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Transcripts For KYW CBS Evening News With Scott Pelley 20150216

small towns are evacuating. bryan hughes of our charleston affiliate wowk is at the scene. bryan, what do you have? >> scott this an incredible scene where the fire continues the rage back behind me. at this point we've been able to count with by fact lars about eight rail cars that are on fire. official estimates from csx is that this is a 109-car train two locomotives. they said only one is on fire but clearly that is not the case. also crude oil has spilled into the canal river. just moments ago csx and the coast guard had to use our cameras to look across the river to identify the actual rail car numbers so they can possibly disconnect these rail cars and identify other rail cars that could have potential problems. >> pelley: bryan do, we know anything about deaths or injuries? >> at this point no injuries have been reported. across the river there is one house right underneath where these rail cars are that one has been absolutely incinerated. >> pelley: and roughly how@ being evacuated? >> reporter: at this point there is a community that's around 100 that's bo virginia, they have been evacuated to the local school,ñi but it's just downriver of this location. at this point there's not an actual estimate of the amount of people that are displaced, but there are a few stragglers who are here. like i said, half mile is going to be the radius that has been officially evacuated, but right now we can tell you the fire is incredible. you can hear it roaring and sometimes the heat when an explosion occurs is intense. >> pelley: bryan hughes of wowk at the scene of the breaking news for us tonight. bryan, thanks. well, it's the shortest month of the year, but it's beginning to feel like it will never end. another february freeze is taking hold. the area that you see here in purple will have temperatures tonight as low as 10 below and the chill is to the bone with winds as high asñr 45mph today on new hampshire'sñr mt. washington. the real-feel there was 85 below. a know blue operator we talked to today said he had three plows break this season because the cold made them so brittle. more snow is onçó the way moving from the southern plains to theñiñr east and jericka duncan is in boston for us tonight. jericka? >> reporter: good evening. this area where i'm standing is normally a waterfront park, but it's anything but a picnic for people who have to walk through here. many of these snow mounds around me are at least seven feet high but elsewhere they're much higher. a procession of dump trucks has been hauling snow around the clock to so-called snow farms, open city parking lots that have been transformed into dumping grounds. they've doubled from 5 to 10 snow farms in the last week. some of the mounds are more than five stories high. two snow melters there been brought in from new york and officials are now looking for more. boston mayor marty walsh. >> shoveling snow piles the make room for new snow. >> reporter: two snow lanes have become narrow one. since saturday the city has towed more than 900 vehicles for breaking the snow emergency parking ban. >> there's eight feet of snow. >> reporter: restaurant owner kevin tyo is battling a leaky roof and workers and customers who can't make it to his location. he's had to shut down six times in the last three weeks. >> people don't want to go out. there's a lot of snow. business is down about 60% over the last few weeks. >> reporter: and potholes are also a big concern. scott, last year the mayor says the city repaired 19,000 of them. it was a record. just one of many records that could be broken before the end of this season. >> pelley: jericka duncan in boston. thank you, jericka. now, have a look at this. it took firefighters in philadelphia two and a half hours to bring an early morning fire in this building under control. they were battling not only the flames, but a wind-chill of 16 below. by the time they were done, they had turned the building into an icebox. and the arctic air is now heading south. the big concern there tonight is freezing rain and ice. utility companies have extra crews on stand-by to repair power lines that might come down, leaving people in the dark and the cold. let's have a look at forecast now from eric fisher, chief meteorologist at our boston station wbz. eric, what's next? >> reporter: well, scott we've seen very significant snow for many areas here with this storm on president's day bringing up to a foot of snow just outside st. louis 8 inches in lexington plus a lot of freezing rain, memphis area and across southern tennessee causing a lot of issues. this snow moving up through the d.c. area tonight bringing some of the most significant snow they've seen there in quite a while, and some additional snowfall in southern new england where we've seen over 90 inches over the last three weeks. biggest totals tonight moving across virginia, the jackpot, at 12 to 18 additional inches. behind all this, arctic cold. it's not just the northeast but all of the central and eastern united states. as you look toward the mid-week high temps in chicago. same story in minneapolis and st. lucie stuck in the teens. that cold air moves into the southeast, as well and florida, northern florida, highs may not get out of the 30s. scott? >> pelley: eric fisher, wbz thanks very much.ñi moving on, today a russian security company reported that it discovered one of the biggest bank robberies ever. no guns involved. hackers did it, breaking into more than 100 banks in 30 countries and making off with a total of as much as $1 billion. here's anna werner. >> reporter: the authors of the report call it "the the great bank robbery of the modern era." >> their ultimate goal was to steal as much money as possible, and they largely accomplished that. >> reporter: chris doggett is managing director for kaspersky lab, the computer security firm that uncovered the scheme. >> your very basic hackers are about getting in and stealing whatever they can get their hands on. the way these guys are different is they were a combination of hackers, spies and thieves. >> reporter: the criminals often used the simplest of methods to get into wants, an e-mail attachment with a virus sent the bank employees. when the employee kicked on it, the hackers gained access to the bank's financial system, and then spied to see how the employees and the systems worked. >> they went in and actually chained -- changed the balances in accounts, so it looked to the bank that there was more money than there was in reality. they then used e-payment systems and atm machines and even the swiss financial network to transfer the money out of those accounts into other accounts that they had set up for themselves. >> reporter: often the hackers sent commands to atms to just spew out money. they would have a person standing there to collect it. the losses are huge. one bank lost nearly $10 million when the hackers targeted its online banking platform. another was hit for $7.3 million through atm fraud. it's not clear yet how many banks in the u.s. were affected or whether they lost money. now, the american bankers' association told us today "there is no evidence u.s. banks were infiltrated, but doggett's group found u.s. banks werzehk definitely targeted." >> pelley: imagine what bonnie and clyde would think. anna, thank you. overseas today another country has been pulled into the war with isis. egypt attacked targets in libya linked to the islamic extremist group that already holds part of syria and iraq. egypt was responding to a savage act against christians. we have a report from cairo. >> reporter: it was still dark when f-16 fighter jets took off, striking training camps and weapons depots along libya's coast. one target was derna headquarters for many islamic militants who have sworn allegiance to isis. the bombings came a day after isis released a video that appears to show the execution of 21 egyptian christians. masked jihadis marched the captives along the beach. a few whispered their final prayers and then all were beheaded. most of the victims came from the christian village of el-aour south of cairo. today relatives sobbed and shouted in grief. one father begged for the return of his son's body. egypt's president abdel fattah al sisi visited cairo's main cathedral to offer his condolences and condemned what he called a heinous act of terrorism. the slain were kidnapped by mill tabs in libya. they were among the hundreds of thousands of egyptians that traveled there looking for work in the oil fields. if the video is confirmed this will be the first time that isis has killed foreigners outside syria and iraq and it raises conce% forging new links to militias in libya. the kidnapping also means that egypt is now fighting groups linked with isis on two fronts to the west in libya, and to the east in the sinai peninsula. egypt has a -- dispatched a foreign minister to new york where they're hoping to rally as much international support as they can for this military intervention in libya. in the meantime, scott, extra security has been deployed inside egypt for fear of reprisal attacks. >> pelley: alex ortiz, thank you. we have reports tonight that the men behind the deadly attacks in denmark were released from jail just two weeks ago and may have been influenced by islamic radicals while behind bars. two people were shot to death. the police later shot and killed the gunman. tonight in copenhagen, tens of thousands attended a candlelight vigil for the victims. friends and family will remember correspondent bob simon tomorrow in new york. he was killed in a car crash last week. bob had just finished a "60 minutes" report on the development of z-map, a promising drug to treat ebola a disease that has killed 9,000 in its latest outbreak in west africa. bob's reporting took him to a secure lab in canada as well as to a series of greenhouses in owensboro, kentucky. >> reporter: this is where the signs have turned into a product, where z-map is manufacture nerd row after row of this odd-looking variety of tobacco. can i smoke it? can i chew it? >> i would recommend that. >> reporter: it's different? >> it's very different. >> reporter: hugh haydon is the president of this company which was recently bought by j.r. reynolds. when you say "cancer," people think death. it's known in our culture as a killer. >> there's clearly been an irony there, but there are good things that can be done with it. that's our objective here. >> reporter: but z-map isn't easy to produce. it takes six weeks. the tobacco plants first have to be grown for 24 days. then they're immersed in a liquid containing a gene that tells them theñr make special antibodies which help the immune system fight viruses in this case ebola. as the plants grow, they copy those antibodies over and over again. xerox machine for antibodies. >> that's essentially what it does. it makes it over and over and over again. >> reporter: the leaves are then ground up into a liquid which looks like a juice you buy at a health food store. since z-map is made up of three different antibody, the process has to be repeated three times using 6,000 pounds of new tobacco planteds, and the yield? >> how much z-map will you get out of three tables like this? >> how many people can you cure of ebola if it works? >> it would be dozens best case. >> reporter: dozens, which is not very much. not very much. dozens of cures when 9,000 people died in this epidemic. sounds like using a bottle of water to put out a forest fire. >> pelley: bob simon was among america's best reporters for nearly 50 years and cbs will broadcast a tribute to his work next sunday on "60 minutes" presents. one of the most unpleasant symptoms of menopause may last more than a decade. that story when the "cbs evening news" continues. you know, if you play football for a long time like i did you're gonna learn to deal with alot of pain. but it is nothing like the pain that shingles causes. man when i got shingles it was something awful. it was like being blindsided by some linebacker. you don't see it coming. boom! it was this painful rash of little blisters. red, ugly stuff. lots of 'em. not a good deal. if you've had chicken pox uh-huh, we all remember chicken pox. well that shingles virus is already inside of you. it ain't pretty when it comes out. now i'm not telling you this so that you'll feel sorry for me. i'm just here to tell you that one out of three people are gonna end up getting shingles. i was one of 'em. take it from a guy who's had his fair share of pain. you don't want to be tackled by shingles. so please go talk to your doctor or pharmacist. talk to your doctor or pharmacist about your risk. ufferers. one tried the newest allergy spray which could take several days to feel the full effect of relief. the other took claritin-d which starts to work on allergies with nasal congestion in 30 minutes. the moral? nothing works faster than claritin-d. there's only one egg that just tastes better. fresher. more flavorful. delicious. with more great nutrition. and 25% less saturated fat. only eggland's best. better taste. better nutrition. better eggs. fact. fast-acting advil is designed with an ultra-thin coating and fast absorbing advil ion core technology stopping headaches and other tough pain. fast. relief doesn't get any better than this. advil. ♪ with pain relief, we're all at the corner of "relief is good"...and "fast relief is better." good thing walgreens gets you in and out in no time... so you can find relief fast, with solutions like advil. at the corner of happy and healthy. >> new research out today says one symptom of menopause, hot flash, can last a lot longer than many women expected. dr. jon lapook is here to tell us more. jon, what's new in this study? >> reporter: we used to think that hot flashes lasted maybe a couple years at most. what this study found was actually on average it can last for more than seven years and in some women up to 14 years. there were big differences ineth necessity. so african american women had the longest duration and japanese women had the shortest. what was the most surprising and i spoke to a gynecologist today, she was surprised that if you're still having periods when you have your first hot flash then usually it can last for more than 12 years. that's a very long time. >> pelley: what does this mean for treatment options? >> reporter: it has a lot of implications. we know hormone replacement can ease symptoms but they increase your risk slightly for breast and ovarian cancer but if you are talking more than seven years, you need to think of non-hormonal treatment breathing exercise changes in diet and a lot of research into other possible options. >> pelley: jon lapook, thank you very much, jon. a marathon runer is determined to finish the race any way she can. and we will meet her in just a moment. what the cloud enables is computing to empower cancer researchers. it used to take two weeks to sequence and analyze a genome; with the microsoft cloud we can analyze 100 per day. whatever i can do to help compute a cure for cancer, that's what i'd like to do. the world is filled with air. but for people with copd sometimes breathing air can be difficult. if you have copd, ask your doctor about once-daily anoro ellipta. it helps people with copd breathe better for a full 24hours. anoro ellipta is the first fda-approved product containing two long-acting bronchodilators in one inhaler. anoro is not for asthma. anoro contains a type of medicine that increases risk of death in people with asthma. it is not known if this risk is increased in copd. anoro won't replace rescue inhalers for sudden copd symptoms and should not be used more than once a day. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition, or high blood pressure. tell your doctor if you have glaucoma, prostate or bladder problems, or problems passing urine as anoro may make these problems worse. call your doctor right away if you have worsened breathing chest pain, swelling of your mouth or tongue, problems urinating or eye problems including vision changes or eye pain while taking anoro. nothing can reverse copd. the world is filled with air and anoro is helping people with copd breath air better. get your first prescription free at anoro.com. ♪turn around!♪ ♪every now and then i get a little bit hungry♪ ♪ and there's nothing really good around♪ ♪turn around!♪ ♪ every now and then i get a little bit tired of living off the taste of the air.♪ ♪turn around barry!♪ ♪ i finally found the right snack!♪ now try fiber one protein bars with the great new taste of cookies and crème. >> pelley: today psychowill... sigh d.l.ist lance armstrong was ordered to pay back billions to owners for cheating. he ultimately confessed and all seven of his tour de france titles were taken away. now look at this difference. athletes who don't cheat can win lasting glory, and boy did we see an astounding performance yesterday at the marathon in austin texas. here's manuel manuel bojorquez. >> almost done. >> reporter: kenyan runner hyvon ngetich had been in the lead for nearly 26 miles. the finish line was in sight when this happened. overcome byñi exhaustion ngetich fell on to her hands and knees but kept going. >> oh, my goodness, look at what's going on here in the women's race. she led for the entire day only in the closing mile her body let her down. >> reporter: race director john conley was watching. >> i've seen athletes wobble and fall and crawl across the finish line but that story of her going 26 miles and crawling the last 450 feet or so, never seen anything like that. >> reporter: whe&i the medical team rushed to help she refused. >> she's taking no for an answer. keep on going young lady. ngetich still managed to come in third. conley greeted her after the race. >> you ran the bravest race and crawled the bravest crawl i have ever seen in my life. >> crawling the last 50 meters to the finish line. >> reporter: ngetich couldn't recall those final few minutes. >> the last two kilometers, i don't remember. >> she did it! she made it! >> running you have to keep going, going. >> reporter: conley bumped up her cash prize. he says it's the least he could do. >> i have never heard our crowds that loud cheering for an athlete like that. >> reporter: it's like she won the race. >> she was the defining moment of that weekend for us. >> you are one tough young lady! >> reporter: an image of defeat turned into triumph, manuel bojorquez, cbs news austin. >> pelley: amazing. singer lesley gore died today lung cancer. in 1963 gore hit the top of the charts with a song about a teenager whose boyfriend dumps her at her birthday party. ♪ it's my party and i'll cry if i want to. ♪ cry if i want to. cry if i want to ♪ you would cry too if it happened to you ♪ >> pelley: lesley gore was 68. in just a moment we'll continue the trip down memory lane with presidential history in need of a home. (announcer) are you dealing with hot flashes during menopause? why suffer more than you have to? you can do something different. because the landscape of options has changed. brisdelle is the only fda approved non-hormonal option proven to reduce moderate to severe hot flashes during menopause. and the bedtime dose provides 24 hour relief. brisdelle is not for everyone. call your doctor if you have changes in mood or behavior, thoughts of suicide, or a high fever, stiff muscles or confusion signs of a possible life-threatening condition. abnormal bleeding, bone fractures restlessness, vision problems, and impaired judgment and motor skills may occur. don't take brisdelle if you are pregnant, taking maois thioridazine, pimozide or are allergic to paroxetine. tell your doctor about all your medicines like tamoxifen, triptans or paroxetine. side effects include nausea, vomiting, tiredness, and headache. change is in the air. it's time to talk to your doctor about the only fda approved non-hormonal option. brisdelle. janet? cough if you can hear me. don't even think about it. i took mucinex dm for my phlegmy cough. yeah...but what about mike? (cough!) it works on his cough too. mucinex dm relieves wet and dry coughs for 12 hours. let's end this. you owned your car for four years. you named it brad. you loved brad. and then you totaled him. you two had been through everything together. two boyfriends. three jobs. you're like "nothing can replace brad!" then liberty mutual calls. and you break into your happy dance. if you sign up for better car replacement, we'll pay for a car that's a model year newer with 15,000 fewer miles than your old one. see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. alright, so this tylenol arthritis lasts 8 hours but aleve can last 12 hours. and aleve is proven to work better on pain than tylenol arthritis. so why am i still thinking about this? how are ya? good. aleve. proven better on pain. >> pelley: and finally on this federal holiday honoring george washington our senior white house correspondent bill plante went mining for presidential history, and he struck gold in new york city. >> reporter: this may be the world's largest private collection of presidential memorabilia, more than one million items but most of it is buried in boxes and locked away. >> it really keeps me up at night thinking that my dad's legacy and passion is sitting in a storage unit. >> reporter: austin wright grew up in a home filled with political paraphernalia from the 1700s to the 2000s amassed over 40 years by his late father jordan. >> it was throughout wall to ceiling, everything you can think of. >> reporter: jordan wright was a passionate collector. he found this flag from george washington's collect inauguration in a mom and pop shop. part of the collection was once displayed in new york -- buttons, hat lantern umbrellas and posters from the campaigns of george washington to george w. bush. here's william mckinley and engraved on the back it says, "william mckinley our hero for posterity." >> that's right. >> reporter: william jennings bryan, the democrats' candidate in 1896 was a renowned orator but the republicans' response... >> they would pass out these coffins with a face in it and say, "talk to death. this is what's going to happen if he's our president." >> reporter: what now? what do you do next? >> we hope by cure rating it is we can figure out exactly what's in it. the problem with my dad amatsing his collection and not sharing exactly what's in it the knowledge was in his head. >> reporter: wright talked to the smithsonian institution. they were interested in only a small part of the collection and he doesn't want to break it up. so you do want to get it displayed? >> i have to getçó it displayed? >> how. >> we'll do exhibitions and we'll travel and hopefully get it digitally archives. >> reporter: honoring his father's memory by making the silly and serious of american politics available to all. >> pelley: and that's the "cbs evening news" for tonight. for all of us at "cbs evening news" all around the world, good night. captioning sponsored by cbs

