race. but just minutes from now, cnn's elizabeth cohen will join me now live right here with the high cost of not ensuring everybody. the pennsylvania charity founded by the former penn state assistant football coach accused of child rape needs a new ceo. the long-time head of the second mile has resigned in hopes he says of restoring faith in the organization's volunteers and staff. the group put a top to jerry sandusky's involvement with children in 2008 when he told them of one allegation. it's also come out that the judge who freed sandusky on $100,000 bail against the wishes of prosecutors has herself been a second mile volunteer. cnn has tried to ask her some questions but she has not responded. today the occupy movement is a lot less occupy, a lot more movement. police in oakland, california are carrying out an vic order handed down saturday after somebody ended up shot to death allegedly by a resident of the occupy campsite. tents are being cleared, demonstrators who aren't moving on are being arrested. police in portland, oregon arrested dozens during an after weekend raids on camp sites in two city parks. protests that began as occupy wall street well over a month ago increasingly are being seen as threats to public health and safety. november 23rd is now just nine days away and there is a lot more than turkey at stake if the people in this room don't get their work done by thanksgiving eve. this is a deficit reduction super committee which has been trying mostly in private to come up with at least $1.2 trillion in budget savings. the alternative being automatic across the bore spending cuts in 2013. the panel is said to be most at odds over -- guess what -- taxes an entitlements. we will of course keep you posted. russia's foreign minister says his country will oppose new sanctions against iran. the obama administration is pushing the international community to strengthen sanctions in the wake of an international atomic energy agency report suggesting that iran has the capability to produce nuclear weapons. republican presidential candidate mitt romney and newt gingrich recently said the u.s. should consider military action against iran if all else fails. in an interview with cnn's piers morgan, israeli president shimon peres says other tactics should be tried first. >> i wouldn't suggest to start immediately with the military operation. nothing at all. i would rather see a tighter economic sanction, a closer political pressure, and what is lacking very much is an attack in moral sense because iran is a small country. >> you can see the full interview with israeli president shimon peres on piers morgan tonight this evening at 9:00 p.m. eastern. the man accused of killing 77 people in norway made his first public appearance in court today. even though he's entered a not guilty play. anders brevic has admitted carrying out a bomb attack in oslo at a rampage at a youth camp in july. brevic was not allowed to be photographed and he was not allowed to deliver a speech he had prepared. judge says there is no reason to believe breivik is legally insane and his trial should begin in march or april. the banks may have back down from a controversial plan to slap fees on debit cards but that hasn't stopped them from raising other fees. "the new york times" reports that bank of america, chase and citi group have all raised their monthly checking account fees. bank of america now charges between $5 and $20 to replace a lost debit card and td bank will impose a $15 fee for having cash wired to your account. bankers say they need to make up for the revenue they lost when the government capped overdraft charges and debit card swipe fees. in just a couple of days, this amazing video has racked up more than 1.5 million views on the internet. it is a time lapse sequence of photos taken from the international space station between august and october. this part shows the northern lights up over the united states. pretty cool. the supreme court agrees challenges to the controversial health care reform law. what this means for your medicare and your wallet. but first, remember this creative marine who invited justin timberlake to the marine corps ball on youtube? well, her request was granted. the singer-turned-actor stayed true to his promise and, yes, took her to the dance. he said it was one of the most moving nights of his life. justin, are you today's rock star. [ female announcer ] the humana walmart-preferred rx plan gives you the lowest plan premium in the country... so you can focus on what really matters. call humana at 1-800-808-4003. quaker oatmeal is a super grain. ♪ it gives me warmth. ♪ [ boy ] it gives me energy to help me be my best. quaker oatmeal has whole grains for heart health. and it has fiber that helps fill me up. ♪ [ male announcer ] great days start with quaker oatmeal. energy. fiber. heart health. quaker oatmeal. a super grain breakfast. i tell you what i can spend. i do my best to make it work. i'm back on the road safely. and i saved you money on brakes. that's personal pricing. back now to our lead story. as expected, president obama's landmark legislative achievement is headed for the highest court in the land. the key constitutional question -- whether the government can force americans to buy something in this case health insurance. if we put it to a vote, it would likely pass now. but that wasn't the case in june. look at this poll right there. 