter: it was a black friday like no others. as retailers opened their doors to the biggest shopping weekend of the year earlier than ever. >> retailers that opened early actually saw a 24% increase in that thursday/friday business. >> reporter: a record 226 million shoppers hit the stores, visited web sites and spent nearly $53 billion. more than any other black friday weekend in history. >> jeans, 50% off. 20% off. for kids, a lot of deals for kids. >> reporter: more than half bought clothing. and nearly 4 in 10 spent on electronics, up from last year. in some places, it got ugly. one woman supposedly waiting in line for an x-box in a walmart in los angeles pepper sprayed people in the store. authorities are still deciding whether or not to charge her. with some cybermonday deals expected to last through the week, and christmas coming up fast. >> there is plenty of shopping left to come. it was all about the deal. >> reporter: michelle miller, cbs news, new york. >> today is cybermonday. in our next hour, we will ask the ceo of online retail giant zappos what he is expecting today. growing tension this morning between the u.s. and pakistan after saturday's nato air strikes killed pakistan soldiers near the afghanistan border. >> correspondent mandy clark is near the khyber pass, one of the main supply routes for the u.s. troops. >> reporter: we are here near the crossing that pakistan has now closed. now more than 300 trucks carrying supplies to international forces in afghanistan are stranded on the other side of the border. this is the aftermath of the air strikes. dead soldiers here beneath white blankets scattered among the wounded. the cell phone footage obtained by cbs news was shot by a soldier picking his way through the bodies. >> so many of us. >> reporter: carried live on tv with politicians and military generals in attendance, the funerals for the pakistani soldiers were treated like a state ceremony. the head of the pakistani army told mourners the nato strikes were an attack on pakistan's sovereignty. that grief over the killings carried on the streets of pakistan. nato forces have apologized for the incident. coalition forces came under fire from the direction of pakistani checkpoints prompting the air strikes. pakistan sealed this border crossing for ten days last year, after u.s. forces killed two pakistani soldiers. so many more soldiers dead, an anti-american sentiment in pakistan running high, this border could be closed for much longer. mandy clark, cbs news, afghanistan. joining is former secretary of state jamie rubin. good morning to you. >> good morning. >> before we talk about the larger and fractured u.s./pakistan relationship, the closing of the border a danger to u.s. troops? >> not yet. the military stockpiles support and supplies for many, many weeks. there are other route in because of the difficulty of the relationship between the u.s. and pakistani. the u.s. military have established difficult routes through the north and as this time goes on, it could become a problem of getting critical supplies, but not right now. >> this is the last thing that the u.s. needs right now, is any further friction in terms of its relationship with pakistan. where does it go from here? because this remains as tumultuous as it is, an i credibly important relationship for the u.s. >> i think it's fair to say pakistan is the epi center of the conflict resulted from those attacks. both because terrorists come from pakistan and crucially because its policy on afghanistan will determine whether we can succeed there, and that is the problem. pakistan really has not behaved like an ally of the united states in the past and it probably won't in the future. so how do you deal with an -- a country who is not behaving as an ally, but, yet, who support you need to make afghanistan a success? that's the problem. >> is there an answer? >> i mean, here is the question. everyone talks about how important this relationship is. not saying that it's not. but i thought jon huntsman said something interesting over the weekend. he said i would recognize exactly what the u.s. and pakistani has become which is merely a transactional relationship. are we expecting too much of this relationship? >> i think it's also true that both president bush and president obama have sugar-coated the reality and not really leveled with the american people about how pakistan's behavior really is inconsistent and it's not fair and true to call them a real partner. and so perhaps if we were to be more candid about the difficulties that the expectations would drop and when one of these incidents happened, we wouldn't throw our hands up, because we wouldn't expect pakistan to be behaving like an ally. >> stop calling them a true partner, call them a necessary business ally? >> look. they are both an ally and an enemy at times. you know, the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, the american number one soldier, just a couple of months ago, admiral mullin, stated that the pakistani intelligence service supports our principal enemy in afghanistan, the haqqani network. they are not a friend but sometimes supporting the enemy. >> the statements about the need to be more transparent is there a concern that in that transparency the relationship is further damaged and the bit of the us gets for it is further threatened? >> well, that is the problem. i think if we developed a more mature policy in which we could be candid with the public and the congress about how