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Transcripts For WUSA CBS Evening News With Scott Pelley 20150216

small towns are evacuating. bryan hughes of our charleston affiliate wowk is at the scene. bryan, what do you have? >> scott this an incredible scene where the fire continues the rage back behind me. at this point we've been able to count with by fact lars about eight rail cars that are on fire. official estimates from csx is that this is a 109-car train two locomotives. they said only one is on fire but clearly that is not the case. also crude oil has spilled into the canal river. just moments ago csx and the coast guard had to use our cameras to look across the river to identify the actual rail car numbers so they can possiblyers so they can possibly disconnect these rail cars and identify other rail cars that could have potential problems. >> pelley: bryan do, we know anything about deaths or injuries? >> at this point no injuries have been reported. across the river there is one house right underneath where these rail cars are that one has been absolutely incinerated. >> pelley: and roughly how@ being evacuated? >> reporter: at this point there is a community that's around 100 that's bo virginia, they have been evacuated to the local school,ñi but it's just downriver of this location. at this point there's not an actual estimate of the amount of people that are displaced, but there are a few stragglers who are here. like i said, half mile is going to be the radius that has been officially evacuated, but right now we can tell you the fire is incredible. you can hear it roaring and sometimes the heat when an explosion occurs is intense. >> pelley: bryan hughes of wowk at the scene of the breaking news for us tonight. bryan, thanks. well, it's the shortest month of the year, but it's beginning to feel like it will never end. another february freeze is taking hold. the area that you see here in purple will have temperatures tonight as low as 10 below and the chill is to the bone with winds as high asñr 45mph today on new hampshire'sñr mt. washington. the real-feel there was 85 below. a know blue operator we talked to today said he had three plows break this season because the cold made them so brittle. more snow is onçó the way moving from the southern plains to theñiñr east and jericka duncan is in boston for us tonight. jericka? >> reporter: good evening. this area where i'm standing is normally a waterfront park, but it's anything but a picnic for people who have to walk through here. many of these snow mounds around me are at least seven feet high but elsewhere they're much higher. a procession of dump trucks has been hauling snow around the clock to so-called snow farms, open city parking lots that have been transformed into dumping grounds. they've doubled from 5 to 10 snow farms in the last week. some of the mounds are more than five stories high. two snow melters there been brought in from new york and officials are now looking for more. boston mayor marty walsh. >> shoveling snow piles the make room for new snow. >> reporter: two snow lanes have become narrow one. since saturday the city has towed more than 900 vehicles for breaking the snow emergency parking ban. >> there's eight feet of snow. >> reporter: restaurant owner kevin tyo is battling a leaky roof and workers and customers who can't make it to his location. he's had to shut down six times in the last three weeks. >> people don't want to go out. there's a lot of snow. business is down about 60% over the last few weeks. >> reporter: and potholes are also a big concern. scott, last year the mayor says the city repaired 19,000 of them. it was a record. just one of many records that could be broken before the end of this season. >> pelley: jericka duncan in boston. thank you, jericka. now, have a look at this. it took firefighters in philadelphia two and a half hours to bring an early morning fire in this building under control. they were battling not only the flames, but a wind-chill of 16 below. by the time they were done, they had turned the building into an icebox. and the arctic air is now heading south. the big concern there tonight is freezing rain and ice. utility companies have extra crews on stand-by to repair power lines that might come down, leaving people in the dark and the cold. let's have a look at forecast now from eric fisher, chief meteorologist at our boston station wbz. eric, what's next? >> reporter: well, scott we've seen very significant snow for many areas here with this storm on president's day bringing up to a foot of snow just outside st. louis 8 inches in lexington plus a lot of freezing rain, memphis area and across southern tennessee causing a lot of issues. this snow moving up through the d.c. area tonight bringing some of the most significant snow they've seen there in quite a while, and some additional snowfall in southern new england where we've seen over 90 inches over the last three weeks. biggest totals tonight moving across virginia, the jackpot, at 12 to 18 additional inches. behind all this, arctic cold. it's not just the northeast but all of the central and eastern united states. as you look toward the mid-week high temps in chicago. same story in minneapolis and st. lucie stuck in the teens. that cold air moves into the southeast, as well and florida, northern florida, highs may not get out of the 30s. scott? >> pelley: eric fisher, wbz thanks very much.ñi moving on, today a russian security company reported that it discovered one of the biggest bank robberies ever. no guns involved. hackers did it, breaking into more than 100 banks in 30 countries and making off with a total of as much as $1 billion. here's anna werner. >> reporter: the authors of the report call it "the the great bank robbery of the modern era." >> their ultimate goal was to steal as much money as possible, and they largely accomplished that. >> reporter: chris doggett is managing director for kaspersky lab, the computer security firm that uncovered the scheme. >> your very basic hackers are about getting in and stealing whatever they can get their hands on. the way these guys are different is they were a combination of hackers, spies and thieves. >> reporter: the criminals often used the simplest of methods to get into wants, an e-mail attachment with a virus sent the bank employees. when the employee kicked on it, the hackers gained access to the bank's financial system, and then spied to see how the employees and the systems worked. >> they went in and actually chained -- changed the balances in accounts, so it looked to the bank that there was more money than there was in reality. they then used e-payment systems and atm machines and even the swiss financial network to transfer the money out of those accounts into other accounts that they had set up for themselves. >> reporter: often the hackers sent commands to atms to just spew out money. they would have a person standing there to collect it. the losses are huge. one bank lost nearly $10 million when the hackers targeted its online banking platform. another was hit for $7.3 million through atm fraud. it's not clear yet how many banks in the u.s. were affected or whether they lost money. now, the american bankers' association told us today "there is no evidence u.s. banks were infiltrated, but doggett's group found u.s. banks werzehk definitely targeted." >> pelley: imagine what bonnie and clyde would think. anna, thank you. overseas today another country has been pulled into the war with isis. egypt attacked targets in libya linked to the islamic extremist group that already holds part of syria and iraq. egypt was responding to a savage act against christians. we have a report from cairo. >> reporter: it was still dark when f-16 fighter jets took off, striking training camps and weapons depots along libya's coast. one target was derna headquarters for many islamic militants who have sworn allegiance to isis. the bombings came a day after isis released a video that appears to show the execution of 21 egyptian christians. masked jihadis marched the captives along the beach. a few whispered their final prayers and then all were beheaded. most of the victims came from the christian village of el-aour south of cairo. today relatives sobbed and shouted in grief. one father begged for the return of his son's body. egypt's president abdel fattah al sisi visited cairo's main cathedral to offer his condolences and condemned what he called a heinous act of terrorism. the slain were kidnapped by mill tabs in libya. they were among the hundreds of thousands of egyptians that traveled there looking for work in the oil fields. if the video is confirmed this will be the first time that isis has killed foreigners outside syria and iraq and it raises conce% forging new links to militias in libya. the kidnapping also means that egypt is now fighting groups linked with isis on two fronts to the west in libya, and to the east in the sinai peninsula. egypt has a -- dispatched a foreign minister to new york where they're hoping to rally as much international support as they can for this military intervention in libya. in the meantime, scott, extra security has been deployed inside egypt for fear of reprisal attacks. >> pelley: alex ortiz, thank you. we have reports tonight that the men behind the deadly attacks in denmark were released from jail just two weeks ago and may have been influenced by islamic radicals while behind bars. two people were shot to death. the police later shot and killed the gunman. tonight in copenhagen, tens of thousands attended a candlelight vigil for the victims. friends and family will remember correspondent bob simon tomorrow in new york. he was killed in a car crash last week. bob had just finished a "60 minutes" report on the development of z-map, a promising drug to treat ebola a disease that has killed 9,000 in its latest outbreak in west africa. bob's reporting took him to a secure lab in canada as well as to a series of greenhouses in owensboro, kentucky. >> reporter: this is where the signs have turned into a product, where z-map is manufacture nerd row after row of this odd-looking variety of tobacco. can i smoke it? can i chew it? >> i would recommend that. >> reporter: it's different? >> it's very different. >> reporter: hugh haydon is the president of this company which was recently bought by j.r. reynolds. when you say "cancer," people think death. it's known in our culture as a killer. >> there's clearly been an irony there, but there are good things that can be done with it. that's our objective here. >> reporter: but z-map isn't easy to produce. it takes six weeks. the tobacco plants first have to be grown for 24 days. then they're immersed in a liquid containing a gene that tells them theñr make special antibodies which help the immune system fight viruses in this case ebola. as the plants grow, they copy those antibodies over and over again. xerox machine for antibodies. >> that's essentially what it does. it makes it over and over and over again. >> reporter: the leaves are then ground up into a liquid which looks like a juice you buy at a health food store. since z-map is made up of three different antibody, the process has to be repeated three times using 6,000 pounds of new tobacco planteds, and the yield? >> how much z-map will you get out of three tables like this? >> how many people can you cure of ebola if it works? >> it would be dozens best case. >> reporter: dozens, which is not very much. not very much. dozens of cures when 9,000 people died in this epidemic. sounds like using a bottle of water to put out a forest fire. >> pelley: bob simon was among america's best reporters for nearly 50 years and cbs will broadcast a tribute to his work next sunday on "60 minutes" presents. one of the most unpleasant symptoms of menopause may last more than a decade. that story when the "cbs evening news" continues. you know, if you play football for a long time like i did you're gonna learn to deal with alot of pain. but it is nothing like the pain that shingles causes. man when i got shingles it was something awful. it was like being blindsided by some linebacker. you don't see it coming. boom! it was this painful rash of little blisters. red, ugly stuff. lots of 'em. not a good deal. if you've had chicken pox uh-huh, we all remember chicken pox. well that shingles virus is already inside