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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  April 20, 2012 7:00am-9:00am PDT

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fifth production captioning funded by cbs good morning to our viewers in the west. it is it friday, april 12th. i'm charlie rose. trayvon martin's parents face-off in court for the first time with the man who killed their son. so will george zimmerman get to walk free? i'm gayle king. more agents face the ax in the secret service sex scandal and we may finally learn what happened to etan patz who disappeared 33 years ago. jon miller covered the story then and has new details this morning. i'm erica hill. high drama aboard a delta flight. a mid air bird strike forces an emergency landing at jfk. we'll ask captain sully
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sullenberger how the captain did in this case. >> we look at today's eye opener. your world in 90 seconds. >> george zimmerman asked a florida judge for his freedom. >> do you believe that george is a danger to the community? >> trayvon martin's family waits for justice. >> zimmerman requested a private meeting with trayvon martin's family. that request was denied. >> it's a stunning thing hose people who were responsible. it's disgusting. >> the secret services braces for more fallout as two agents accused in a sex scandal of revealed. >> david chaney, the agent posted photos on facebook of himself and governor palin in 2008 writing comments like i was really checking this out. >> check this out, bodyguard, you're fired. >> a scare in the air over jfk airport.
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>> an engine failure due to a bird strike. >> case stumped nypd and fbi for 30 years. >> they are back digging for a sign of etan patz. >> what's the fine going to be? a dozen oreos? >> all that -- >> starbucks will now serve bug-free frappuccinos. >> and all that matters. >> university of colorado in boulder hopes it can prevent thousands coming to campus for participating in the pot smoking event dubbed 420. >> that's a tragedy for a lot of people for sure. >> on "cbs this morning." >> don't be paranoid but that sound you hear, that's me. i'm coming for you, moonbeam.
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welcome to "cbs this morning." there's a tense scene in a florida courtroom this morning as murder suspect george zimmerman tries to get out on bail. >> the parents of trayvon martin, the teenager he shot and killed, are at that bond hearing. it's going on right now. mark, what's the latest? >> reporter: good morning, charlie and erica. george zimmerman is upstairs now in courtroom 5-d as his lawyer is trying to get him bond as he awaits trial on second-degree murder charges. also in court with him seeing him for the first time in person are the parents of trayvon martin. they of course do not want zimmerman released. they think now that he's behind bars, he should stay behind bars. zimmerman's lawyer is trying to make two points. one, that he is not a violent person, and two, that zimmerman is not a flight risk. prosecutors will push back against both points and right now that hearing which began at
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9:00 a.m. local time is still going on. >> does it appear at this point whether he could be released today? >> it's a high bar to keep him behind bars. there has to be overwhelming proof and presumption he'll be found guilty. that's not seen by local legal experts as being all that likely. again, it's a court hearing. the judge can consider any one of a number of things. it's not clear at this point as this hearing just began. >> you mentioned parents of trayvon martin. are they expected to testify? >> reporter: also a good question. you wouldn't expect it in a hearing like this. this is sort of a free flowing hearing. rules are more relaxed than during a regular trial. it's possible but no one said it's likely. >> what about george zimmerman's family? hearing anything from them? >> reporter: they are testifying by phone. you had his wife on the phone earlier. his father, robert, on the phone, laying out a case they don't believe he's a violent person and they think he's a responsible person and not a
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threat to the community and they also promised to vouch for him even to tell the court if zimmerman failed to show up for a certain event or hearing or disappeared, they promised to tell the court even if it's not in george zimmerman's best interest. >> anything new expected to be revealed about the case today, mark. >> reporter: that's one of the big questions is how far will the prosecution go. special prosecutor angela corey to reveal her case and lay it out in order to keep zimmerman behind bars. so far it has been a very aggressive cross examination of the witnesses who are trying to push for zimmerman's release. it's going to be interesting in the next couple of hours to see just what of the state's case is going to be revealed because until now it's been murky. >> a lot to watch today. mark, thank you. we have new information including names for two of the secret service agents who lost their jobs because of a sex scandal in colombia. >> as the investigation continues, officials say more agents could soon be let good. bill plante is at the white house. bill, good morning.
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>> reporter: good morning erica and good morning in the west. the results of the lie detector test they gave to secret service members involved in the incident should be available today. those results are expected to put into motion the steps required to fire at least some of them. the inquiry into the secret service prostitution scandal is moving quickly on two tracks. government investigators are interviewing employees at the hotel where the scandal unfolded. they identified all of the women who partied with the 11 secret service agents and ten members of the u.s. military. the woman who started it all, a 24-year-old escort, is featured in new york post and new york daily news. she reportedly told investigators she was offered only $30 for her services instead of the 800 she was promised. in washington there are expectations of change. >> i would not be surprised if additional resignations came within the week. >> reporter: cbs news learned
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the names of the two supervisors against whom the secret service took action. greg stokes was fired but has an option to appeal and david chaney, allowed to retire. according to "the washington post," chaney protected governor sarah palin during her vice presidential run. he posted this photo of her on facebook writing i was really checking her out if you know what i mean. palin told fox newsthe scandal was symbolic of government run amuck. >> the president, for one, he better be weary of when secret service is accompanying his family on vacation. they may be checking out the first lady instead of guarding her. >> the post also reports that chaney's father served in the secret service when john f. kennedy and lyndon johnson were president. a third was allowed to resign. others remain under investigation. some insist they did not patronize prostitutes and did nothing wrong. >> obviously there's pushback. no doubt. on the other hand as evidence builds, the director has to push
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them out. >> reporter: some republicans including palin are using the scandal to attack the president's leadership. >> the buck stops with the president. he's really got to start cracking down and seeing some heads roll. he has to get rid of these people at the head of these agencies where so many things obviously are amiss. >> reporter: of course the president did talk about the scandal last weekend when he was in colombia. he said that he would be very angry if the allegations turned out to be true. now the white house is trying to keep its distance but republicans are pointing out several recent incidents. the troops posing with body parts in afghanistan, the organization partying in las vegas and this incident suggesting that they somehow show a lack of presidential leadership. but remember, this is an election year. charl charlie, erica? >> bill plante, thank you. sometime in the next few days we may know what happened to 6-year-old etan patz who vanished on his way to school.
