tv CBS Overnight News CBS December 29, 2017 3:12am-3:59am PST
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the cia and senior national security contributor. mike, great to have you on with us this evening. given today's attack, buzz isis in afghanistan pose a threat to the u.s. similar to isis in iraq and syria? >> bianna, afghanistan is one of the places where the isis cancer has spread. it's not yet a threat to the u.s. homeland, but if it is allowed to continue to grow in strength, if it allowed to acquire a safe haven, it could very well become a threat to the u.s. homeland. >> is the u.s. doing enough to prevent that from happening? >> so the military pressure on isis in afghanistan is significant. isis is one of the reasons why president trump decided to leave a u.s. troop presence there. and those operations against isis are intensive. >> let me switch gears and ask you about secretary rex tillerson, who has written an op-ed really promoting u.s.
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foreign policy. he took a rather tough stand regarding russia. in fact, he wrote that absent a peaceful resolution of the ukraine situation, there cannot be business as usual with russia. mike, those are strong words. but does this carry any weight with vladimir putin? >> so they are tough words, but from putin's perspective, he really only listens to the president. he mirror images. and in his system, he is the only person that matters. so when he looks at us, he thinks the president is the only person that matters. the most important thing to putin are u.s. actions. and we have not taken tough action with regard to the meddling in the election. but just last week, we took very tough action by allowing the ukrainians to acquire from the united states anti-tank weapons that is a very tough step with regard to russia. and putin will see that. >> mike morel, our thanks to you. and happy new year. >> same to you, bianna, thank you. now here are some other stories we're following in our
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evening news feed. 128 law enforcement officers have died this year in the line of duty. that's a 10% drop from last year, according to the national law enforcement officers memorial fund, which says possible reasons include better safety gear and training. apple apologized today for slowing down older iphones. the company said it was done to preserve battery life and prevent shutdowns. but in multiple lawsuits, customers argue it was a scheme to get them to buy new phones. apple is now offering those with an iphone 6 or newer a $29 replacement battery. and public filings show apple's ceo tim cook got a 47% raise this year to $12.8 million. that's on top of the stock he owns worth hundreds of millions of dollars. apple's board has also told cook to use only private planes for security and efficiency. and there is much more ahead. >> you can board without presenting your boarding pass passport or other travel
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documents. >> biometrics are being used increasingly by the airlines, but there are questions about privacy. >> you're just going to walk up and they're going the take a picture and that's it? wow. these folks won the lottery. or did they? >> i feel like i spent my real money to win monopoly money. someone thought each of these business ventures would be a success. but they weren't. we'll take you inside the museum of failure in los angeles. oh, sorry i'm late, sir. when you said you were at the doctor,
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at the height of this busy travel season, the tsa posted photos today of the arsenal of prohibited items people have tried to carry on to planes. all were confiscated, including 129 bullets discovered this week in baltimore washington international. a record 25 guns were confiscated at bwi this year. knives and blades are among the most common banned items.
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occasionally meat clooefrs and machetes turn up as well. occasionally brass knuckles and knives that fold into keys. confiscated items are turned over to the states and sold. airlines are testing new technology to improve security and speed up the boarding process. soon you may have to show only your face to board a plane. here is transportation correspondent kris van cleave. >> you board without presenting your boarding pass, passport or other documents. >> reporter: this jetblue flight leaving for aruba has passengers taking a trip to the future without a boarding pass. >> you're just going to walk up and they're going the take a picture, and that's it? wow. yeah. it amazing me. every year things change. it just amazes me the n sends facial recognition technology can compare a picture taken at the gate against a passenger's passport picture stored in a database.