of you. it ain't pretty when it comes out. now i'm not telling you this so that you'll feel sorry for me. i'm just here to tell you that one out of three people are gonna end up getting shingles. i was one of 'em. take it from a guy who's had his fair share of pain. you don't want to be tackled by shingles. so please go talk to your doctor or pharmacist. talk to your doctor or pharmacist about your risk. ufferers. one tried the newest allergy spray which could take several days to feel the full effect of relief. the other took claritin-d which starts to work on allergies with nasal congestion in 30 minutes. the moral? nothing works faster than claritin-d. there's only one egg that just tastes better. fresher. more flavorful. delicious. with more great nutrition. and 25% less saturated fat. only eggland's best. better taste. better nutrition. better eggs. fact. fast-acting advil is designed with an ultra-thin coating and fast absorbing advil ion core technology stopping headaches and other tough pain. fast. relief doesn't get any better than this. advil. ♪ with pain relief, we're all at the corner of "relief is good"...and "fast relief is better." good thing walgreens gets you in and out in no time... so you can find relief fast, with solutions like advil. at the corner of happy and healthy. >> new research out today says one symptom of menopause, hot flash, can last a lot longer than many women expected. dr. jon lapook is here to tell us more. jon, what's new in this study? >> reporter: we used to think that hot flashes lasted maybe a couple years at most. what this study found was actually on average it can last for more than seven years and in some women up to 14 years. there were big differences ineth necessity. so african american women had the longest duration and japanese women had the shortest. what was the most surprising and i spoke to a gynecologist today, she was surprised that if you're still having periods when you have your first hot flash then usually it can last for more than 12 years. that's a very long time. >> pelley: what does this mean for treatment options? >> reporter: it has a lot of implications. we know hormone replacement can ease symptoms but they increase your risk slightly for breast and ovarian cancer but if you are talking more than seven years, you need to think of non-hormonal treatment breathing exercise changes in diet and a lot of research into other possible options. >> pelley: jon lapook, thank you very much, jon. a marathon runer is determined to finish the race any way she can. and we will meet her in just a moment. what the cloud enables is computing to empower cancer researchers. it used to take two weeks to sequence and analyze a genome; with the microsoft cloud we can analyze 100 per day. whatever i can do to help compute a cure for cancer, that's what i'd like to do. the world is filled with air. but for people with copd sometimes breathing air can be difficult. if you have copd, ask your doctor about once-daily anoro ellipta. it helps people with copd breathe better for a full 24hours. anoro ellipta is the first fda-approved product containing two long-acting bronchodilators in one inhaler. anoro is not for asthma. anoro contains a type of medicine that increases risk of death in people with asthma. it is not known if this risk is increased in copd. anoro won't replace rescue inhalers for sudden copd symptoms and should not be used more than once a day. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition, or high blood pressure. tell your doctor if you have glaucoma, prostate or bladder problems, or problems passing urine as anoro may make these problems worse. call your doctor right away if you have worsened breathing chest pain, swelling of your mouth or tongue, problems urinating or eye problems including vision changes or eye pain while taking anoro. nothing can reverse copd. the world is filled with air and anoro is helping people with copd breath air better. get your first prescription free at anoro.com. no one in my family has gone past high school. through the at&t aspire initiative i met my mentor, elizabeth. she believes in me. she pushes me to do better in school and in life. because of the at&t aspire initiative, i'm the first one in my family to ever go to college. at&t employees are mentoring students in communities across america. you can change a life. become a mentor. >> pelley: today psychowill... sigh d.l.ist lance armstrong was ordered to pay back billions to owners for cheating. he ultimately confessed and all seven of his tour de france titles were taken away. now look at this difference. athletes who don't cheat can win lasting glory, and boy did we see an astounding performance yesterday at the marathon in austin texas. here's manuel manuel bojorquez. >> almost done. >> reporter: kenyan runner hyvon ngetich had been in the lead for nearly 26 miles. the finish line was in sight when this happened. overcome byñi exhaustion ngetich fell on to her hands and knees but kept going. >> oh, my goodness, look at what's going on here in the women's race. she led for the entire day only in the closing mile her body let her down. >> reporter: race director john conley was watching. >> i've seen athletes wobble and fall and crawl across the finish line but that story of her going 26 miles and crawling the last 450 feet or so, never seen anything like that. >> reporter: whe&i the medical team rushed to help she refused. >> she's taking no for an answer. keep on going young lady. ngetich still managed to come in third. conley greeted her after the race. >> you ran the bravest race and crawled the bravest crawl i have ever seen in my life. >> crawling the last 50 meters to the finish line. >> reporter: ngetich couldn't recall those final few minutes. >> the last two kilometers, i don't remember. >> she did it! she made it! >> running you have to keep going, going. >> reporter: conley bumped up her cash prize. he says it's the least he could do. >> i have never heard our crowds that loud cheering for an athlete like that. >> reporter: it's like she won the race. >> she was the defining moment of that weekend for us. >> you are one tough young lady! >> reporter: an image of defeat turned into triumph, manuel bojorquez, cbs news austin. >> pelley: amazing. singer lesley gore died today lung cancer. in 1963 gore hit the top of the charts with a song about a teenager whose boyfriend dumps her at her birthday party. ♪ it's my party and i'll cry if i want to. ♪ cry if i want to. cry if i want to ♪ you would cry too if it happened to you ♪ >> pelley: lesley gore was 68. in just a moment we'll continue the trip down memory lane with presidential history in need of a home. (announcer) are you dealing with hot flashes during menopause? why suffer more than you have to? you can do something different. because the landscape of options has changed. brisdelle is the only fda approved non-hormonal option proven to reduce moderate to severe hot flashes during menopause. and the bedtime dose provides 24 hour relief. brisdelle is not for everyone. call your doctor if you have changes in mood or behavior, thoughts of suicide, or a high fever, stiff muscles or confusion signs of a possible life-threatening condition. abnormal bleeding, bone fractures restlessness, vision problems, and impaired judgment and motor skills may occur. don't take brisdelle if you are pregnant, taking maois thioridazine, pimozide or are allergic to paroxetine. tell your doctor about all your medicines like tamoxifen, triptans or paroxetine. side effects include nausea, vomiting, tiredness, and headache. change is in the air. it's time to talk to your doctor about the only fda approved non-hormonal option. brisdelle. janet? cough if you can hear me. don't even think about it. i took mucinex dm for my phlegmy cough. yeah...but what about mike? (cough!) it works on his cough too. mucinex dm relieves wet and dry coughs for 12 hours. let's end this. you owned your car for four years. you named it brad. you loved brad. and then you totaled him. you two had been through everything together. two boyfriends. three jobs. you're like "nothing can replace brad!" then liberty mutual calls. and you break into your happy dance. if you sign up for better car replacement, we'll pay for a car that's a model year newer with 15,000 fewer miles than your old one. see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. alright, so this tylenol arthritis lasts 8 hours but aleve can last 12 hours. and aleve is proven to work better on pain than tylenol arthritis. so why am i still thinking about this? how are ya? good. aleve. proven better on pain. >> pelley: and finally on this federal holiday honoring george washington our senior white house correspondent bill plante went mining for presidential history, and he struck gold in new york city. >> reporter: this may be the world's largest private collection of presidential memorabilia, more than one million items but most of it is buried in boxes and locked away. >> it really keeps me up at night thinking that my dad's legacy and passion is sitting in a storage unit. >> reporter: austin wright grew up in a home filled with political paraphernalia from the 1700s to the 2000s amassed over 40 years by his late father jordan. >> it was throughout wall to ceiling, everything you can think of. >> reporter: jordan wright was a passionate collector. he found this flag from george washington's collect inauguration in a mom and pop shop. part of the collection was once displayed in new york -- buttons, hat lantern umbrellas and posters from the campaigns of george washington to george w. bush. here's william mckinley and engraved on the back it says, "william mckinley our hero for posterity." >> that's right. >> reporter: william jennings bryan, the democrats' candidate in 1896 was a renowned orator but the republicans' response... >> they would pass out these coffins with a face in it and say, "talk to death. this is what's going to happen if he's our president." >> reporter: what now? what do you do next? >> we hope by cure rating it is we can figure out exactly what's in it. the problem with my dad amatsing his collection and not sharing exactly what's in it the knowledge was in his head. >> reporter: wright talked to the smithsonian institution. they were interested in only a small part of the collection and he doesn't want to break it up. so you do want to get it displayed? >> i have to getçó it displayed? >> how. >> we'll do exhibitions and we'll travel and hopefully get it digitally archives. >> reporter: honoring his father's memory by making the silly and serious of american politics available to all. >> pelley: and that's the "cbs evening news" for tonight. for all of us at "cbs evening news" all around the world, good night. 70 miles south and west of d.c. this is kind of an early warning of what is coming to the d.c. area. not boston yet, but definitely winter. >> reporter: d.c. mayor muriel bowser has a record number of salt trucks on the roads tonight. she's asking that you him your travel to give them room to operate -- limit your travel to give them room to operate. >> reporter: motorists try to get home before the big part of the storm. this is hank silverberg on the loudoun/fairfax county line. >> good evening. i'm jan jeffcoat. >> and i'm derek mcginty. this storm is expected to be the big he is we've seen this season. -- biggest we've seen this seasonful several virginia classes have canceled tomorrow. we have a list scrolling at the bottom of your screen. >> the snow is expected to continue into the morning. chief meteorologist topper shutt tracking who could get the worst of it. >> we're on the weather terrace. in the last minute or two it's not snowing super hard, but it has dusted the terrace. the good news is the light fluffy snow, bad news is it's going to get heavier overnight. we still think a general of 4 to 8-inch band is going to be pretty prevalent either side of i-66 and up through the beltway, bethesda, maybe even up to rockville. now to the south, that's the bull's eye, culpeper and la plata and fredericksburg. you folks will get 8 to 12 inches and i think that's going to be a lot especially into southern maryland. to the north cumberland and hagerstown probably 3 to 6 inches, probably even frederick as well, so a little less to the north. legitimate snow. critical hours essentially now through