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>> his disappearance in new york city captured the attention of the nation in 1979 and the mystery was never solved. there are new developments in this case in which jon miller has covered from day one. >> reporter: nypd and fbi are about to start digging up the concrete floor in the basement of this building. it's just down the street from the last place etan patz was seen 33 years ago. a school bus stop. >> we're putting greater emphasis on this location looking forensically for any evidence of museum remains, clothing. >> reporter: sources tell cbs news that cadaver dogs indicated the presence of human remains during a search here several days ago. the day before etan patz vanished in 1979, he came home with a dollar from this man. 76-year-old miller, a neighborhood handyman who would
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pay etan when he helped with small chores. he had a workshop in this building. just after etan disappeared, a new concrete floor was put down. >> the fbi was here. he cooperated with them. he doesn't have anything to do with this. >> reporter: perhaps because the boy's father was a professional photographer and had hundreds of clear images of a blond hair boy with an impish grin, because the case tapped into every parents' nightmare, the disappearance of etan patz hauntsed the nation. >> you see his face and his eyes and you see a beautiful and simple boy and someone who never had a future. it's very sad. >> reporter: images of etan were placed on milk cartons and started the movement that led to the founding of the national center for missing children. but for stan and julie patz, there was never closure. in 2000, they spoke with "60 minutes" about their refusal to give up hope.
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>> we have his belongings all over the house. to put them away is saying to us and to our children that he's gone and he's not coming back. >> reporter: today no one has ever been charged in the case but many suspected that etan was kidnapped and murdered by jose ramos, a friend of patz's baby sitter in jail on child molesting charges in pennsylvania. now authorities are looking at new leads that may point to other suspects. >> jon miller, good morning. why now? >> you know, this is one of the rare murder cases that comes out of a campaign promise. the family of etan patz challenged candidates to say if you win, will you reopen this case? he said yes. when he started in that office over a year ago, they put a team of fresh investigators and prosecutors on this case with the fbi and started going over old suspects and saying did we do everything with this angle?
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did we do everything with this location? that's what we're seeing now. >> how confidence at are they they'll find a body? >> they're cautiously optimistic because of the man that controlled the space back then but also because an fbi cadaver dog alerted on that space and because of the odd circumstances about when that concrete floor was laid after the disappearance and why. >> they didn't look at this then because it would have been too expensive to replace the concrete floor? >> that's what people say but that's not correct. that's kind of the short version. what they did is they went and interviewed miller at the time who was a friend of the family. had a good relationship with the boy for all appearances. they said when did this concrete floor go down? they said the other day. they said we might want to dig under that. back in 1979, miller said if you're going to dig it up, you'll have to pay to put it back down again. there were other suspects and
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other leads and other things that looked better at the time. this is an effect of going back 33 years later er saying was th any lead we didn't take then that we could take farther now? breaking news from the airlines. us airways announcing it wants to take over american airlines. in a letter the ceo says there's a deal with american's three major labor unions to support a merger. those unions represent nearly 55,000 workers including american's pilots and flight attendants. american filed for bankruptcy protection in november. it's reorganizing promising to cut some 13,000 jobs. us airways promises to save half of those. now to the drama over new york's kennedy airport on thursday. a bird strike knocked out an engine on a delta air lines jet forcing an emergency landing. as michelle miller reports, the trouble started after flight 1063 took off for los angeles. >> reporter: the plane landed safely back on the ground after a harrowing few minutes in the air. inspectors examined the right
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engine which was damaged after what passengers describe as violent shaking followed by smoke seen in the cockpit. minutes after the flight took off, the pilot radioed to air traffic control. >> delta 1063 has had an engine failure on the right engine declaring an emergency due to a bird strike. >> reporter: one passenger shooting video after takeoff captured striking footage of a flock of birds out the window. a freeze frame show at least seven birds, some of which were probably ingested in the right engine. >> we declared an emergency engine failure. request a visual return back to 13 right. >> reporter: a visual return saves precious seconds for the pilot as he guided the crippled aircraft down. >> we're going to scaquare downo the right and head back in. just to let you know our stats, we're delta 1063. 179 souls on board. >> the flight brought back memories of the miracle on the
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hudson back in 2009 when us airwise flight 1349 made an emergency landing after both engines were damaged by a flock of geese. last night in los angeles, a delta passenger recalls his fear. >> i thought we were going to roll. >> reporter: grad he had a souvenir video. >> i'm glad i videoed it. my little girl gets to see the video today. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning," i'm michelle miller in new york. >> cbs's aviation and safety expert captain chelsey sullenberger knows this all too well. good morning. >> good morning, charlie. >> tell me what steps the captain might have taken to bring this plane to safety. >> the captain and first officer would have been working very closely together during this entire episode. the loss of a single engine on takeoff is something that pilots train for on a regular basis.
