tv CBS This Morning CBS February 22, 2018 7:00am-9:00am EST
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day. captioning funded by cbs good morning. it's thursday, february 22nd, 2018. welcome to "cbs this morning." students take their demands about guns straight to the people in power. survivors from the florida school shooting confront senator marco rubio on live tv while a parent asks president trump how many children have to get shot. the president say it may be time to arm teachers. plus we'll hear from a teenager who prevented a shooting in vermont. she said a friend sent her plans about a sinister plot when police found a gun, gas mask, and journal detailing the attack pan. will artificial intelligence one day save your life?
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dr. david agus explores a new frontier where computers are diagnosing ailments like heart disease and cancer. the products men are now embracing in pursuit of physical perfection. but we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. people are dying. >> i want to feel safe at school. >> it should have been one scoot shooting and we should have fixed it. >> parents sit down with president trump. >> we want to learn everything we can learn and after this meeting we're going to work. this is a long-term situation that we have to solve. we'll solve it together. >> we are children and we are dying. >> a powerful day of nationwide advocacy on gun violence following the florida school shooting. >> what is youra?
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>> plans announced to the reverend billy graham. >> a private funeral in north carolina. the national security council is seeking a resolution that calls for a 30-day cease-fire in syria. the threat of heavy flooding hangs over the plains in the northeast. >> it's a madhouse. an explosion ripping apart a crowded ferry in mexico as passengers were getting off the boat. none of the injuries is life threatening. >> three, two, the ball gets away. we are headed to -- oh, no. >> -- and all that matters -- >> they backed out at the last minute, which means mike pence flew like 15 hours to watch ice dancing. >> -- on "cbs this morning." . >> she scored earlier. >> rooney. >> the united states win gold in pong challenge.
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>> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" presents by toyota. let's go places. >> i'd fly 15 hours to watch that. >> i know. congrats to the u.s. women. >> go team usa. welcome to "cbs this morning." survivors of florida school shooting are taking their demand for gun control directly to the people in power. last night students and parents confronted senator marco rubio why the type of gun used by the shooter las not been outlawed. >> if i believe it would have prevented it, i would support it. but i'll explain why it's not. >> rubio was booed last night. >> that town hall meeting on live tv following a very emotional meeting at the white house in the afternoon.
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other students and parents spoke directly to president trump asking him to lead an effort to change gun culture in this country. >> the president offered a series of possible remedies including one controversial idea, letting teachers carry guns. margaret brennan is at the white house. margaret, good morning. >> good morning. well, it was an extraordinary gesture to bring cameras into the room with the grieving and it shows that the president has heard the outcry and is willing to at least consider taking some kind of action. >> i want to listen, and then after i listen, we're going to get things done. >> one by one survivors of school shootings and their family members shared their pain. >> i'm pissed. i'm not going see my daughter again. >> i lost my best friend, practically a brother.
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>> we have got to stop this. >> i'm begging for a change. >> andrew pollack lost his 18-year-old daughter meadow in the shooting. >> my daughter has no voice. she was murdered last week and she wa taken from us, shot nine times on the third floor. we as a country failed our children. >> reporter: senior sam zeiss whose best friend died in the massacre wondered why it's so easy to buy an assault riving, the ar-15 used in the shooting. >> i don't understand why at 18 i can go in and buy a weapon of war. >> president trump talked about strengthening background checks, increasing mental health services and increasing school staff. >> they could end the attack very quickly. >> mark barden lost his 6-year-old son six years ago in the sandy hook master kerr.
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>> teachers have more than enough responsibilities than to have the awesome responsibility to take a life. >> cbs spoke to some of the students. they said listening is not enough. >> he heard our cries and he talked to us and i think he understood where we were coming from, but the nra wasn't there. >> zeist said -- >> why would we bring more guns into school. >> and the photographer captured this image i want to point out to you. it's a copy of the handwritten notes that the president cared with him into the meeting to prompt some empathy in his response questions like what can we do to make you feel safe and simply i hear you. norah, that seems to be his main
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message. >> that's exactly right. margaret, thank you so much. other students and parents packed the town hall meeting carried on cnn. senators marco rubio and bill nelson eed congressman deutsche >> your comments and the presidents have been pathetically weak. look at me and tell me guns were a factor in the hunting of our kids in this school this week and look at me and tell you you accept it and you will work with us to do something about guns. >> i'm saying na the problems we're facing here today cannot be solved by gun laws alone and i'm going to tell you what we've done already and moving ahead. >> were guns a factor in the hunting of our kids? >> of course, he were. >> he said he'd consider the age
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limit to buy a rifle, banning bump stocks and improved background check systems and looking at the size of the bullets. >> he said law abiding owners should not be punished. i thought it was a terrific display of democracy where people feel they can challenge lawmakers, you know, people who make the laws. >> face-to-face. >> yeah. >> i thought so, too, norah. i commend senator rubio going, knowing he's going to be heavily criticized and booed. most presidents wouldn't have allowed cameras in there because it's so personal and painful, but i'm glad we got to see it. talking is not enough. the anger from the students and parents in south florida echoed around the country. thousands of students from washington state to washington, d.c., walked out of school yesterday demanding stricter gun
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control laws. more than a thousand people rallied outside the capitol in tallahassee, florida, while students from stoneman douglas high lobbied their lawmakers. add ya na diaz has that part of the story. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. we sat in three of those meetings between students and lawmakers, and students asked poignant questions about assault rifles and school security. they arrived back to parkland by bus and in a short time here, they made sure their message was heard. florida state capitol became the nerve center of a growing nationwide movement to end gun violence. >> there's a lot of talk about looking. when are you going to do any action? >> you have started something huge. >> reporter: inside students held meetings with lawmakers including democrat jones.
