tv Through the Decades CBS January 6, 2016 5:00pm-6:00pm MST
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a new storm system could be and it looks even different tomorrow. >> this was the sea near lake tahoe overnight as a lot of drivers had trouble with slick roads. the snow is traveling with cold temperatures. and we will feel that change tonight. and green is here tonight. >> reporter: it's just a series of systems, good for the mountains but not for us. we do have snow in the west and we have clearing skies here
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looking south, more moisture, moisture, then a break, and then look at this moisture falling in behind. the bounce continue to get finds no. winter weather advisories and a winter storm warning up to 12 inches over colorado. that goes until midnight tonight. then that is canceled. then we have a winter storm watch until friday. and yes, snow in denver as well, snow over the greater metro, and you might have a little bit of snow to deal with tomorrow, and the low will only be about 23 degrees, and yes, snow all over the state including the greater metro. i will be filling this in with the amounts you can expect in your neighborhood. the latest on a hit and run that caused a rollover crash
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tonight police need help finding the driver responsible. that was overnight at park avenue west in lower downtown. mark is getting the latest. it was a scary a scary impact for the people in the jeep. crash shut down this area while police investigated. and they said it is often difficult to track down the suspect in a hit and run like this. two people were inside of this jeep when another driver struck they rushed the driver to the hospital with head and neck injuries. the passenger was worried about his friend and did not get a good look at the suspect. >> it went down fast and i i was just making sure my friend was find the was fine. i could not get my seatbelt off. >> reporter: police are looking for a white four-door
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should call police. think you mark. also developing, the search for vandals who damaged 30 cars in southwest denver. the used a use a pellet gun to shatter all of the windows. we talked to some victims as they were out clean up the mess. >> what were they thinking? with a like someone to do that to their parents car? >> this morning i was angry, but after a while, just deal with it. it is all you can do. searching for it is believed to be connected. and tonight, possible motivation behind the crimes. a man a man is facing attempted murder charges after attacking a family member with a hammer. police
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member repeatedly with a hammer. new information for you on who worked in seven hospitals in medical centers across northern colorado. we learned that the colorado board of nursing suspended the loss - - license today after allegations he fondled several female patients charges were filed in one case and the suspension comes after lauren started asking questions about his past and learned that he got several of these jobs even after he had a record. >> reporter: yes, yes, a record including misdemeanor offenses. now we know that he faces a felony and we heard from police that they receive new information. fort collins police are looking into several potential leads regarding him and greeley police tell us they are taking a second look at a complaint here at the greeley emergency center.
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allegations that he fondled some of his patients, really police patients, greeley police say they were never told about one of the complaints lodged against him in their jurisdiction. >> we did not have that report, it did not come to us. >> records indicate that police and the state board knew of a complaint that he inappropriately touched a female patient at the emergency center in april. a spokesperson says the word of the report never made it to greeley police. >> we have no record of any incident occurring with this person as a suspect. we checked our records. >> reporter: his department is aware of one allegation made in august of 2014 from a woman who said five months earlier that he had groped her chest while she was in his care also at the emergency center.
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case and the detective sergeant is asked that we contact this person again and see if there is any change in her - - decision. >> police told me today she could change her mind and the case still falls within the statute of limitations. we were - - do know that she's - - he is facing unlawful sexual contact charges from a hospital in fort collins. we have tried to reach him and we know that you see health tells us the have received our questions about his workplace history and they are working on getting - - getting us answers. a developing story, six people arrested in a child sex trafficking ring. and investigators are still looking for a suspect.