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it's well within the skill set. the noise of the failing engine and vibration and suddenness of it would have gotten their attention and they would have taken immediate steps to control the airplane and return for landing. >> there really seems to be reduced focused on bird strikes since your landing, the miracle on the hudson. there's talk in the new york area about the concentration of birds around airports. how much of a concern is that? >> it's a concern. populations have grown in the last decades. in new york in particular there's the proposal now the city of new york to build marine transfer stations. trash facilities near laguardia airport. one only about 2,000 feet from the end of one of the big major runways at laguardia and one at east 91st street. i've spoken about this before. it's a bad idea to build near an airport anything that's likely to attract birds including trash facilities. >> anything you can do about the planes to make them more immune from this kind of thing? >> well, a lot of people are
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looking at that right now but of course there are some limitations in terms of the materials and the weight that an airplane can accommodate but the best techniques currently are to try to discourage birds from roosting near the airport and in terms of migratory birds like the geese we struck over the hudson they could be anywhere. there are experiments with high frequency radars. it's a problem that will be with us for a while. >> thank you for joining us this morning. congratulations on your new book on leadership. >> well, thank you. i'll see you next month in new york when the book is published. >> look forward to it. it's now time to show you some of this morning's headlines from around the globe. "the new york times" reports more experts are worried that the economic recovery might falter this spring. two big reasons, our interest rates on european bonds and high oil prices. >> a story on norwegian mass
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murderer who used video games to practice using rifle sites. he testified he played modern warfare for 16 months before shooting dozens of catchers. >> also in britain, buckingham palace in a colorful new life. an image of queen
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incredible story from dixon, illinois. president reagan's boyhood home. we'll show you how the city's financial chief allegedly stole millions in public funds to spend on horses and high living. college basketball's winningest coach says good-bye after 38 years. >> it's never a good time but you have to find the time that you think is the right time and that is now. >> we'll look back at pat summitt's historic career and talk with her son about the future. you're watching "cbs this morning." >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by
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reporters from the united states are hard at work in colombia digging up information on the secret service prostitution scandal. there was a dispute in the hotel over how much she should be paid. after they promised $800 they only gave her $30. that's what you call a trade deficit. essentially they settled for $225. now, these are the guys we should put in charge of negotiating our foreign debt. sorry, chin nashgs a, we really remember bothering $2 trillion. we were drunk. we'll give you this watch and these shoes. the oldest and perhaps most beloved ballpark in the major leagues turns 100 today. >> players and fans will
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celebrate as boston famed fenway park as red sox take on, who else, the yankees. 726 and a time some news headlines and guiliani. goodrich accidents are blocking lanes in both directions and mackovic is that the bridge with the latest. it's a real mess out here in the eastbound lanes of the san mateo bridge and traffic is at a crawl there is also concern right now about some diesel fuel leaking from the west down side of the san mateo bridge into the water below that is after a tanker truck at the great that was involved in accidents and apparently that diesel fuel tank was a compromise and now there is concern about that fuel there was a second accident on the eastbound side chp came to check out the first accident and the officer was here in his car was
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hit by another vehicle and a fire truck was hit as well. so right now there's only one lane going each direction and to the end of planes are jammed that the on the westbound cited their generally clear because that is then closed since six this morning. let's go now to as the meth will tell us then on and the traffic elsewhere. thank you juliette lewis it did with this hemisphere bridge checkup these backups in less than many spam 92 so again both directions as an just mentioned to have line shutdowns with two separate traffic alerts because of two separate accidents was kind of a crazy morning happened within about 45 minutes of each other so for a while there were actually to rent cars off the bridge entirely and less than 92 they're taking cars off the roadway their but looks like just within the last couple of minutes they're not letting people want the bridge but obviously this is a bridge you don't to be around for the next two to three hours of the still
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in the meantime the bridge is a good alternative will be a little slow coming down south down 80 heading toward highway 84 but it is a much better idea in his back,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,, o
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conservatives rally to romney, i think they will in massive numbers with tremendous enthusiasm. >> if you excuse me, rose, blanch and sophia and i have a
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cheesecake to get to. >> welcome back to "cbs this morning." >> dixon, illinois, is a small city, fewer than 16,000 people. its top financial official is charged with a very big crime. stealing $30 million from the city. whit johnson is in dixon with the story making national headlines. >> reporter: the amount of money rita crundwell is accused of stealing is astounding. crundwell is free after posting a bond only fueling the outrage. a nationally renowned house breeder, a city employee since the 1980s and a world class thief according to the fbi. she's accused of siphoning $30 million from city accounts since 2006. >> you would think that amount of money would raise wred flags
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sooner than later. >> shock. absolute shock. i didn't realize that dixon had $30 million anywhere. >> reporter: prosecutors say much of that money went to fuel a lavish lifestyle including half a million dollars to run two farms where she raised champion quarterhorses. crundwell spent $339,000 on jewelry. in 2009, she bought a $2.1 million motor home allegedly paid for with taxpayer dollars. you feel betrayed? >> everybody in the city does. >> reporter: mayor jim burke has been in office since 1999 and has known crundwell since the 1960s. her salary was just $80,000 a
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year, the breeding business was enough to keep the curious at bay. do you accept any blame? >> well, absolutely. as mayor of the city, i can look back probably every member of this council will look back i should have done this and that. >> reporter: the six-year long scam was discovered by the city clerk filling in for crundwell who was on vacation. the two said nothing to anyone for six months while the investigation played out. >> the worst time was going to bed at night, sleep an hour and wake up thinking about this. it would go on all night long. you could not get this out of my mind because i knew what was going to happen to her. >> reporter: so that are crundwell is charged with one count of wire fraud.
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a judge has limited her travel and prohibited her from selling any of her horses or personal property. her next court appearance is on may 7th. >> thank you, whit. i can't imagine what you think that you'll never get caught? >> especially with that amount. we see stories about people get to the point where they think, nobody has caught me, i can keep going. sometimes it happens in these cases but $30 million? >> i better not go on vacation. >> there's the rule. i'll figure out you've been taking my money, charlie rose. red sox fans have something extra to cheer about today. fenway marks the 100th birthday and mark strassmann is going exploring with a red sox fan. >> i didn't break the law of the green monster. he did. your correspondent broke the green monster. >> i'm so sorry. >> you're watching "cbs this morning." ♪
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♪ >> reggie jackson did it for the yankees in world series games last night. granderson hit three homers with the yank beating minnesota 7-6. welcome back to "cbs this morning." i love that song. >> much to yankee fans delight, the boston red sox are in last place with a 4-8 record. that will not damper the mood at fenway this afternoon as the team celebrates the 100th birthday of the magical and historical ballpark. >> mark strassmann recently took a tour of fenway with a well known die-hard fan, actor and comedian dennis leary. >> reporter: boston's fenway park, home of the red sox, has staged a century of baseball's great drama. experienced tragedy like the curse.