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>> i'll make sure they get something this their face to force the vote, i mean that. >> reporter: others like joe negron weren't as decisive. >> it's a military weapon, it's not meant for self-defense. >> it's an issue we're going to look at as we work on developing a legislative response. >> reporter: students were not deterred. >> we're coming after you, every single one of you, demanding action and demanding change. >> reporter: by noon more than a thousand protesters protested outside the capitol raising the volume on their demands. >> if we're going to protect our future, why are we not protecting our children? >> reporter: solidarity was displayed nationwide with walkouts. >> some form of legislation needs to be passed into law because far too many innocent
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people have been killed. >> i'm marching because we students deserve to feel safe in our school. >> reporter: state lawmakers on both sides of the aisle are working on legislation that would increase funding for mental health in schools and limit action to assault rifles and not ban them. the sheriff in parkland county said going forward deputies will be armed with rifles at county schools. >> thanks. the reverend billy graham will be buried next friday in north carolina. the public may pay their respects in charlotte on monday and tuesday when his body will lie in repose. david begnaud is live in charlotte near the place where graham will be laid to rest. good morning, david. >> reporter: good morning, john. when you come to the library, you have to go through the cross. that's exactly how billy graham wanted it. he hated the idea of a museum or
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building that would honor him, but when his family said it would be a library with ongoing history, he warmed. he will be buried here. >> yes, jesus has the answer to life's problems. >> reporter: reverend billy graham's funeral service will be held under a tent. it's fitting. he rose preaching under the canv canvas. >> jesus christ can forgive. >> funeral services have been extended to president trump and other presidents. barack obama said he gave hope to many. >> reporter: known as american's pastor, he will be buried in a casket made by prisoners.
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it's a lined pine box with a mattress pad. he died at home. no one else was with him except for a nurse. his doctor said he just wore out. >> i think we can say he passed in his sleep. described by his and doctor it was a very peaceful passing, he was not with any pain. >> reporter: his life was not without controversy. >> reporter: a taped phone call between him and president nixon drew criticism from the jewish community. s he ministry also supported a ban against gay marriage. joel olstein calls him a hero. >> he was somebody we always looked up to and admired. >> reporter: billy graham will also be buried here on the library property right alongside his wife ruth.
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the grave is very simple, but this is where he will go. his son asked him, daddy, what do you want on your tombstone. he had a one-word answer. preacher. >> i love those details. an attack in sir ya killed at least 13 children. this assad regime backed by russia is trying to wipe out resistance in eastern the u.s. secretary calls it hell on earth. they're ordering a 350-day cease-fire in much of syria. investigators in mexico are trying to determine the cause of an explosion onboard a ferry on the caribbean coach. surveillance cameras captured the moment of the blast yesterday. as many as 25 people were hurt on the dock including at least
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seven americans. vladimir duthiers of our streaming network cbsn is here with a story and tuque of survivors. good morning. >> good morning. it's a popular destination. one american family o four were on a beach getaway when their trip took a terrifying turn. security footage shows the moment a fireball ripped through the center of the ferry. the boets had just docked at playa del carmen when explosion sent debris and shrapnel into the water and into the crowd. crews rushed to the scene. 18 people were taken to the hospital. images of the aftermath show a gaped hole in the center of the ship. >> from my right side i heard a loud boom. >> reporter: rebecca and her family were on the dock waiting for another ferry when the blast happened.
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>> there was a lot of debris in the air, a lot of glass. people were knocked quickly. they hit the ground hart. >> reporter: the couple's two minor sons suffered cuts and bruises and wir taken to the hospital where they received stitches and were released. >> others were not as lucky and have a little more recovery than we do. >> flank no one was killed. the explosion was due to mechanical failure. a deeper investigation into exactly what caused the failure is ongoing. >> look at those pictures, it's hard to believe nobody else was killed. >> that's amazing. thank you, vlad. a thrilling shoot-out on the ice led to a gold medal for team usa. they beat canada for the first time in 20 years. ben tracy is at the olympics
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pyeongchang. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the last time the u.s. women won was 1998. since then canada has won four times. that streak is now over. this was a grunge match between the world's two hockey powerhouses. so it's only fitting the game went all the way to a shoot-out. tied after five shots jocel jocelyne lalamareux davidson stopped it. these golden girls did not need a miracle on ice.
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they just needed to show the world how good they are. the american men did their part too. >> double 1080. >> becoming heroes on the half pike. david-wise spon his way to a gold medal in the freestyle event while alex roe vieira took silver. there were cringe moments after two nasty walls including torin yater. both were able to walk away. in the alpine, it was youth over experience. 22-year-old mikaela shiffrin slalomed their way to silver, but there was no happy ending for lindsey vonn's olympic career. she veered off course. back to women's hockey for a moment, though, goalie maddie rooney was amazing.
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she defended more than 30 shots from cade yans. after team usa won that match, somebody went on wick peep ya and changed her occupation to secretary of defense. >> oh, my gosh. that's awesome, ben. >> we all love that. >> the internet provides. >> go team usa. all cars in the u.s. will soon be required to have rearview cameras. a report overnight
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ahead, three things y good morning, i'm rahel solomon. one woman is dead and five people are injured in what police say was a frightening and dangerous scene in north philadelphia investigators say a 23 year-old woman was shot and killed driving near broad street around 8:30 last night. van was hit by at least five bullets and then crashed in the building. two women and three children under age of six year-old were injured in the crash. so far police have made no arrests. let's send it over to kate for a check of the forecast what a difference a day makes. >> no kidding, we are seeing a transition in a noticeable way where wet weather is over spreading out of southeastern, pennsylvania right now. it is most widespread very far north but this will again, just cover the entire region, as the day progresses and then temperature also drops.