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fran. >> delta is testing and is trying out a facial recognition bag drop in minneapolis, part of larger drop that envisions your face or finger print as the only thing you'll need to 1/2 an airport. >> marrying each of the technologies at each of the steps in the travel ribbon is a game changer for experience you. literally go from curb to plane without having to interact with a human being if you so desire. >> reporter: there is also clear, a private company that for a fee will store and verify a fly area's biometrics. but a new report questions whether it's legal for a airline to use facial recognition and they're asking to halt expansion of the testing as i mid security concerns. >> as we consolidate into big databases and we use it more and more, those databases will become targets. and the risk of data breach
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increases greatly. >> reporter: the tsa is testing fingerprint verification at least two airports in the u.s. and here at reagan national, certain delta customers can use their fingerprint as their boarding pass. kris van cleave, cbs news, arlington, virginia. >> technology hopefully making travel a little less painful. when we come back, a report of asbestos in girls' makeup. ok, let's try this. it says you apply the blue one to me. here? no. have a little fun together, or a lot. k-y yours and mine. two sensations that work together, so you can play together. fredget in, fred!thing for his daughter. even if it means being the back half of a unicorn. fear not fred, the front half washed his shirt with gain.
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claire's, which sells makeup for children and young women, has recalled at least nine of its products as a precaution following a report that asbestos was found in one of them. asbestos can cause cancer. for a list of the recalled product, go to cbsnews.com. in south carolina, many who thought they hit the lottery, well, they're out of luck. a christmas day computer glitch caused a flood of winning tickets. it started a ticket buying frenzy. but lottery officials quickly stopped the game and are not paying out prizes while they investigate. better luck next time. in southeast china this week, a construction crew made an eggs-citing discovery. they were clearing ground for a school when they found more than 20 perfectly preserved dinosaur eggs. scientists estimate the eggs roughly the size of small footballs, are 130 million years old. they were found in a part of
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>> reporter: the hawaii hula zmar it looks a little silly. >> it is. >> reporter: martin brought the museum of failure to los angeles. >> imagine your ceo sitting there in the meeting and just going like this. when you see the commercial, you've got all these smiling people going like this. ♪ if you can sit, you can get fit, the hawaii chair ♪ >> well, that didn't help either. the product tanked. >> reporter: the museum showcases major flops by big-name brands, like olestra-laced pringles. >> make sure you had an imodium with you when you were kuiping that. >> reporter: or ford's revolutionary edsel. >> the steering wheel where they tried to center all the pieces, all the controls into the steering wheel. and people just got confused. >> 80, 90% of all innovation projects, they fail. >> reporter: psychologists and innovation researcher samuel west cure rated the museum. we tracked him down on vacation. >> there is a saying that failure is a better teacher than
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success. and i truly believe that. we have so much more to learn from failure. >> reporter: colgate learned that its lasagna wasn't nearly as fresh an idea as its toothpaste. bic bombed. but sticking to the basic, sells more than 30 million products a day. what do you hope is the biggest takeaway for people who visit the museum? >> i hope people leave the museum with a reevaluation of what failure means for progress. >> reporter: it's a message that visitors hear loud and clear. >> as a parent, i want to teach my kids it's okay to fail. >> reporter: which brings up the biggest irony. the museum dedicated to failure appears to be a huge success. jamie yuccas, cbs news, los angeles. >> and that's overnight news for this friday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back with us a little later for the morning news, and of course cbs this morning. from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm bianna golodryga. thanks for watching.
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is the cbs overnight news. >> welcome to the overnight news. i'm don dahler. new year's weekend starts today, and it's doing so in frigid fashion. old man winter has brought bone-chilling cold from montana all the way into the south. and for most, it won't be warming up any time soon. in new york city, the arctic weather isn't the only thing putting a chill on preparations for new year's eve. police are planning the biggest security cordon in city history around times square. tony dokoupil is there. >> reporter: three days before the ball drops in times square, security is building up.
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new york police commissioner james o'neill. >> we take away are our preparations this. people will be safe. and they should feel safe too. >> reporter: to protect about a million revellers in a city still shaken by a botched pipe bombing this month and a deadly vehicle attack on halloween, the nypd is promising stepped up patrols, k-9 teams and heavy weapons squads. the old barriers are back too, along with sand trucks to guard against a vehicle attack. but the nypd is putting a new focus on aerial security with spotters on buildings. and for the first time officers in hotels up and down the avenue to react in the event of a sniper-style attack. three months after las vegas suffered the deadliest mass shooting in modern u.s. history, the city's new year's eve party has been designated a sear 1 security threat by the department of homeland security. of a designation typically reserved for political conventions and the super bowl. law enforcement is taking no chances, adding snipers and twice as many armed rapid response teams on top of 800 steel security pylons.