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count indictment that the group was recruiting girls on facebook and forcing them in - - and to prosecute - - prostitution. developing now, north korea is rattling nations around the world with an unannounced test of a powerful bomb. the claim this is sex fully - - successfully tested a miniature hydrogen bomb. and it is in an area where previous nuclear tests have been carried out to the initial analysis conducted of the events reported tonight is not consistent with claims of a successful hydrogen bomb test. >> reporter: it is more powerful than the one dropped on hiroshima. the romance scheduled an emergency meeting to discuss the development. and a security council issued a statement condemning
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the question now is can anything be done? we spoke to a man in denver who has said - - sat face to face with the north koreans. >> reporter: doctor chris hill was an ambassador to south korea in 2004 and in 2005 and he later headed up the party talks with the north and he is not pleased with what happened today. >> reporter: with a broadcast and what really happened are in dispute. the country claimed detonation of a hydrogen bomb in the test. doctor chris hill, the hill, the dean of the university of denver school of international studies negotiated with north koreans over four years. we have to understand what they say and what actually happened are different things. >> reporter: he is also a - - a united states ambassador. snap >> they are very difficult to deal with and they
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>> reporter: news was televised on big screen televisions. they have been trying to develop long- range nuclear weapons to hit the united states. >> what is the bigger threat? new isys does not have nuclear weapons. i think nuclear weapons are more of an issue. >> reporter: he dismisses a visit to meet with the leader. >> is he a viable figure? snoo i don't think so. >> reporter: he believes diplomatic efforts must be stepped up including through china to reign in north korea before it is too late. sanctions seem to be the next step what failed to accomplish what was wanted in the p ast. a high school's a high
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sidelined for headbutting a referee. snow in the west is just beginning to move into our state and you can see we have rain and snow moving our way and we get another break and another system is moving out of the pacific. good news for the mountains and for california drought, how drought, how much snow we will
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we are back with breaking news, two people are dead in littleton. a possible murder suicide involving a gun. it happened at an apartment complex on south grants not far from little divorce littleton high school. police found a man dead and brushed a a woman to the hospital who later died. police are awaiting a warrant to search - - search for evidence. a high school basketball
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last night after a foul call and he had that's the referee. in the referee falls to the ground with only 40 seconds left in the game and divides teams behind by four paul thomas four points. divine teaches algebra and history in the district says he is on leave pending review. police are investigating but so far have not filed charges. more americans are suffering from digital eyestrain. the survey found 65% of us endorse symptoms including dry and irritated eyes, blurred vision and headaches. 80% of those say they use two or more devices at the same time. >> for every 20 minutes that
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a 22nd break to look at something 20 feet further a way. >> reporter: doctors recommend pushing your screen further back and increasing font sizes on your devices. herbal tickets are a hot commodity. nights jackpot is expected to be the sixth largest ever in the united states. is strong demand for tickets raised the jackpot to $5 million imagine we do with all that money matches dreaming up ways to spend the way and he is joining us now in keystone.? >> reporter: it has been a hard day, we have been coming up with all sorts of - - ways to spend that money from houses to cars and this is the winning ticket that has been burning a hole in my pocket. and i have been spending big bucks.
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one ticket, one chance to win the powerball. i have a good not feeling about this that i want to see with the jackpot will really get me in summit county. a quick stop by the dealership, i i think two of the corvettes will work just fine. >> i don't know what color to get. with $500 million i guess we will take one of each. >> reporter: a new garage to park all of the new rides in. let's just get the house. it's all about location. >> all of the people who had won the lottery in previous years had come up your. this is the modern style. >> reporter: this seven bedroom and seven beth home has all of the bills and whistles. >> reporter: if it's not your
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>> we will have the bar and billiards and house and tv. >> reporter: and if not $5 million, your jackpot can go a long way. >> after $4 million we have a lot of ways to spend the money. it is exhausting to spend that kind of money. >> it can be but i would be willing to try. clear skies, sunshine around northeastern colorado and you can see the clothes moving up and the snow moving into our state. here is the moisture moving in and we have a little break and then your comes the next system, getting hounded in california and it takes a bite out of the drought and it could could cause flooding
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they are watching that carefully. cold air to the north, and real cold air up here as well. low 20s by the time the weekend hits. one system in the next is poised to move in. here is how it goes. snow developed over the mountains and as we get into tomorrow morning, it looks like was western and seven sections of the area. some folks will have a snowy morning rush hour. that continues in denver and then we catch a break and then into friday, another batch of snow that hangs around often on pushing into saturday. mountain snow shower activity and sunshine returns to the eastern plains. we do have a winter weather advisory over southwestern colorado the goes until midnight and then they cancel this and then push it off to the east. that is a winter storm watch until 6:00 p.m.