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the home team's 86-year world series drought. >> deep to left. will not get it. it's a home run. >> reporter: magic moments too. >> there it goes. >> reporter: the home run in the 1975 series. and 2004 when the sox reversed a curse and finally won a world series. >> they are champions of the world! >> reporter: to new englanders especially, fenway is a shrine. many recall their first game here as a right of passage. how old were you? >> i was probably -- i want to say 5 or 6 years old. >> reporter: dennis leary, actor and comedian, grew up a red sox fans in nearby massachusetts. >> you see those guys and they're a little kid, they look huge. when i got older and started to go to other ball parks, that's when i started to realize how special the place was. >> reporter: fenway park opened its gates for the first time
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april 20th, 1912. five days after the great ship "titanic" sank in the north atlantic. 100 baseball seasons later, teams and ball players both great and forgettable have come and gone but the ballpark lives on. today no stadium is older or quirkier. it's one of a kind left field wall standing 37 feet high was originally built to block nonpaying spectators and painted in 1947 to match the park. the green monster was born. a wall that seems even more monstrous by the rest of fenway's tiny dimensions. full capacity is barely 37,000 fans and the red sox have sold every seat for almost nine years. >> this is the thing about fenway park. you feel even sitting in these seats but even center field bleachers, you feel like you can reach out and choke the opposing players with your bare hands at any given moment.
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sometimes you feel like choking a red sox player. >> reporter: that intimacy helped connect generations of red sox fans like the learys. dennis and his late father, john, would sit in fenway's bleachers. it's all they could afford. when you come to this park, does it remind you of times with your father? >> i think of my dad today. he loved this ballpark. i got baseball handed down to me by my dad. i handed that down to my son. >> reporter: in 1999, the iconic park was nearly lost. fenway's age was showing and the red sox pushed to tear it down and start over. instead new owners invested almost $300 million in renovations including 274 new seats above the green monster. >> look at that. how does it get better than this. >> reporter: only one way. go down on the field.
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the green monster still has a manual scoreboard. the only one in baseball. >> it's great. you broke it. now we're going to get kicked out. are you happy now? everything was going great. wait until i tell charlie and gayle king, i didn't bring the green monster but he did. watch your step and your head. >> reporter: behind the monster, autographs from hundreds of ball players, celebrities and fans. >> look how much space neil diamond took out. >> reporter: leary found something even more special under the right-field grand stands. a commemorative brick enscribed for his father. he bought it but had never seen it. john leary will always be part of fenway. >> he would have loved that. >> reporter: a century ago today boston beat new york in fenway's first game. this afternoon the same two
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teams will open the ballpark's second century. for cbs this morning, mark strassmann, in bo
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we >> we have milk and cheese that are good for our bones. how do they actually help in other areas? turns out they could lower your risk of a stroke. we'll tell you how coming up next in "healthwatch." you're watching "cbs this morning."
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pat summitt, the legendary women's basketball coach at t tennessee is stepping down. >> we hear from summitt in her own words why she made the tough decision plus her son will talk with us about his mom and the battle she is facing with alzheimer's. >> that's ahead. first, time for this morning's "healthwatch." good morning. today in "healthwatch" milk products and stroke. if you eat low-fat dairy foods you may be lowering your stroke risk. researchers looked at almost 75,000 adults over the course of ten years. people who drank low fat milk and ate low fat yogurt and cheese had a 12% lower risk of
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stroke. the benefits of low fat dairy may be did you to its rich content of vitamins and minerals such as calcium, magnesium, potassium and vitamin d. vitamin d helps maintain a healthy blood pressure which is a critical part of stroke prevention and that's important because stroke is the fourth leading cause of death in this country. americans consume a larger amount of milk products than many other kcountries. so making the switch to low fat could impact the stroke risk of millions. so if you've got milk, just hold the fat. i'm dr. holly phillips. >> announcer: "cbs healthwatch" sponsored by bayer. try new bayer advanced aspirin, twice as fast as before. about taking aspirin for pain. doubts that's why we developed bayer advanced aspirin with micro particles. it enters the bloodstream fast and rushes relief to the site of pain. we know it works. now we're challenging you to put it to the test.
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that's different. you're more with it, sharper, getting stuff done. this is why people choose 5-hour energy over 9-million times a week. it gives them the alert, energetic feeling they need to get stuff done. 5-hour energy...when you gotta get stuff done. look at that there. >> what did we do before the atm? believe it or not, one of the earliest atms was considered a failure because the only customers who used it were pros it at this institut prostitutes and gamblers. that's timely. >> gayle king has a look at what's coming up our next hour. gayle? hello, charlie rose. cybill shepherd and robert de
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niro will be live. this could be interesting, they are each promoting different things. i saw an interview with cybill recently where she said years ago they were in a movie together. robert de niro asked her out and she said no. they'll be in the greenroom together. awkward. legendary coach pat summitt announced she was stepping down yesterday. her legacy inspired many, including her son, and guess what career path he is taking. tyler summitt is is his name. he will join us to talk about that. in this digital age, when was the last time you listened to a record? when was the last time you bought a record? more and more people, you might be surprised, are doing exactly that. the vinyl sales, we're hearing, have tripled over the last five years. jeff glor has that story. you're watching cbs "this morning." catch us on facebook, twitter. your local news is next.
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of the embassy this morning with a collision between big rig in the pickup is not clear yet when traffic on san mateo bridge will get back to normal. and the big frilly incident to tell you about this one and the west to sacramento into stadiums closed in both directions on yolo causeway as they look for a suspect in the sacramento,,,,,,,
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what'll it be?
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i'll have blueberry pancakes. uh huh. actually, make that glazed pecans... ok. with chocolate... no... caramel sauce. whipped cream? uhhhhhhh, yeah... but on the side. introducing build your own pancakes.