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just checked it is only 51 at the airport. not too chilly just yet but these temperatures will continue to drop and tomorrow is just a raw, chilly day with more rain and that even lasts us through the weekend, meisha all right, katie, thank you. looking outside we have some problem spots out there, we can expect that now, we are an accident route 100 southbound at phoenixville pike, off to the right very slow moving around there and vine eastbound at ben franklin parkway that far right is compromised coming off that exit. just a heads up, look at that backup shot vine headlights are backup shot, bumper to bumper conditions there, rahel , over to you. and next update 7:55. up next this morning the girl who tipped police off about a classmate who intended to bring a gun to their former high school, i'm rahel solomon , good
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the winter olympics are in full swing, which means we get all the pageantry of russian cheating on ice. >> russian curler alexander krushelnytsky may have used a banned substance. >> yeah. curling should be the cleanest event the entire sport is sweeping. in fact, the only thing cleaner than the ice is the seats because no one's watching. do the russians cheat at everything? what a waste of sterds. like, i take the
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steroids. >> he does that well. we should know there is some news this morning. the russian curler was officially strip of his bronze medal for the doping. >> your mom said, crime does not pay. >> that's right. >> he gets no medals. >> so no mel doan yum at home, kids. >> that's right. welcome back to "cbs this morning." the president's daughter and senior adviser ivanka trump departs for south korea today. she'll lead the delegations at the winter olympics and close the olympics on sunday morning. kim yonge chul will lead an eight-panel delegation. the cdc said it's okay to use the flu mist it. was pulled after it was found to
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be ineffective against swine flu. the company making the flu mist said it's being reformulated. flu mist is the only nasal spray flu vaccine on the market. the recommendation now goes to cdc for final approval. after spacex's successful launch of its new rocket earlier this month, a smaller falcon 9 is scheduled if lift off this morning. the rocket is carried two new satellites to deliver low-cost internet around the globe. a spanish radar/satellite will also be put into orbit. a teenager in vermont is accused of planning an attack on his former high school after a friend reported him to police in new york state. jack sawyer pleaded not guilty to four charges including attempted murder. he told the friend he was targeting the school at fair haven, vermont, where he was once a student.
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meg oliver is reporting on the student who's now being hailed a hero. good morning. >> good morning. this investigation spanned state lines involving new york and vermont. it would not have been possible if it wasn't for the brave 17 who told authorities her friend might be planning a deadly attack. >> i texted him and said the school just got shot up. he said that's fantastic, i 100% support it. >> reporter: she met him at a treatment facility. >> when you were at the treatment, what did you notice about him? >> very detail and very kind. >> reporter: last week their friendship took a turn. according to a vermont state police affidavit on february 11th sawyer wrote to mcdevitt on facebook messenger, just a few days ago i was plotting up shooting my old high school.
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the next one was it's been planned for two years and on february 14th he pratzed the florida shooting writing it's natural slerkz taken up a notch. >> i found it disturbing and knew i had to contact somebody in vermont to look further into it. >> reporter: one day after the florida shooting mcdev have it met with her high school resource officer dev trout who then contacted authorities. >> people are calling you a hero as well. >> i followed through with it. that's about it. she's definitely the one who did the most of it. >> reporter: according to the affidavit when police interviewed sawyer he admitted he was planning a shooting at fair haven shooting high school and was partly inspired by columbine. he bought a shotgun a few days before. a few days before when the police searched they found a shotgun, bullets, gas mask and journal detailed "the journal of an active shooter." police say sawer told them he
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was going to use an hand zbu ha handgun, and a shotgun to carry. >> what does that say? >> it's not about a matter of friendship if it's about life at hands. you need to do what you need to do. >> according to the affidavit sayier is diagnosed with adhd, depression, and anxiety. his public defender said public there are a lot of unproved allegations in the case and it's a lot different than portrayed. angela told me after the interview she hopes if anybody is watching this and knows something, come forward. >> exactly. so many students will read something leak this and say i didn't take it seriously or think he would do it. in the climate you live in today, you have to take it seriously. >> authorities say if someone
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talks about harming themselves or another person, you have to report it. that's the rule. new technology in cars is significantly cutting the number of backup crashes. a new report released overnight shows promising test results from the rear crash test, rear automatic breaking. it's led to 562% drop in accidents in cars without equipment chris van cleaves is in new falls, virginia. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. those fender benders can cause thousands of damage or worse. that's why you have backup cameras to spot obstacles and people. add up backup sensors and automatic braking and you can cut reported accidents up 78%. michael dalen will never forget the day his daughter died. in 2010 a neighbor backed out of his driveway not seeing
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2-year-old abigail was behind the car. >> i had to climb under a car and pick up her body. it was a hard day. >> reporter: starting in may, all new cars will be required to have a rear view camera. some automakers are going further, adding backup warning centers and reverse automatic breaking. they tested the combination of technologies. the 2017 subaru outback and cadillac xt5 earned superior ratings. four other vehicles scored advanced rating for substantially reducing a vehicle's speed. but there's some room to improve. this car did not stop before a driver packed into dummy car parked as an angle. the chief research officer. >> the auto brake, cameras are going to prevent a lot of property damage and hope they're going to prevent some crashes
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involving people. >> dahlen hopes the technology will one day mean no other parent has to lose a child like he did. >> i still have nightmares and flashbacks. i don't want anybody to go through it. >> right now the backup braking system is for accidents involving obstacles that do damage like this. they're woking on something so it protects pedestrians passing by. front auto brairking, that's supposed to become standard in most cars by 2022. but when it comes to the backup braking, there is no plan to make it standard. >> thanks. any of us with kids. >> i want to know which automakers are going to put that as an option this their cars. i would think a lot of parents would say that's the car i want to buy. >> you get your neighbors to buy
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it too. there's a new push to find out who killed a prosecutor in his hone years ago. you're watching "cbs this morning." hey maya. what's up? hey! so listen, i was taking another look at your overall financial strategy. you still thinking about opening your own shop? every day. i think there are some ways to help keep you on track. and closer to home. i'm all ears. how did edward jones grow
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and with panera catering, it's food worth sharing. panera. food as it should be. and with panera catering, if you have moderate to severep, little things can be a big deal. that's why there's otezla. otezla is not an injection or a cream. it's a pill that treats psoriasis differently. with otezla, 75% clearer skin is achievable after just 4 months, ... with reduced redness, thickness, and scaliness of plaques. and the otezla prescribing information has no requirement for routine lab monitoring. don't use if you're allergic to otezla. otezla may cause severe diarrhea, nausea, or vomiting. tell your doctor if these occur. otezla is associated with an increased risk of depression. tell your doctor if you have a history of depression or suicidal thoughts, or if these feelings develop. some people taking otezla reported weight loss. your doctor should monitor your weight and may stop treatment. other side effects include upper respiratory tract infection and headache. tell your doctor about all the medicines you take and if you're pregnant or planning to be.