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around trinidad, up to 8 inches of snow possible. 5 inches around the greater metro, less than five in denver, that is tomorrow cots night, and into friday. and we held our record high of 66 in 10 years later we got to 21 degrees below zero. 65% humidity and a study barometer. temperatures are mostly in the teens and 20s over the eastern plains, single digits and teens for the high country. tomorrow the cold air starts to settle in and 30s and 40s instead of 40s and 50s, 20s and 30s for the high country, mostly 30s out west. tonight, increasing clouds tonight, increasing clouds and then snow developing, 26 26 degrees and 23 degrees for the overnight lows and tomorrow, light snow off and
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speaking of which, not out of the 20s on friday with a chance for snow, up to three more inches. more sunshine, 24 degrees on sunday, monday sunday, monday 33 degrees got sunny skies, and then have to work. >> we could do with out - - without the single digits. >> to cold. we can't do anything can do
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the nhl is doing something different with all-stars and it care. each of the four divisions is going to have a team and they will play of the treatment of 20 minute games on three on three hockey. representing the avalanche, matt duchene, tied four points. he caught fire in november, breaking the record of 11 goals in the month. >> i guess it is a nice reward. the biggest thing is continuing to focus on the task at hand. just put it on the back burner until the time comes and go enjoy it and it should be great. prove they visit the blues and emmanuel will not suit up pick
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he practiced yesterday and said his ankle was sore. the nuggets when six out of nine and they are just four games back. >> we are still together, still positive, and there is still hope. there are a lot of games to be played and as we get more healthy, this team is capable of really cool things. >> reporter: ronnie was running for a a season-high of 117 yards and they awarded him offensive play her of the week. all eyes will be back on the quarterback position and gary will be ready to announce a decision. it seems like a lot of stress handling the controversy. but gary's is not necessarily. >> it is enjoyable because of where we are.
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inch here, an inch or two for thursday and friday and it goes on saturday and will stay cold into monday. >> thank you ed. >> thank you for watching. a person finds a pile of lost money and returns it will show you what the >> pelley: the most powerful el nio storm of the season hits the west, and there is another right behind it. also tonight, an underground nuclear test in north korea sends shock waves around the world. we'll take you to ground zero in the epidemic of pain pill abuse. patients now suing doctors and pharmacies that allegedly got them hooked. >> we are talking in a certain sense drug traffickers. >> pelley: and the search for an authentic boston accent. >> welcome to fenway park, the greatest ballpark ever. >> ever. >> ever.
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captioning sponsored by cbs this is the "cbs evening news" with scott pelley. >> pelley: the latest powerful el nio storm is hitting the west. warnings, watches and advisories are up all along the coast of california for heavy rain, flooding and high surf. have a will be at the los angeles river. the water rose yesterday from less than an inch in the morning to several feet by mid-day. ben tracy's in the thick of it. >> reporter: el nio round two is packing a punch. this morning mud cascaded down hillside right on to the freeway. drivers stuck in rising water were rescued from their swamped cars, and several feet of snow blanketed the mountains. these storms battering the west coast also drenched arizona, where a man and his young grandson were pulled from their hummer after getting swept up in raging floodwaters. samantha young is the child's relieved mother.
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i said "thank god" a thousand times. it wouldn't be enough. no >> reporter: record amounts of rain have fallen in parts of los angeles, and the national weather service says a gustnado damaged eight buildings near the roof and blowing out windows. but the region is also getting something it desperately needs: water. some of the billions of gallons of storm water inundating rivers in los angeles are being diverted into recharge basins where they replenish groundwater supplies. director of the public works department. how much water are you capturing in these places? >> well, in the storm that occurred yesterday, for example, we were able to capture 1.6 billion gallons of water, which is enough water for around 40,000 people. >> reporter: the concern now are these saturated hillsides like this one that burned in a recent wildfire.