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clark county sheriff joe lombardo. >> i'm confident every available resource is being used to make sure this new year's eve will be safe. >> reporter: other big cities are beefing up too. chicago police say they are adding specialized teams with a focus on vehicle-style attacks. for the first time miami will conduct random security checks at its outdoor events. in san francisco, days after spoiling an alleged plan to attack the city's popular tourist site pier 39, police are beefing up security along the famed embarcadero. so just how cold will it be for this new year's eve weekend? meteorologist danielle niles is with our cbs boston station wbz. >> it's just brutal. a piece of the polar vortex dives south for a record start, temperatures 20 to 40 degrees below normal. and that may be a little bit on
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the conservative side. you're making your plans for new year's eve. ball drop forecast. midnight, windchill values, 15 to 30 below zero from boston back into northern new england. stretching west towards the midwest. 3 below the ball drop in new york. that's what it's going the feel like as we head into new year's eve night. the first day of 2018, brutal. single digits and teens in terms of actual temperatures. most of the nation, 70% of it going to be below the freezing mark with a lot of cold air in place. meanwhile, the next couple days we're measuring the snow in feet in parts of the west coast with a multiple disturbances coming in off the pacific. these deep pinks you see here from northern portions of washington, stretching back into montana with elevation will be measuring the snow in two to three feet in spots. thousands of people in states with high property taxes are scrambling to pay their 2018 tax bills before the start of the year. the new trump tax code limits the property tax deduction for many. but the irs says it may audit people who try to get around the law.
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and that's not the only confusion on the tax horizon. jan crawford has some details on charitable giving. >> how you doing? >> reporter: in the nation's capital, the charity serves hundreds of meals daily to the needy, operating largely through charitable donations. but under the new tax reform law, nonprofits like so others might eat will soon be taking a big hit. >> we are absolutely concerned that tax reform and also just confusion about what the new laws are going to be will impact charitable giving. >> reporter: it's a concern shared by nonprofits across the country, because the new tax law lowers incentives for people to donate. before, people could reduce their tax burden by writing off charitable donations and itemizing them on their tax returns. under the new law, many middle class taxpayers no longer will need to itemize, but instead offers a bigger standard deduction, doubled to $12,000 for individuals and $24,000 for couples. but here is the rub.
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if you don't itemize, you can't deduct your charitable donations. >> people will continue to give to charity. they just won't give as much. if you get a thousand dollars more in your paycheck and there is no financial incentive to give it to charity, you may still give to charity, but you're probably going get the washing machine. >> reporter: united way ceo brian gallagher says his organization, which collects $3.5 billion a year in donations and funds charities like so others might eat expects to take in $300 million less. estimates that overall charitable give willing go down $13 billion a year, which would mean up to 10 million people will lose needed services. what's the impact of that? >> the impact is lives, human lives. >> come january 1, california will become the eighth state in the nation to allow the recreational sale of marijuana to adults. but just because it's legal
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doesn't mean it will be easy for the stores. carter evans has the details. >> murder shop called urban trees. and right now they only sell medical marijuana. but they would like to get a license to sell recreational. to do that, though, things are going to have to change. for example, this brownie here has 500 milligrams of thc. the new limit is only 100 milligrams. and then it has to be divided into 10 milligram doses. and that's just the beginning. come january 1, anyone 21 years of age or older will be able to buy recreational marijuana legally in california. that is if they can find a place allowed to sell it. some local governments are banning pot shops altogether, while others are still working through the permits process the head of los angeles's regulation department. >> this is a process, not an event. >> reporter: l.a. won't even begin accepting license applications until january 3rd.