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♪ take a look at this from yesterday's white sox game. a little boy just walked out on the field and a player had to put him back in the stands. you can never get mad at a little kid that just gets excited about seeing baseball players. it's 8:00. welcome back to "cbs this morning." i'm gayle king. >> he just wanted to say hello to his hero. >> say hi. >> they seemed to handle it very well. >> i thought so, too. >> i'm charlie rose with erica hill. women's basketball was barely visibility when pat summitt came the coach in 1974. after eight national titles, 1100 wins, she announced yesterday that her historic
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career is over due to illness. >> she copied her final season after being diagnosed with early on set dementia. dean is on the campus, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. folks around here still having a hard time grasping the idea that pat summitt will not be in charge next season. she will be head coach emeritus, though, a page has definitely turned in tennessee. >> this really means a lot to me to be here today. >> reporter: pat summitt, the winningest coach in tennessee history, the daughter of dairy farmers from tennessee was saying good-bye at the top of her game. >> i can tell you i have loved my work at the university of tennessee. it's been awesome. i can say for almost four decades, it has been a privilege to make an impact on the lives of 161 women who have worn
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orange. i am so proud of them, the lady vols student athletes. >> that was pat summitt. always pushing, always urging to greater places in their life. confrontational, combative. >> you didn't come here real inspired. >> reporter: compassion. she handed over the whistle to long time assistant and took up a new position, head coach emeritus, a position taken on her by dementia, this feisty competitor. people that worked with her noticed. >> i saw signs of pat stepping back and maybe not being as active as she has been in the past. >> some days she would just be super, super quiet. that's one thing i did recognize. >> reporter: at her side this day was her 21-year-old son tyler, who coincidentally will be joining marquette university
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women's basketball just as his mother takes leave of her position. >> tyler, all you've got to do is post 1,099 wins and you'll blow past your mother. >> reporter: now comes word that president obama is awarding the medal of freedom to coach summit, the highest civilian honor the country can award not only for her stellar basketball career but also for her efforts to highlight and fight alzheimer's disease. charlie and erica. >> thank you very much. my impression has been and you know from being there and watching and editing the piece you did that pat probably could have coached very well in the nba if she ever wanted to. >> reporter: absolutely. it's true. >> she had the kind of understanding of the game and toughness to make her and build a remarkable career. as you can also imagine, her fairwell is front page news all over the state of tennessee. with us from knoxville is the coach's son, the aforementioned
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tyler. it is a pleasure to have you here, tyler. welcome. >> thank you for having me. >> the remarkable thing about your mother beyond her legacy, what she has done, is that she may very well be able to do so much more now because of her courage. talk to us a bit about where and how she will spend her life now this she has, in a sense, marked this remarkable achievement in basketball. >> well, i think we've always known god had a bigger plan for her than just coaching basketball. so she's stepping into a new role where she can still mentor her players and be a role model for them. >> tyler, i was so touched yesterday watching the news conference with you and your mom when you were rubbing her mom and rubbing her back. it's clear the two of you have quite a bond. what did you learn from her as a coach and what did you learn from her as a parent? what was she like as a parent? what is she like as a parent? >> well, i'll tell you this,
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discipline always came first. that was a priority in our house. that goes with parenting and coaching. with coaching, she made sure that i knew to always do the right thing and treat people the right way. that's part of the reason why i went to marquette. terry mitchell there, she does things the right way. i'm very excited to go there. >> when did you know that coaching was something you wanted to do? was it because you watched your mom be so great all these years? >> well, i think the reason i have a passion for coaching, part of it is i did see my mom and really the relationship she had with her players and mentored them and turned them into successful young women. so i look forward to have the opportunity to do that as well. >> tyler, what made her a great coach? >> what's that? >> what made her a great coach? >> good question. i think it was a lot of things. it goes back to those relationships that she had with her players. she got the best out of every
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single one of a lot of different young women, young ladies. that's what it went to. she demanded the best from everybody that she was around. >> this is going to be as many people understand, always a journey now. tell me how you will face this and how she will face this? >> well, i think we j
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memories of records. tomorrow is record store day. we'll show you why. and how much money do you think you need to be happy? not as much as we used to. we'll make that a long tore short. you're watching "cbs this morning." atching "cbs this morning." let's play indoors this weekend. all we need is a couple of gallons of our hardest-working paint... ...from the get-it-done place that gives us more top-rated brands than anywhere else... ...at prices that won't shake up our budget. let's make a one-wall statement... ...or tackle a total room takeover ...with paint that'll get the job done in fewer trips up and down the ladder. more saving. more doing. that's the power of the home depot. the number one brand of paint just got better. starting at $23.98.
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test. test. [ girl ] my mom always tells me: if you want something done right, then do it yourself. that's the idea behind our children, our future -- the ballot initiative to fix our schools. we've waited years for the politicians to do it.
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big time well, a little bruce. big time musicians like bruce springsteen and paul mccartney are releasing music. why? it's record store today. >> this event is the biggest one yet. jeff glor is here to explain growing nostalgia for the day of the phonograpphonograph. >> for more than half a century it's how we listen to music, now it's back. if you see long lines outside a local record shop tomorrow, this is why.
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♪ >> needle on vinyl. if you're an audiophile it's how you play music. if you're a band, it's why. >> what is it about vinyl? >> well. >> what isn't there about vinyl is really the question. >> joy williams and john paul white, the grammy winning country duo, the civil wars, are one of many artists breathing new life into a format long left for dead. >> a seven inch billy jean vinyl. how did one decide on that. >> seems like a natural. >> that's what people think as soon as they hear our music. >> michael jackson. >> they should put out michael jackson vinyl covers.
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i grew up with my parents' records. you had to be so particular with them. you revered them. they had a lot of weight. they had a lot of value. >> their vinyl single comes out tomorrow. the fifth annual record store day. until the 1980s, vinyl reigned supreme before getting replaced by cassettes, cds, then mp 3s. since record store day began five years ago, vinyl sales have more than tripled. now it tracks artists like coldplay and katy perry. and according to billboard editor joe levy, newly vinted fans. >> i know what music is.
