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The Paris attacks come 10 months after 20 people died during attacks on the offices of the Charlie Hebdo Magazine and a kosher supermarket in Paris

The Paris attacks come 10 months after 20 people died during attacks on the offices of the Charlie Hebdo Magazine and a kosher supermarket in Paris. In August, three Americans stopped a man with a machine gun on a French train. Are these multiple coordinated attacks on "soft targets" an evolution of the terrorist threat in Western Europe? CBS News' national security analyst, Juan Zarate joins CBS “This Morning: Saturday”

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French president, Francois Hollande said this morning ISIS is to blame for the attack that brought terror in the city of light in what he calls “an act of war.”

French president, François Hollande said this morning ISIS is to blame for the attack that brought terror in the city of light in what he calls “an act of war.” Overnight, he mobilized 15,000 soldiers, after the deadliest violence in Paris since World War II. At least 127 people are confirmed dead after half a dozen attacks from a soccer match to a concert a hall. All eight of the known terrorists are dead and seven blew themselves up, but the manhunt for accomplices has just started. A state of emergency is in place across France with border checkpoints in effect. The world is rushing to help with Germany offering special anti terror unit.

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Also, a connection between the fiancée of shooting victim Christopher Few and one of the officers has been revealed

New details are emerging in the deadly police shooting of a 6-year-old boy in Louisiana, as a connection between the fiancée of shooting victim Christopher Few and one of the officers has been revealed. Few's son, Jeremy Mardis, was killed last Tuesday, and the two marshals are in jail. We're also learning more about the suspects' histories including a pending civil suit for excessive force. David Begnaud reports

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The full episode of the CBS Evening news from the November 9, 2015 edition.

After one student spent more than a week on a hunger strike and the football team threatened to sit out their next game, University of Missouri president Tim Wolfe resigned Monday amid outcry that he had not done enough to combat racist incidents that have taken place at the school; a new report released Monday showed that people who had taken medication to lower their blood pressure were living longer lives, but how low is too low?

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