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hillside, and at the base of it you have a bunch of homes and a bunch of very worried homeowners. scott, if there is any good news tonight, it is that the rain that is forecast for tomorrow, is expected to be much lighter. >> pelley: ben tracy reporting. thanks. also in california today, a state of emergency was declared over a massive natural gas leak near los angeles. thousands were evacuated from l.a.'s porter ranch neighborhood after people there complained of nausea and headaches. the methane has been blasting out of a broken well since october. and today in michigan an emergency was declared in flint where the drinking water is contaminated with lead. last october children were found to have elevated levels of lead in their blood, after the city started using water from the flint river to save money. tonight, scientists doubt north korea's claim that it tested a hydrogen bomb, which would be far more powerful than the three
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before. data from seismographs indicated a blast last night equal to around 7,000 tons of t.n.t. but that's not large by atomic bomb standards. seth doane begins our coverage. was how north korea's state media put it... defending its nuclear arsenal as a powerful deterrent against the u.s., which it called "the cheiftain of aggression." the underground test registered as a 5.1 magnitude quake. it was close to the site of three previous nuclear tests. the news sparked cheers in north korea and rattled nerves in south korea, which questioned whether the explosion was big enough to be a hydrogen bomb. north korea is known for its saber-rattling, but possessing a
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and surprising step forward. when we were in north korea last october, it appeared relations with china, its biggest ally, were warming. china had sent a top official to the ceremony. but there was no hint of that today. china's foreign ministry condemned the test. will there be some action on china's part? "china has been using words and actions," spokeswoman hua chunying said, "but demilitarisation requires efforts from all parties." ultimately, scott, north korea wants to create a weapon capable of reaching the mainland united states. regardless of what was tested, this likely provides more research and another step toward that goal. >> pelley: seth doane reporting from beijing tonight. seth, thank you. north korea also claimed that its hydrogen bomb was miniaturized to fit on a
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engineering achievement, also unlikely. david martin is at the pentagon. >> reporter: u.s. aircraft flying out of japan will collect air samples off the coast of north korea to determine exactly what kind of nuclear device went off. but based on analysis of the seismic wave the blast triggered, u.s. intelligence is highly skeptical of the north korean claim it successfully tested a hydrogen bomb. last night's explosion is estimated to have been less than 10 kilotons, about half the power of the weapon which destroyed hiroshima at the end of world war ii. a hydrogen bomb, which has never been used in war but was tested in the pacific during the 1950s, would be 50 to 100 times more powerful. whatever kind of device was detonated, the greatest mystery about north korean nuclear weapons is whether they have the capability to launch one against the united states. north korea has a missile capable of reaching that far,
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to be on the safe side, the u.s. keeps its missile defense system, which officials say is capable of shooting down a small number of north korean missiles, on constant alert. north korea seems to specialize in nasty surprises. u.s. intelligence had expected another test sooner our later, but they had no warning it would happen last night. scott? >> pelley: david martin reporting tonight. david, thank you. well, worries about china's slowing economy shook up financial markets again today. the dow closed off 252 points. oil finished below $35 a barrel for the first time in nearly 12 years, and we note that chipotle lost $22 a share today. it is down nearly 38% since an e. coli outbreak at its restaurants in the fall. 26 days now before the voting in iowa, and republican donald trump is questioning the birth
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just when you thought this campaign couldn't get any stranger, cruz fired back, with the help of the fonz. here's nancy cordes. >> i really know nothing about it. >> reporter: a lack of knowledge has not stopped trump from claiming repeatedly this week that his closest competitor might be ineligible to run for president. >> i hope that's not going to be a problem for him, but i've been hearing a lot about it, and him you've been hearing it and i guess everybody is talking about it. >> reporter: texas senator ted cruz was born in canada, but to an american mother; legal scholars widely agree that makes him a natural-born american citizen. trump once shared that view but has apparently had a change of heart as cruz climbed to the top of some iowa polls. the billionaire now argues a cruz candidacy could imperil the g.o.p. >> the problem is, that if the democrats bring a lawsuit, the lawsuit could take years to resolve, and how do you have a candidate where there's something, you know, over the
