tv CBS Overnight News CBS February 19, 2016 1:37am-4:30am CST
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a national backlash says she regrets her controversial behavior she was calling for muscle to remove a student journalist from a campus protest. the video shows her cursing at police a month early. >> she's the woman seen at a university of missouri protest last fall ordering protesters away from the quad. >> you need to get out. >> her actions brought her many miss demeanor assault chargerss. >> i was embarrassed by my behavior and doesn't represent the good i was doing there that day and certainly i wish i could do it over again. >> she said she was trying to
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sure the man filming was a real journalist. >> he introduced himself only as media and came at me with a camera. >> a camera not a weapon. >> sure but it also wasn't a big camera. it could have been a phone sized camera. journalist to me. >> we asked if she would review the tape with us. >> i don't wish to do that. >> but on the tape she's clearly heard identifying the student journalist as a reporter before calling for muscle to remove him. >> who wants to help me get this reporter out of here. need some muscle over here. help me get him out. respectful. >> it was a mistake. i never naent as a call for violence. it's just one of those things said in the heat of the moment. >> but another video released
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earlier protest during a homecoming in october cursing at a police officer who she says pushed her. >> get utahout or get arrest. >> you can see where people watching those videos are saying she's got a problem. >> people who know me don't feel that way. and people there know i was there with the best of intentions and know it was a really tricky situation. >> the university governing board is investigating. david steelman is a board member. >> what about the video is most damaging. >> the call for muscle. no question about it. imagine yourself as a parent and that's your child that a faculty
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>> earlier called her someone as outstanding record with teaching and she worried she won't get a fair hearing. >> i believe there's an environment set up where i can't be fairly evaluated. >> if that's the case what happens after that. >> well i fight for my job. i love my job. i'm zba at my job. i made mistakes. i don't think i should be judged by those mistakes and i'm going to fight for what i think is fair. >> we'll be right back. no other nasal allergy spray can say that. when we breathe in allergens our bodies react by over producing six key inflammatory substances that cause our symptoms. most allergy pills only control one substance. flonase controls six. and six is greater than one. complete allergy relief or incomplete. let your eyes decide.
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photograph danny clench has worked with just about every big name in the music world, rockers, rappers, country stars, jazz artists and more. we look at how he gets up close and personal with the subjects. spoke with anderson cooper. >> bruce springstein hitting the road on tour once more. his wife patty by his side. and danny clench is there to talk about old times. >> in '99 was the first time i photographed you guys. >> '99 that's right. >> and shoot the band rehearseing rehearsing. >> over the years, clench has
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springstein. and many have become classics. >> this is a farm house on bruce's property, just a really sweet little spot. >> there are portraits of the artist off stage that mirror of tone and message of his music and the famous shot of springstein falling back into the crowd where from the stage clench had the perfect view. >> he was in there and he fell back and i got my shot. >> did you know you got it. >> i felt like i did, yes. >> clench wears many hats, pun intended. as the portrait photographer at the grammys he covers the spectrum
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tony bennett, lady gaga, mereiranda lambert, too fighter, davegrohl and paul mccartner. >> you're in the history of the moment. i never take it for granted. >> that's the band phish one of several trusting him to stay out of the way. >> it's new year's eve, phish is playing madison square garden and to the crowd clench is the invisible man. >> what is it about shooting a concert. what are you trying to get? >> i'm trying to capture a moment. not about the singer at the microphone. i'm trying to look for a moment in between. >> he works from the back of the stageiding behind the drums or
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between moment popping up like a whack-a-mole to get his shot. sometimes it paid off big as in this classic photograph of dave grohl. >> or this one eddie vedder and jeff ahmet airborne. >> i was hiding behind a amp and there popped up. >> could you wear ear plugs. >> i should but often don't. >> i'm surprised you can hear me or are you reading my lips. >> gentleman, i get out there and i'm like, geez, i should have some ear plugs, but i forgot them. >> he was an assistant to photographer before hitting the road. he preferring shooting in natural light and agrees that if
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you're not close enough. even when he's not working he's still looking for the perfect shot. >> i'm photographing all the time. i don't want to miss that moment. >> you're never without your camera. >> rarely. >> even right now. >> see, i always want to be prepared because you never know who will come to your studio. >> i really like this one a lot. >> his studio is a place where any music fan would love to be locked up for few days. >> it's like history of rock and roll. >> yeah. couple things twient show you. i want to show you. >> couple years back he photographed one of the men who started it all, chuck barry who is now 89. and another founding father jerry lee lewis who is 80.
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sessions with bob dylan. >> just keeping it real simple. >> greg allman on a rainy day. johnny cash waiting to go on stage. a shot capturing the lonelyness of life on the road. country stars faith hill and mim mcg r a wrks. norah jones. tupac. >> he was really professional. he took his shirt off and i saw the tattoos and said would you mind doing one like that. >> when you took it did you know how strong it was. >> i felt it was a really powerful image, the simplicity of it was really powerful. >> he branched out to commercials and music videos, this one shot on willie nelson's
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>> willie n does the mind medoesn't mind me taking his photograph but he doesn't like being directed so i found ways to work with that. >> he also got candid photos like nelson braiding his hair weed. >> i don't know what to call it it's so big. it's like a cigar. >> somehow i can't remember what happened after that. you don't know me >> and then there are the occasional shoots he wishes he could forget. >> i was at a madonna show in the sweet spot and she came out, it was the best part of the show, i was shooting, shooting, shooting, i'm like, god i must have shot 100 pictures have i not run out of film and i open the back and there was no film. that happened to me only once.
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>> no doubt one reason he gets along so well with musicians u he knows the language. >> wearing yet another hat to play with the tangiers blues band jamming with willie and bruce. his harm onica like his camera goes everywhere he goes. he grew up on the jersey shore living in tom's river, few miles down the garden state parkway from springstein country. >> some good ones. >> he got the photography bug from his mother. >> she always has a camera, even still. at times i take pictures of her taking pictures of the family. >> from his father he got a taste for classic rock and roll from the 50s and classic cars. his prized possession, a 1948
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of car his father always noticed when clench was a kid. >> everywhere we went he would point out the cars and i started to love them myself. >> and he's always found ways to work them into the shot. springstein with the pontiac and with his wife's 1950 hudson with clench's father at the wheel. an old cadillac with kneel young's hat and neil tooling around nashville. >> this was big for me. >> was he driving. >> he was driving, yeah. we stopped at an interedwin escobar and i we stopped and i grabbed it. >> more in moment.feels. as a urologist, i have performed 9,421 and a half prostate exams. nd i grabbed it. >> more in moment. because i get paid. und... on this side of the glove
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kind you buy. >> it's common practice in cheese plants like this to use very small amounts of cell urksulose but some are cutting corners and duping customers. >> whether sprinkled on pasta or shaved on salads or grated on anything america's appetite for cheese has been heating up the last four decades but experts believe some of the parm isn't them. >> americans are probably consuming close to 100 million pounds annually at probable
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>> cell u loskll u losulose is a big culprit. more than every day cheese was 8.8% cellulose. while walmart came in at 7.8%. >> you're getting ripped off. it's not what you bargonned for. >> walmart wouldn't comment but jewel-osco has pulled the essential every daye parm cheese. >> the labelled is disingenuous. and the labelling is out of whack. >> in 2013 it was quoted that it's parm cheese proeds didn't
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the company declared bankruptcy and is facing criminal charges. it they can refer cases to the department of justice for prosecution. >> the consumer is being frauded buying something flat and tasteless. not what they expected to get. >> difference between which cheeses are real and which are loaded with fillers. there's a real true cheese seal going to urge others in the industry to adopt this seal as well. >> that's the news for this friday. for some the news continues. for everyone here in the broadcast sit. city. blan now it's a holy war between trump and the pope. >> a religious leader to
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disgraceful. >> also tonight, two days before the nevada caucus, a personal side of hillary clinton. >> my mother met me at the door and she said, there is no room for cowards in this house. >> a hospital pays ransom to hackers to get its computers back. and from football to foot lights. >> i got good feet. ha, ha. >> a former nfl star, pulls off the play of a lifetime. it may sound odd but all i care about is love >> this is the "cbs overnight news" coming to you from las vegas. the odd's makers here at ceasar's palace never bet on this, but in a campaign that has seen just about everything, we now have donald trump feuding with the pope.