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i don't know what that is. you play it on what, a record player? >> reporter: in vinyl's heyday, there were 75 record pressing plants in the u.s. today 10. >> the last record press was made in 1980, '81. so when we need a part, we make the part. we have in other words down in the basement carving them out. that's what you need to do to keep things going. >> you can't keep up with demand? >> no. part of it is there's a cool factor. i also think people are starting to rebel against this digital format that everyone has been used to for the last 10 years. >> so much so before his death steve jobs was working with music legend neil young to create better audio files. >> steve jobs was a pioneer of digital music. his legacy is tremendous.
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but when he went home, he listened to vinyl. >> for the uninitiated, why does vinyl sound better? >> when you take music to digital you're losing information. you're clipping off some of the highs, clipping off some of the lows. i can carry 10,000, 30,000 songs in my pocket, but do they sound as good as the 12 songs on this record? no. >> you don't download? >> almost not at all. >> seriously? i'm learning something new. >> for the civil wars, vinyl is a medium worth passing on, because many years ago, someone did it for them. >> i've got my grandparents' records. i don't have their hard drives. ♪
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>> i like that story. >> great line. >> if you're wondering, by the way what a vinyl record is, right in this bag here, that becomes this sort of hockey puck, then that gets flattened down into a vinyl record. >> if the sound is better, why did we switch anyway, for the convenience of it? >> convenience. simple to make. doesn't cost to transport it if it's mp-3. the key is making audio files that are better. it's a bandwidth, size issue. i think they will figure out eventually. >> digital in the end will be better sounding than vinyl. >> i think it can potentially be. there's something to be said for taking that record out, the smell, the feel of it. >> reading the liner notes, the lyrics. >> and the cover, too. >> i love that. >> i went back and looked -- >> beautiful, beautiful artwork.
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>> bring it back. thank you, jeff. >> thanks, jeff. >> sure. just ahead they and togeth,, bay area ! here's big news from verizon wireless and xfinity from comcast. now get the xfinity triple play
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>> time for some news headlines, accidents are blocking lanes in both directions of the san mateo bridge right now. first a big rig and a pickup truck crashed in a westbound lane and then a car crashed into the back of the chp crews are responding to the scene on in east bound lane. it will be at least another hour before the scene is clear. highway 80 a shutdown in both directions as police are looking for a man connected to a shooting in a carjacking. causeway and it is um no one by we will reopened. marijuana advocates plan a protest this morning condemning the federal raids of the middle local marijuana facilities that
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>> it is still a mess across the san mateo bridge westbound in east bound. two separate accidents both directions and are still cleaning up the fuel spill in that area. only one lane is open in both
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attractions of the san mateo bridge right now. unfortunately people are getting the message they're traveling southbound 80 heading towards the dumbarton bridge and now those alternates are backed up as well. we're told by some drivers that westbound and east bound 84 is backed up as well. we know a lot of bay area drivers are heading out of town and there is still a traffic alert. both directions of interstate 80 were shut down between davis and west sacramento as they search for a gunman. >> this might be a good day to stay home and enjoy the sunshine. we do have patchy fog towards the media coastline but that is about it. 62 in concord and 57 in oakland. by the afternoon, '70s and upper 80s in the,,,,,,,,
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♪ we are feeling very new york today. welcome back to "cbs this morning." new york city's tribeca film festival is going on right now. it began in 2002 as the defiant response to the 9/11 attacks. over the past ten years it showed more than -- listen to these numbers -- 1200 movies from 0 countries and generated $725 million in economic activity. the festival was the brain child of two-time oscar winner robert de niro and his partner jane rosenthal. pleased to have you both here. welcome. >> good morning. >> has this turned out to be even more than you expected? >> when we first started, we
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didn't know what to expect. so we're very happy that it's done as well as it has. >> what pleases you most about it? >> the fact that, if it would be a part of the new york tradition and last for a long time, i'd be happy. >> i think you got that. >> i was going to say mission accomplished. i think for many people, guys, when they think of film festivals, they think independent movies. you get independent and big blockbusters by design. >> absolutely. big blockbusters. there's a lot of people that pay attention to the big block busters. what that does is attention to all the smaller films, the great independent films, the world cinema, the experimental films, the amazing documentaries. so as long as it helps us draw attention to those films we screen for the next ten days, that's our goal.
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>> what's the most fun for you, robert de niro, connected with this festival? may i say i'm so glad you're here, bob de niro. we are so glad that you're here at the table. >> thanks. the festival -- i'm just beginning to enjoy it because it's a little bit -- it's a little bit of stress in the sense that, you've got to be on the show, you've got to be ready. and so -- it's terrific. i'm very happy with what's happening, the whole thing. the fact that it's not just a festival, a film festival, per se. it's got the street fair. it's got the drive-in. it's got other elements that are more -- that are not expected in the film festival which makes it to me more special. >> what makes the two of you work together so well? what is this partnership that's working and you've got something new coming up now? >> you answer that one.
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>> you trust her? she's creative? you speak the same language? >> i mean we've been together a long time. in order for things to work, you have your ups and downs, but basically you have an understanding and you give each other the room that is needed to do what we want to do individually, together. it's been very good. >> you've got 22 coming up. >> we do. >> would you mind if we show a clip? we just happen to have a clip. let's see the clip, randy. >> old enough that i had to threaten to sue the academy to get in. just call me lazareth. >> if she was a good reporter, why did you quit? >> i didn't quit. they fired me. budget cuts. >> but a cop?