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individual? >> reporter: it's familiar territory for trump, who was the figurehead for the birther movement, questioning president obama's hawaii roots. >> our president has finally released a birth certificate. >> reporter: like the president, cruz initially brushed off trump's comments, likening them to this famously implausible scene from the 1970s sitcom "happy days." >> i'm going to stick with fonzie jumping the shark, and i'll let the rest of y'all battle it out. >> reporter: but in rock rapids, iowa today, the lawyer in him took over. >> reporter: as a legal matter, the issue is straightforward. the child of a u.s. citizen born abroad is a natural born citizen. >> reporter: legally it isn't entirely settled because the supreme court has never weighed in on the matter, but two past g.o.p. nominees, john mccain and barry goldwater, were also born outside the states to american parents, scott, and neither of
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challenge. >> pelley: nancy cordes on the campaign for us tonight. nancy, thank you. today a texas state trooper was indicted for perjury over his account of a traffic stop and arrest of a woman who died in custody. in july, trooper brian encinia pulled over sandra bland and pulled her from the car and threatened her with a taser. he claimed she swung at him and kicked him. she was charged with assault, and hanged herself in jail three days later. if convicted, encinia could face a year in jail. now we have a special investigation of what has become a plague in our country. about two million americans are hooked on prescription painkillers, and in 2012, 259 million prescriptions were written. that's one bottle for every
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how could that be? jim axelrod and producer ashley velly found out in west virginia, a state that's attempting a drastic solution, allowing addicts to sue the doctors who got them hooked. >> you spent $1,000 a week? >> right. >> reporter: 17 years ago willis duncan's life changed forever, when a coal mining accident left him with a crushed sternum and broken ribs. it changed your life? >> it changed everything. >> reporter: duncan became a lifelong addict when his doctor's only treatment was a supply of pills. >> the only time you went in to see a doctor was to get your pills. >> reporter: hang on a second. you go in to get looked, at but the examination wasn't done by a doctor? >> no. >> reporter: duncan would wait for hours to be seen for just a few minutes at this clinic where
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for pain med prescriptions. did you ever say to a doctor, this has gotten out of hand, and i need help? >> never, because you got used to them and you didn't know how the function without them. >> reporter: this cash-only operation allowed doctors to clear as much as $100,000 a week. >> we're in mingo county, west virginia, executing a search warrant. >> reporter: the clinic was raided and shut down in 2010. >> there's an exam room. >> reporter: these are what passed for exam rooms. >> main office. >> reporter: piles of trash and files, loose prescription pads, syringes. and starving birds stuck in roach-infested cages. hundreds of patient records were seized along with thousands of undated and presigned prescriptions for addictive pain meds like vicodin, xanex and lortab. the doctor in charge went to
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negligence. >> take a look at the place. >> reporter: d.e.a. agent gary newman is part of a team currently investigating dozens of doctors, pharmacies and distributors throughout the state. >> we are talking in a certain sense, drug traffickers, and they are doing nothing but writing and cranking out prescription after prescription after prescription. they're pushers. they truly are. >> reporter: west virginia has the highest rate of overdose deaths in the nation. each year doctors write the equivalent of one painkiller prescription for every man, woman and child in the state of 1.8 million. in the last year the west virginia department of health inspected 19 pain clinics. 12 were told to shut down. >> you can actually be so stressed that you can't sleep at night. >> reporter: one is run by dr. michael kostenko, seen here lecturing patients. he's written more than 40,000
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last two years at his clinic. kostenko was among those ordered to stop operating at the pain clinic, but he remains open. after weeks of trying to reach kostenko, we drove out to cole country clinic, located at the end of this narrow two-mile logging road. instead of finding the doctor, we came face to face with a rottweiler. shutting down these clinics can often take years because these are licensed doctors writing legal prescriptions. >> therein lies the problem. you have to be able to prove, in court, that they're prescribing was for a non-medical necessity or in such an egregious amount that it was negligent. >> reporter: among the 30 west virginians now suing their enabling their addiction is willis duncan. >> i hurt a lot of people. it's just a bad deal all the way
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i had nothing for none of them. >> reporter: as for dr. kostenko, this friday the state begins the process of seeking to shut him down permanently, but tonight his clinic is still operating. the state could also set a precedent by not going after just the doctors and the pharmacies, but the wholesale drug distributors in court, as well. >> pelley: remarkable work. jim, thanks very much. up next, the quest for rest. >> it's 3:20. i did not go to sleep since 2:00, so i'm a bit overtired. >> pelley: who has the most trouble sleeping? and the future king begins his education when the "cbs evening news" continues. the "cbs evening news" continues. right...well, if the portfolio you're invested in doesn't perform well for two consecutive
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for those quarters. i wasn't born yesterday. well, actually it looks like you were born yesterday. happy belated birthday. thanks. for all the confidence you need td ameritrade. you got this. if you take multiple medications, a dry mouth can be a common side effect. that's why there's biotene. it comes in oral rinse, spray or gel so there's moisturizing relief for everyone. biotene, for people who