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and it could take weeks before stores are properly licensed to sell recreational marijuana. >> we do not want to necessarily disrupt this market, but we do need to regulate this market. >> reporter: medical shops like tory holistics in san diego face challenges in becoming recreational sellers. so you've had to create new packaging? >> we did. our packaging is completely changing so that it is not see-through. >> reporter: opaque, childproof package just part of the new rules. this is 115 pages. what is this? >> this is the proposed regulations by the state of california. >> reporter: so these are the rules you've got to follow? >> these are the rules we're following. >> so it's really, really nice. >> reporter: recreational pot users will have plenty of rules too. smoking marijuana is not allowed in restaurants, bars, and most public areas. also off limits, your car. and the california highway patrol wants everyone to know about the dangers of driving while high. did you know that smoking a joint can get you a dui? >> if you can buy a drink or buy
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a joint, you can also ok, let's try this. it says you apply the blue one to me. here? no. have a little fun together, or a lot. k-y yours and mine. two sensations that work together, so you can play together. that cough doesn't sound so good. well i think you sound great. move over. easy booger man. take mucinex dm. it'll take care of your cough.
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fine! i'll text you in 4 hours when your cough returns. one pill lasts 12 hours, so... looks like i'm good all night. ah! david, please, listen. still not coughing. not fair you guys! waffles are my favorite! ah! why take 4-hour cough medicine? just one mucinex lasts 12 hours. start the relief. ditch the misery. let's end this. it says you apply the blue one ok, letto me. this. here? no. have a little fun together, or a lot. k-y yours and mine. two sensations that work together, so you can play together.
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this is the cbs overnight news. >> wildlife conservationists will go to the ends of the earth to save their beloved animals. but how do you save a herd of black rhinos from poachers? lara logan took to the sky for "60 minutes." >> reporter: take one 1400 pound black rhino who has been darted and sedated. >> a young female, currently about 6 or 7 years old. >> reporter: two veterinarians. >> with black rhino, lots of things can go wrong. >> reporter: three game capture specialists. >> now we're putting these drops on the feet. >> reporter: four leg straps, a 52-year-old huey helicopter and its pilot. add a potentially lethal
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130-foot chain. >> keep an eye on that chain. i'm always worried about it swinging into someone's face. >> reporter: and you get this. >> yeah. >> look at that! >> amazing, isn't it? i never tire of seeing it. >> reporter: this feat of engineering, aerodynamics and conservation has been choreographed by jacques fremont, a veterinarian who is moving these rhino to save them. why did you start flying the rhinos, transporting them by helicopter instead of by road or other means? >> some of these rhino are in very inaccessible parts of the reserve. and this method of airlifting them provided us with an opportunity. i immediately thought this is the solution to our problem, getting them out of rugged mountainous, or thick forested areas where vehicles cannot go in. >> reporter: with more than 100 square miles of mountains and ravines, the atala game reserve
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fits that description. when we joined the team, they were searching the impossible terrain for three rhino they selected for relocation, part of his plan to protect them from poachers and increase their numbers. why did you choose the black rhino to focus on? >> well, i didn't choose it. it chose itself because it's in trouble. >> reporter: so how many black rhino were there in the country when you began? >> there were about 2,500 black rhino in south africa when we started the project. >> reporter: that was 15 years ago. the black rhino was a critically endangered species. to get the numbers up, flamond started the black rhino range expansion project with the help of the world wildlife fund. the idea was to take a small number of rhino from government parks and settle them in new places, mostly on private land where they would breed and create new populations.
