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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  April 3, 2017 3:00am-4:01am PDT

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york city, i'm reena ninan. severe weather slams the south. tornados, flash floods and hail threaten millions across texas and the lower mississippi valley. also tonight, the desperate search for survivors after an avalanche of water and mud wipes out homes in southern colombia, hundreds are dead. president trump's tweet storm. and baseball season gets under way. we'll tell you about one baseball journey to the hall of fame. >> i had no concept seven years ago just what this was going to mean, how long it was going to take, how much travel i was take, how much travel i was going to have to do. captioning funded by cbs
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this is the "cbs overnight news." millions of people in the deep south are in the path of some dangerous weather this evening. this is the sight near woodward, louisiana. tornados, flash floods, devastating winds and hail are all in the forecast. across texas, arkansas, louisiana and mississippi. the southern storms cap a weekend of deadly weather in the weekend. >> reporter: a suspected tornado toppled this mobile home, killing a mother and a 3-year-old daughter inside police said. heavy rain and hail as large as ping-pong balls hammered homes from texas to mississippi. moist air more typical of august than april could bring flash floods with as much as two inches of rain falling an hour. strong tornados remained a risk into sunday night. in dallas, about 40,000 basketball fans had to make new plans after the threat of
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violent storms forced officials to cancel outdoor events ahead of the game. worshippers at the real life church in chesapeake, virginia had to find a new place to pray after a tornado tore through on friday. further north, april fools' day snowstorms were no joke for massachusetts and maine where more than a foot fell. >> i'm all done, all done with this. ready for spring, ready for summer. yeah, can't happen fast enough for me. >> reporter: and this major severe weather outlook for the gulf states will last through tonight. and hail is the biggest worry. some of the biggest chunks can fall at speeds estimated at 100 miles per hour. the death toll continues to climb from devastating floods in colombia. heavy rains caused three rivers to overflow. what's been described as avalanche and mud on the city of mocoa. we have the latest.
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>> reporter: emergency responders are looking for the rubble, tirelessly searching for survivors. this father is looking for his daughter louisa who's barely old enough to call out his name. she's gist o she's just one of the hundreds still missing. the streets of mocoa were consumed with a wall of water. heavy rain triggered the overflow of three rivers, and the flooding quickly turned into an avalanche of mud. aerials revealed the city's true devastation. the force of the mudslide knocking buildings over, sweeping cars away, and tearing families apart. this woman's friend was swept away by the current. her husband unable to hold on tight enough. colombia's president santos toured mocoa and declared it a disaster zone. he says their hearts are with the families suffering, and they are doing everything they can to
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help. more than 1,000 troops are on the ground searching and recovering bodies. this has become mocoa's weeping wall, where a list of the confirmed dead continues to grow. many of them young children. during his sunday blessing, pope francis thanked those helping in the rescue. and said he'd be praying for the victims of mocoa. colombia's attorney general has launched an investigation with 45 investigators on this case. he wants to make sure that corrective action is taken to prevent this from happening again, and rena, that is extremely important right now, because more rain is expected in the area in the next few days. thanks, myria. a 14 year old was arrested and charged with multiple crimes. at least 40 people watched this
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attack and no one reported it. at least four adults and six children are home from the hospital after being treated for carbon monoxide at a pool. it happened at the quality inn. the pool was not properly ventilated. the investigation continues. buzz aldrin lifted off from earth again sunday. he didn't shoot for the moon this time, but he did get to be part of a bunch of pretty cool tricks with a fighter squadron from florida. the legendary astronaut posted these pictures with the caption, good to get back in the cockpit. nine months after british voters voted to leave the european union, theresa hagan the so-called brexit process. >> reporter: a gray, threatening dawn over london, and a gray
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many say threatening future for britain. nine months after voting for it, the british handed the eu its official demand for divorce. >> this is a historic moment from which there can be no turning back. >> reporter: theresa may's government and the eu have two years to negotiate the terms of the divorce, a negotiation donald tusk said would not wlea to a win/win outcome but to lose/lose. >> this is about damage control. >> reporter: a lot of people are already trying to control the damage. at a currency trading company, they're planning to move part of their operation to ireland to stay in the eu trade zone that brexit will almost certainly take britain out of. and ceo michael kent says not just the little guys are hedging their bets. >> there's not a single tech or financial services company that
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isn't considering these options right now. every single entrepreneur that i talk to, every single board member, every single banker that i talk to is thinking about this. >> reporter: those who campaigned for britain to leave the eu promised an economic wind fall. boris johnson is now foreign secretary. >> we have a whole johnson family christmas where the subject was outlawed. that's how we got through to boxing day. >> reporter: calling his sister rachel called to stay in europe. >> we have to do this thing now. it's completely crazy. it's crazy beyond your wildest nightmares, but it's happening. >> reporter: there are already signs this will be an expensive divorce and an acrimonious one. you want to leave the eu, saying take your share of the family debt with you. the settlement deal for britain about $60 billion. two years of argument lie ahead and no guarantee of a deal. mark phillips, cbs news, london.
