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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  February 24, 2018 7:00am-9:00am EST

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captioning funded by cbs good morning. it's february 24th, 2018. welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." rising anger over the florida school shooting. a shocking report shows new failures by police as florida's governor calls for new gun regulations and dozens of companies end their relationships with the nra. plus, the president's former campaign aid pleads guilty to conspiracy against the united states, and new charges are leveled against president trump's former campaign chairman. police investigate a
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threatening post about possible gun violence not from a stunt but from an nfl player. details on his arrest. and avoiding al qaeda, pirates and political instability all for a fantastic cup of joe. inside a young man's journey to bring coffee crops back to the country where it all started. but we begin this morning with today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. mr. president, any concerns about rick davis? >> thank you very much. >> it's mueller time again as a trump campaign aide flips. >> the former deputy campaign chairman to the president of the united states is a felon. >> this is not good. >> paul manafort was hit with new charges just a couple of hours after rick gates pleaded guilty to conspiracy. >> 911 emergency, how can i help you. >> cbs news has learned 5 1sz 2 weeks before a shooting a woman called the fbi and said nikolas
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cruz would get into a school and shoot the place up. >> so much for a teleprompter. >> he rocked the crowd of cpac 2018. >> if you could only have one, second amendment or tax cuts? second amendment? >> the american men have won the gold medal in curling delivering a stunning 10-7 defeat to switsz. >> donald trump ice daughter ivanka is cheering on the u.s. in the olympics. she attended the big air final. >> i try like hell to hide that bald spot. >> we'll be talking than next or n now. >> -- and all that matters -- >> every team paying tribute to the stoneman douglas high school
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shooting. great move by baseball. >> everyone is coming out of the woodwork to show their love and support for the kids. >> -- on "cbs this morning: saturday." >> jackson, deep throw. >> oh, my goodness. he got it. 80-78 the final. what a thriller in bloomington. and welcome to the weekend, evan. i'm anthony mason. >> and i'm alex wagner. we begin this morning with the continuing questions about the response to the florida school shooting and the ongoing debate over gun safety. there are reports this morning that at least three broward county sheriff's deputies waited outside marjory stoneman douglas high school while a gunman killed 17 people inside. that includes a school resource officer who resigned on thursday. >> last week's shooting has prompted calls at the state and national level for changes to gun laws and security measures
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at schools. omar villafranca is outside stoneman douglas high school in parkland, florida. omar, good morning. >> good morning. governor rick scott says he wants to make it virtually impossible for anyone with a mental health issue to use a gun. meanwhile cbs news has confirm thad a woman close to the alleged shooter called the fbi on january 5th and warned them that she was concerned that nikolas cruz would, quote, get in to a school and just shoot the place up. >> i'd rather have somebody who loves their students who wants to protect their students instead of somebody standing outside who doesn't know anybody and doesn't know the students and, frankly, for whatever reason de-sid not to go in even though he heard lots of shots being fired. >> reporter: at cree pack on friday, president trump once again called for arming gun-adept teachers to keep students safe. he would rather see educators
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with concealed carry permits than armed officers who had a chance to stop alleged shooter nikolas cruz but did not. >> a teacher would have shot the hell out of him before he new what happened. >> we're going to have law enforcement in every school and look at the size of campuses but at least one forever,000 students. let officers do the safekeeping and teachers do the teaching. >> reporter: governor scott also proposed a violent threat restraining order that would spreenlt a violent person like cruz from having a gun if evidence of a threat is presented in court. >> he was kicked out of school. he was known to students as a danger to shoot people and he was reported to the fbi as a possible school shooter and yet he was never put on the list to be denied the ability to buy a gun and his guns were never removed from him. >> reporter: cbs news has confirmed a woman called an fbi
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tip line concerned nikolas cruz would get into a school and just shoot the place up. she said, you know, it's just so much. i know he's going to explode. >> it was very somber. some people were emotional. >> reporter: marjory stoneman douglas social studies teacher greg pittman was one of the staff members who returned to the school friday. he is a gun owner but guns in a classrooms are a very bad idea. >> what if a stunt overpowers me and takes the gun? on top of that, i want to be a teacher. i do not want to be police, i do not want to be s.w.a.t., i do not want to be the army. if i did, then i would have joined that. >> i had a bullet go in here. they sewed that up. shrapnel hear, hear, and here. >> reporter: 12th grade shooting survivor samantha fuentes plans to complete her education online so she can advocate for stricter
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gun control but that doesn't mean she's concerned about returning to campus. >> i want to return to a safe place a safe country for all of our children and their children and their children and the only way to do that is to step back onto campus and say, no, i will not be deneeded, i will not be turned away, i will be listened to. >> reporter: on sunday students can go to an open house on campus and ask for help. classes are expected to resume on wednesday. >> thanks, omar. pressure is building on the national rifle association following the florida school shooting. more than a dozen companies have ended their relationships with the nra. many of the companies offered discounts to nra members. twitter users are pressuring companies affiliated with the gun rights group by using the #boycottnra.