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>> why not. after 14 years in the street, i had better sources than the detectives i was writing about. >> set in new york city. your love of new york city is legendary. if you didn't live here, where would you live? >> i don't know. i'm a new yorker. i don't know where i'd where i'd live. new york is my home. >> there's nothing like it. >> nyc, a cop drama. why did you decide that particular drama, genre? >> first of all, cbs was looking for another cop show. that was number one. that was an opening. we had the opportunity to work with richard cites who is an incredible writer and novelist and has a very unique voice. we went to richard and asked what he thought about doing a rookie cop show. he was definitely into it. he wanted to set it in harlem. harlem is really a changing neighborhood right now. it's all character driven which
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i think is different than a lot of cop shows. it's far more character and a lot less intense action than you normally find. >> i known both of you for a whichlt you know what intrigued me about him is that you think of him as good an actor as america, but he's also a entrepreneur with remarkable talent. what is that? this guy does well at business. his father was an artist. he's an artist. yet you've shown remarkable understanding about restaurants, hotels, developing tribeca. >> i've been lucky, too. i just try and take advantage of things that i think are common sense, that's all. i guess my mother was an artist, also, but she was also -- had a business sense, practical sense. >> when are you going to direct
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again? >> i hope soon, but i don't know. it's a lot of work. it's a big commitment. as much as i love it, it has to be something so special -- we have a couple of things we're talking about. >> is acting today as sbresting and as challenging as it's ever been for you? >> absolutely. >> we also should say, charlie, you've got a great sense of humor, bob de niro. i saw you on "saturday night live." there clearly is a side of you that loves to laugh and loves to have fun. when i said i was so glad you're here, i also know you don't like to do interviews so much. this wasn't so bad, was it, with me and charlie? >> no, no. it was fine. >> he can think of a hundred other things to do. >> a root canal, perhaps. why is it that you really don't like to? i'm curious. you're such a great actor. you can play any role. people love to hear you and hear what you have to say. why is it that you prefer not to? i'm not trying to put you on the spot. i've always wondered.
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>> if we got into a discussion about something that's more controversial, and if it was -- then the pieces of that could be taken out -- >> out of context. >> out of context and put as a blip somewhere and then how do i explain it. you'd say, let me just be careful. >> i believe, and i've said this before, all of us are fascinated by films and tribeca, especially interesting in small creative numbers. i don't know of anybody that can understand better about the craft than you. that may be boring. for most of us it's not boring. i have to think that you think about it and you love it and it's interesting to you because you do it so well. >> it's not boring to me. i don't talk about it much unless somebody really asks me or students ask me and people who are really interested ask me, kids. i like to give advice to kids.
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i always enjoy doing that. >> the best way to do an interview with him, go before a bunch of acting students in a place where it's informal, not a television studio and realedly understand. you think about so many things, it's a reflection of american cinema over the last 20, 25 years. what he's done. >> a new baby in the house. does bob de niro change diapers? very happy for you and your lovely wife. >> thank you. i've not done a lot. >> i'm thinking if acting doesn't work out, you should do talk radio. great to see you. we'll see you around tribeca. thank you, jane. >> you can see their brand new episode of "nyc 22" coming up at 10:00 right sunday night on cbs. the last picture show was sib bell shepherd's first movie back in the day. 40 years later she's playing memorable and,,
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thanks. i'll take the usual. got it. if you're open to choosing your own batter, mix-ins and toppings, come in today and build a stack you'll be proud of. only at denny's.
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>> yoo-hoo, memaw is in the house. >> gorgeous mom. >> the cake for my bo. >> you must be. >> i'm garrett and you are even prettier than your mamma says. >> we're glad you could make it. >> wouldn't miss it for the world. i know how important family is to lynette. >> that's mamma, always thinking about us. >> you got that right. i'll pour the wine. we've watched cybill shepherd on tv and in the movies, seen her ads, read her auto biography. now co-starring with jennifer love hewitt in a new drama called "the client list." >> she plays a church going grandma who has been married five times. hello. >> hello. wonderful to be here with you. >> before we talk about you, we're in the green room and robert de niro was here.
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cybill shepherd asks for an autograph from robert de niro. >> of course. we worked on "taxi driver" together. i'm a huge fan. i loved him in that movie and the experience of working with him. such a great actor and a wonderful guy. i was so excited to see him again. >> is it true you turned him down for a date? >> i'm ready to have a date now. we rushed in and out and didn't have a chance to say how about tonight. >> he's married with a new baby. >> i don't do that anymore. i don't mess with married men. >> i did indeed. e autograph?- >> it was interesting seeing her say will you sign this picture for me. i have loved you ever since "last picture show." i remember seeing her -- what was her name jacey. >> yes, my character, jacey.
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>> you were so good and so young. that's when i first saw cybill shepherd. now here we are 2012 and you're still doing it. >> i'm still doing it. i'm 62. telling the truth so long it's too late to lie. >> i love you don't have hang-ups about your age. >> it's not fun getting older. let's face it. the important thing for women is to learn to love ourselves as we age and to learn there's something more important than the external shape and weight and more of a spiritual journey and what we can give back. >> you're comfortable in your own skin and so many women of a certain age -- i even hate that, certain age. erica, what is that, certain age? >> i don't know what that is. i think we all feel the same way about it. we did a great story the other day on the anniversary of botox. we all went, ooh, because people looked really scary. someone in the piece said, it's about embracing your experience. shouldn't that be what you focus on. >> i think women should have all the choices they could possibly have that they want to do
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whatever they want, that's fine. i do think you don't want to necessarily fight growing older. you don't want to see like you're desperate. the reality is we get so much better as we get older as women and we grow so much. men do, too. but definitely -- sometimes a younger man is a nice thing. post menopausal, younger man. i'm ael all for it. >> it helps to have a good hair and makeup team as well. let's talk about "the client list." this poster came up and charlie rose who was sitting in your chair said, oh, maybe i should stay. >> she's gorgeous. >> talking about "the client list" starring you and jennifer love hewitt. you said she was an inspiration for you. how so? >> she started very young in the business as i did. she's one of the most professional people i know. she's the first on the set, the first in wardrobe. no divas on this show. it's a girl's club which is
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wonderful. a lot of great women. loretta divine among others. so it's just a great show to do. i love her. she's a wonderful person. >> your character is kind of fun. >> i'm kind of fun. grandma lynette. my kids call me meemaw. >> your grandkids -- >> i don't have grandchildren. >> i'm sorry. >> that's okay. i can't wait to have grandchildren. my kids call my mother is meemaw. alive and kicking in memphis, tennessee. >> how much children do you have? >> i have three, aerial and zack, and claim men tile. my eldest daughter, she's very beautiful, too. very proud of my kids. doing really well. >> don't you think when you're proud of your kids, you have to say, i did a good job.