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investigators say they're closer to solving the mystery of who murdered a federal prosecutor more than 16 years ago but they need the public's help. tom wales was killed in his washington home in 2001. officials believe there are people who know critical information of those who could help solve the case. they've increased the award money to more than $1.5 million. tony dokoupil is following the investigation. good morning. >> good morning. what an investigation is. tom wales was targeted because of his job. if that is true, he would be the first and only u.s. attorney killed in the line of duty. the case has never gone cold and a new reward may be a sign that investigators believe they're getting closer to the truth. on a chilly night fwh 2001, tom wales was sitting in his home in
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a basement office when a gunman shot several rounds through the basement window. >> the shooter was familiar with his property and work habits. >> reporter: it set off the motion detectors, leading the investigators to believe it was a carefully planned execution. more than 16 years later the killer still at large and the case was recently the jikt of a five-part podcast. >> they say it was the perfect murder, but i'm not buying it. >> reporter: investigators are not buying it either. they came together wednesday in a seattle congressroom named for the fallen u.s. attorney asking the public to help solve the case. >> we have a lot of investigators right now, several we're very fond of, and we need more information. >> i think they have people identified that they think are the perpetrators. >> reporter: john mckay took over as u.s. attorney of seattle shortly after wales was killed. >> they're creating for someone
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to come forward and give them the last couple of pieces that will push them over the finish line. >> reporter: the reward has been raised from $1 million to $1.5 million after previous leads failed. earlier on they identified a suspect, a commercial airline pilot who denied any involvement and was never charged. through bullet casings they say they identified the weapon, but they apparently never found it. wales' father suggests her father's duties as a prosecutor might have played a role in his murder. >> if a federal prosecutor can be mored for carrying out his proseccu torrey duties, the process that keeps all of us safe are fundamentally compromised. >> an indication of how committed his former colleagues are in solving the case, they've opened their wallets to an increase of more than $1.5 million. the fbi has opened more than
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2,000 sub files. >> it's important to solve it. coming up next, a look at this morning's headlines, including how tech giants are taking over the stockmarket and youtube is promising to make changes after it promoted a conspiracy theory about a florida shooting survivor. ah >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by
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tears in the stomach or intestines, low blood cell counts and higher liver tests and cholesterol levels have happened. your doctor should perform blood tests before you start and while taking xeljanz xr, and monitor certain liver tests. tell your doctor if you were in a region where fungal infections are common and if you have had tb, hepatitis b or c, or are prone to infections. needles. a must for vinyl. but for you, one pill a day may provide symptom relief. ask your doctor about xeljanz xr. an "unjection™". welcome back to "cbs this morning." here's a look at some of your morning headlines. am zorch's shares hit $1,500 for the first time yesterday. the online retail alone accounts for nearly a third of the gains on the s&p 500 this year and nearly half of the index's advance has been due to three
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stocks. amazon, microsoft, and net fliks. the "detroit free press" announced ford north america's raj nair will be stepping downlet it led to an investigation.r by nair was incob sis tent with the company's code of conduct. th outside firm and that's how they came to this conclusion. "the hill" reports the fda announced the recall of dietary supplements containing kratom. kratom acts like an opioid that can be addictive. it led to an outbreak of salmonella. it's used for weight loss but also as an alternative to prescription opioids. fat is back and consumers are willing to pay for it. butter sales are expected to
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increase 2.9%. it comes after stois show lower health risk from dairy fat and the negative effects of alternative trans fats. oh happy day. i know, norah, you don't approve. >> you just were shouting about it. >> because i'm excited norah. south koreans spend more than $7 billion a year on cosmetics and men are buying a lot for themselves. ahead, john dickerson with some new face cream. that's coming up.