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his flight home from mexico, said that if trump wants to build a wall on the mexican border than he is not a christian. then all hell broke loose. major garrett is in south carolina. >> for a religious leader to question a person's faith is disgraceful. >> donald trump said mexico fed the holy father propaganda. >> so they met with the pope and met with the pope them this. and told them what a bad guy donald trump is. he doesn't know me. if and win vatican is attacked by isis, which is as everyone knows isis ultimate trophy, i can promise you that the pope would have only wished and prayed that donald trump would have been president. question another's christian faith. for getting this twitter post. how can ted cruz be a christian when he lies so much sand so
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figure has dared crossed the paper assy. trump supporters we met found refreshing. >> i think people need to know about what's going on this this world. >> i thought it was appropriate. i think he needs to let people know why the pope was saying derogatory things about him and the reasons behind it. >> trump has defied political convections and manners before. insulting mexicans and his at his president shat a at his presidential announcement. >> they're bringing drugs and they're bringing crime. they're rapists. >> and dishonoring viet prisons of war. >> he's not a war hero. he was a war hero because he was captured i like people who weren't captured hate to tell you. >> the one constant trump drives the conversation and leaves his rivals, including ted cruz, veering in another direction. >> that's between donald and the pope i'm not going to get in the
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the safest places for trump to pick even a small fight with the pope. scott, four years ago only 14% of primary voters identified themselves as catholics, 65% as christian. >> thanks much. the republican primary is in south carolina saturday. trump has a commanding lead nationally in a new cbs poll of republican voters out tonight. he leads his closest rival, ted cruz, nearly two to one. john kasich gets the most improved he's at 11% up nine points since last month. there was a very emotional moment in kasich campaign stop in clemson. >> over a year ago a man who was like my second dad who killed himself and few months later my parents got a divorce and few months later my dad lost his job and i was in a dark place for a
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i was pretty depressed. but i found hope in the lord and in my friends and now in my presidential candidate that i support. i really appreciate one of those hugs you've been talking about. [ applause ]. >> reporter: kasich told the young man, the lord will give you strength, i promise you,if you ask him. on the democratic side hillary clinton has an eight-point lead nationally on bernie sanders. here in nevada two days before the caucuses they are neck and neck. here's nancy cordes. >> we're going to convince people to caucus on saturday . >> reporter: nevada has become a crap-shoot for clinton after her double-digit lead evaporated after sanders win in granite state. >> we're going to surprise them
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surprise them here in nevada. >> clinton has spent the last year courting nevada's. >> we're going to get a path to citizenship. that's what we want, right. >> you have lived through the greed and illegal behavior of wall street. >> nevada's largest union, the culinary workers have decided not to endorse either canada candidate, after backing president obama in '08. geoconda arguello- kline is one of the union's top officers. >> the members they all were asking, saying, you have to listen what's going on and participate. >> nationally sanders still gets higher marks in the cbs poll for being honest and trust worthy but 41% of democrats say his proposals are not realistic, 14%
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she's also seen as the candidate most likely to get things done in washington by a wide 26-point margin. >> nevada is a notoriously hard state to poll. people move in and out of the state a lot and democrats can register on caucus day. bottom line, neither campaign knows who will win on saturday. >> nancy cordes on the campaign for us. thank you very much.
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from maine to maui, thousands of high school students across the country are getting in on the action by volunteering in their communities. chris young: action teams of high school students are joining volunteers of america and major league baseball players to help train and inspire the next generation of volunteers. carlos pea: it's easy to start an action team at your school so you, too, can get in on the action.
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and tieing in iowa he's decided to stay here through the caucus. we spoke to her in her las vegas campaign office today. >> what do you think donald trump and bernie sanders have tapped into? it's a powerful thing. >> i do think, scott, people are angry. people feel like the government is not working for them, the economy is not working, it's political system is not working. people are angry but also hungry for solutions. i'm meeting the people in eyes of people is tell me something i can believe. that's what i try to do. >> your resume checks will many every box in terms of experience but it doesn't seem to be what the american people want in this election. >> at the end of the day voters understand they're selecting both president and commander in
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experience that i have that will enable me on day one to do all aspects of the job. i think democrats are focused on who can actually beat the republicans. i know how to go after what republicans stand for and to defeat them because i believe with all my heart, every one of the ones runs on the republic san side would be really bad for america. >> what's your tax plan? who gets the increase, who gets a tax cut. >> first i'm not raising taxes on the middle class, period. going after income $5 million or more that i think have too many opportunities to escape paying i'm going after corporations that are gaming the system. i want a sensible corporate tax policy. >> senator sanders said that he would raise taxes on families that made $250,000 and above. is that your level? >> i said i will not raise taxes on anybody $250 or below.
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way for him to fulfill the promises he's making without raising the taxes on the middle class. >> in '76 jimmy carter said i will not lie. >> i will tell you through all my time i've tried to level with the american people. >> have you always told the truth? >> always tried to. always. always. >> some people are going to call that wiggle room that you gave yourself, always tried to. jimmy carter said i will never lie to you. >> you know, you're asking me to say have i ever. i don't believe i ever have. i don't believe i ever have. i don't believe i ever will. i'm going to do the best i can to level with the american people. >> we'll be back later in the broadcast with more of the interview with hillary clinton including the advice she got from her mother.
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day's news. >> interesting view from the campaign trail. thank you. today we learned an attack that shut down computers at a california hospital until a ransom was paid is far from an isolated case. hackers are hitting soft targets here's john blackstone. >> the cyber threat criminal who collected $17,000 ransom from the hollywood presbyterian medical center are part of a increasingly lucrative online crime waive where they hack into a computer network, lock out other users and demand ransom usually to be paid in the untraceable currency bitcoins. >> is it their only option to pay the money? >> she which lose their data. in most cases, yes. >> a cybersecurity analyst at the rand corporation has been following
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attacks. >> ransomware attacks tend to be on entities that are smaller with no securities in place, on hospitals, fire stations, schools, rather than large companies. >> since january 2015, have collected at least $325 million in ransom payment as cording to reports by the cyber threat threat alliance. victims range from the hospital in hollywood, to 9 sheriff's department, in tennessee, and to the city government in detroit. even south carolina schools, the director of technology is trying to save the system without paying the $8,500 ransom. >> we're going server by server, back up by back up to see what we have to restore those back ups. it will be a business decision.
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computers have been victories. computers have been victims, charlie, the best protection keep anti virus software up-to-date and never click on a link in an unsolicited e-mail. >> thank you john. the natural gas leak in porter ranch, california, was declared permanently sealed today. for four months it spewed methane that made people sick and turned l.a. suburb into a ghost town. monitors will stay in place to make sure air is safe to breathe. president obama will make a historical trip to cuba, he will raise human rights issues with president raul castro. some worry it will legitimize the communist government. mr. obama will be the first sitting american president to travel to cuba since calvin coolidge in 1928. still ahead, what pregnant women in the u.s. need to know about the zika virus. and helicopter crash caught on camera when the "cbs overnight
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>> 30-year-old jessica reiner is expecting to twins in april. today she getting tested for zika virus. something she never heard of a month ago. >> it adds an element of anxiety. i feel anxious about a lot of things. >> last month she and her husband, drew, took a vacation to puerto rico not knowing it was added to a c.d.c. list of places with zika transmission and then a friend sent her this text message, i don't mosquitos. in brazil it's linked with an abnormally small head and brain. those who survive have lifelong neurological problems. dr. stacey ehrenberg is a says that some of her patients are panicked >> a lot of patients are concerned that they could
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united states. in the continental united states who contracted the virus here. >> zika virus remains in the blood of an infected person for about a week. c.d.c. says based on current evidence a previous zika infection doesn't pose a risk birth defect for a future pregnancy. men who live in or have travelled to a country with zika virus outbreak should abstain from sex or use condoms during sex with pregnant women. >> public health experts say it is important to eradicate mosquito breeding grounds before the virus arrives. >> thank you john. a camera captured a frightening helicopter plunged into the water. the chopper went down near the uss arizona memorial in pearl
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and made her way through the great depression she died in 2011 at the age of 92. >> how much of what we're hearing is your mother? which words are her words. >> well, a lot of it is. you know, i wish she were still here. she was in '08. she gave me so much support. and she was also a great, you know, mirror. >> tell me about a moment, if you would, with your mother, as a little girl, that was formative for you. >> you know, i was pretty shy. kind of a reserved little girl. >> really? >> yes. i would go outside to play and literally would get knocked down and pushed around by all the little kids. and so the kids knocked me down, pushed me around, i ran back in crying, my mother met me at the door and said there is no room for cowards in this house. you go right back out there and stand up for yourself. so i came back out and said i'm not going to run inside the
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i'm here, i want to play. and literally they formed a circle and this one girl who was so mean came over and pushed me and i just pushed her right back and she was so surprised. and they all just looked at me and said okay, and so i played that day and every day after that. but if my mother had not met me and had not given me that tough love that i think every kid needs at some point in his or her life, my life might have been very different. >> no room for cowards. >> no room for cowards in this house. >> secretary clinton. in a moment charlie rose has tonight's grand finale, a former football star scores big on broadway.on of weight on your chest. severe shortness of breath. unexplained nausea. cold sweats. there's an unusual tiredness and fatigue. there's unfamiliar dizziness or light-headedness.