52% support the so-called individual mandate, up from 44% five months ago. the mandate is key to forcing insurance companies to take all customers no matter how sick they might be. joining me now to connect those dots, cnn's senior medical correspondent elizabeth cohen. nice to see you. why not make insurers insure everybody and do away with the mandate? >> okay. so if you told insurance companies in this country you have to take everybody, we don't care what pre-existing conditions they have, we don't care if they had a heart attack yesterday, you have to take them. that would be extremely expensive for insurance companies. what they said during this whole process was we can't do that, that's an enormous amount of money. you want us to insure everybody? that means you have to bring us some more healthy young customers. that's where the mandate comes in. you have to require that these healthy young people get insured. we like them. right? they're healthy, they're young, they pay their premiums an rarely do they need expensive care so that's where the two things are connected to each other. >> what really though is the objection to the mandate? it there are two sides to this obviously but we have to buy car insurance, we have to do a lot of things already. >> we have to own car insurance if you want to own a car. right? owning a car is a privilege. i can't think of anything else that we require people to buy just by virtue of living in this country. saying to someone, hey, you live here, you have to buy health insurance and if you don't, we're going to fine you. that's unusual. that's very different and it ruffles a lot of people's feathers. >> i great a great op-ed on this today. next the government's going to tell us swree to eat our broccoli. that's where sort of the argument is headed. when is it going to stop. what if the mandate is thrown out? because as i mentioned, there is 400-plus provisions in there. so what happens to each of those? >> experts i talked to said there is a really good chance that the whole thing will kind of fall apart because you are taking all of these people are pre-existing conditions, all of these sick people requiring insurance companies to insure them. well, you need some money to fund that. that's where the individual mandate comes in and the whole thing could fall apart. another thing that's going on here, this gets back to the broccoli argument that you were just giving. you have this healthy person, this healthy 22-year-old who doesn't want to buy insurance. i'd rather go on a vacation than buy insurance. why would i want to spend that money on insurance? i'm never sick. they're in a car accident and they end up in the hospital. who pays for them? you and i pay for them. taxpayers end up paying for them. so that's one of the arguments for why people should be required to buy insurance, because we all end up paying for each other when we have a catastrophic event and we aren't insured. >> it is going to be interesting to see which way this goes though we probably won't know for six months or so. we'll see. the space shuttle endeavor now a museum and u.s. astronauts kind of look like sidekicks. how this snowy launch is a good look at the future. [ male announcer ] butter. love the taste, but want to cut back on fat? try smart balance buttery spread. it's heart-healthier than butter. with omega-3s. 64% less saturated fat. and clinically proven to help support healthy cholesterol. ♪ put a little love in your heart ♪ the world needs more energy. where's it going to come from? ♪ that's why right here, in australia, chevron is building one of the biggest natural gas projects in the world. enough power for a city the size of singapore for 50 years. what's it going to do to the planet? natural gas is the cleanest conventional fuel there is. we've got to be smart about this. it's a smart way to go. ♪ the soyuz spacecraft carrying one american astronaut and a team of russians is on its way to the international space station. it blasted off this morning in the middle of a snowstorm. wow. looks like something out of a movie, doesn't it? this is the first flight of a u.s. astronaut since nasa shut down its shuttle program. what is the future of our space program? it is a future we think is quite frankly "uncovered." john zarrella, i know you love all things space. nasa space shuttle "endeavour" now a museum. is this the new future of space travel for us, riding shotgun with the russians in a snowstorm? >> well, for the foreseeable future. but really, randi, this is an exciting time if you look at the future. nasa went under the radar last week but in two years in 2014 nasa announced it is going to do its first test flight of its or orion capsule. they'll fly it out 5,000 miles, re-enter the earth's atmosphere at 25,000 miles an hour. unman that first flight but that will be a huge step. out in new mexico, sir richard branson in about a year is going to start flying space tourists on his virgin galactic vehicles. boeing is building its cap actual at kennedy space center called the cst-100 that will take astronauts to the international space station. so really this is an exciting time for astronauts, perhaps maybe the most exciting time in years. but for the foreseeable future, yes, relying on the