difficult it is to maintain both a relationship with the military, support them when we get something back, but also be clear about the problems. the republican debate this past week, the issue of this aid to pakistan was really complicated and nobody could agree on it and that is why presidents are reluctant to be fully honest about pakistan because they are worried about losing those aid dollars that we need in order to get support when pakistan does provide it, which is real and does help us in the case of drones to kill terrorist activities. >> no easy answer. >> jamie rubin, my senses, we will see you again on this issue. thank you so much. in egypt they are holding the first election since hosni mubarak was forced to quit in february. >> many protests continue in the capital and where we find elizabeth palmer in cairo with the latest. >> reporter: good morning. we were up at the crack of the dawn to get out to the polling stations by the time the doors opened at 8:00. by the time we arrived hundreds of people were already on the sidewalk lined up determined to vote. it's the police and the army keeping order outside polling stations for the long lines of voters waiting patiently to be allowed in. in the street, an obvious breach of the rules. activists were supposed to stop handing out campaign literature 48 hours ago. but inside, party workers and officials are watching like hawks to make sure the voting is free and fair. so far, at least in this suburb of heliopolis, so good. >> i think it's my first time to vote. >> reporter: a few miles away in downtown, a few hundred protesters are still camped in tahrir square, most of them boycotting the election. they argue egypt's ruling generals have to hand over power first. but in all of the polling stations, proof that vast numbers of egyptians disagree. they want to see the generals pushed from power too, but through the ballot box. this election is going to stretch out for several weeks but what happens today, the tone that set today is going to be crucial to see it through to a peaceful end. erica? >> liz palmer, thanks. three american college students who were detained in egypt a week ago are now back in the u.s. and they are telling their stories. one of them derrik sweeney joins us from his home in jefferson city, missouri, along with his mother joy. derrik, welcome home. >> thanks. >> thanks for getting up early for us. you have denied thaw were throwing anything off rooftops that you were throwing fire bombs as was initially alleged. video the egyptian authorities have shown and i know you've seen it and we will show it now. they say this is you wearing a face covering among the protesters. first of all, is it you in the video and second of all what you were doing there when you picked up? >> yeah. it's interesting that they show that video. and that does appear to be me. and as you can see in it, i'm just standing there. and they -- i don't know where they derived this story that i'm throwing something in the video, but i think that anybody who watches it will see that i'm just standing there and we were on muhammad ma mood street there. >> what made you go down to these protests and what drew you in? >> well, there is a fight for democracy and for liberty and for freedom and i really -- i really enjoyed politics personally and i do believe that they are fighting for something valuable and i had a strong desire to go see what was there as opposed to i'm a curious person. >> see for yourself firsthand. how were you treated in jail? what were the conditions like and what were you told? >> well, the first night, we were not -- well, we weren't really told anything as to what was going to happen to us for a long time. for several days. but the first night, we were hit several times in the face in the back of the neck and we were forced to sit on the ground in the dark with our hands cuffed behind our backs, and there were a number of egyptian policemen behind us with guns telling us, if we moved, we would be shot. we were there for about seven hours. >> joy, i imagine pretty tough, even though i know it's not the first time you heard it but pretty tough for you to hear derrik describe that. what was the first thing he said to you when he got off the plane and you hugged him? >> i think i said i love you which is what i've been saying to him every single time you talk to him. i was so glad to see him. >> i know you've said you'll go back to egypt and we will continue to follow this. appreciate your time and welcome back home. >> many thanks. >> i think i could listen to joy sweeney's laugh all weekend long. she has a way of the joy she shows that her son is still ahead this morning, newt gingrich gets an endorsement that is getting some attention in new hampshire. >> we will tell you what the paper there had to say about gingrich. also about mitt romney and how all this could be affecting the gop campaign as we take a closer look at the race for 2012. stay with us. you're watching "the early show" on cbs. ♪ a little rendezvous ♪ that special something ♪ that will carry you through ♪ that little reward ♪ for all the things you do [ female announcer ] luscious, creamy filling -- perfectly combined with our intense, slow-melting chocolate -- the one and only ghirardelli squares chocolate. for all the things you do. ghirardelli. moments of timeless pleasure. it's all crossed out... it's 'cause i got everything on it. boom! thank you! 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