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even your upper stomach, are signs you're having a heart attack. don't make excuses. make the call to 9-1-1 immediately. learn more at womenshealth.gov/heartattack. when the twins were about 10 days old, the doctors told us they were going to need blood transfusions. we're so proud of who they've become. as a result of one person, deciding to spend an hour of their life giving blood is just immeasurable, how powerful that one donation could possibly be.
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eddie george the former football player whose nfl career took him from houston to tennessee to dallas. his new career has taken him to new york, the city, and "chicago" the play. here's jim axelrod. >> is everybody here, hit it. >> while former football star eddie george is no stranger to the spot light. >> i don't care about expensive things, cashmere coats, diamond rings. >> it's a very different stage than where he first made his name 21 years ago winning the heisman trophy before a nine-year all-pro nfl career. >> i didn't come to this earth just to say i played football nine years, won a heisman trophy and die. razzle-dazzle them >> he caught the theater bug and started from the ground up. >> how's your foot work.
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good feet. >> drama classes, voice lessons and shakespeare in his hometown of nashville before auditioning for broadway. >> what was important for me was that the ensemble didn't look at me as a gimmick, some guy athlete that wanted to do broadway. >> no vanity project. >> no vanity project here. is this is perfectly understandable >> this is not just bold-faced name hired to get people into the seats? this is a legitimate song and dance guy? >> yes, he is. yes he is, you just watch him. >> >> did you get my trial. >> take it easy kid. >> i wasn't expecting what eddie brought to the stage. give them the old razzle-dazzle >> if you trust and go through
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intention of getting better and unfold like you can never imagine. >> he could be talking football or broad way, eddie george knows the secret behind a great play. and they'll make you a star >> "cbs overnight news." >> that's the overnight news for this friday. for some of you the news continue for others check back later for the morning news and cbs this morning. from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm charlie rose. >> this is the "cbs overnight" news. >> hi everyone.
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a key fight in the battle for the republican presidential nomination will play out tomorrow in south carolina. candidates in the first southern primary of campaign 2016 and voters are bomb barded by phone calls, mail, and knocks on the front door. one voter showed us how overwhelming the campaign blitz can be. >> tommy is an undecided republican. who welcomed us into his kitchen to get a taste of his political mail. >> so these mailer vintage would be wednesday. >> yeah, wednesday, just today. >> they're not aged at all. >> not aged and not including phone calls. >> that last call left him a bit confused. >> i can't tell you if it was
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understand was rubio. >> by phone or by mail and on tv, politics is unavoidable. >> trump politicians and steam rolled the little guy. >> ted cruz voted to under mind our national defense. >> harken told us he feel inundated. >> do they have any effect on you. >> i think after a while they have a negative effect. you don't know what to believe because so many are negative. >> he and his friends are getting worn out but political pros say it pays off. >> all those mediums have effect on persuasion and when one and eight republican primary voters undecided it will have an impact. >> he said he doesn't read the mailers or take the calls any more but campaigns can't afford
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>> maybe a mail piece a voter receives today doesn't persuade them but the one they receive tomorrow does, advertising works, it's why businesses do it, why candidates do it. >> he's not so sure. he just knows this -- >> everybody, my friends at least, we talk about it, hear about it, are getting fed up with it, getting tired of if. >> a new issue sparking discussion on the campaign trail is apple stand off with the f b i over privacy concern and google ceo is supporting apple's decision to defy a judge's order to unlock an iphone from one of the san bernardino killers. >> apple sources are digging in industry sources say the tech giant is ready to fight this all the way to the supreme court. >> the fbi is locked out of his
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apple is betting its global customer base wants unbreakable inscription not a company that hands over its example private information. the u.s. judge ordered apple to wipe out all of datea if the wrong pass code is entered ten times. apple ceo said the tech giants doesn't have the technology and developing it would create a back door to not only that iphone but millions of devices. the white house defended the request for apple to aid in las in an investigation that the president called a national priority. >> they are not asking to resign a product or create a new back door to one of their products, they're simply asking for something that would have an impact on this one device.
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privacy collide, they say both have compel right to privacy collide, apple and the fbi both have compelling yet competing interests. >> apple is saying if you promise you will only use it once it will be used again and again and when you give precedent once you can't deny next time. >> google ceo posted a series of tweets siting with apple saying this -- >> in the two months since they killed 14 people in san bernardino, california,the f b i has discovered evidence leading up to the terror attack. >> publically apple says it doesn't have the technology to do what the fbi wants but a top industry official tells
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theoretically write the software to comply with that ruling. >> this week second of state >> this week secretary of state john kerry met with a group of executives in los angeles. >> secretary kerry said he called this meeting to discuss ideas about how to combat what he calls the isis narrative. some are concerned he is trying to get executives to produce anti-isis propaganda. >> america, we claim to have the greatest army history has known. >> this video has the hallmarks of a movie trailer but it is a pro-isis propaganda piece produced by the terror group. now the u.s. government is asking hollywood for advice on how to counter that message. >> this is not just a military battle but a battle of ideas
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tuesday's closed door meeting with almost a dozen studio executives when the secretary of state made his pitch. >> hollywood is one of the greatest competitive advantages we have as a country, it is revered around the planet, our second largest export. >> the film industry grosses tens and billions of dollars every year. not the first time they teamed up with government. the pentagon worked with producer jerry brock hiemer in 1986 for "top gun" a box office hit that became an effective recruiting tool. other collaborations have produced mixed results. some felt cia officials made to makers of "zero dark 30" led to torture techniques. said this week's meeting took a different approach.
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to get ideas on how they counter the message that isis is spreading. >> but when the messenger is just the u.s. government some worry that message can get lost. >> the reason united states can't be the brand behind counter narrative is because we have no credibility when we're talking about islam. >> something senator kerry >> he said we are thinking outside the box strategy of soft power. >> now secretary kerry 90 minute meeting with the studio execs was not just about isis a plarnt i also talked about content piracy is viewed around
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regrets her controversial behavior she was calling for muscle to remove a student journalist from a campus protest. the video shows her cursing at police a month early. >> i'm media can i talk to you. >> no you need to get out >> she's the woman seen at a university of missouri protest last fall ordering protesters away from the quad. >> you need to get out. >> her actions brought her many miss demeanor assault chargers. and widespread condemnation now she's apologizing. >> you need to go. >> werea pauled by the video? >> i was embarrassed by my behavior and doesn't represent the good i was doing there that day and certainly i wish i could do it over again.
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protect the students protest whog she said were under threat journalist. >> he introduced himself only as >> a camera not a weapon. >> sure, but it also wasn't a big camera. it could have been a phone-sized it didn't say professional journalist to me. >> we asked if she would review the tape with us. she declined. >> i don't wish to do that. >> but on the tape she's clearly heard identifying the student journalist as a reporter before calling for muscle to remove him. >> who wants to help me get this reporter out of here. need some muscle over here. help me get him out. >> is calling for muscle respectful? >> it was a mistake. i never meant it as a call for violence. it's just one of those things said in the heat of the moment. >> but another video released last pic shows her at a earlier protest during a homecoming in
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officer who she says pushed her. >> get out or get arrest. >> you can see where people watching those videos are saying she's got a problem. >> people who know me don't feel that way. and people there know i was there with the best of intentions and know it was a really tricky situation. >> the university governing board is investigating. david steelman is a board member. >> what about the video is most damaging. >> the call for muscle. no question about it. imagine yourself as a parent and that's your child that a faculty member calls for muscle on. you do not pour gasoline on on already volatile situation. >> earlier called her someone as outstanding record with teaching and she worried she won't get a
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>> i believe there's an environment set up where i can't be fairly evaluated. >> if that's the case what happens after that. >> well i fight for my job. i love my job. i'm good at my job. i made mistakes. i don't think i should be judged entirely on those mistakes. to fight for what i think is fair. >> we'll be right back.ngs) where are you? well the squirrels are back in the attic. mom? your dad won't call an exterminator... can i call you back, mom? he says it's personal this time... if you're a mom, you call at the worst time. it's what you do. if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance, you switch to geico. it's what you do. where are you? it's very loud there. are you taking a zumba class? [cough, cough] mike? janet? cough if you can hear me. don't even think about it.