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coming up,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
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it's going to be another busy week in washington with investigations continuing on russian interference in the election. and a senate showdown brewing over president trump's pick for the supreme court. mr. trump weighed in on some of the hot topics sunday on twitter. here's errol barnett. >> reporter: president trump began his day by reminding supporters he still plans to repeal obamacare. meanwhile, senate majority leader mitch mcconnell predicted a win for the president when his supreme court nominee faces senate confirmation. >> neil gorsuch will be confirmed this week. how that happens really depends on our democrats. >> reporter: democrats are in no mood to cooperate and may
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filibuster the vote. to maneuver around that, mcconnell would need to permanently change senate rules, a so-called nuclear option the president supports. >> look, when a nominee doesn't get 60 votes, you shouldn't change the rules. you should change the nominee. >> reporter: the senate is also gearing up for closed-door interviews with witnesses in its investigation into russian election interference. >> no. >> reporter: president putin this week denied playing any role. and today the kremlin spokesman said there's no proof. >> any blamings that russia could have been interfering in domestic affairs of the united states is slander. and it has no, no evidence at all. >> reporter: republican john cornyn of the senate judiciary committee disagrees. >> we want to understand the extent to which russia has attempted to influence and interfere in our elections and to undermine our democracy.
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>> reporter: president trump today tweeted the real story turns out to be surveillance and leaking. find the leakers. the ranking democrat on the house intelligence committee, adam schiff sees behavior from the white house as suspicious. >> whenever they see the president use the word "fake", it ought to set off alarm bells. the question is of course why. and the answer to the question is this effort to point the congress another directions. >> reporter: today president trump played golf while discussing health care with senator rand paul. monday, mr. trump will host egypt's president at the white house. and later this week, mr. trump hosts china's president at his mar-a-lago resort in florida. they are expected to discuss north korean nuclear threats. thanks, errol. on face the nation, john cornyn said the intelligence community hasn't decided whether to grant immunity to michael flynn, the president's former national
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security adviser. he asked for immunity late last week and president trump said i supported that request. let's bring in our chief correspondent. it was interesting that the president encouraged flynn to seek immunity. how should we interpret that? >> the president's critics see this as much more smoke, what they hope is the fire that connects the president's team or the president himself with the russian efforts to influence the election. another way to look at this, though, is in a highly partisan environment where there are two congressional investigations and a fbi investigation that mr. flynn may have exposure in some way based on his other business dealings, which we're still learning about after he left the white house, and in order to limit his exposure, his smart lawyer is trying to get a deal and that it's basically, has more to do with the exposure
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that general flynn has than the exciting quality of what he may have to say. >> i want to turn now to the supreme court, john, before you go. the main senator, angus king who is considered a swing vote says he hasn't decided how he'll vote. what are you watching for as we get closer to vote this week? >> i think what we're watching for is basically whether the republicans can get enough senate democrats to avoid having to invoke the so-called nuclear option, which is to say changing the senate rules to make it so neil gorsuch could be confirmed with a simple majority rather than clearing the 60-vote in a filibuster. they don't change the rules often, and this would be a big one, given what senator mcconnell anch mcconnell and cornyn have said about changing the rules like this. it would hurt the institution. so it would be a big deal. it looks hilike that's where wee
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headed. and it's another sign in a partisan age your we thought we'd gotten partisan in every possible way, this will be a new way, and you can't go back once you do it. >> john dickerson, thank you. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. make the most of a few minutes
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catastroph controversial pesticide. scott pruitt was not convinced by the science. here's john blackstone. >> we can just go ahead and put the amount i need in there. >> reporter: this almond grower turns to this when nothing else will kill what threatens his crop. now he says it's a product of last resort. >> it's more just when we absolutely need it, but it's critical to our pest management program. >> reporter: corps pyro foss is used in tens of thousands of farms. farmers say the sprayed food is safe to eat. but exposure through the air left to changes in children and is related to lower intelligence scores. in 2015, the obama era epa endorsed a ban. the pesticide had already been banned for household use in