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good morning, i'm jim donovan. a new uber service is coming to philadelphia today, it is called express pool and connects riders in the same area who plan to travel to similar destinations. riders would be pick up at a common pick up stop and would be dropped off very same way, feature debuts in philadelphia and several other u.s. cities today. lets send it over to katie for a look at forecast. >> it is not looking great, as we enjoyed a warm afternoon yesterday we are really into that, it is not going to last very long. it is still kind of mild you the side but very dreary view just like we have seen in the last few mornings but we will not see sun break through like we have in the last few afternoons. in fact these temperatures will only drop off, still mild
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but is there rain over spreading the area as day goes on, temperatures continue to decline we will hit high of 58 around midnight by tomorrow a raw, chilly rain and then we have wet weather in the forecast all weekend long, meisha. >> not fun. all right, thank you. looking outside we have problem spots of course we have an accident with injuries 95 south at route 320 that right lane compromised push off to the right but still very slow moving traveling past plus activity here schuylkill westbound near spring garden slow moving here as well and hbo series filming in atlantic city so connection tunnel is closed until 4:00 p.m., jim. >> up next, our next update 8:25. coming up on cbs this morning remembering life and work of evangelist billy graham. aim he jim donovan, make it a great
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it's thursday, february 22nd, 2018. welcome back. the reverend billy graham's impact on christian and political life. we'll talk with a southern baptist leader who says graham may be the most important evangelist in 1,900 years. but first here's today's "eye opener" at 8:00. survivors of the florida school shooting are taking their demands for gun control directly to the people in power. >> this was an extraordinary gesture and it shows that the president is willing to consider some kind of action. the teenagers asked
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questions about their positions on assault rifles and school security. they made sure their message was heard. >> when you come to the library, you have to go through the cross. that's exactly how billy graham wanted it. his funeral will happen here, and we're told the reverend approved every aspect of the plan. >> playa del carmen is a popular resort destination. one american family of four was on a bench getaway when their trip took a terrifying turn. >> someone went on maddie's w k wikipedia and changed her destination to secretary of defense. >> there's a possibility in the works. >> the bobsled and skeleton team decided to do a little matchup with some of the winter olympic events and look what happens at the end. there you go. it ends back with curling.
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>> i'm norah o'donnell with john dickerson and gayle king. survivors of the massacre in floor are behalf after a day of action on kbun control took them to the state capitol and the white house. president trump listened to emotional stories from the parents of school shooting victims and students who lost their classmates. >> i was actually in the second classroom. i was shot at. in my mind as a kid, that shouldn't -- nothing that horrible should ever have to happen to you. you can't even think about it. like it doesn't seem real still. >> i was born into a world where i never got to experience safety and peace. there needs to be a significant change in this country because this has to never happen again and people should be able to feel that when they go to school they can be safe. >> i lost a best friend.
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he was practically a brother. and i'm here to use my voice because i know he can't. and i know he's with me cheering me on to be strong, but it's hard. >> how do we not stop this after columbine and sandy hook? i'm sitting with a mother that lost her son. it's still happening. >> andrew pollack whose daughter meadow was killed in last beak's shooting said action is overdue. >> there should have been one school shooting and we should have fixed it. and i'm pissed. it's my daughter i'm not going to see again. she's not here. she's not here. s she's in ft. lauderdale, king david cemetery. that's where i go see my kid
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now. >> reporter: he said the school needs to address school safety first, not gun laws. >> they'll sit down to continue the discussion on gun violence. margaret brennan is at the white house with the latest from the president on the mass shooting. good morning. >> good morning. many of the survivors who met with the president had personally written letters asking to be part of the conversation. others who had lived through the sandy hook and columbine massacres have become advocates for gun control safety and their stories clearly had an impact on the president who tweeted yesterday i will always remember the time i spent today with courageous students, teachers and families. so much love in the mist of so much pain. we must not let them down. one of the president's suggestions was to allow teachers or star with experience with fire averages to carry concealed weaponed into the schools. in a tweet today he said gun-free school zones are a
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magnet for bad people. the president did not suggest a weapons ban but he did pledge to strengthen background checks and strengthen the age limit for gun purchases. shortly after the nra spokesperson argued changing age restrictions would restrict law-abiding 18-year-olds the constitutional right of self-protection. the president closed the session saying the world is watching. norah, we'll have to wait and see if there's any action. >> all right, margaret. thank you so much. an nra spokeswoman faced tough questions at a town meeting last night. dana loesch. >> how now is an 18-year-old with a military assault rifle regulated? >> he's not -- he should. have been able to get afire arm. he should have been barred from getting a firearm and he should
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not have been able to. >> so what are you going to do about it? >> he should, a, never have been able to get a firearm, b, people who are crazy should not be able to getfirea firearms, c, people are darjs to themselves and other individuals should not be able to obtain firearms. and there isn't a loophole. it's a criminal act and that's -- >> loesch said the nra supports president trump's justice department order to decide bump stock should be illegal. they were used in the shooting in las vegas but not florida. the public will have a chance to pay respects to bill ya graham before he's lied in repose. the famed evangelist spoke with
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politics. he met with and spiritually advised every president from harry truman to barack obama. russell moore is president of the ethics and religious liberty commission of the southern baptist convention. good morning, russell. >> good morning. >> thanki ins for being here. how much of an impact was billy graham's life? >> it was massive. part of it is because of technologies but also how sane he was of the christian message. he never cut corners on the gospel. he was never embarrassed that jesus shed blood. that was the message over and over again. so those in the homeless shelter or the united states billionaire find the same message.