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yeah...but what about mike? he has that dry scratchy thing going on. guess what? it works on his cough too. cough! guess what? it works on his cough too. what? stop! don't pull me! spoiler alert! she doesn't make it! only mucinex dm relieves bothwet and dry coughs for 12 hours with two medicines in one pill. start the relief. ditch the misery. let's end this. degree gave women a motion-activated wristband to understand how much they move,... and created degree with motionsense. the world's first antiperspirant activated by movement, it has unique microcapsules that break with friction to release bursts of freshness all day. keeping you fresher with every move. motionsense. protection to keep you moving.
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photograph danny clench has worked with just about every big name in the music world, rockers, rappers, country stars, jazz artists and more. we look at how he gets up close and personal with the subjects. spoke with anderson cooper. >> bruce springstein hitting the road on tour once more. his wife patty by his side. and danny clench is there to talk about old times. >> in '99 was the first time i photographed you guys. >> and shoot the band rehearsing. >> over the years, clench has
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springstein. and many have become classics. >> this is a farm house on bruce's property, just a really sweet little spot. >> there are portraits of the artist off stage that mirror of tone and message of his music and the famous shot of springstein falling back into the crowd where from the stage clench had the perfect view. >> he was in there and he fell back and i got my shot. >> did you know you got it. >> i felt like i did, yes. >> clench wears many hats, pun intended. as the portrait photographer at the grammys he covers the spectrum. tony bennett, lady gaga, miranda lambert, too fighter, davegrohl and paul mccartney.
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moment. i never take it for granted. >> that's the band phish one of several trusting him to stay out of the way. >> it's new year's eve, phish is playing madison square garden and to the crowd clench is the invisible man. >> what is it about shooting a concert. what are you trying to get? >> i'm trying to capture a moment. not about the singer at the microphone. i'm trying to look for a moment in between. >> he works from the back of the stage hiding behind the drums or the amps waiting for that in between moment popping up like a
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sometimes it paid off big as in this classic photograph of dave grohl. >> kind of still gives me goose bumps. >> or this one at a pearl jam concert, eddie vedder and jeff ahmet airborne. >> i was hiding behind a amp and there popped up. >> could you wear ear plugs. >> i should but often don't. >> i'm surprised you can hear me or are you reading my lips. >> yeah, i get out there and i'm like, geez, i should have some ear plugs, but i forgot them. >> he was an assistant to photographer before hitting the road. he preferring shooting in natural light and agrees that if your pictures aren't good enough you're not close enough. even when he's not working he's still looking for the perfect shot.
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time. i'm such a visual person. i don't want to miss that moment. >> you're never without your camera. >> rarely. >> even right now. >> see, i always want to be prepared because you never know who will come to your studio. >> i really like this one a lot. >> his studio is a place where any music fan would love to be locked up for few days. >> it's like history of rock and roll. >> yeah. couple things i want to show you. >> couple years back he photographed one of the men who started it all, chuck barry who is now 89. and another founding father jerry lee lewis who is 80. and here's the first pictures of sessions with bob dylan. >> just keeping it real simple. >> greg allman on a rainy day.
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stage. a shot capturing the loneliness of life on the road. country stars faith hill and tim mcgraw, norah jones. tupac. >> he was really professional. he took his shirt off and i saw the tattoos and said would you mind doing one like that. >> when you took it did you know how strong it was. >> i felt it was a really powerful image, the simplicity of it was really powerful. >> he branched out to commercials and music videos, this one shot on willie nelson's bedroom on his tour bus. you give your hand to me
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his photograph but he doesn't like being directed so i found ways to work with that. >> he also got candid photos like nelson braiding his hair and indulging in his favorite recreational past time, smoking a huge stick of weed. >> i don't know what to call it it's so big. it's like a cigar. >> somehow i can't remember what happened after that. you don't know me >> and then there are the occasional shoots he wishes he could forget. >> i was at a madonna show in the sweet spot and she came out, it was the best part of the show, i was shooting, shooting, shooting, i'm like, god i must have shot 100 pictures have i not run out of film and i open the back and there was no film. that happened to me only once. >> ouch.
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along so well with musicians u he knows the language. >> wearing yet another hat to play with the tangiers blues band jamming with willie and bruce. his harmonica like his camera goes everywhere he goes. he grew up on the jersey shore living in tom's river, few miles down the garden state parkway from springstein country. >> some good ones. >> he got the photography bug from his mother. >> she always has a camera, even still. at times i take pictures of her taking pictures of the family. >> from his father he got a taste for classic rock and roll from the 50s and classic cars. his prized possession, a 1948 pontiac silver streak, the sort of car his father always noticed when clench was a kid.
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point out the cars and i started to love them myself. >> and he's always found ways to work them into the shot. springstein with the pontiac and with his wife's 1950 hudson with clench's father at the wheel. an old cadillac with neil young's hat and young's tooling around nashville. >> this was a great moment for me, driving around in this cadillac with neil >> was he driving. >> he was driving, yeah. we stopped and i grabbed it.
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>> more in moment. when the engines failed on the plane i was flying, i knew what to do to save my passengers. but when my father sank into depression, i didn't know how to help him. when he ultimately shot himself, he left our family devastated. don't let this happen to you. if you or a loved one is suicidal, call the national suicide prevention lifeline. no matter how hopeless or helpless you feel, with the right help, you can get well. (franklin d. roosevelt) the inherent right to work is one of the elemental privileges of a free people. endowed, as our nation is, with abundant physical resources... ...and inspired as it should be to make those resources
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>> it's common practice in if you like grated parmesan cheese, may want to check the kind you buy. >> it's common practice in cheese plants like this to use very small amounts of cellulose to keep it from clumping. it's considered safe to eat but some manufacturers have crossed the line, using it as fillers, cutting corners and duping customers. >> whether sprinkled on pasta or shaved on salads or grated on anything america's appetite for cheese has been heating up the last four decades but experts believe some of the parmesan isn't real cheese and it's costing them. >> americans are probably consuming close to 100 million pounds annually at probable value of $500 million a year. >> cellulose is a big culprit.
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2% to 4% is acceptable in the industry but more than two brands were tested and one was 8.8% cellulose. while walmart came in at 7.8%. >> you're getting ripped off. it's not what you bargained for. >> walmart wouldn't comment but jewel-osco has pulled the essential every day parmesan cheese. >> the labelled is disingenuous. and the labelling is out of whack. >> in 2013 it was quoted that castle cheese in pennsylvania it's parmesan cheese proeds didn't contain any parmesan cheese.
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and is facing criminal charges. the fda takes economic fraud very seriously. it they can refer cases to the department of justice for prosecution. >> the consumer is being frauded buying something flat and tasteless. not what they expected to get. >> difference between which cheeses are real and which are loaded with fillers. there's a real true cheese seal going to urge others in the industry to adopt this seal as well. >> that's the news for this friday. for some the news continues. for others check back later for the morning news and cbs this morning. from new york city and the broadcast center. trump and the pope. >> a religious leader to question a person's faith is
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>> also tonight, two days before the nevada caucus, a personal side of hillary clinton. >> my mother met had he at the door and she said, there is no room for kourds in this house >> a hospital pays rans om to hackers to get its computers back. and from football to foot lights. >> i got good feet. ha. ha. >> a former nfl star, pulls off the play of a lifetime. it may sound odd but all i care about is love >> this is the cb"cbs overnight" coming to you from las vegas. the odd's makers here at ceasar's palace never bet on this, but in a campaign that has seen just about everything, we now sl donald trump feuding with the pope. it all started when francis on
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said that if trump wants to build a wall on the mexican border than he is not a christian. then all hell broke loose. major garrett is in south carolina. >> for a religious leader to question a person's faith is disgraceful 1y50 donald trump said mexico fed the holy father propaganda. >> so they met with the pope and met with the pope them this. if and win vatican is attacked by isis, which is as everyone knows isis ultimate trophy, i can promise you that the pope
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met found in refreshing. >> trump supporters we met found it refreshing. >> i think people need to know about what's going on this this world. >> i thought it was appropriate. i think he needs to let people know why the pope was saying derecognize torrey things about him and the reasons behind it. >> trump has defied political vengss and manners before. insulting mexicans and his presidential announcement. >> they're bringing drugs and they're bringing crime. they're rapists. >> and dishonoring viet prisons of war. >> he's not a war hero. >> the one constant trumt drives the conversation and leaves his rivals, including ted cruz, veering in another direction.