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hi hey you look good. thank you, i feel good. it all starts with eating right. that's why i eat amaz!n prunes now. they're delicious and help keep my body in balance. i love these. sunsweet amaz!n prunes, the feel good fruit. >> pelley: america got a wake-up call today. we're not getting enough sleep. here's dr. jon lapook. >> reporter: 44-year-old jackie
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single mother of a two-year-old. >> i never get seven hours of sleep in a night. i'm going to say, ever. >> reporter: we asked cohen to chronicle a typical night. >> i've been up since about 1:30. it's 3:20 and i did not go to sleep since 2:00, so i'm a bit overtired. >> reporter: she's not alone. nearly one-third of adults don't get the recommended seven hours of sleep daily. a new report out today by the national center for health statistics finds single moms have the greatest difficulty, about 40% get less than seven hours, compared to 31% of married women. >> those are basically motion trackers. >> reporter: dr. daniel baron is a neurologist at new york- presbyterian's weill cornell center for sleep. what does our body accomplish while we're asleep? >> nearly every organ is
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our blood sugar goes down. >> reporter: there's no way getting around the need to sleep. even if you want to live every minute of your day, you still need to sleep for about one year of your life. >> it's a great equalizer. we all need to sleep. >> reporter: sleep deprivation has been linked to diabetes, high blood pressure, heart disease, immune disorders and a weakened immune system and even dementia and obesity. >> pelley: that's an eye-opener. jon, thanks very much. baseball's hall of fame coming up next. baseball's hall of fame coming up next. really want it... new is ecoboost technology. new is a foot-activated liftgate. new is tougher, stronger and lighter. new is ford. america's best-selling brand. now get into a new focus, fusion, or escape with 0% financing for 60 months plus $2,000 dollars trade-assist cash.
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,,,, >> pelley: today outfielder ken griffey, jr., who hit 630 home runs, and catcher mike piazza, a 12-time all-star, were elected to the hall of fame. other players linked to the steroids scandal did not get in. in britain, this was first day of nursery school for two and a half-year-old prince george.
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his dad, prince william, on his first day 30 years ago. in a moment, what boston did to the king's english. >> this portion of the "cbs evening news" is sponsored by publisher's clearing house and pch.com. g house and pch.com. caring for someone with alzheimer's means i am a lot of things. i am his sunshine. i am his advocate. so i asked about adding once-daily namenda xr to his current treatment for moderate to severe alzheimer's.
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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. ask for the crestor $3 card. ask your doctor about crestor. >> it is a great pleasure to come back to a city where my accent is considered normal. ( laughter ) >> pelley: president kennedy at boston college, 1963; which brings us to anna werner's story tonight, hollywood: in search of boston. >> you look good. >> reporter: when a director needs a real boston accent, their first call is often to casting agent angela peri. >> here's somebody that's really going to do it.
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yourself looking for people wherever you go? >> everywhere i go, everywhere i go. >> reporter: tax incentives have made boston a hotbed of movie making, and directors want actors with the right look and sound. >> it's like sifting, diamond search. i'm sifting through the city. >> my name's natalie. i'm from hyde park. >> you're done. >> reporter: at a recent casting call, 400 people showed up hoping to talk their way to stardom. >> welcome to fenway park, the greatest ballpark ever. >> evahr. >> evah. >> evah! >> evah! >> everyone i know kind of talks like me. >> just the kind of guy i'm looking for. love that. that's the kind of guy i want. >> reporter: because why? >> because i just want him to be authentic. so i'll meet them, and instantly i know who is going to be good. >> reporter: like in "the
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remember mark wahlberg's cyst sisters? nearly all were locals discovered by peri. >> george's fingers are so bleeped )... >> reporter: it was erica's first audition ever. >> what did she like about you? >> i think i was able to swear. >> reporter: jill quigg's boston accent got her her acting gig in "gone baby gone." so this is the real you? >> i'm not acting. i'm me. >> reporter: it's a business that's come full circle for peri, whose own accent cut her career short. so do you think people in boston should be proud of their accent? >> i am. i am. it's done me well. >> reporter: now it's that accent that brings hollywood to her. anna werner, cbs news, boston. >> pelley: and that's the wicked smart cbs evening news for tonight. for all of us at cbs news, all
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captioning sponsored by cbs captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org firefighters rushed to an apartment on a medical call and found a man did inside. this is the cherrywood apartments at grant and barry. >> they were the initial stages of the investigation and we have no reason to believe there is anybody that is a danger to is a danger to the community. we are processing the scene and trying to figure out what we have and what happened. >> reporter: investigators have no
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