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so you got the word out to people. >> we got the word out that we were looking for land for black rhino. and well, it's worked amazingly. so those 20 black rhino, however many, get put all together on to a new block of land and are left to breed. and we wanted to put 20 because that's a genetically viable number. >> reporter: his team captured the rhino by darting them, then driving trucks in to pick them up. but when they ran out of road, they turned to the skies. >> i mean, it's spectacular and unbelievable and also slightly distressing at the same time. it's sort of everything. >> you really have to put your mind adrift that the animal psychologically is not being harmed in any way. >> reporter: dave cooper has been the chief veterinarian for 22 years. he says the rhino are usually in the air for less than ten
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minutes and fully sedated the entire time. >> it looks as if the animal is really uncomfortable. but we've done our homework. we didn't just do this and see if it was going to work. we hung rhino upside down with chains and set monitors and sophisticated equipment. >> reporter: didn't you volunteer to huang yourself upside down from the helicopter? >> did. but the pilots wouldn't let me. >> some of the vets wanted to be tied upside down. they told me anything that can walk on its feet can be hung by its feet. >> reporter: they have been working together from the beginning. ross told us the huey helicopter he is flying for this can hold two tons, more than enough to lift a black rhino. you've done how many now? >> this will be 198. >> reporter: so almost 200, and you've lost none? >> we do three today and it will be 200, yeah. >> reporter: what's the most difficult part? >> putting it down. putting it down gently.
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>> reporter: so you don't hurt the animal? >> yeah. >> reporter: we saw just how difficult it can be as ross struggled to land the first rhino. he got it down safe and unhurt on the second try. vet dave cooper was already up in another smaller helicopter, looking for the next rhino. >> here we go. >> reporter: he prepped darts for his tranquilizer gun with a dose strong enough to knock the animal out for 30 minutes. the first dart didn't fully pierce the inch-thick skin. three minutes later, his second shot stuck. they tracked the rhino until it dropped. we were right behind him in the
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huey with jock flamond and the game capture team. i see the rhino down. how many minutes do you have now to get that rhino? >> we've got time. >> reporter: as soon as we landed, it was a race to get to the sedated animal. dave cooper's priority removing the tranquilizer dart and treating the wound with an antibiotic. >> i darted him once here. >> reporter: yeah? >> the dart went in and out. so i immediately had to put another one in. >> reporter: so that's the first thing you do is cover the eyes? >> that's right. because that stops them. >> reporter: so is this a male or female? >> this is a male. >> reporter: he is young and has many years of breeding ahead of him. exactly what they need. they id'd him from notches in his ears. most rhino in the kwazulu natal
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parks are marked this way. >> i'm happy with that. >> reporter: the game capture team cleared a path to above. >> the helicopter is now going to come. >> reporter: wow. >> and they're going to pithitcp the four straps. >> reporter: tosh ross maneuvered in the chain and swept the rhino away. it took them less than 16 minutes. for dave cooper, it's a small victory every time. >> i have tears in my eyes. >> reportebe to me. >> reporter: as a vet, you're the one that gets called out when the poachers have been there. >> yeah. >> reporter: and they've hacked off the horn and the animal is bleeding. >> yeah. >> reporter: is that very difficult for you? >> yes. so much negativity around rhino at the moment with all the poaching that to be involved in something like this is what lifts you and keeps you positive
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about things. >> reporter: this is what cooper and flamond are seeing more and more. when the program started in 2003, three or four black rhino were being killed a year. >> now we're into the hundreds for this province alone this year. >> reporter: so why is that? >> well, because there is that stupid demand for rhino horn, which has absolutely no medicinal value, sadly. >> reporter: rhino horn is made of keratin, the same substance as human finger nails. yet in countries like china and vietnam, people believe it can cure hangovers and increase virility. private game parks are drowning in security costs. most remove the horns to deter poacher. but it's worth so much, more per ounce than gold or cocaine that every place there is rhino is a target. >> you can see the full report on our website, cbsnews.com.
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that's when he needs vicks vaporub. proven cough medicine. with 8 hours of vapors. so he can sleep. vicks vaporub. goodnight coughs. for most dedicated mountain climbers, scaling mt. everest is the challenge of a lifetime. but others are looking for even more adventure. dana jacobsen has the story of the north face climbing team and their quest to climb the highest peaks at the bottom of the world. >> we're going to antarctica, oh, yeah.