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2000. margaret reeves is with the pesticide action network. >> we've been arguing for the last 17 years that we need to ban its use everywhere, and epa agreed with us, until a couple days ago. >> reporter: new epa director scott pruitt said in a statement by reversing the previous administration's steps to ban one of the most widely-used pesticides in the world, we are returning to using sound science in decision making. many in agriculture agree. >> it's extremely safe. it's extremely effective. and because we have it we don't have to use some other products out there that can be more challenging. >> reporter: farmers say they don't have an alternative. without this, they're in trouble. >> it has been a very useful tool for farmers, no doubt about that. however, the overwhelming danger and hazard to children and children's development does not justify its continued use. >> reporter: farmers say that on crops like these almonds, the pesticide is carefully sprayed
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following strict regulations, and the company that makes it, dow agri sciences said when used as authorized, there are wide margins of protection for human health and safety. john blackstone, cbs new, modesto, california. we'll be right back. ♪living well rise above joint discomfort with move free ultra's triple action joint support for improved mobility and flexibility, and 20% better comfort from one tiny, mighty pill... get move free ultra, and enjoy living well.
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museum curators in scotland have discovered an ancient piece of egyptian history inside a crumpled up paper bag. cbs has this story from london. >> reporter: it looks like garbage just waiting to be tossed out. but after more than 70 years sitting on a shelf in the national museum of scotland's storage, a team of curious curators finally peeked inside. >> it was really exciting to be able to get it out and -- >> reporter: dr. margaret mateland made the discovery. >> can you make discoveries in museum collections as well. >> reporter: that highlight, a2,000 year old mummy shroud used to wrap bodies of high-ranking egyptians. one was so fragile it took 24
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hours to unrap. >> each fold revealing another part of the shroud was so exciting to see his face emerge. >> reporter: maitland says the final result was so well-preserved they could even read the name of the deceased. as it turns out, the museum already had relics of his well-studied parents, his father a high-ranking egyptian official and his mother. it goes on display this week. they still have 11 million pieces from all over the world in storage. who knows what other treasures are waiting to be discovered. john vig lee oaty, london. up next, a man on a hall of fame journey. ,,,,,,,, [music]
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[music] ♪ i love you [music] daughter: can we get strawberries? mother: okay. [music]
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and let's do it, here in st. pete, first pitch is low and inside, and we are under way, the season has begun. >> and there it is, the first pitch of the 2017 major league baseball season, this year brings a few new rules aimed at speeding up the pace of the game. we end tonight with the store eva man and a baseball. in 2010, ralph carhard began what he called the hall ball project. taking a picture with every member of the hall of fame, living and deceased. >> reporter: the ball ralph carhart has taken to 33 states isn't much to look at. his wife pulled it out of a creek near the baseball hall of fame, and he got it in his head
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to take a photo of the ball with every hall-of-famer. >> i had no concept seven years ago as to what this was going to mean, how long it was going to take. >> reporter: 37,000 miles so far by road and air has yielded these 300 pictures. yogi barra and reggie jackson, cal ripkin jr. most are deceased so he drove to idaho to find one grave site. ted williams at the cryogenics lab where williams' head is preserved. >> not every interaction with the living guys is great. some of them just don't understand why i would do such a thing. the tommy lasorta photo. lou brock kept me there for about ten minutes. he wanted to make sure his hair looked good. so i will had to keep taking ph
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of him until he liked his hair. >> reporter: carhart doesn't usually ask for photos. >> there are a number of people out there, i know some, who have tried to get autographs of all the hall-of-fameres, but this is a little different. this sounds like something nobody's ever done before. >> reporter: last week, carhart visited patterson, new jersey to honor the negro star who doesn't have a grave site but played at the field. that leaves 16 more pictures to take. then carhart wants the hall of fame to take the ball back. >> i hope they accept the ball when i'm done with the project, and i can take my kids there and say dad made that. >> reporter: patterson, new jersey. he has one more grave site photo to take, he plans on doing it in hawaii and bringing with him his entire family. that's the overnight news.