russians. >> i'm glad you brought it back to that. that's what weem are looking at. is russia the new space super power? that's what it looks like. >> well, i tell you what. it's the only game in town as far as flying astronauts, cosmonauts, yoeuropean astronau. the only capable vehicles is the russian soyuz to fly to the international space station but they aren't necessarily the only super power. the chinese is coming on and coming on very strong. a lot of experts say the chinese may beat the united states to an asteroid if we're not careful. >> what about the concerns and some fears behind this launch? >> well, they lost one of their vehicles in august. a soyuz crashed carrying a progress resupply ship to the international space station so they grounded their fleet of soyuz rockets until they resolved the problem. but the soyuz has flown more than 1,800 times, more than any other spacecraft in history. >> why is it so important to get people to the international space station? >> well, if you're ever going to fly -- here's an example. if you're ever going to fly out to mars or an asteroid you have to understand what long durations in space are going to do to the human body. for instance, what they're finding out now is that many of the astronauts that we've sent to the space station, many in particular, are coming back with problems in their eyes. something that they never suspected where the shape of the eye is actually being changed from this long duration in space. they've got to understand that before you can -- as one scientist put it studying this, he said what good does it do to send humans to mars if they all end up blind when they get there? >> good point. john zarrella, always nice to talk space with you. nice to see you. >> thanks, randi. the soyuz spacecraft is expected to dock with the international space station on wednesday. stay tuned to cnn for updates on the mission and the future of nasa. the scandal surrounding jerry sandusky isn't just shaking things up at penn state. how the former coach is hurting the charity he founded. but first, on this day in 1970, the marshall university football team would not make it home. 75 people died as the plane crashed on approach to tri-state airport in west virginia after a loss to east carolina university. a memorial sits where the plane crashed. in 2006 the film "we are marshall" told the story of the crash and how the university recovered. that crash is this shame in history. 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and did others know about sandusky's alleged sex abuse? an attorney for one of sandusky's alleged victims told abc news they may file a lawsuit against sandusky and others who did not report the allegations. pennsylvania's governor says a new state law could be coming that requires abuse allegations be reported to government officials. >> we have to make sure the change in the law is one that's effective, it is easy enough to take a look to see what other states have done. but i'm sure that within the next few weeks you will probably see bills become public. i wouldn't be surprised to see if a bill was passed between now and the end of this year. >> now there are serious questions being raised against the judge who granted sandusky bail and whether or not she was in a position to make that ruling. her biography indicates she was a volunteer at the second mile, a potential conflict of interest she did not disclose in court. going against prosecutors wishes, judge leslie dutchcot freed sandusky on a $100,000 unsecured bail. we do not know whether dutchcot still has any affiliation with the charity. it is a lot it digest, we know. hln's mike galanos has been on top of this story since he broke and he joins us now from penn state's campus at university park. mike, let me first ask you about this that we just got in to cnn. big ten apparently removing paterno's name from the championship trophy calling it inappropriate to keep his name on the trophy at this time. that's coming from the big ten commissioner. what do you make of that? >> not surprising at all, randi. again, this story -- and everybody agrees -- is much bigger than football but it is just another dent in joe paterno's legacy when you think of his name being on his trophy and should have been for years to come obviously. penn state by the way could end up playing with this championship but his name off and amos alonzo stag's name is being put on. he's an old-time founder of the game of football here in the united states. basically the statement says to have his name on there would be inappropriate at this time. that's where it stands. just again, one more piece, not surprising, but it just brings home the gravity of what we are dealing with here, randi. >> mike, what is the next move for penn state? >> on so many different fronts -- you just kind of touched on, there's so much to digest here. just on an investigative front, there's so many investigations going on. he we know they've basically put together a special committee that will be transparent and a rigorous investigation and it leads to some of the questions -- who knew what when? the more grave question -- are there other victims out there. when you consider jerry sandusky founded this second mile program in 1977, and the first allegation in the grand jury testimony doesn't come until 1994, that's a