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>> reporter: when this massive cargo plane lifted off from cape town, south africa, it was carrying 1700 pounds of extreme cold weather gear and six of the best rock climbers and mountaineers in the world. >> we made it on to the continent! >> reporter: their destination, almost six hours' flight due south. a rugged and remote region of antarctica called uma >> there is kind of an elliptical ring of mountains. and there is six peaks with walls between 2,000 and 3,000 feet tall. >> reporter: for a climbing legend like team leader conrad angkor, those walls, which very few people have ever seen, much less scaled, are irresistible. >> the fact that it's always below freezing makes it a challenge for wall climbers. the remoteness, the cliff face and the temperature, any one of them can get us. but all three together, you always have to manage that risk on a day-to-day basis.
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>> reporter: yosemite search and rescue vet cedar wright came up with the idea for the all-star antarctica adventure. >> if you go out deep into the center of that wild unexplored continent, you find one of the most impressive ranges of granite in the world. i look at it like as a frozen yosemite. each of these formations is at least, if not bigger than el capitan. it kind of takes all the skills we have learned in places like yosemite and brings them to this really wild and severe environment. >> reporter: yosemite and its sheer granite monster el capitan is the most famous training ground for expeditions like this. and no one has conquered el capitan like alex. he accomplished a ropeless solo free lime up its face. his biggest challenge in antarctica, temperatures hovering around freezing and below. >> my lips aren't too chapped. life is good here in antarctica.
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>> when you first touch cold rock, your fingers will get numb. but after the initial numbing, blood rushes back to your fingers. it really hurts when blood rushes back into your fingertips. it makes you want to scream and makes you feel sick. >> see how cold it is. cold! >> reporter: jimmy chin's long career has acclimated him to the cold but that happens when you accomplish feats like he did in 2006 when he skied off the summit of mt. everest. >> yeah! >> reporter: the stakes for anna fath and her climbing partner anna cummings are even higher. they're the only women on this expedition, which is the sort of journey that typically is all male. they hope the trip helps them move the sport forward. >> sick! >> i would like the get more women in the sport of doing this kind of stuff. >> there is still the stigma that the mountains are made for men. i've had people say these things to me before. and what it's done to me is it's made me want the try harder. ♪
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in our series living stronger, we're introducing you to some older americans who are an inspiration for people of all ages. here is julianna goldman. ♪ five, six. ♪ show your shoulders records sol land. madam binda known to her students has been teaching ballet for 67 years. and at 95 years old, she says she has no intention of slowing down. the story of your birth is pretty noteworthy? >> it was a little unusual. it was at that time no doctor.
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so it happened to be japanese vet. >> reporter: a veterinarian deliver you'd? >> yes. >> reporter: that was in china, where her belgian father worked as an engineer. she had a privileged childhood. a big house, horses, and dance lessons with a renowned russian ballerina. all of which went away during world war ii. >> we had about a week to be told that we were going to go to a concentration camp. and we stayed there for three and a half year. >> reporter: amid the starvation and squalid conditions at the way shannon internment camp, she still managed to dance. >> we made our own costume. because out of sheets. so anything. >> reporter: after allies liberated the camp, mclane married an american soldier and moved to the washington, d.c. suburbs. but the marriage didn't last. with two small children to support, she started teaching dance. that was in 1950. in the years since, she has taught thousands of students, many of whom have gone on to
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dance careers themselves. >> these are the little ones. >> reporter: her studio is a shrine to decades of rehearsals and recitarecitals. it's packed with her hand-stitched costumes. thousands of costumes in here? >> yeah, yeah. >> reporter: she doesn't sew as much anymore, but she still drives, both her car and her lawnmower. >> you have to look at your heel. >> reporter: and of course she teaches. you could have stopped doing this years ago. >> that's my vitality. i take my oxygen from them. >> reporter: for madam binda, ballet is life. and it's kept her on point throughout the years. julianna goldman, cbs news, falls church, virginia. >> thank you, ladies. >> and that's the overnight news for this friday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back with us a little later for the morning news. and of course cbs this morning. from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm don dahler. thanks for watching.
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