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check back later for morning news and cbs this morning. i'm reena ninan. this is the "cbs overnight news." welcome to the overnight news. i'm reena ninan. the search and rescue effort resumes at dawn in colombia where heavy rain triggered a flood that all but washed away an entire town off the map. nearly 200 bodies have been recovered but many more are missing. they have no drinking water and little hope of finding their loved ones alive among the trees and rubble of their collapsed homes. >> reporter: emergency responders are looking through the rubble, tirelessly searching for survivors. this father is looking for his daughter louisa, who's barely
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old enough to call out his name. she's just one of the hundreds still missing. the streets of mocoa, colombia were consumed by a wall of water late friday night. heavy rain triggered the overflow of three rivers, and the flooding quickly turned into an avalanche of mud. aerials revealed the city's true devastation. families torn apart. this woman's friend was swept away by the current. her husband unable to hold on tight enough. colombia's president santos toured mocoa and declared it a disaster zone. he says their hearts are with the families suffering, and they are doing everything they can to help. more than 1,000 troops are on the ground, searching and recovering bodies. this has become mocoa's weeping wall, where a list of the confirmed dead continues to
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grow. many of them young children. during his sunday blessing, pope frances prayed for those helping in the rescue and said he'd be praying for the victims of moco mocoa. they want to make sure that corrective action is taken to prevent this from happening again, and that is extremely important right now, because more rain is expected in the area in the next few days. >> thank you maria. it's going to be another busy week in washington, with investigations continuing on russian interference in the election. and a senate showdown brewing over president trump's pick for the supreme court. mr. trump weighed in on some of the hot topics sunday on twitter. here's errol barnett. >> reporter: president trump began his day rhymedieminding supporters he still plans to repeal and replace obamacare.
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he tweeted talks will continue until a deal is hopefully struck. meanwhile, senate majority leader mitch mcconnell predicted a win for the president when his supreme court nominee faces senate confirmation. >> neil gorsuch will be confirmed this week. how that happens depends on our democratic friends. >> reporter: democrats are in no mood to cooperate. to maneuver around that, mcconnell would need to permanently change senate rules, a so-called nuclear option the president supports. >> look, when a nominee doesn't get 60 votes, you shouldn't change the rules. you should change the nominee. >> reporter: the senate is also gearing up for closed-door interviews with witnesses in its investigation into russian election interference. >> no. >> reporter: president putin this week denied playing any role, and today the kremlin spokesman said there's no proof. >> any blamings that russia
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could have been interfering in domestic affairs of the united states is slander. and it has no, no evidence at all. >> reporter: republican john cornyn of the senate judiciary committee disagrees. >> we want to understand the extent to which russia has attempted to influence and interfere in our elections and to undermine our democracy. >> reporter: president trump today tweeted the real story turns out to be surveillance and leaking. find the leakers. the ranking democrat on the house intelligence committee, adam schiff, sees behavior from the white house as suspicious. >> whenever they see the president use the word "fake", it ought to set off alarm bells. the question is of course why. and i think the answer to the question is this effort to point the congress in other directions. >> reporter: today president trump played golf while discussing health care with senator rand paul. monday mr. trump will host
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egypt's president at the white house. and later this week, mr. trump hosts china's president at his mar-a-lago resort in florida. they are expected to discuss north korean nuclear threat the. thanks, errol. the famine emergency in the african nation of south sudan continues to worsen by the day. more than 100,000 people are in imminent danger of starvation and 5 million more don't know where their next meal will come from. debora patta is there. >> reporter: hope for the village is pinned on the skies. the scorched village has not had food for six months. jubilant laborers hired for the day rush to help sort the supplies dropped by the red cross. it's too dangerous to bring food by road. so airdrops are the only way to get some kind of nutrition to this community. food is the latest weapon in the