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>> it's so interesting to think of him in those historical terms. you call him the most significant christian evangelist since the apostle paul. >> right. >> that's high precedence. >> i think part of that is because of the time that emerged. he was able to use technologies that weren't available at any other time in history. >> using television and radio. >> right. it's very common to use it. in later years, use of the internet. always get back to the old-time message. >> could it be that bill ya graham had an iphone. that would be nice to know. >> i would not be surprised. >> he said one of his big regrets if he had to talk about regrets in life is when he crossed the line into politics. he was so revered on both sides of the aisle. why do you think he regretted that. >> he looked back at the tapes,
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his close association with richard nixon, which was more personal than political. later he looked back and saw how those lines could become blurred and they could easily confuse a part of the political agenda for the kingdom of god and transforms all of that. his primary goal was to reach people, all people with the message of god's love, on the day of judgment that's coming for all people, and of the free dochl that comes through forgiveness through the cross. so he, i think, more than made up for whatever errors he might have made in his past. >> christ's message is love thy neighbor, don't judge, don't be prideful. when you listen to political talk today whether it's by officials or online, that does not skpif. does that allow a figure like graham jump in or -- >> we need people in politics who have consciences that are guided by morality and by the
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spirit of god, but i think we also need people standing outside of politics speaking a word of grace and of redemption and of coming judgment. and i think that's what graham was able to do. he was able to say what we all know. we're sinners and no matter how much we try to say everything's really tarchd fine, we know that's not true in our own hearts. at the same time, he loved people. billy graham was never angry, never resentful, never warring against the culture around him. he loved the world because god loved the world enough to say come to christ. >> i saw an old interview diane sawyer did with him years ago, when the time comes, he doesn't want people to say nice things about them because he didn't deserve it. what he wants to hear from the lord is well done, my servant. you knew him personally. what stood out to you? >> what stood out is the
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gravity. i was in my early 20s coming into ministry. walking into the room was like walking into the room with an old testament prophet and at the same time there was this warmth. someone mentioned a preacher in london many years ago, he was a steamroller but a gentle steamroller. i think that was true of billy graham. he had a gentleness and a warmth but the gravity of the mench was overwhelming. >> and still enduring. we need that message these days too. >> he's had a profound impact over the centuries. thank you. youtube talks about conspiracy theories. wired's issy lapowsky
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ahead on a more perfect union, the professor who pays it foofrmtd you're watching "cbs this morning." searching for answers may feel overwhelming. so start your search with our teams of specialists at cancer treatment centers of america. the evolution of cancer care is here. learn more at cancercenter.com/experts
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♪ the 2018 camry. toyota. let's go places. this is food made to sit down for. slow down for. put the phone away, and use a knife and fork for. and with panera catering, it's food worth sharing. panera. food as it should be. and with panera catering, if you have moderate to severep, little things can be a big deal. that's why there's otezla. otezla is not an injection or a cream. it's a pill that treats psoriasis differently. with otezla, 75% clearer skin is achievable after just 4 months, ... with reduced redness, thickness, and scaliness of plaques. and the otezla prescribing information has no requirement for routine lab monitoring.
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don't use if you're allergic to otezla. otezla may cause severe diarrhea, nausea, or vomiting. tell your doctor if these occur. otezla is associated with an increased risk of depression. tell your doctor if you have a history of depression or suicidal thoughts, or if these feelings develop. some people taking otezla reported weight loss. your doctor should monitor your weight and may stop treatment. other side effects include upper respiratory tract infection and headache. tell your doctor about all the medicines you take and if you're pregnant or planning to be. ♪ otezla. show more of you.
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youtube faces strong criticism after it spread conspiracy theorys in the aftermath of the deadly school shooting in florida. the top trending video on the platform yesterday falsely accused survivor david hogg of being a crisis actor. that video was viewed more than 200,000 times before it was taken down. >> the yub tuoutube spokespersod this shid owe should never have appeared in trending. it was miss classified. last month logan paul removed a video he posted of a suicide
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victim. is is lapows issi lapowsky is a seen your writer at "wired." it ended up becoming the most popular video on the website. is no one watching it? >> there are. basically this video was a clip of david hogg speaking to local news affiliate years ago about an incident he saw on the beach. so youtube's algorithms look at that and say, okay, this is a legitimate news source. then they look at the caption to the video. the caption said david hogg, the actor. there's nothing harassing about those words. for some it's a fact, for some it's a compliment. they don't know he is a survivor of a school shooting. >> people are unwittingly liking and sharing propaganda. >> exactly. that falls to the yub tube
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moderators around the world. youtube will say we have people monitoring the videos and flagging, but not everybody has the context about this specific conspiracy right here in the united states. they say they're adding moderator, scaling up to 10,000 moderators this year. the question is with 4,000 going up on youtube, can they really catch this stuff. what i've been arguing is none of these trending tools online are really -- you know, they don't exist in nature. the tech companies created them. they have to start thinking is the upside, showing people relevant videos, outweighing the downside which shows complete conspiracy theories that are really harmful. >> what are the questions companies need to be asking? it's so disturbing it was trending and people were believing this. >> they need to think through
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engagement versus fact. they need to think through what is the real public service that these trending tools are providing. they created them with good intentions. they're not bad people. they're thinking if facebook and youtube is getting their way, we can have something eakin to the front page and that becomes this trending. they can't pull it aside because of the sheer content out there. they have to ask themselves whether it's responsible to let these exist. >> is it youtube's policy to create this kind of video? >> last year youtube instituted a new application of its harassment policy. if you post a picture of a victim of a tragedy, we're going to hold it as harassment. it's not that it's untrue. they say they don't want to be the arbiters of truth but youtube has decided if you're playing a hoax on the victim of a tragedy, that's clearly
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microsoft co-founder bill gates is one of the world's richest people but he failed a test from ellen degeneres who made him guess the price of basic groceries on his tv show. >> how much do you think rice a rowney would be within a dollar. >> $5. the audience didn't like that. let's see. oh, it's a dollar. what a bargain. >> i'll take five. >> i know. >> the billionaire admitted it's been a long time since he's been grocery shopping. he thought tide pods were $4
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when they cost about $20. good morning i'm rahel solomon. one of the philadelphia's mess popular spots turns 125 years old today. we are celebrating a birthday for the reading terminal market. market features locally grown exotic produce plus meat, sea food, baked goods andl historick building between 11th and 12th , arch and fil philadelphia convention center. let's send itrrack of the f. we are tracking a change in the temperatures. >> different pattern here with more wet weather moving in and reall to n the radar locally. our broadcast center in spring garden. we are still dealing with rain we hav hours,
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pockets rolling through northern mess counties and whol see this rain and we are all going to continue to see these temperatures d 50's from fill dunn through delaware and south jersey but the now, with that colder air, wrapping in in the wake of the crossing through. but it is not just one and done, there t systems, so right through weekend we have wet weather in the forecast. >> all right, katie, thanks very much. looking outside just a lot of volume still on i-95 south at cottman, traveling, very, very slow there still, also accident norristown route 202 dekalb street at sum it street we have lanes block there and then hbo series filming in atlantic city, ac connection continue he will be closed unhel,ack over to you. thanks, very much. next updatead texas a.m. e, professor whose stuctnts
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." right now it's time to show yous from around the globe. "the wall street journal" says" another 200 s s. holiday sales. they already announced store closing aboeings affecting abou. they failkr in september. an amateur astronomer happened to catch a supva in arn he put his cram on a telescope. he aimed it at a galaxy 80 million light years away.