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the safest places for trump to pick even a small fight with the pope. scott, four years ago only 14% of primary voters identified themselves as catholics, 65% as christian. >> thanks much. the republican primary is in south carolina saturday. has a commanding lead near his closest rival, ted cruz, neerparly two to one. ted cruz up nine points since last month. there was a very emotional moment in kasich campaign stop in clemson. >> over a year ago a man who was like my second dad who killed himself and few months later my
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months later my dad lost his job and i was in a dark place for a long time. i was pretty depressed. but i found hope in the lord and in my friends and now in my presidential candidate that i support. i really appreciate one of those hugs you've been talking about. [ applause ] . >> reporter: kasich told the young man, the lord will give you strength, i promise you,if you ask him. on the democratic side hillary clinton has an eight-point lead nationally on sarntds. here in nevada two ds before the caucuses they are neck and neck. here's nancy cordes. >> we're going to convince people to caucus on saturday 1y50. >> reporter: nevada has become a crap-shoot for clinton after her
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after sanders win in granite state. 450er here in nevada. >> we're going to get a path to sit destineship. >> you have lived through the greed and illegal behavior of wall street. >> nevada's largest union, the culinary workers have decided not to endorse either canada after backing president ob in '08. geoconda arguello- kline is one of the union's top officers. >> the members they all were asking, saying, you have to listen what's going on and participate. >> nationally sanders still gets higher marks in the cbs poll for being honest and trust worthy
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proposals are not realistic, 14% say that about clinton's plans. she's also seen as the candidate most likely to get things done in washington by a wide 26-point margin. >> nevada is a notoriously hard state to poll. people move in and out of the state a lot and democrats can register on caucus day. bottom line, neither campaign knows who will win on saturday. >> nancy cordes on the cam feign for us.
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snu hampshire in a land slide and tieing in iowa he's decided to stay here through the caucus. we spoke to her in her las vegas campaign office today. >> what do you think donald trump and bernie sanders have tapped into? it's a powerful thing. >> i do think, scott, people are angry. people feel like the government is not working for them, the economy is not working, it's political sisystem is not working. people are angry but also hungry for solutions. i'm meeting the people in eyes of people is tell me something i can believe. that's what i try to do. >> your resume checks will many every box in terms of experience but it doesn't seem to be what the american people want in this election. >> at the end of the day voters understand they're selecting
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chief and i'm proududf the kpeerns experience that i have that will enable me to did the job. i think democrats are focused on who can actually beat the republicans. i know how to go after what republicans stand for and to defeat them because i believe every one of the ones runs on the republic san side would be really bad for america. >> what's your tax plan? >> first i'm not raising taxes on the middle class, period. going after income $5 million or more that i think have too many opportunities to escape paying the taxes that they should. i'm going to after corporations that are gaming the system. i want a sensible cocoorate tax popocy. >> senator sanders said that he would raise tax on families that made $250,000 and above.
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>> i said i will not raise taxes on anybody $250 or below. here's the problem there's no way for him to fulfill the promises he's making wititut raising the taxes on the middle class. >> in '76 jimmy carter said i will not lie. >> i will tell you through all my time i've tried to level with the american people. >> have you always told the truth? >> always tried to. always. always. >> some people are going to call that wiggle room that you gave yourself, always tried to. jiy carter said i will never lie to you. >> you know, you're asking me to say have i ever. i don't believe i ever have. i don't believe i ever have. i don't believe i ever will. i'm going to doet best i can to level with the american people. if >> we'll be back later in the broadcast with more of the interview with hillary clinton including the advice she got
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but right now charlieieose is in new york with the rest of the day's news. charlie. >> interesting view from the campaign trail. thank you. today we learned an attack that shut down computers at a california hospital until a ransom was paid is far from an isolated case. hackers are hitting soft targets all over the country. >> the cyber threat criminal who's collected $17,000 ransom from the hollywood presbyterian medical center are part of a increasingly lucrative online crime waive where they hack into a computer network, lock out other users and demand ransom usually to be paid in the untraceable currency bitcoins. >> is their only option to pay the money? >> she which lose their data. in most cases, yes. >> a cybersecurity an list at
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the growing use of ransomware attacks. >> tend to be on entities that are smaller with no securities in place, on hospitals, fire stations, schools, rather than large companies. >> since january 2015, have collected at leefltast $325 million in ransom paimts victories ranging from the hospital in hollywood, to 9 sheriff's department, in tennessee, and to the city government in detroit. even south carolina schools, the director of technology is trying to save the system without paying the $8,500 ransom. >> we're going server by server, back up by back up to see what we have to restore those back ups.
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>> even individuals on home computers have been victories. best protection keep anti virus software up-to-date and never qlik on a link in an unslitted e-mail. >> thank you john. the natural gas leak in porter ranch, california, was declared permanently sealed today. for four months it spewed methane that made people sick and turned l.a. suburb into a ghost town. monitors will stay in place to make sure air is safe to breathe. president obama will be inthe first sitting american president to travel to cuba since calvin coolidge in 1928. still ahead, what pregnant women in the u.s. need to know about the seeka virus and a
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i think we should've taken a left at the river. tarzan know where tarzan go! tarzan does not know where tarzan go. hey, excuse me, do you know where the waterfall is? waterfall? no, me tarzan, king of jungle. why don't you want to just ask somebody? if you're a couple, you fight over directions. it's what you do. if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance, you switch to geico. oh ohhhhh it's what you do. ohhhhhh! do you have to do that right in my ear? living well your immune system works hard to keep you on top of your game. you can support it by eating healthy, drinking fluids, and getting some rest. and you can combine these simple remedies with airborne. no other leading immunity brand gives you more vitamin c. plus it has a specially crafted blend of 13 vitamins, minerals and herbs. so when you want to support your immune system, take airborne, and enjoy living well.
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mothers need to know about zika. >> 30-year-old jessica reiner is expecting to twins in april. today she getting tested for zika virus. >> it adds an element of anxiety. i feel anxious about a lot of things. >> last month she and her husband, drew, took a vacation to puerto tyreke anso not knowing it was add stod a c.d.c. list of places with zika transmission and then a text message, i don't want to scare you but avoid mosquitos. in brad ill it's linked with microcephaly, babies born with an abnormally small hetd and brain. those who survive have lifelong neurological problems. dr. stacey ehrenberg is a high-risk pregnancy expert who
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>> a lot of patients are concerned that they could contract zika virus here in the united states. we don't have any patients here in the contineneal united states who contracted the virus here. >> zika virus remains in the blood of an infected person for about a week. c.d.c. says based on current evidence a previous zika infection doesn't pose a risk birth defengt for a future pregnancy. men who live in or have travelled to a country with zika vivis outbreak should abstain from sex or use condoms during sex with pregnant women. >> public health experts say it is important to eradicate mosquito breeding grounds before the virus arrives. >> thank you john. a camera captured a frightening scene in honolulu as a helicopter plunged into the
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child. scene in honolulu as a child. back now in las vegas with more of our interview with hillary clinton. last week we went home to brooklyn with clinton's opponent bernie sanders to talk about what formed his character. well, today, we asked secretary clinton about the remarkable life of her mother, dorothy rodham who ran away from an abuseive home at the age of 14
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great depression she died in 2011 at the age of 92. >> how much of what we're hearing is your mother? which words are her word snz. >> well, a lot of it is. you know, i wish she were still here. she was in '08. she gave me so much support. and she was also a great, you know, mirror. >> tell me about a moment, if you would, with your mother, as a little girl, that was formative for you. >> you know, i was pretty shy. kind of a reserved little girl. >> really? >> yes. i would go outside to play and literally would get knocked down and pushed around by all the little kids. and so the kids knocked me down, pushed me around, i ran back in crying, my mother met me at the door and said there is no room for cowards in this house. you go right back out there and stand up for yourself. so i came back out and said i'm
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house. i'm here, i want to play. and literally they formed a circle and this one girl who was so mean came over and pushed me and i just pushed her right back and she was so surprised. and they all just looked at me that day and every day after that. but if my mother had not met me and had not given me that tough love that i think every kid needs at some point in his or her life, my life might have been very different. >> no room for cowards. house.
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in a moment every day it's getting closer going faster than a roller coaster a love like yours will surely come my way hey, hey, hey babies aren't fully developed until at least 39 weeks. if your pregnancy is healthy, it for labor to begin on its own. a healthy baby is worth the wait. o0 c1 travel is part of the american way of life. when we're on vacation, we keep an eye out for anything that looks out of place. [ indistinct conversations ] miss, your bag. when we travel from city to city, we pay attention to our surroundings.