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civil war where aid convoys are regularly ambushed by warring militias. despite months of waiting, villagers line up patiently to get their food, including the 110 pound bag of sorghum and beans, it weighs about the same as she does. the food will help feed her family of ten now facing a cholera outbreak on top of the food shortages. her father is wasting away. i have a sore stomach, he says. there's nothing to eat but leaves and fruit. sometimes i have nothing. but not everyone gets help today. this man is new to the region and not registered with the red cross. she fled the fierce fighting 300 miles away. we were sleeping, and then the war came to us, she said. i saw the soldiers shoot my
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children and burn my house to the ground. heavily pregnant, she fled with her two survivoring children, walking for24 days to find safety. amazingly, she gave birth to a healthy boy in the bush along the way. but there is no extra food. i don't know anyone here, she says. i just sit under a tree and hope people will help me. but everyone here already has too many hungry stomachs to fill. there just isn't room for one more. debora patta, seebcbs news, sou sudan. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back.
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if you copy academy of country music awards you know that dolly parton got the lifetime achievement award. willie nelson has a new album coming out, and he sat down with bob schieffer to talk about life and music. ♪ the internet said i had passed away ♪ >> reporter: now how in the world did you come up with that song? >> oh, i don't know. ♪ and i woke up still not dead again today ♪ >> i've been killed several times throughout the years, so i just thought i'd write something funny about it. >> reporter: it's easy for willie nelson to laugh off the greatly exaggerated rumors of
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his demise. closing in on his 84th birthday, he's on the road again, performing, writing music. ♪ you think you're still a young bull rider ♪ ♪ till you look at the mirror >> reporter: a new album out later this month, "god's problem child", is his 110th, give or take, with songs like "still not dead." ♪ >> reporter: and "oldtimer." >> there's a theme here. this is about the autumn of life. is this hard for you to think about? >> no. no. do you remember one of those deep thinkers, a guy named seneca? he said you should look at death and comedy with the same count nance, and i believe that. >> reporter: the autumn of your life -- and i'm right there with
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you, bud edy -- is like the springtime in anybody else's life. you are at the top of your powers at this point, writing songs. >> age is just a number. it's not how old you are. it's how you feel. and i've been lucky health wise, and career wise. everything. and haven't really got anything to bitch about. >> reporter: it wasn't always so. ♪ gee, ain't it funny ♪ how time slips away >> reporter: early on, nelson left his native texas for nashville. he made a name for himself, writing hits for others. ♪ crazy >> reporter: like patsy cline. ♪ for thinking that my love could hold you ♪ >> reporter: nashville liked his songs, but his singing, not so much. i heard that you became so dejected at one point that you went out and laid down in the
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middle of the street hoping that a car would run over you. >> in nashville. >> reporter: in nashville. >> of course it was midnight, and there wasn't a lot of traffic. [ laughter ] but no car came. no car got me, though. >> reporter: what were those days like? >> they were wild and crazy, you know. i was going through one relationship after another, one divorce after another. and those things will make you write songs if you're a songwriter. that's where you get your material from all your headaches and heartaches. >> reporter: nelson went back to texas, changed his look and changed his tune. ♪ whiskey river don't run dry >> reporter: less good old one and more good old boy. with his friend waylon jennings came a new raw sound, outlaw