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Transcripts For KPIX CBS Evening News 20150216

pittsfield, massachusetts, 36 below, berlin, new hampshire, 39 below zero. in norwood, mass, the snow kim taylor is trying to remove is as tall as she is. in boston, this homeowner aimed a leave blower outside a upstairs window trying to clear the snow off a rooftop. why? because this can happen. on garfield street in quincy, a roof collapsed. >> we have two reports tonight including the forecast we begin with jericka duncan in boston. >> reporter: winds gusting up to 60 miles-per-hour whipped up the additional 16 inches of snow boston received sunday, creating white-out conditions. more than 600 plows throughout the city are doing the heavy lifting and moving. snow melters aren't getting any breaks. boston mayor marty walsh is at a loss for words. >> i know as i was walking out of my house today, people are frustrated, people just want this to end. i think we all want the spring to come. >> since saturday, nearly 4000 vehicles have been ticketed, more than 200 towed, right now cars are not allowed to park downtown, two-way streets have been changed to one-way, one way, and the city's transit system is out of service. >> businesses have lost major business, restaurants and local business retailers but also the big ones, you know, it has been a tough month for everybody. >> reporter: what do you think the economic impact has been? >> oh i think it is going to be big. i can't put a dollar figure on it right now. >> reporter: at the quincy market, tourists were the only me ones there, 26 year old yanchenve shi is visiting boston with a group from china. >> it is amazing to me because ich have never seen this kind of snow before, i am from the south part of china so this is great unfortunately all the shops are closed. >> reporter: brandie andrews has lived here over ten years, she considers herself lucky. >> i love the snow, because i live in an apartment, i just wake up and somebody else has shoveled for me, i don't have to drive anywhere. >> reporter: is it what you expected? >> yes. everything i expected and more. >> reporter: the city's homeless shelters are at overflow capacity. tonight, jeff, i am told more than 600 people are seeking safety in the nearby shelters because of this dangerously cold weather. >> glor: all right, jerickaer duncan, thank you. eric fischer is chief meteorologist at our boston station wbz, eric, what is ahead? o >> jeff, it is just brutal out there behind the blizzard, you are talking wind-chill values 20-35 below zero and see frostbite in less than 30 minutes with conditions like that, a lot of cold out there, for a monday morning for president's day and also tracking a new storm, this is a mid-south winter storm, a lot of storm warnings throughout the region, tracking eastwardt starting tonight and tomorrow heavy snowfall, ice to theomor southern side of all of that snow, and then to the northeast we head toward tuesday additional snow, places like new york city and boston, the bull's eye for snow, kentucky, over half a foot of accumulation f expected there, we will see some significant totals over toward d.c. and then to new york, y boston yet again could see half foot of fresh snowfall and with all of this, a lot of cold jeff, the whole central and eastern part of the u.s., went to 40 degrees below average for a binge chunk of this week. >> glor: eric fischer, thank you very much. at least 15 people were hurt today in a multi-car pileup in chicago. it happened this morning on the m kennedy expressway, 38 vehicles were involved, there were whiteout conditions, none of the injuries are considered life- threatening. overseas, we are learning more tonight about the suspect accused of two deadly terror attacks in denmark yesterday. police say the gunman openedli fire on a free speech meeting, and later outside a synagogue before officers gunned him down. >> here is charlie d'agata. >> reporter: the first light of dawn fell on the body of the suspected killer after the firefight with police that brought his rampage and his life to an end. danish media quoting police forces identified the suspect as 22-year-old omar abdel hamid al hussein, born in denmark he had a criminal record that included violence and weapons offenses. they say he acted as a lone wolf when he opened fire in a cafe on an event on free speech. an audio recording obtained by on the bbc captures the moment. >> why do we still say buzz when we-- ( gunshots ) >> i could hear the gunshots approaching, so i thought the gunman must be already in the building. i could hear arabic and the. shouts allah akbar. >> his next attack targeted the synagogue after midnight shooting an unarmed man who stood watch outside. today, danish prime minister helen thorning-schmidt visited and paid tribute. >> a man has lost his life in the service of that synagogue, and we are devastated. >> danish intelligence said the suspect had been on the agency's radar. but tonight, as mourners held candlelight vigils for the victims, they are left to wonder why more wasn't done to stop the attacks from happening. police raided an internet cafe today, where they made four arrests in connection with the investigation, jeff. they are also looking into whether the suspect may have been inspired by isis messages and videos, although there is no evidence to suggest he traveled to conflict zones like syria and iraq. >> glor: charlie d'agata in london, charlie, thank you. hundreds of jewish graves have been desecrated in france at a cemetery in northern france. nearly 200 gravestones were knocked down, others painted with swastikas and nazi slogans in a statement president francois allande called the attack "odious and barbaric." isis released a new video today, showing the execution of 21 coptic christians kidnapped in libya, the video shows the egyptian prisoners being marched to a bleach, dressed in blackso and then the prisoners are beheaded brutally, juan zarate is the senior national security analyst for cbs news and joins us from washington.ro juan, what is significant about this? >> jeff, this video really marks isis on the world stage, well beyond the videos that we have seen in the past out of syria and iraq, this is the first beheading video that we have seen outside of that region, in libya, keep in mind that isis has established beachheads ins libya, in egypt, and is gaining adherents and alliances around the world. and so this demonstrates and underscores that. in addition, it marks the targets that isis is engaged in,si they are targeting the people of the cross, the coptic christians and the egyptians who are now their enemies. and finally, it demonstrates that isis is not going to be cowed by the criticism that they c felt in light of the recent horrific videos. this is a group at war and these videos are a window into that reality. >> glor: and on the subject of videos we saw how the jordanians reacted when a fighter pilot was burned to death, the egyptians are reacting to this now. what more can we expect? >> well i think the egyptians will have to react. president el-sisi gathered his security council to talk abouted what form that will take, no doubt the egyptians will want to find some way of attacking isis. the challenge for egyptian is, egypt is they have their own challenges internally, they areng fighting islamic radical terrorists internally, in the sinai and trying to keep cairo safe and so egypt will be at war with isis, we will just have to see what form that ultimately takes. >> glor: juan zarate, juan thank you very much. >> thanks, jeff. >> glor: more than 24 hours thes cease-fire in ukraine is largely holding, except in one town, that is dobosov where russian- backed rebels surrounded ukrainian troops, they say they have a right to keep shooting saying the territory is theirs. >> the proposed regulations foror commercial drones, the faa, they want to make sure the drones can share the skies with planes and helicopters. here is julianna goldman.pt >> reporter: the proposed rules apply to commercial drones opening the skies to crop monitoring, aerial photography videography and maybe someday package and pizza delivery. >> the guidelines cover drones that weigh up to 55 pounds, and require that they be only flown within sight during daylight hours, below 500 feet, and no faster than 100 miles per hour. operators need to be at least 17 years old, pass an aeronautics test and be vetted by the tsa.po transportation secretary anthony fox unveiled the regulations in a conference call sunday morning. >> so-called hobbyist drones like the one that accidentallyll crashed at the white house last month are operated under a different set of guidelines, which have existed for years. along with the new faa rules the white house wants agencies to set policies on the government's use of domestic drones, like those flying along the u.s.- mexico border.. the president wants guidelines spelled out for commercial andia private drones, around issues of privacy, accountability, and transparency. one trade group projects by 20- 20 give the i have will create more than 100,000 jobs with an economic impact of $82 billion brian win is the president of the association for unmanned vehicle systems international. >> as people get used to thes value and the benefits of these ideas, i think they will become more excited about thete possibilities of this technology can be put to use for. >> it could take years before these rules are set, and industry representatives say it is also unclear how the president's memorandum issued on sunday will impact the final rule, so, jeff, don't expect to be getting that drone delivery any time soon. >> glor: i will not, juliannalo goldman, thank you very much from washington. seven people to a flight to hawaii were injured when their plane hit turbulence. united flight took off from newark to honolulu, encountered high winds, four crew members and a teenage girl were hospitalized. police say alleged road remain rage incident has led to a murder in las vegas. tammy myers was with her 14- year-old daughter when she got into a near collision, that led h to an argument. her husband says the other driver then followed her home and she was killed. police are looking for the gunman tonight. coming up here, how could a gang of cyber-thieves pull off a billion dollars bank heist? and where westminster dogs get treated like stars. when the cbs news continues. stars. when the cbs news continues. >> the 12 hour strength of aleve. for pain relief that can last all the way until morning. new aleve pm, for a better am. if you're suffering from constipation or irregularity powders may take days to work. for gentle overnight relief, try dulcolax laxative tablets. ducolax provides gentle overnight relief, unlike miralax that can take up to 3 days. dulcolax, for relief you can count on. congratulations. you're down with crestor. yes! when diet and exercise aren't enough, adding crestor lowers bad cholesterol up to 55%. crestor is not for people with liver disease or women who are nursing, pregnant, or may become pregnant. tell your doctor all medicines you take. call your doctor if you have muscle pain or weakness, feel unusually tired have loss of appetite, upper belly pain, dark urine or yellowing of skin or eyes. these could be signs of serious side effects. i'm down with crestor! make your move. ask your doctor about crestor. ♪ ♪ ♪ we're on a mission, a mission for underwareness, a cause to support the over 65 million people who may need the trusted protection of depend underwear. join us. drop your pants for underwareness and show off a pair of depend. because wearing a different kind of underwear, is no big deal. support the cause and get a free sample of depend at underwareness.com. [coughing] dave, i'm sorry pt... i gotta take a