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eddie george the former football player whose nfl career took him from houston to tennessee to dallas. his new career has taken him to new york, the city, and "chicago" the play. here's jim axelrod. >> is everybody here, hit it. >> while former football star eddie george is no stranger to the spot light. >> i don't care about expensive things, cash mere coats, diamond rings. >> it's a very different stage sthan where he first made his name 21 years ago winning the heisman trophy before a nine-year all-pro nfl career. >> i didn't comeh to this earth just to say i played football nine years, won a heisman trophy and die. razzle-dazzle them >> he caught the theater bug and
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>> how's your foot work. >> foot work is nice, man, i got good feet. >> drama classes, voice lessons and shakespeate in his hometown of nashville before auditioning for broadway. >> what was important for me was that the ensemble didn't look at me as a gimmick, some guy athlete that wanted to do broadway. >> no vanity project. >> no vanity project here. is this is perfectly understandable >> this is not just bold-faced name hired to get people into the seats? this is a legitimate song and dance guy? >> yes, he is. yes he is, you just watch him. >> >> did you get my trial zblat take it easy kid. >> i wasn't expecting what eddie brought to the sdage.
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>> if you trust and go through the process and show up with the intention of getting better and better and be humble things will unfold like you can never imagine. >> he could be talking football or broad way, eddie george knows the secret behind a great play. and they'll make you a star >> "cbs overnight news." >> that's the overnight news for this friday. for some of you the news continue for others check back later for the morning news and cbs this morning. from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm charlie rose. >> this is the "cbs overnight" news.
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a key fight in the battle for the republican presidential nomination will play out tomorrow in south carolina. candidates in the first southern primary of campaign 2016 and voters are bomb barded by phone calls, mail, and knocks on the front door. one voter showed us how overwhelming the campaignlitz can be. >> tommy is an undecided republican. >> this one is negative. >> to get a taste of his political mail. >> so these mailer vintage would be wednesday. >> yeah, wednesday, just today. >> they're not aged at all. >> not aged and not including phone calls. >> that last call left him a bit
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>> i can't tell you if it was for or against, all i could understand was rubio. >> by phone or by mail and on tv, plikolitics is una voilable. unavoidable unavoidable. he told us he feels inunated. >> do they have any effect on you. >> i think after a while they have a negative eventuallyffect. you don't know what to believe because so many are negagave. >> he and his friends are getting getting worn out but political pros say it pays off. >> all those mediums have effect on persuasion and when one and eight republican primary voters undecided it will have an impact. >> he said he doesn't read the
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more but campaigns can't afford not to try. >> maybe a mail piece a voter receives today doesn't persuade them but the one they receive tomorrow does, advertising works, it's why businesses do it, why candidates do it. >> he's not so sure. he just knows this -- >> everybody, my friends at least, we talk about it, hear about it, are getting fed up with it, getting tired of if. >> a new issue sparking discussion on the campaign trail is apple stand off withhe f b i over privacy concern and google ceo is supporting apple's decision to defy a judge's order to unlock an iphone from one of the san bernardino killers. >> apple sources are digging in and rad to fight it all the way to the supreme court. >> the fbi is locked out of his
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apple is betting its global customer base is not a company that hands over its example private information. the u.s. judge ordered apple to wipe out all of itsdatea if the wrong pass code is entered ten times. the tech giants doesn't have the technology and developing it would create a back door to millions of devices. the white house defended the request forr apple to aiaiin las vegas the presidentinvestigation . >> they are not asking to resign a product or create a new back door, just something to have an impact on this one device. >> as the war on terror and
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and thefbi both have compelling yet competing interests. >> apple is saying if you promise you will only use it once it will be used again and again and when you give precedent once you can't deny next time. >> posted a series of tweets cyte siting with apple with this to say -- >> in the two months since they killed 14 people in san bernard bernardino, california,the f b i has discoverere evidence l lding up to theerror attack. >>ublically apple says it doesn't have the technology to do what 9the fbi wants but
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the software to kpla kplooi withcomply with the ruling. >> thiss week second of state john kerry with a group of executives in los angeles. >> secretary kerry said he called this meeting to discuss ideas about how to combat what he calls the isis narrative. some are concerned he is trying to get executives to produce anti-isis propaganda. >> america,e claim to have the grgrtest army history has known. >> this video has the hall marcuss of a movie trailer but it is a proisis propaganda piece produced by the terror group. now the u.s. government is asking hollywood for advice on how to counter that message. >> this is not just a military battle but a battlef ideas
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>> a top kerry aid was in tuesday's closed door meeting with almost a dozen studio executives when the secretary of state made his pitch. >> hollywood is one of the greatest competitive advantages we have as a country, it is revered around the planet, our second largest export. >> the film industry grosss tens and billions of dollars every year. not the first time they teamed up with government. top gun was a box office hit that became an effective recruiting tool. other collaborations have produced mixed results. some felt cia officials made to makers of zero dark 30 led to torture techniques.
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different approach. >> the government is just trying to get ideas on how they counter spreading. >> but when the messengerer is just the u.s. government some worry that message can get lost. >> the reason united states can't be the brand behind counter narrative is something we have no credibility when talking about islam. >> something senator kerry understands. >> he said we are thinking outside the boxx strategy of soft power. >> now secretary kerpry 90 minutes also there are a lot of different kinds of yucky germs. but not all disinfecting wipes... are approved to kill the same number of them. lysol wipes are approved to kill more types of germs than c crox. this cold and flu season
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[cough, cough] mike? janet? cough if you can hear me. don't even think about it. i took mucinex d dfor my phlegmy cough. yeah...but what about mike? he has that dry scratchy thing going on. guess what? it works on his cough too. cough! guess what? it works on his cough too. what? stop! don't pull me! spoiler alert! she doesn't make it! only mucinex dm relieves bothwet and dry coughs for 12 hours with two medicines in one pill. start the relief. ditch the misery.
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a national backlash says she regrets her controversial behavior she was calling for muscle to remove a student journalist from a campus protest. the video shows her cursing at police a month early. >> s s's the woman seen at a university of missouri protest last fall ordering protesters away from the quad. >> you need to get out. >> her actions brought her many miss demeanor assault chargerss. >> i was embarrassed by my behavior and doesn't represent the good i was doing there that day and certainly i wish i could do it over again. >> she said she was trying to
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sure the man filming was a real journalist. >> he introduced himself only as media and came at me with a camera. >> a camera not a weapon. >> sure but it also wasn't a big camera. it could have been a phone sized camera. didn't say professional journalist to me. >> we asked if she would review the tape with us. >> i don't wish to do that. >> but on the tape she's clearly heard identifying the student journalist as a reporter before calling for muscle to move him. >> who wants to help me get this reporter out of here. need some muscle over here. help me get him out. >> is calling for muscle respectful. >> it was a mistake. i never naent as a call for violence. it's just one of those things said in the heat of the moment. but another video r reased last piquet shows her at a
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homecoming in october cursing at a police officer who she says pushed her. >> get utahout or get arrest. >> you can see where people watching those videos are saying she's got a problem. >> people who know me don't feel that wawa and people there know i was there with the best of intentions and know it was a really tricky situation. >> the university governing board is investigating. david steelman is a board member. >> what about the video is most damaging. >> the call for muscle. no question about it. imagine yourself as a parent a a that's'sour child that aaculty
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>> earlier called her someone as outstanding record with teaching and she worried she won't get a fair hearing. >> i believe there's an environment set up where i can't be fairly evaluated. >> if that's the case what happens after that. >> well i fight for my job. i love my job. i'm zba at my job. i made mistakes. i don't think pet moments are beautiful, unless you have allergies. then your eyes may see it differently. only flonase is approved to relieve both itchy, watery eyes and congestion. no other nasal allergy spray can say that. when we breathe in allergens our bodies react by over producing six key inflammatory substances that cause our symptoms. most allergy pills only control one substance. flonase controls six. and six is greater than one. complete allergy relief or incomplete. let your eyes decide.