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country. ♪ let them be doctors and lawyers and such ♪ >> reporter: through the years, nelson's music came to transcend genre. he's won eight grammys and honors he'd never imagined. ♪ little things i should have said and done ♪ >> reporter: what is it that set t sets your songs apart. somebody said one time, country music is three chords and the truth. ♪ you were always on my mind >> it's three quarters of the way true. you can have more than try chords. >> reporter: you've had a lot more chords. >> but the truth matters. ♪ when the evening sun goes down ♪ >> reporter: what causes you to come up with these songs that people say, well, that's right? >> i don't know. i'm just writing what i'm
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thinking. ♪ tonight over ♪ >> if it comes out pretty good, i'll write it down somewhere and come up with a melody for it. but i'm just writing off the top of my head, really. >> he writes as he feels. his emotions, his inner thoughts and he writes it down. he's really a poet. >> reporter: willie's big sister, bobbie has been looking out for him and playing peiano with him since they were kids in abbott, texas. ♪ >> reporter: she's still there, every night he takes the stage. and now, two of his sons, lucas and mica often perform with him. >> that's the greatest feeling in the world, to be up there
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with your kids. and to know that they're doing well and they're good, and you can be proud of what they're doing. it's just the best feeling there is. >> reporter: when he's not traveling on his bus to one of the more than 100 shows he still does every year, willie splits his time between a home in maui, where he hangs with friends like wood e woody harrelson, and his ranch outside austin, complete with an old west town he named "luck." when we dropped by, 3,000 fans filled the town for the luck reunion, the brainchild of willie's great-niece, bobbie's granddaughter. >> i'd grown-up on this property, basically this is my back yard. ♪ on tennessee time >> reporter: so what is the luck reunion? >> the luck reunion started as a one-day event, celebrating
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singers and songwriters who are kind of forging their path in the same vein as willie is, just doing their own thing, without compromise. >> a lot of people hear a lot of good music, hang out and have a good time. so it's turned out to be real good. ♪ in the twilight i see her ♪ >> reporter: things didn't always turn out real good for willie. ♪ blue eyes cryin' in the rain >> reporter: back in the '90s, there was the little matter of back taxes he owed uncle sam. >> i got to say, you are the only guitar picker from abbott, texas that i ever knew or heard of that owed the federal government $32 million. >> it's kind of funny when you think about it. >> reporter: i'm sure it wasn't funny to you at the time. he worked it out and paid it
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off. so why didn't you declare bankruptcy? >> i don't believe in that. you know, i believe if i owe some people some money, i want to pay it. ♪ i ain't leavin' ♪ roll me up and smoke me when i die ♪ >> reporter: he's been arrested more than once for possession of marijuana. >> i want to ask you about pot. >> you got one? >> reporter: these days, he's in the cannabis business in places where it's legal. ♪ it's all goin' to pot ♪ weather hether we like it or ♪ >> reporter: why have you been such an advocate? >> for myself, it's good for me, it keeps me from going off and doing crazy things, i can relax, sit around and play music and act like a grownup. >> reporter: you married a better man than his other wives? >> no, i did. i got him after, after everybody
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else sort of trained him. >> reporter: annie nelson is willie's fourth wife, but they've been together more than 31 years. what's it like to be married to willie nelson? >> it's not boring. it's never boring. he has a lot of energy. it's, i think his goal is to, there's 23 years between us, but i think his goal is to wear me out so that we're both the same age. ♪ on the road again ♪ goin' places that i've never been ♪ >> reporter: you think you'll ever retire? >> what, do you want me to quit? all i do is play music and play a little golf. i don't want to quit either one of those. ♪ on the road again ♪ like a band of gypsies we go down the highway ♪ ♪ >> reporter: for will eie nelso the way to stop wearing out is
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to speed up. ♪ on the road again >> reporter: andy rooney said one time we don't ask to get old, we just get old. and then he said, if you're lucky, you may get old too. >> yeah, yeah. ♪ i can't wait to get on the road again ♪ >> reporter: you and i have been pretty lucky. >> we've been pretty you know your heart loves megared omega-3s... but did you know your eyes, your brain, and your joints really love them too? introducing megared advanced 4in1... just one softgel delivers mega support. um, i got something on this, but i'm not quite sure what it is.