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for whatever reason they could go astray. when they turn out okay, i think it was jackie kennedy onassis who said when you raise your kids well, there's nothing better than that. >> we have to support our children regardless of their choices. they may not make choices we would particularly want them to make. support and love them and know they're going to be okay. they'll figure it out themselves. it can't live their lives for them. >> cybil, good to see you. the show is called "the client list." congratulations. >> thank you. i want to say one quick thing about the war on women and reproductive freedom including the attack on planned parenthood, abortion is our constitutional right, we should keep it legal. also birth control should be available to everyone -- >> cybill, we need more time if we're going to do that. >> cut me off any time you want. >> i'm going to lead the next march on washington. i'm not wearing a bulletproof vest. my mother is scared for me. >> we need more time to do it.
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>> i'll come back tomorrow. >> we'll see you later. >> we'll be right back with more. you're watching with "cbs this ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
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♪ up on cripple creek she sends me ♪ >> a shot from marietta, georgia. as drummer and singer for the band, levon helm was a driving force behind memorable music in the '60s and '70s. one of the great concert movies of all time "the last waltz", who died yesterday at age 71. bob dylan called him one of the last great spirits. >> high praise. >> just a note on "cbs this morning: saturday," the legendary julie andrews is here in studio 57. she'll discuss a few of her favorite things, including the new children's book she's written with her daughter, those classic movies all tomorrow on
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"cbs this morning: saturday." >> great weekend coming up. hope you have a great time. >> what's happening? >> well, i don't know. >> i'm like, charlie, i ain't got no plans. >> nothing going on? >> no. >> he'll fill out your dance card. >> oh, you let the cat out of the bag, as they say. that does it for us. coming up, a look at the past week. we'll show you the names of the people who so proudly have brought you this broadcast. have a great weekend. >> charlie, this election's going to be a referendum on the president's economic policy. >> the race between romney and president obama is now dead even. >> start packing. >> you want a leader who's been successful. >> the president will try to make the election about anything other -- >> he admitted eating dog -- >> i'm going to talk about jobs. >> you would say those dogs are very special. >> you're either on team strap your dog to the roof or throw your dog on the high batthe hib >> the tornado is on its way.
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>> one tornado killed six people. >> you're looking at the master bedroom. >> in kabul -- >> afghan forces -- >> the international community is not leaving. >> american paratroopers mugging for the camera. >> those kind of photos are used by the enemy to incite violence. >> he greeted the court with a mile and close-fisted salute. >> they to want see him crash. >> the pattern of behavior that's built up, wheels up party. >> three members of the secret service are down. >> we owe $47 to a prostitute. >> pippa middleton is being investigated by police in paris. >> it's unattractive. >> did you really just call pippa luscious earlier, mark? >> mark? >> that's going to be fun. >> it is. >> make love to betty white. >> it's not going to happen. >> i was i was asking young women in my office, is there a
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lot of spanking going on. >> excuse me. >> can do you that on television? >> it's always glamorous. >> i wanted to see scenes where girls weren't wearing negligently chas, the knitty grit. >>-y. >> a lot of bad sex practicing. >> i started practicing the 90 day rule years ago. ♪ all by my side >> i watch your show on pbs every night but also it puts my 8-year-old to sleep. >> you're kidding? >> we put this together for you. >> something you did 25 years ago. i wouldn't argue with it. it's pretty nice. >> a reporter is considered the most trusted man in america. >> that's the way it is. >> that's the kind of legacy that was unheard of. >> the changing of the guard. >> i only look at her and see hope. >> we're all born and then we die. it's what we do in between that defines us. >> still able to live the dream. >> rock around the clock.
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>> our side of the war. he was a huge figure. >> there was this happening ,,
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>> good morning. it is back to san francisco superior court this morning for the city suspended sheriff. there is a hearing on ross mirkarimi motion to overturn his suspension. ground is now officially broken in santa clara for the new 49ers football stadium. an invitation only brought ground-breaking ceremony was held yesterday. all goes as planned the 49ers will open the 2014 season in santa clara. tonight is the last night for a landmark restaurant in san francisco's chinatown. he gained fame as the home of the world's richest waiter but it is unable to pass certain fire codes and the owners say they cannot afford to update the
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kitchen. >> a lot of sunshine, a few patches of fog towards the coastline but otherwise the temperatures will be something else. plenty of blue skies over san francisco with high pressure over head and it will really crank up the temperatures. numbers well into the 80s in land and as high as 86 in livermore. 85 in santa rosa and 72 in san francisco. the next few days, maybe some low 90s tomorrow and then we will cool down into sunday. war clouds on the way as we head into next weekend we could see rain returned to the bay area.
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>> it is still pretty much a nightmare in both directions of the san mateo bridge. since 6:00 this morning we have been following two crashes across the span. one involving a big rig the leaking fuel. there was another accident shortly thereafter in the eastbound lanes of 92 involving a chp cruiser. the san mateo bridge is not a good bridge to use. only one lane is getting by and the dumbarton bridge we have seen some improvement although it is definitely slower than normal. also some pretty strong traffic on southbound 880. the bay bridge would be another
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good alternate. it is slightly heavier than usual. usual. of your business. we can recommend financial solutions that can work for you that have helped millions of business owners save time, reduce expenses, and maximize cash flow. as the number-one small business lender for nine years running, we're with you when you need us so you can be there for your customers. wells fargo.

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