sick day tomorrow. dads don't take sick days, dads take nyquil. the nighttime, sniffling sneezing, coughing aching, fever, best sleep with a cold medicine. [ man ] i remember when i wouldn't give a little cut a second thought. ♪ ♪ when i didn't worry about the hepatitis c in my blood. ♪ ♪ when i didn't think twice about where i left my razor. [ male announcer ] hep c is a serious disease. take action now. go to hepc.com or call 1-844-444-hepc to find out how you and your doctor can take the next step towards a cure. because the answers you need may be closer than they appear. ♪ ♪ >> glor: the russian cyber security firm kaspersky labs says in 20131 hacker group may have stolen up to a billion dollars from banks around the world. kaspersky says the cyber attacks are still happening. here is how they say it works. hackers send e-mails containing a malware program to bank employees. the malware installs programs that record computer keystrokes and takes screen shots of bank computers. the hackers can then figure out the bank's inner workings and eventually how to remotely control the bank's computers. the hackers can then transfer money or make e-payments into fraudulent bank accounts, or even direct atms to spit out money at whatever time and place they choose. this full report comes out tomorrow but joining us tonight is chris doggett. he is the managing director of kaspersky north america, he joins us from boston. f chris, thank you for being with us. first i want to ask you, how did you discover this? >> well, we first got involved in investigating karbanak when a bank in kiev called us up, they discovered an external connection to a the server in china, which shouldn't be there, and they knew they needed help so we sent in a forensics team. >> that is the malware you are talking about. chris, are american banks involved? >> we think that there may bee american banks involved, yes. we do see target ip addresses from the hacker servers to institutions in the u.s. >> you are not releasing the names of the banks involved, but this is a lot of money. why no names? >> well, it is an ongoing operation, that is to say the attackers are still currently stealing money from the banks, there are obviously law enforcement investigations that are active and underway in multiple countries, multiple jurisdictions, and we do not want to compromise any of those investigations by releasing any specific information about victims. >> glor: chris, explain there to t me a little bit if you would. i know there are a couple of different things you say the b hackers were doing but one of them would be go into someone's account for example who has $1,000 in there and then add a t zero, so it would look like there was 10,000 in there and then transfer $9,000 out of it o let's say, so that goes into a fraudulent account, and thehe person doesn't realize it because it looks like there is still just 1,000 in there, correct? >> that is exactly right. what these attackers were able a to do, which is really something we haven't seen before, is essentially to hide their activities in plain sight. they were able to disguise what they were doing as legitimateis banking transactions and in doing so, it was very difficult for anyone, whether it was thehe account holder or the bank top pick up on what they were doing. >> glor: how concerned should ba banking customers be tonight? >> well, i think it does call into question the integrity and some of the controls that are init place in some of the banks, in particular, with respect to security itself. and so it is a note of serious concern for people. >> glor: chris doggett from kaspersky, thank you very much for joining us from boston tonight. midnight tonight is the deadline for enrolling in obamacare, many were prevented from enrolling yesterday by a glitch, but officials say the site is back up and running. those who missed the deadline do t not have insurance already and are above the federal poverty line will face a tax penalty. up next, why more museums want you to check your selfie stickan at the door. stick, your selfie stick at the door. >> uld not be taken more than twice a day. symbicort contains formoterol. medicines like formoterol increase the risk of death from asthma problems. symbicort may increase your risk of lung infections osteoporosis, and some eye problems. you should tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. grandfather: symbicort could mean a day with better breathing. watch out, piggies! child giggles doctor: symbicort. breathe better starting within 5 minutes. call or go online to learn more about a free prescription offer. if you can't afford your medication, astrazeneca may be able to help. anyone have occasional constipation diarrhea, gas, bloating? yes! one phillips' colon health probiotic cap each day helps defend against these occasional digestive issues... with 3 types of good bacteria. live the regular life. phillips' thank you for being a sailor, and my daddy. thank you mom, for protecting my future. thank you for being my hero and my dad. military families are thankful for many things. the legacy of usaa auto insurance could be one of them. our world-class service earned usaa the top spot in a study of the most recommended large companies in america. if you're current or former military or their family, see if you're eligible to get an auto insurance quote. introducing new always discreet underwear for sensitive bladders, from always. with soft, dual leakguard barriers to help stop leaks where they happen most. plus a discreet fit, that hugs your curves. always discreet. alright, so this tylenol arthritis lasts 8 hours but aleve can last 12 hours. and aleve is proven to work better on pain than tylenol arthritis. so why am i still thinking about this? how are ya? good. aleve. proven better on pain. eh, you don't want that one. yea, actually i do. it's mucinex fast-max night time and it's got a nasal decongestant. is that really a thing? it sounds made up. mucinex fast max night time for multi-symptom relief. breathe easy. sleep easy. let's end this. >> glor: you can be the leonardo da vinci of the selfie and all your self portraits could be masterpieces but a growing number of museums are banning selfie sticks in order to protect priceless art and treasured artifacts. here is don dahler. >> reporter: selfie sticks hold a camera or smart phone further than at arm's length away for that perfect picture of family and friends, pic and/or self they have been around since 2005, but in the past year, they have become nearly ubiquitous.ri the selfie taker in chief goofed around with one for his latest obamacare push. laura rodriguez used a selfie stick during a recent visit to the natural museum of historyns where they are permitted. >> you can take good pictures ofer the things that are inside. >> self portraits are a cherished art form practiced byic the likes of van gogh and picasso, but a growing number ofud museums, including the metropolitan museum of art in new york city don't see selfie sticks as objects of beauty. >> he is chief officer. >> the concern is that the c selfie sticks can do damage to our art, to our visitors, and the selfie stick users themselves, they are sois distracted they are not paying attention and when you don't pay attention, you could fall off a balcony, all kinds of things could happen. >> so there is no objection to taking pictures, it is usingtu this pole and having it waved around? >> absolutely, we are pro- selfie, not pro-selfie stick. >> leave the sticks at home if you are visiting the getty center in la and the museum of fine art in boston, among t others. >> what are some of the objects you can use? >> i have one of these here, it is an attachment you add to your cell phone, once you put it on there it gives you a wide angle shot and make sure to thele tallest person in the group is always reaching out and taking the picture himself. >> that's right. >> reporter: or simply enjoy the art for art's sake. uncle ned will just have to trust that you were there. don dahler, cbs news, new york.or >> glor: still ahead here tonight, one of new york'sne finest hotels that indicators to the westminster crowd. >> indicators to the if you suffer from a dry mouth then you'll know how uncomfortable it can be. but did you know that the lack of saliva can also lead to tooth decay and bad breath? well, there is biotene specially formulated with moisturizers and lubricants... biotene can provide soothing relief and it helps keep your mouth healthy too. biotene, for people who suffer from a dry mouth. why do people count on sunsweet amazin prune juice to stay fit on the inside? it's made only from prunes nothing else. it's works, simple as that. it's a natural source of fiber and five essential vitamins. try sunsweet amazin prune juice. also available in light. i have a cold with terrible chest congestion. better take something. theraflu severe cold doesn't treat chest congestion. really? new alka-seltzer plus day powder rushes relief to your worst cold symptoms plus chest congestion. oh, what a relief it is. here we go! >> glor: more than 3,000 dogs are in new york city for the start of the westminster kennel club show tomorrow. and several hotels are givingl the dogs the v.i.p. treatment. here is lauren lyster. >> the show attracts dedicated competitors like trainer jesse carlson and his dog nicholas and takiana. >> we come to westminster and showing all year. we worked all year to get to this point. >> they want everything to be perfect. >> hey, buddy! >> and this is where he comes in. >> i am jerry. >> reporter: jerry grymek is iny public relations. but for one week a year, he drops everything to cater to these guests during their stay at new york's hotel pennsylvania. >> we are expecting to see 600 to 700 dogs this weekend, and i have got to tell you we welcomeek them with open paws. >> reporter: you can in, insert your favorite dog pun here but jerry probably already have it covered. >> we literally treat them as h vip's: very important pooches and we give them the attention. >> that starts with what grymek calls the dog spa. grooming tables, their own bathroom, and for exercise-- >> you can do it. >> --there are doggy treadmills. there is gourmet food. and portrait sessions too. then there are the requests. >> one time where they will say extra pillows and a cot so we bring a cot and the owner would sleep on the cot and the dog will sleep on the bed. we had an opera singer serenade a dog. >> other requests have been red- carpets to be rolled out for our dogs. >> reporter: that is less outrageous? >> compared to the opera singer,l yes. >> why all the fuss? >> grymek says owners want to make sure their dogs get the best treatment. >> you are coming here to compete against the top dogs ino the country. >> on the road to that same show. lauren lyster cbs news, new york. >> glor: that is the cbs evening news tonight. later on cbs "60 minutes", including bob simon's final report.t i am jeff glor, cbs news in new york, scott pelley will be here tomorrow. good night. pt captioning sponsored by cbs captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org bay area golf course. there's a big cannabis a pilot had to make a bold move after his plane lost power over a bay area bulldog: you don't need superpowers to help someone. sometimes, all it takes is a warm heart and a cold nose. that's why mattress discounters good deed dogs is raising money to train service dogs for people with disabilities. i would never imagine a life without an assistance dog ever again. i relied on people a lot. he helps me live a more independent life. bulldog: we need your help to do more. give at mattressdiscountersdogs.com, or any mattress discounters. mattress discounters good deed dogs helping dogs help people you see this over here. in the middle