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the hollywood sign in the hills above l.a. has been a tourist attraction for decades, but nowadays a lot of locals are a little fed up with all the attention. >> reporter: it stands as a symbol of glamour and sell llu d lloyd dreams. the problem, gps made it easy for tourists by the tens of thousands to get closer to the landmark, creating mayhem in what was a quiet neighbor. >> people have knocked on the door to use the bathroom. >> reporter: it was built in 1923 to attract the public and promote a real estate development. since then, it's become a cultural icon, the main attraction for movie lovers who come from around the world for a selfie with the sign. tracy thomas and her family are visiting from london. >> watched many movies where the sign has appeared.
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i remember a movie where actors were sitting on it. >> reporter: this is a stable offering horseback riding tours, but it's also the easiest access point where you can get your best closeup with the sign. two years ago, the city sent out a press release that encouraged people to use the gate, saying it will safely allow pedestrians into beach wood canyon, but last year the ranch filed a lawsuit, saying all those people in the street creates a hazard and interference with the business. a judge agreed. >> this is a public park. >> reporter: the city councilman announced they will study traffic problems, ensure safety and multiple access points. >> there will be a hollywood ending to improve accessible for everyone, whether you live next door, one state over or halfway across the world. >> we want our neighborhood to return to being a residential neighborhood and not disneyland. >> reporter: movie fans will
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still have a romance with the sign. but soon it,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
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steve hartman now with the story of a writer who got a warm welcome in a place that he once gave the cold shoulder. >> reporter: inside this ice shanty in northern minnesota, there's a fish out of water. >> oh, yeah, look at that. >> reporter: and i'm not talking about the walleye. chris ingram dressed in his coat and boots with the tag still on appears equally out of place. he works for the "washington post" and the only reason he's here is base of an article he wrote in 2015. the article was about a seemingly innocuous u.s. department of agriculture study. and in the article, chris concluded the absolute worse place to live in america is drum roll please, red lake county, minnesota. and that was it. >> i published a story, story
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goes up at like 9:32 on a monday. by 9:37 the hate mail started rolling in on social media. it was fast and furious like nothing i'd ever seen before. >> reporter: and from the same zip code. you get people who take it personally. >> yeah, we take offense. how does this person have a clue? >> reporter: just about everyone in town took a shot at the messenger, except jason brumwell who took a different tack. >> i wanted him to come here and see it for himself, put his money where his mouth is, i guess. >> reporter: so jason invited chris for a visit, and chris agreed. flew out for his first visit in august of 2015. >> so i pull up to the courthouse, get a car, there's a marching band playing. >> reporter: a marching band? >> there were no pitchforks, i was really happy. no torches, no nothing. just a bunch of beaming, smiling people. and the weird thing about the trip, when i got back, i
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couldn't stop thinking about the place. >> reporter: which brings us to the most unbelievable part. at the time, chris and brianna were not happy living outside of d.c. they hated the long commutes and high cost of living. so last year they packed up their twin toddlers and moved to -- you guessed it -- red lake county. but this was the worse place in america. >> i thought it was the absolute worst place to live in america. that's what the spreadsheet said. so coming out here and getting that ground truth changed my perspective on it. >> reporter: and you factor in the people. >> it did not factor in the people, no. >> reporter: today chris still writes for the post, but he works from home, giving him lots more time to spend with his family and all those internet trolls he now considers friends. they really do love him here. because they know it's easy for some reporters to lob judgments and generalizations, but it takes real integrity to make this kind of correction. steve hartman, on the road in
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red lake county, minnesota. red lake county, minnesota. that's the overnight n,, captioning funded by cbs captioning funded by cbs it's monday, april 3rd, 2017. this is the "cbs morning news." hail, rain, and tornados sweep across the south, leaving at least two people dead and miles of damage. and in colombia, the search is on for the missing after a mudslide kills more than 200 people. preparing for a showdown over the u.s. supreme court nominee. >> neil gorsuch will be confirmed this week. how that happens really depends on our democratic friends. and that sweet sound of victory. south carolina takes home their first ncaa women's basketball chpi

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