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his findings were published today when the word first got out. they used their telescopes to study the supernova. "the verge" reports they responded to more than a million users who hate the design of the app. they say they're useful. many say they feel uncomfortable, but it is here to say. the new snapchat will adapt to user over time. are you struggling with the new app? >> norah, i got jokes. >> our streak was going so well and then you fell off. >> i fell off the instagram grill. you know what they say about payback. >> i don't have that app. our partners at the bbc
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reports that justin trudeau's wardrobe has bun shown. he and his family have been shown on several occasions to wear the indian outfits. one tweeted is it just me or is this choreographed cuteness all a bit much now. fyi, we indians don't dress like this every day, circumstance not even in bollywood. the frontier in medicine. it's the topic of this morning's series grand rounds which is a practice of medical professio l professionals who teach other doctors about advancement. in a snu study we told you about researchers at googles uses aldo rhythms and eye scans to detect heart disease. >> they can diagnose patterns and speed up treatment. it's transforming medical care. our dr. david agus direct reese
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search. he also heads usc's west side canc cancer ter. he's a very busy dude but he joins us at the table. >> good morning. i'm still scared of the payback threat. >> it was aimed at me. >> it's so freaking cool -- that's what he says about a.i. what sit that strikes you most? >> they can take over our tasks. so at google if you look at the back of the eye, the fundus, there are blood velss there. they took 280 scans and they can look in the back of your eye, tell you your sex, your age, plus or minus three years, whether you smoke, your blood pressuring and most pofrptly your risk for heart disease by look. >> all by computer that all by computer. >> imaging is one of the fields
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where a.i. can do wonders. >> it is doing wonders. computers are better at picking up tuberculosis than humans are. imagine you're in the emergency room and there's a hundred x-rays the doctor has to look at. maybe they can look at it first and say, hey, doc, pay attention to this one because it may be pneumonia. that person can be treated quicker. there's a lot of information. >> when you get excited about this, we've gotten excited about a lot of technological intelligence and then months later everybody is freaked out. when you think about it, do you think about it as u i'm at the doctor's office or i'm on a scanner? >> it's a good question. a.i. is as simple as calling to confirm your appointment. there are certain taesks doctors aren't good at. if you'ring look at the mikes row scope, you have to look at a thousand cells and say normal,
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kabser, normal, cancer. the computer can do it all at once. some things they'll take over and do well, others will be in the purview of a physician. the cool thing about a.i. is it's going to make the good doctors great. >> a.i. and heart disease. >> yes. >> we've been teasing that all morning. how does that work? >> in the google example, they can look at the back of the eye. they can predict heart disease. in england, they can use a.i. to look at patients' medical records. all of a sudden it's going to be added on to what we do. we're going to get these clues. they're going to say, hey, you should consider this because even though they don't meet the standard criteria, we think they might. >> why is there so much information the eye? >> we know that. >> back in the eye, you could see all of the blood vessels and you can see whether they're a little thicker in certain areas of not. as an indicator, there are blood
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vessels all over the body. it's an el meant that gives you clues. >> your eye doctor could spot health concerns as we well. i have a question about a.i. and prove sichlt certainly we at one point can reach the point where jen otic information, the data gets loaded up in the cloud and thatting bes both helpful and troublesome. >> no question about it. they passed the jean gnome about a decade ago. it protects us from this. you're right. there's a potential dpr using it for other things and we have to be very careful about security and about taking away identifiers when we start to minor look at this information. so it's something that needs governance. we need to have somebody in charge, use a.i. correctly to protect privacy and do it right. >> same thing in medicine? >> no question about it. a.i. used inappropriately, it can make decisions not under our
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control. used in the right way, we'll make things better. >> that's hopeful. >> yeah. >> thank you. >> good to have you at the table. >> not about the payback. >> stay here and project me. all right, did you know, doctor, however, there's a new trend fueling the cosmetics industry in south koreand and it's quickly spreading around the world. one country's beauty industry is worth more than $13 billion. some spend more on plastic surgery than any other nation. well, now, skincare products are going global. the september london based unilever paid $2.7 billion for one of south korea's fastest growing cosmetic companies. holly williams is in seoul and shows us how a new generation of hyper-image-conscious men are embracing the boom in it.