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Transcripts For KPIX CBS Evening News With Scott Pelley 20150217

a train pulling more than 100 tankers of crude oil hasar derailed and exploded in west virginia. oil is pouring into a river that supplies drinking water and two. small towns are evacuating. bryan hughes of our charleston affiliate wowk is at the scene. bryan, what do you have? >> scott, this an incredible scene where the fire continues the rage back behind me. at this point we've been able to count about eight rail cars that are on fire.csx official estimates from csx is that this is a 109-car train two locomotives. they said only one is on fire, but clearly that is not the case. also crude oil has spilled into the canal river. just moments ago csx and the coast guard had to use our cameras to look across the river to identify the actual rail car numbers so they can possibly t disconnect these rail cars and identify other rail cars that could have potential problems. >> pelley: bryan, do we know anything about deaths or injuries? >> at this point no injuriesn have been reported. across the river there is one house right underneath where these rail cars are, that one has been absolutely incinerated. >> pelley: and roughly how many people are being evacuated? >> reporter: at this point there is a community that's around 100, that's boomer west virginia, they have been evacuated to the local school, but it's just downriver of this location. at this point there's not an actual estimate of the amount of people that are displaced, but there are a few stragglers who are here. like i said, half mile is going to be the radius that has been officially evacuated, but right now we can tell you the fire is incredible.t you can hear it roaring, and sometimes the heat when an explosion occurs is intense. >> pelley: bryan hughes of wowk at the scene of the breaking news for us tonight. bryan, thanks. well, it's the shortest month of the year, but it's beginning to feel like it will never end. another february freeze is taking hold.ng the area that you see here in purple will have temperatures tonight as low as ten below, and the chill is to the bone with winds as high as 45 miles-per- hour today on new hampshire's mt. washington. the real-feel there was 85 below. a snow plow operator we talked to today said he had three plows break this season because the cold made them so brittle.is more snow is on the way, moving from the southern plains to the east and jericka duncan is inn boston for us tonight. jericka? >> reporter: good evening. this area where i'm standing is normally a waterfront park, but it's anything but a picnic for people who have to walk through here. many of these snow mounds around me are at least seven feet high, but elsewhere they're much higher. a procession of dump trucks has been hauling snow around the clock to so-called snow farms, open city parking lots that have been transformed into dumpingfo grounds. they've doubled from five to ten snow farms in the last week. some of the mounds are more than five stories high. two snow melters there been brought in from new york and officials are now looking for more. boston mayor marty walsh. >> shoveling snow piles to make room for new snow. >> reporter: two snow lanes have become a narrow one. since saturday the city has towed more than 900 vehicles for breaking the snow emergency parking ban. >> there's eight feet of snow. >> reporter: restaurant owner kevin tyo is battling a leaky roof and workers and customers who can't make it to his location. he's had to shut down six times in the last three weeks. >> people don't want to go out. there's a lot of snow. business is down about 60% over the last few weeks. >> reporter: and potholes are also a big concern. scott, last year the mayor says the city repaired 19,000 of them. it was a record. just one of many records that could be broken before the end of this season. >> pelley: jericka duncan in boston. thank you, jericka. now, have a look at this. it took firefighters in philadelphia two and a half hours to bring an early morning fire in this building under control. they were battling not only the flames, but a wind-chill of 16 below. by the time they were done, they had turned the building into an icebox. and the arctic air is now heading south. the big concern there tonight isai freezing rain and ice. utility companies have extra crews on stand-by to repair power lines that might come down, leaving people in the dark. and the cold. let's have a look at the forecast now from eric fisher, chief meteorologist at our boston station wbz. eric, what's next? >> reporter: well, scott, we've seen very significant snow for many areas here with this storm on president's day bringing up to a foot of snow just outside st. louis, eight inches ine lexington plus a lot of freezing rain, memphis area and across southern tennessee causing a lot of issues. this snow moving up through the d.c. area tonight bringing some of the most significant snow they've seen there in quite a while, and some additionalve snowfall in southern new england where we've seen over 90 inches over the last three weeks.ot biggest totals tonight movingdd across virginia, the jackpot, at a 12 to 18 additional inches. behind all this, arctic cold. it's not just the northeast but all of the central and eastern united states. as you look toward the mid-week, high temps in chicago. same story in minneapolis and st. louis stuck in the teens. that cold air moves into the southeast, as well, and florida,rt northern florida, highs may not get out of the 30s. scott? >> pelley: eric fisher, wbz, cargo ships are steadily backing up at the ports of los angeles and long beach, california. 33 dropped anchor, unable to dock because of the ongoing labor dispute. talk between the management and dock workers union stalled. labor secretary tom perris is scheduled to meet with both sides tomorrow. today a russian security company reported that it discovered one of the biggest bank robberies ever. no guns involved. hackers did it, breaking into more than 100 banks in 30 countries and making off with a total of as much as $1 billion. here's anna werner. >> reporter: the authors of the report call it "the great bank robbery of the modern era." >> their ultimate goal was to steal as much money as possible, and they largely accomplished that. >> reporter: chris doggett is managing director for kaspersky lab, the computer security firm that uncovered the scheme. h >> your very basic hackers are about getting in and stealing whatever they can get their hands on. the way these guys are different is they were a combination of hackers, spies and thieves. >> reporter: the criminals often used the simplest of methods to get into banks, an e-mail attachment with a virus sent theye to bank employees. when the employee kicked on it the hackers gained access to the bank's financial system, and then spied to see how the employees and the systems worked. >> they went in and actually changed the balances in accounts, so it looked to the bank that there was more money than there was in reality.ms they then used e-payment systems and atm machines and even the swiss financial network to transfer the money out of those accounts into other accounts that they had set up for themselves. >> reporter: often the hackers sent commands to atms to just spew out money. they would have a person standing there to collect it. the losses are huge. one bank lost nearly $10 million when the hackers targeted its online banking platform. another was hit for $7.3 million through atm fraud. it's not clear yet how many banks in the u.s. were affected or whether they lost money. now, the american bankers' association told us today, "there is no evidence u.s. banks were infiltrated, but doggett's group found u.s. banks were definitely targeted." >> pelley: imagine what bonnie >> and clyde would think. anna, thank you. today, another country has been pulled into the war with isis. egypt attacked targets in libyan linked to the islamic extremist group that already holds part of syria and iraq. egypt was responding to a savage act against christians. alex ortiz is in cairo. >> reporter: it was still dark when f-16 fighter jets took off, striking training camps and weapons depots along libya's coast.ill one target was derna headquarters for many islamic militants who have sworn allegiance to isis. the bombings came a day after isis released a video that appears to show the execution of 21 egyptian christians. masked jihadis marched the captives along the beach. a few whispered their final prayers and then all were beheaded. most of the victims came from the christian village of el-aouria south of cairo. today relatives sobbed andve shouted in grief. one father begged for the return of his son's body. egypt's president abdel fattah al sisi visited cairo's main cathedral to offer his condolences and condemned what he called a heinous act of terrorism. the slain were kidnapped by militants in libya. they were among the hundreds of thousands of egyptians that traveled there looking for work in the oil fields. if the video is confirmed, this will be the first time that isis has killed foreigners outside syria and iraq and it raises concerns they are forging new links to militias in libya. the kidnapping also means that egypt is now fighting groups linked with isis on two fronts to the west in libya, and to the east in the sinai peninsula. egypt has dispatched a foreign minister to new york where they're hoping to rally as much international support as they can for this militaryth intervention in libya. in the meantime, scott, extra security has been deployed inside egypt for fear ofr reprisal attacks. >> pelley: alex ortiz, thank you. friends and family will remember correspondent bob simon tomorrow in new york. he was killed in a car crash last week. bob had just finished a "60 minutes" report on the development of z-mapp, a promising drug to treat ebola, a disease that has killed 9,000 in its latest outbreak in west africa.ok bob's reporting took him to a secure lab in canada as well as to a series of greenhouses in owensboro, kentucky. >> reporter: this is where thegn signs have turned into a product, where z-map is manufactured row after row of this odd-looking variety of o tobacco. can i smoke it? can i chew it? >> i wouldn't recommend that. >> reporter: it's different? >> it's very different. >> reporter: hugh haydon is the president of this company which was recently bought by reynolds american. when you say tobacco it suggestswn "cancer," people think death. it's known in our culture as a killer. >> there's clearly been an irony there, but there are good things that can be done with it.ti that's our objective here. >> reporter: but z-mapp isn't easy to produce. it takes six weeks. the tobacco plants first have to be grown for 24 days. then they're immersed in a liquid containing a gene that tells them to make special antibodies which help the immune system fight viruses, in this case, ebola. as the plants grow, they copy those antibodies over and overla again. xerox machine for antibodies. >> that's essentially what it does. it makes it over and over and over again. >> reporter: the leaves are then ground up into a liquid, which looks like a juice you buy at a health food store.st since z-map is made up of threead different antibodies, the process has to be repeated three times using 6,000 pounds of new tobacco plants, and the yield? >> how much z-map will you get out of three tables like this? >> how many people can you cure of ebola if it works? >> it would be dozens, best case. >> reporter: dozens, which is not very much. not very much? dozens of cures when 9,000 people died in this epidemic. sounds like using a bottle of water to put out a forest fire. >> pelley: bob simon was among america's best reporters fors, nearly 50 years, and cbs will broadcast a tribute to his work next sunday on "60 minutes" presents. one of the most unpleasant symptoms of menopause may last more than a decade. that story when the "cbs evening news" continues. news" continues. you know, if you play football for a long time like i did you're gonna learn to deal with alot of pain. but it is nothing like the pain that shingles causes. man when i got shingles it was something awful. it was like being blindsided by some linebacker. you don't see it coming. boom! it was this painful rash of little blisters. red, ugly stuff. lots of 'em. not a good deal. if you've had chicken pox uh-huh, we all remember chicken pox. well that shingles virus