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photograph danny clench has worked with just about every big name in the music world, rockers, rappers, country stars, jazz artists and more. we look at how he gets up close and personal with the subjects. spoke with anderson cooper. bruce springstein hitting the road on tour once more. his wife patty by his side. and danny clench is there to talk about old times. >> in '99 was the first time i photographed you guys. >> '99 that's right. >> and shoot the band rehearseing rehearsing. >> over the years, clench has
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springstein. and many have become classics. >> this is a farm house on bruce's property, just a really sweet little spot. > there are portrts ofhe artist off stage that mirror of tone and message of his music and the famous shot of springstein falling back into the crowd where from the stage clench had the perfect view. >> he was in there and he fell back and i got my shot. >> did you know you got it. >> i felt like i did, yes. >> clench wears many hats, pun intended. as the portrait photographer at the grammys he covers the spectrum
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tony bennett, lady gaga, mereiranda lambert, too fighter, davegrohl and paul mccartner. >> you're in the history of the moment. i never take it for granted. >> that's the band phish one of several trusting him to stay out of the way. >> it's new year's eve, phish is playing madison square garden and to the crowd clench is the invisible man. >> what is it about shooting a concert. what are you trying to get? >> i'm trying to capture a moment. not about the singer at the microphone. i'm trying to look for a moment in between. >> he works from the back of the stage hiding behind the drums or
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between moment popping up like a whack-a-mole to get his shot. sometimes it paid off big as in this classic photograph of dave grohl. >> or this one eddie vedder and jeff ahmet airborne. >> i was hiding behind a amp and there popped up. >> could you wear ear plugs. >> i should but often don't. >> i'm surprised you can hear me or are you reading my lips. >> gentleman, i get out there and i'm ke, ez, shohod have some earar plpls, but i forgot them. >> he was an assistant to photographer before hitting the road. he preferring shooting in natural light and agrees that if
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you're not close enough. even when he's not working he's still looking for the perfect shot. >> i'm photographing all the time. i don't want to miss that moment. >> you're never without your camera. >> rarely. >> even right now. >> see, i always want to be prepared because you never know who will come to your studio. >> i really like this one a lot. >> his studio is a place where any music fan would love to be locked up for few days. >> it's like history of rock and roll. yeah. cocole things twient show you. i want to show you. >> couple years back he photographed one of the men who started it all, chuck barry who is now 89. and another founding father jerry lee lewis who is 80.
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sessions with bob dylan. >> just keeping it real simple. >> greg allman on a rainy day. johnny cash waiting to go on stage. a shot capturing the lonelyness of life on the road. country stars faith hill and mim mcg r a wrks. norah jones. tupac. >> he was really professional. he took his shirt off and i saw the tattoos and said would you mind doing one like that. >> when you took it did you know how strong it was. >> i felt it was a really powerful image, the simplicity of it was really powerful. >> he branched out to commercials and music videos, this one shot on willie nelson's
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>> willie n does the mind medoesn't mind me taking his photograph but he doesn't like being directed so i found ways to work with that. >> he also got candidi photos like nelson braiding his hair and smoking a huge stick of weed. >> i don't know what to call it it's so big. it's like a cigar. >> somehow i can't remember what happened after that. you don't know me >> and then there are the occasional shoots he wishehe he could forgetet >> i was at a madadna show in the sweet spot and she came out, it was the best part of the show, i was shooting, shooting, shooting, i'm like, god i must have shot 100 pictures have i not run out of film and i open the back and there was no film. that happened to me only once.
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>> no doubt one reason he gets along so well withh musicians u he k kws the language. >> wearing yet another hat to play with the tangiers blues band jamming with willie and bruce. his harm onica like his camera goes everywhere he goes. he grew up on thehe jerseseshore living in tom's river, few milil down the garden state parkway from springstein country. >> some good ones. >> he got the photography bug from his mother. >> she always has a camera, even still. at times i take pictures of her taking pictures of the family. >> from his father he got a taste for classic rock and roll from the 50s and classic cars. his prized possession, a 1948
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of car his father alwa noticed when clench was a kid. >> everywhere we went he would point out the cars and i started to love them myself. >> and he's always found ways to work them into the shot. springstein with the pontiac and with his wife's 1950 hudson with clench's father at the wheel. an old cadillac with kneel young's hat and neil tooling around nashville. >> this was big for me. >> was he driving. >> he was driving, yeah. we stopped at an interedwin escobar and i we stopped and i grabbed it. embarrassed by a prostate exam? imagine how your doctor feels. as a urologist, i have performed 9,421 and a half prostate exams. so why do i do it? because i get paid. und... on this side of the glove i know prostate exams can save lives.
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kind you buy. >> it's common practice in cheese plants like this to use very small amounts of cell urksulose but some are cutting corners and duping customers. >> whether sprinkled on pasta or shaved on salads or grated on anything america's appetite for cheese has been heating up the last four decades but experts believe some of the parm isn't real cheese and it's costing them. >> americans are probably consuming close to 100 million pounds annually at probable
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>> cell u loskll u losulose is a big culprit. more than every day cheese was 8.8% cellulose. while walmart came in at 7.8%. >> you're getting ripped off. it's not what you bargonned for. >> walmart wouldn't comment but jewel-osco has pulled the essential every daye parm cheese. >> the labelled is disingenuous. and the labelling is out of whack. >> in 2013 it was quotedhat it's parm cheese proeds didn't contain any parm cheese.
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and is facing criminal charges. it they can refer cases to the department of justice for prosecutioio >> the cononmer is being frauded buying something flat and tasteless. not what they expected to get. >> difference between which cheeses are real and which are loaded with fillers. there's a real true cheese seal going to urge others in the industry to adopt this seal as well. >> that's the news for this friday. for some the news continues. for everyone here in the broadcast sit. city. blan now it's a holy war between trump and the pope.
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disgraceful. >> also tonight, two days before the nevada caucus, a personal side of hillary clinton. >> my mother met me at the door and she said, there is no room for cowards in this house. >> a hospital pays ransom to hackers to get its computers back. and from football to foot lights. >> i got good feet. ha, ha. >> a former nfl star, pulls off the play of a lifetime. it may sound odd but all i care about is love >> this is the "cbs overnight news" coming to you from las vegas. the odd's makers here at ceasar's palace never bet on this, but in a campaign that has seen just about everything, we now have donald trump feuding with the pope.
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his flight home from mexico, build a wall on the mexican christian. then all hell broke loose. major garrett is in south carolina. >> for a religious leader to question a person's faith is disgraceful. >> donald d ump said mexico fed d ththholy father propaganan. >> so they met with the pope and met with the pope them this. donald trump is. he doesn't know me. if and win vatican is attacked by isis, which is as everyone knows isis ultimate trophy, i can promise you that the pope would have only wishednd prayed that donald truru would have been president. >> trump said no leader should question anoer's christian faith. for getting this twitter post. how can ted cruz be a christian when he lies so much sand so
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figure has dared crossed the paper assy. trump s sporters we met found refreshingng >> i think people need to know about what's going on this this world. >> i thought it was apprriate. i think he needs to let people knowhy the pope was saying derogatory things about him and the reasons behind it. >> trump has defied political convections and manners before. insulting mexicans and his at his president shat a at his presidential annououement. >> they're bringing drugs and theyeye bringing crime. they're rapists. >> and dishonoring viet prisons of war. >> he's not a war hero. he was a war hero because he was you. >> the one constant trump drives rivals, including ted cruz, veering in another direction. >> that's between donald a a the pope i'm not going to get in the middle of it.
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the safest places for trump to pick even a small fight with the pope. scott, four years ago only 14% of primary voters identified themselves as catholics, 65% as christian. >> thanks much. the republican primary is in south carolina saturday. trump has a commanding lead nationally in a new cbs poll of republican voters out tonight. he leads his closest rival, ted cruz, nearly two to one. john kasich gets the most improved he's at 11% up nine points since last month. there was a very emotional moment in kasich campaign stop in clemson. >> over a year ago a man who was like my second dad who killed himself and few months later my parents got a divorce and few months later my dad lost his job and i was in a dark place for a
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i was pretty depressed. but i found hope in the lord and presidential candidate that i really appreciate one of those hugs you've been talking about. [ applause ]. >> reporter: kasich told the young man, the lord will give you strength, i promise you,if you ask him. on the democratic side hillary clinton has an eight-point lead nationally on bernie sanders. here in nevada two days before the caucuses they are neck and neck. here's nancy cordes. >> we're going to convince people to caucus on saturday >> reporter: nevada has become a crap-shoot for clinton after her double-digit lead evaporated after sanders win in granite state. >> we're going to surprise them
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surprise them here in nevada. >> clinton has spent the last . >> we're going to get a path to citizenship. that's what we want, right. >> you have lived through the greed and illegal behavior of wall street. >> nevada'a'largest union, the culinary workers have decided not to endorse either canada candidate, after backing president obama in '08. geoconda arguello- kline is one of the union's top officers. >> the members they all were asking, saying, you have to listen what's going on and participate. >ationally sanders still gets gher marks in the cbpoll for being honest and trust worthy but 41% of democrats say his proposals are not realistic, 14%
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she's also seen as the candidate most likely to get things done in washington by a wide 26-point margin. >> nevada is a notoriously hard state to poll. people move in and out of the state a lot and democrats can register on caucus day. bottom line, neither campaign knows who will win on saturday. >> nancy cordes on the campaign for us. thank you very much.
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from maine to maui, thousands of high school students across the country are getting in on the action by volunteering in their communities. chris young: action teams of high school students are joining volunteers of america and major league baseball players to help train and inspire the next genenation ofofolunteers. carlos pea: it't'easy to start an action team at your school so you, too, can get in on the action.