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>> reporter: traditional ideas of masculinity female size strength and stoicism embodied by these guards at the royal palace. but he's part of the new generation. he doesn't leave the house without applying six products including a bb cream, a light foundation. >> there are some spots on my face. >> reporter: he shells out $2,000 a year on beauty products he told us partly because of pressure from his girlfriend. sales from the cosmetics products now top $7 billion a year and south korean men are reportedly spending more than any other nation. influenced by well groomed korean celebrities and encouraged by internet tutorials and advertisements that target men the same way they target women suggesting that an
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expensive cream will somehow make them more desirable. this one feature s image is so important to this man who's a surgeon that he gets botox injections every 16 months to give his jawline more doef nation. the most important thing is i cure people, he told us, but i don't want to repel my patients. south korean society is hypercompetitive, and for some, keeping up with the kims means going under the knife. at this carolina eck they say the most popular procedures for men are eye enlarge market, nose augmentation, and contouring to make their faces look narrower. but not everyone here is pursuing outward perfection.
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this is an 86-year-old monk and told us he's never moisture ietzed in life. everyone has a bit of vanity, he told us, but what's inside is more important. holly williams, cbs news, seoul. >> like that part. >> tyke for job dickerson to shafrmt harry uses six products every morning. >> i like moisturizing on the inside. i go with the buddhist monk. >> you wear makeup. >> i use it as part of my job and reclamation, just undoing what's already there. >> i think it's good to take care of yourself. >> i agree. you should use a mourtizer that has sunscreen to protect yourself. >> especially someone translucent like me and irish, yeah. >> it's a good color. a popular college professor who's gone above and beyond students learns about teachi
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stronger than what devrys us. this morning we want to introduce you to a professor that teaches through not just lectures but actions. omar slee a franca is at college station, texas, with how kindness can be a very powerful tool in the classroom. good morning. >> good morning. henry musoma is a business professor here at texas a&m. you can see he's hanging on the leadership banner. every yoo he has hundreds of students but he makes a point to learn their names so he can make a personal connection and now the students are showing the teacher what they learned. >> guess what happened? >> reporter: it's hard for students to fall asleep in dr. henry musoma's class. he's always doing something extra. extra engaged, extra supportive to the people he cares about most. his students. >> i'm reminds of a friend of mine who said he's not an
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educator but an edutainer. >> reporter: when ashton said she couldn't come to class because she didn't have a babysitter, the answer was simple. >> bring him to class. >> reporter: a little fussiness didn't keep the professor from finishing his lesson. for jake ross he met so much to him that jake's fiancee surprised them by having him officiate their wedding. he hoped elizabeth pope find a job. >> he knew i loved business and medicine and said i have the fehr job for you. >> reporter: how does someone learn to be kind? his education started over 8,000 miles away other four decades way in the african country of zambia. >> both my parents worked hard. my father was one of the first people in his family to go to college. >> reporter: like his father musoma wanted an education, but
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an american one seemed too expensive. >> no, sir. to far out of reach. >> reporter: but then he met alfred kaitz who changed his mind. >> how did he convince you? >> he said here's my business card, come my office tomorrow. guess what? omar, that night ♪ america, america god shed his grace on thee ♪ he gave me an idea. >> reporter: case helped musoma immigrate to america in the mid-'90s. he earned a college degree and started teaching. in classes he often brings up the story of kaitz and possibility, a lesson his former student remembers well. >> at the end of err story he would mention how this man took him in and convinced him to go to texas and study. >> reporter: when it came time
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to pay back dr. musoma for all of his kindness, they knew what to do. he scoured social media sites and government records. for two years he searched and nearly gave up. finally a breakthrough with the help of ancestry.com. he received an e-mail from kaitz and helped musoma connect with the past. >> i ran to the business school that morning with this e-mail i printed o it and i was trying to play it cool but i was freaking out. i said, reat this right now. >> what was his reaction? >> complete silence, so i wasn't totally prepared for that because he's one of the most tockive people. he's always got something to say. i handed hello the e-mail and he red through it, put it in his pocket and said, thank you. gave me a hug. >> decades after their first meeting dr. musoma and alfred cates were reunited. a life of kindness that's come full circle.
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>> my son joshua who's about to be 7 sees me in front of my students and when they live he looks at me and wants to put on a little tie when i walk with him and he says, daddy, i love that you're kind. when i'm gone, if that's what my dad says of me, i'll rest in peace. >> reporter: one of the life lessons that professor musoma learned from his father is taking care of his extended family. he considers all of the students here at texas a&m part of his extended family and that family is getting bigger every year. >> now he has a bigger family in our audience. we all love him. what a story. >> kindness costs nochlgt thank you. >> it's contagious. >> it is. beautifully done. >> you can hear more on our podcast. find originals on
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good morning everyone i'm jim donovan. police in philadelphia are searching for the gun man who shot and killed a woman as she drove through the fernrock section of the city. investigators say the 23 year-old woman was behind the wheel of the veneer broad and grange street around 8:30 last night, van was hit by at lee five bullets, she crashed her van in the building, two women and three children under age of six were injured in the crash, so far, police have made no arrests. let's turn to katie for a lot a the forecast. it is not a great one if we are a fan of the warmth and sunshine because both aring ago way today, we will start off with the cloud just as we have in the last few days and we cannot bank on the sun break go through this time. we have got a widespread batch of wet weather moving in, so a
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very, foggy view about 9 miles from the city in that live neighborhood network camera. is there rain. it is glummy outside. that wet weather has been blossoming in the last couple hours and will over spread entire region throughout the day. we have long since daytime high of 58, happened around midnight so gone is that mild air, and we are left with temperatures in the lower 40's this afternoon. tomorrow also somewhat raw, chill which more rain moving in and we have got additional batches have rain that come through over span of the weekend. while it warms up, meisha, it is still dreary. >> i know, sure is, you can see it right behind me ben franklin bridge and also what you see right away take a look at that volume my friends in new jersey, traveling westbound in center city over that ben, wow, that is still so very, very slow. schuylkill at city avenue still slow moving in the westbound direction, eastbound side, as we can push close tore try to get in the center city area and also an accident in norristown 202 dekalb
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