is already inside of you. it ain't pretty when it comes out. now i'm not telling you this so that you'll feel sorry for me. i'm just here to tell you that one out of three people are gonna end up getting shingles. i was one of 'em. take it from a guy who's had his fair share of pain. you don't want to be tackled by shingles. so please go talk to your doctor or pharmacist. talk to your doctor or pharmacist about your risk. ufferers. one tried the newest allergy spray which could take several days to feel the full effect of relief. the other took claritin-d which starts to work on allergies with nasal congestion in 30 minutes. the moral? nothing works faster than claritin-d. there's only one egg that just tastes better. fresher. more flavorful. delicious. with more great nutrition. and 25% less saturated fat. only eggland's best. better taste. better nutrition. better eggs. fact. fast-acting advil is designed with an ultra-thin coating and fast absorbing advil ion core technology stopping headaches and other tough pain. fast. relief doesn't get any better than this. advil. ♪ with pain relief, we're all at the corner of "relief is good"...and "fast relief is better." good thing walgreens gets you in and out in no time... so you can find relief fast, with solutions like advil. at the corner of happy and healthy. >> pelley: new research out >> pelley: new research out today says one symptom of menopause, hot flashes, can last a lot longer than many women expected. dr. jon lapook is here to tell us more. jon, what's new in this study? >> reporter: we used to think t that hot flashes lasted maybe a couple years at most. what this study found was actually on average it can last for more than seven years and in some women up to 14 years. there were big differences insing ethnicity. so african american women had s the longest duration and japanese women had the shortest. what was the most surprising and i spoke to a gynecologist today, she was surprised that if you're still having periods when you have your first hot flash, then usually it can last for more than 12 years. that's a very long time. >> pelley: what does this mean for treatment options?y >> reporter: it has a lot of implications. we know hormone replacement cant ease symptoms, but they increasese your risk slightly for breast and ovarian cancer, but if you are talking more than seven years, you need to think of non- hormonal treatment, breathing exercise, changes in diet and a lot of research into other possible options. >> pelley: jon lapook, thank youh, j very much, jon. a marathon runner is determined to finish the race any way she can. h and we will meet her in just a moment. what the cloud enables is computing to empower cancer researchers. it used to take two weeks to sequence and analyze a genome; with the microsoft cloud we can analyze 100 per day. whatever i can do to help compute a cure for cancer, that's what i'd like to do. the world is filled with air. but for people with copd sometimes breathing air can be difficult. if you have copd, ask your doctor about once-daily anoro ellipta. it helps people with copd breathe better for a full 24hours. anoro ellipta is the first fda-approved product containing two long-acting bronchodilators in one inhaler. anoro is not for asthma. anoro contains a type of medicine that increases risk of death in people with asthma. it is not known if this risk is increased in copd. anoro won't replace rescue inhalers for sudden copd symptoms and should not be used more than once a day. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition, or high blood pressure. tell your doctor if you have glaucoma, prostate or bladder problems, or problems passing urine as anoro may make these problems worse. call your doctor right away if you have worsened breathing chest pain, swelling of your mouth or tongue, problems urinating or eye problems including vision changes or eye pain while taking anoro. nothing can reverse copd. the world is filled with air and anoro is helping people with copd breath air better. get your first prescription free at anoro.com. >> pelley: today, cyclist lance armstrong was ordered to pay back $10 million in bonuses to promoters because he cheated by using performance-enhancing drugs. he ultimately confessed and as you know, all seven of his tour de france titles were taken away.e. now look at this difference. athletes who don't cheat can win lasting glory, and boy did we see an astounding performance yesterday at the marathon in austin, texas. here's manuel bojorquez. >> almost done. >> reporter: kenyan runner hyvon ngetich had been in the lead for nearly 26 miles. the finish line was in sight when this happened. overcome by exhaustion, ngetich fell onto her hands and knees but kept going. >> oh, my goodness, look at what's going on here in the women's race. she led for the entire day only in the closing mile her body let her down. >> reporter: race director john conley was watching. >> i've seen athletes wobble and>> fall and crawl across the finish line, but that story of her going 26 miles and crawling the last 450 feet or so, never seen anything like that. >> reporter: when the medical team rushed to help, she refused. >> she's taking no for an answer. keep on going, young lady. l ngetich still managed to come in third. conley greeted her after the race. >> you ran the bravest race and crawled the bravest crawl i have ever seen in my life. >> crawling the last 50 meters to the finish line. >> reporter: ngetich couldn't recall those final few minutes. >> the last two kilometers, i don't remember. >> she did it! she made it! >> running, you have to keep going, going. >> reporter: conley bumped up her cash prize.'s he says it's the least he could do. >> i have never heard our crowds that loud cheering for an athlete like that. >> reporter: it's like she won i the race. >> she was the defining moment of that weekend for us. >> you are one tough young lady! >> reporter: an image of defeat turned into triumph, manuel bojorquez, cbs news, austin. >> pelley: amazing. singer lesley gore died today, lung cancer. in 1963 gore hit the top of thets charts with a song about a teenager whose boyfriend dumps her at her birthday party. >> ♪ it's my party and i'll cry if i want to. ♪ cry if i want to. cry if i want to ♪ you would cry too if it happened to you ♪ >> pelley: lesley gore was 68. in just a moment we'll continue the trip down memory lane with presidential history in need of a home. (announcer) are you dealing with hot flashes during menopause? why suffer more than you have to? you can do something different. because the landscape of options has changed. brisdelle is the only fda approved non-hormonal option proven to reduce moderate to severe hot flashes during menopause. and the bedtime dose provides 24 hour relief. brisdelle is not for everyone. call your doctor if you have changes in mood or behavior, thoughts of suicide, or a high fever, stiff muscles or confusion signs of a possible life-threatening condition. abnormal bleeding, bone fractures restlessness, vision problems, and impaired judgment and motor skills may occur. don't take brisdelle if you are pregnant, taking maois thioridazine, pimozide or are allergic to paroxetine. tell your doctor about all your medicines like tamoxifen, triptans or paroxetine. side effects include nausea, vomiting, tiredness, and headache. change is in the air. it's time to talk to your doctor about the only fda approved non-hormonal option. brisdelle. janet? cough if you can hear me. don't even think about it. i took mucinex dm for my phlegmy cough. yeah...but what about mike? (cough!) it works on his cough too. mucinex dm relieves wet and dry coughs for 12 hours. let's end this. you owned your car for four years. you named it brad. you loved brad. and then you totaled him. you two had been through everything together. two boyfriends. three jobs. you're like "nothing can replace brad!" then liberty mutual calls. and you break into your happy dance. if you sign up for better car replacement, we'll pay for a car that's a model year newer with 15,000 fewer miles than your old one. see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. alright, so this tylenol arthritis lasts 8 hours but aleve can last 12 hours. and aleve is proven to work better on pain than tylenol arthritis. so why am i still thinking about this? how are ya? good. aleve. proven better on pain. his mother's wishes and got the first vaccine of his life. next weather talent appears at wx center with generic pinpoint filling >> pelley: and finally on thisng g federal holiday honoring george, washington, our senior white house correspondent bill plantepr went mining for presidential history, and he struck gold in new york city.s >> reporter: this may be the world's largest private collection of presidential memorabilia, more than one million items, but most of it is buried in boxes and locked away. >> it really keeps me up at night thinking that my dad's legacy and passion is sitting in a storage unit. >> reporter: austin wright grew up in a home filled with political paraphernalia from the 1700s to the 2000s, amassed over 40 years by his late father jordan. >> it was throughout wall to ceiling, everything you can think of. j >> reporter: jordan wright was a passionate collector. he found this flag from george's washington's inaugural in a mom and pop jnnk shop. >> the husband and wife would yell at each other, "where is the political memorabilia?"in and the husband would shout out, "it's in the basement!" >> part of the collection was once displayed in new york-- buttons, hat, lantern, umbrellas and posters from the campaigns of george washington to george w. bush. here's william mckinley, andy, engraved on the back it says "william mckinley, our hero for posterity." >> that's right. >> reporter: william jennings bryan, the democrats' candidate in 1896 was a renowned orator, but the republicans' response... >> they would pass out these coffins with a face in it and say, "talk to death." this is what's going to happen if he's our president." >> reporter: what now? what do you do next? >> we hope by curating it is we can figure out exactly what's in it. the problem with my dad is his collection and not sharing exactly what's in it, the knowledge was in his head. >> reporter: wright talked to the smithsonian institution. they were interested in only a small part of the collection and he doesn't want to break it up. so you do want to get it displayed? >> i have to get it displayed. >> how? >> we'll do exhibitions and we'll travel and hopefully get it digitally archived. >> reporter: honoring hisy by father's memory by making the silly and serious of american politics available to all. >> pelley: and that's the "cbs evening news" for tonight. for all of us at "cbs eveninggo news" all around the world, good night. captioning sponsored by cbs captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org are *hacking* into banks... and making off with tens of millions of no guns or disguises necessary. now robbers are hacking in to the banks and making off with tens of millions of dollars. bay area cyber experts call the schemes sophisticated and very dangerous. good evening. i'm ken bastida . >> and i'm veronica de la cruz. it's the late st let's from cyber terrorists and proving to be lucrative. phil matier with how the bankers are handing over the money. >> china japan united states, canada have all been hacked and robbed. and nobody is even wearing a mask. here's the story. >> it's pretty impressive. it's a very sophisticated heist. >> reporter: cyber security expert herbert lynn says there's likely to be more to come. >> they try they fail. they try, they fail. they try, they succeed. so eventually they're going to win. >> reporter: they entered the bank system via e-mails to employees. when the e-mails were open it sent off a virus that allowed the hackers to see every keyboard move, every mouse click, essentially teaching them step by step how to steal. >> they were able to pretend they were bank employees not a bonnie and clyde robberies but more like an ocean's 11 robbery. >> reporter: in the process they stole millions of dollars from banks across the globe including some herein the united states. >> the cyber world is the wild wild west. we design new defenses and hackers design new ways to penetrate them. >> reporter: it's interesting to note that bank security wasn't a topic at the summit. it had taken a back seat to other threats by cyber hackers. >> for example is this more important than protecting