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if you were a hippie in the '60s, you need to know. it's the dawning of the age of aquarius. yeah, and something else that's cool. what? osteoporosis is preventable. all: osteo's preventable? right on! if you dig your bones, protect them. all: cbs cares! for clinton these are high stakes in nevada after losing
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and tieiei in iowa he's decided to stay here through the caucus. we spoke to her in her las vegas campaign office today. >> what do you think donald trump and bernie sanders have tapped into? it's a powerful thing. >> i do think, scott, people are angry. people feel like the government is not working for them, the economy is not working, it's political system is not working. people are angry but also hungry for solutions. i'm meeting the people in eyes of people is tell me something i can believe. that's what i try to do. >> your resume checks will many every box in terms of experience but it doesn't seeeeto be what the amamican people want in is election. >> at the end of the day voters understand they're selecting both president and commander in
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experience that i have that will enable me on day one to do all aspects of the job. who can actually beaeathe republicans. i know how to go after what republicans stand for and to with all my heart, every one of the ones runs on the republic san side would be really bad for america. >> what's your tax plan? who gets the increase, who gets a tax cut. >> first i'm not raising taxes on the middle class, period. going after income $5 million or more that i think have too many opportunities to escape paying the taxes that they should. i'm going after corporations that are gaming the system. i want a sensible corporate tax policy. >> senator sanders said that he would raise taxes on families that made $250,000 and above. is that your level? >> i said i will not raise taxes on anybody $250 or below. re's the problem there's no
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promises he's making without raising the taxes on the middle class. >> in '76 jimmy carter said i will not lie. >> i will tell you through all my time i've tried to level with the american people. >> have you always told the truth? >> always tried to. always. always. >> some people are going to call that wiggle room that you gave yourself, always tried to. jimmy carter said i will never lie to you. >> you know, you're asking me to say have i ever. i don't believe i ever have. i don't believe i ever have. i don't believe i ever will. i'm going to do the best i can to level with the american people. >> we'll be back later in the broadcast with more ofhe interview with hillary clinton including the advice she got from her mother. but right now charlie rose is in new york with the rest of the
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charlie. >> interesting view from the campaign trail. thank you. today we learned an attack that shut down computers at a california hospital until a ransom was paid is far from an isolated case. hackers are hitting soft targets all over the country. here's john blackstone. >> the cyber threat criminal who collected $17,000 ransom from the hollywood presbyterian medical center are part of a increasingly lucrative online crime waive where they hack into a computer network, lock out other users and demand ransom usually to be paid in the untraceable currency bitcoins. >> is it their only option to pay the money? >> she which lose their data. in most cases, yes. >> a cybersecurity analyst at the rand corporation has been following
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attacks. >> ransomware attacks tend to be on entities that are smaller with no securities in place, on hospitals, fire stations, schools, rather than large companies. >> since january 2015, have collected at least $325 million in ransom payment as cording to ports by the cyber threat threat allllnce. victims range from the hospital in hollywood, to 9 sheriff's department, in tennessee, and to the city government in detroit. even south carolina schools, the director of technology is trying to save the system without paying the $8,500 ransom. >> we're going server by server, back up by back up to see what we have to restore t tse back ups. will be a business decision.
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computers have been victories. computers have been victims, charlie, the best protection keep anti virus software up-to-date and never click on a link in an unsolicited e-mail. the natural gas leak in porter ranch, california, was declared permanently sealed today. methane that made people sick ghost town. monitors will stay in place to make sure air is safe to breathe. president obama will make a historical trip to cuba, he will raise human rights issues with president raul castro. some worry it will legitimize the communist government. mr. obama will be the first sitting american president to travel to cuba since calvin coolidge in 1928. stl ahead, what pregnant women in the u.s. need to know about the zika virus.
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>> 30-year-old jessica reiner is expecting to twins in april. today she getting tested for zika virus. something she never heard of a month ago. >> it adds an element of anxiety. i feel anxious about a lot of things. >> last month she and her husband, drew, took a vacation to puerto rico not knowing it was added to a c.d.c. list of places with zika transmission and then a friend sent her this text message, i don't want to scare you but avoid mosquitos. in brazil it's linked with microcephaly, babies born with an abnormally small head and brain. those who survive have lifelong neurological problems. dr. stacey ehrenberg is a high-risk pregnancy expert who says that some of her patients are panicked >> a lot of patients are concerned that they could
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united states. we don't have any patients here in the continental united states who contracted the virus here. >> zika virus remains in the blood of an infected person for about a week. c.d.c. says baseseon current evidence a previous zika infection doesn't pose a risk birth defect for a future pregnancy. men who live in or have travelled to a country with zika virus outbreak should abstain from sex or use condoms during sex with pregnant women. >> public health experts say it is important to eradicate mosquito breeding grounds before the virus arrives. >> thank you john. a camera captured a frightening scene in honolulu as a helicopter plunged into the water. the chopper went down near the uss arizona memorial in pearl harbor all five people were
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child. > back now in las veves with more of our interview with hillary clinton. last week we went home to brooklyn with clinton's opponent bernie sanders to talk about what formed his character. well, today, we asked secretary clinton about the remarkable life of her mother, dorothy rodham who ran away from an abusive home at the age of 14
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great depression she died in 2011 at the age of 92. >> how much of what we're hearing is your mother? which words are her words. >> well, a lot of it is. you know, i wish she were still here. she was in '08. she gave me so much support. and she was also a great, you know, mirror. >> tell me about a moment, if you would, with your mother, as a little girl, that was formative for you. >> you know, i was pretty shy. kind of a reserved little girl. >> really? >> yes. i would go outside to play and literally would get knocked down and pushed around by all the little kids. and so the kids knocked me down, pushed me around, i ran back in crying, my mother met me at the door and said there is no room for cowards in this house. you go right back out there and stand up for yourself. so i came back out and said i'm
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i'm here, i want to play. and literally they formed a circle and this one girl who was so mean came over and pushed me and i just pushed her right back and she was so surprised. and they all just looked at me and said okay, and so i played that day and every day after that. but if my mother had not met me and had not given me that tough love that i think every kid needs at some point in his or her life, my life might have been very different. >> no room for cowards. >> no room for cowowds in this hohoe. >> secretary clinton. in a moment charlie roseas tonight's grand finale, a former football star scores big on broadway. woman: what does it feel like when a woman is having a heart attack? chest pain, like there's a ton of weight on your chest. severe shortness of breath. unexplained nausea. cold sweats. there's an unusual tiredness and fatigue.e. there's s familiar dizziness or light-heaeadness.
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even your upper stomach, are signs you're having a heart attack. don't make excuses. make the call to 9-1-1 immediately. learn more at womenshealth.gov/heartattack. when the twins were about 10 days old, the doctors told us they werergoing to need blood transfusions. we're sosoroud of who ty've become. as a result of one person, deciding to spend an hour of their le giving blood is just immeasurable, how powerful that one donation could possibly be.
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we end with the story of eddie george the former football player whose nfl career took him from houston to tennessee to dallas. his new career has taken him to new york, the city, and "chicago" the play. here's jim axelrod. >> is everybody here, hit it. >> while former football star eddie george is no stranger to the spot light. >> i don't care about expensive things, cashmere coats, diamond rings. >> it's a very different stage than where he first made his name 21 years ago winning the heisman trophy before a nine-year all-pro nfl career. >> i didn't come to this earth just to say i played football nine years, won a heisman trophy and die. razzle-dazzle them >> he caught the theater bug and started from the ground up. >> how's your foot work.
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good feet. >> drama classes, voice lessons and shakespeare in his hometown of nashville before auditioning for broadway. >> what was important for me was that the ensemble didn't look at me as a gimmick, some guy athlete that wanted to do broadway. >> no vanity project. >> no vanity project here. is this is perfectly understandable >> this is not just bold-faced name hired to get people into the seats? this is a legitimate song and dance guy? >> yes, he is. yes he is, you just watch him. >> take it easy kid. brought to the stage. give them the old razzle-dazzle >> if you trt and go through
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intention of getting better and better and be humble things will unfold like you can never imagine. >> he could be talking football or broad way, eddie george knows the secret behind a great play. and they'll make you a star >> "cbs overnight news." >> that's the overnight news for this friday. for some of you the news continue for others checback later for the morning news and cbs this morning. from the broadcast center in new
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it's friday, february 19th, 2016. this is the "cbs morning news." a face-off with francis. donald trump's latest campaign comments are aimed at the vatican, after pope francis criticizes the republican front-runner. as thousands prepare to say good-bye to the late supreme court justice antonin scalia, the battle continues over who will appoint his successor. five people are on board when a sight-seeing helicopter smashes into pearl harbor. and adele opens up what
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