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West 7th, once Fort Worth's 'unloved' industrial side, is rapidly becoming its ritziest

The Cultural District’s been known for world-class museums for years. But now the growing corridor is home to some of Fort Worth’s most expensive hotels, luxury condos and hottest commercial real estate in the city.

Amon-carter-museum
Texas
United-states
Fort-worth
France
Dallas
French
John-goff
Scott-wilcox
Montgomery-plaza
Among-carter
Nenetta-carter-tatum

Who Are Acquia Leaders and Executives?

Acquia leaders and executives develop specialized cloud-based digital solutions to empower brands and clients. Get to know them right here.

United-states
India
France
Boston
Massachusetts
Sydney
New-south-wales
Australia
Tokyo
Japan
Paris
France-general

Top Government Contracts Won by Acquia

Get to know the top government contracts won by Acquia, a FedRAMP-certified company helping agencies streamline their digital operations.

Massachusetts
United-states
Boston
Australia
Australian
Heather-hartford
Dries-buytaert
Stephen-reny
Chris-doggett
Chris-andersen
Drupal-saa
Acquia-services

Meet The Acquia Leaders, Founders, And Executives

Acquia Software Company is a fast-growing IT solution company in the US. Meet the Acquia leaders, founders, and executives here!

Japan
Australia
Massachusetts
United-states
United-kingdom
Boston
France
Lisa-campopiano
Warren-schuman
Chris-doggett
Dries-buytaert
Mark-picone

A Look into Acquia Leaders, Founders, and Executives

Acquia is a prime cloud computing, content management systems, and open-source software company. Get to know Acquia's leaders, founders, and executives here.

United-states
Massachusetts
America
Jim-shaw
Brian-paul
Tom-erickson
Paul-sallaberry
Matthew-gonnering
Heather-hartford
Richard-damore
Mark-picone
Chris-andersen

Who Are Acquia Leaders and Executives?

Acquia leaders and executives develop specialized cloud-based digital solutions to empower brands and clients. Get to know them right here.

United-states
Massachusetts
Boston
Australia
Sydney
New-south-wales
Paris
France-general
France
Japan
United-kingdom
Tokyo

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