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in response some nra supporters are promising to boycott any company that does cut ties with the organization. a former senior adviser to president trump's election campaign pleaded guilty to charges of federal conspiracy and making false stamtds. the plea entered by rick gates on friday says he will fully cooperate with special counsel robert mueller's russia investigation. gates is now the fifth person to enter a guilty plea as part of mueller's probe. paula reid is at the white house with more. good morning. >> good morning. the gates plea caps off for what has been a busy week for the special counsel's office and he's likely to be a valuable witness for them. he could provide valuable evidence against his formers by associate and strum p campaign manager paul manafort. rick gates became the fifth
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defendant to plead guilty in special counsel robert mueller's russia investigation. gates admitted to charges of conspiring against the u.s. and lying to federal authorities in a recent interview with instigators. in october mueller charged gates and former trump campaign chairman paul manafort with 12 counts related to their lobbying efforts on be of of foreign governments. on thursday a federal grand jury in virginia returned an additional 32-count indictment against gates and manafort for tax evasion and bank fraud. before he agreed to cooperate, gates was facing the pocket of decades behind bars but under the terms of his plea agreement he now faces between 57 and 71 months in prison and that could be shortened based on his cooperation. he tried to distance himself from the campaign chairman and business associate saying the charges against manafort had
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nothing to do with the president or his campaign. >> and there are no activities or official capacity in which the trump campaign was engaged any of these activities. most took place before the campaign ever even existed. >> reporter: but gates is now the third trump associate known to be working with mueller's investigation, and his plea deal will put the spotlight on manafort who has given no indication that he intends to cooperate. manafort released a statement friday reiterating his innocence and saying gates' decision does not alter his commitment to defend himself against, quote, untrue piled up charges. if manafort decided to cooperate, he could provide special counsel with evidence about that trump tower meeting with the russians he attended and also why the trump campaign pushed to make the republican party platform more friendly to rush. but so far no indication he wants to play ball. he's expected to go to trial in the fall. anthony? >> paula reid at the white
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house. thanks, paula. president trump is leaving it up to white house chief of staff john kelly to decide whether mr. trump's son-in-law jared kushner will get a final security clearance. the "washington post" reports the justice department alerted the white house two weeks ago to ongoing issues in kushner's security investigation. kushner only has an interim clearance. that still gives him access to top-secret and sensitive information. as president, mr. trump can give his son-in-law a high-level security clearance if the background investigation goes on. >> for more on the developments in washington, we turn now to anna palmer, senior washington correspondent for politico and co-author of politico's playbook news letter which i read every morning. good morning. >> good morning. >> let's talk about the latest turn in the events. how much pressure is on paul manafort given the breadth of these indictments? >> i think what you saw was an
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escalation. paul manafort getting closer every week, the pieces falling into place. a $60 million scheme they're accusing him of. this is one of his closest providers who's now pleading guilty. pressure is now ramping up. >> where does this get gates with mueller? >> i think we're still going to figure that out. one has been how secret and they've been clamped down on information. we've been surprised essentially times about where this is going, who's pleading guilty, when they're pleading guilty. this also gets him a step closer to president trump. this is somebody who was deputy campaign chairman of the trump campaign clearly in the know at the highest levels of what was happening there. >> do we have a sense of how concerned the white house is about this? >> i think they continue to say we are not a part of this. as you can tell, this is happening before the presidency started. but you have to look at where this is going and it's clearly
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coming closer and closer toward the white house, toward potentially jared kushner. a lot of people who have been questioned are still working in the white house. let's talk about the issue of the school shooting in florida and the repercussions from that. president trump has been in what the white house is calling a listening phase on developing gun safety measures. is there a real potential here for meaningful legislation on the issue? >> i think -- i'm a real pes mist on this. i even been covering the gun lobby and gun reform lobby for over ten years. it is very difficult to thread the needle here. certainly on smaller issues they'd be banning bump stocks, mental health issues, you could see something happening. but the concept of the president pushing guns for teachers is a nonstarter for almost all democrats and a lot of republicans. >> the president's opinion is in place on one issue but then you see in florida, a republican governor whoa's maybe open to some reforms.
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does that give you an incling of the dynamics that may be changing for 2018? >> i think that's going to be the big tell. they'll say, oh, they spend a lot of money, that's why they control this. i don't think that's true. it's because they win elections, it's because they're able to turn out this base, and if you see the gun control lobby able to flip some seats and you make this an issuing, all of a sudden their power crumbles. >> is there any reaction from florida for students leading these marches to shift the debate? >> i think it's compelling and clearly something that keeps it in mind. one of the biggest issues, there's been a series of these mass shootings at schools and it peaks the news, us, we're covering it. congress is talking about it and then nothing happens. >> there is another looming issue that needs to be dealt with and that is the fate of the dreamers and daca. from the perspective of the hill s there anything that is actually going to be done in terms of a legislative solution here? >> i think light now the month
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to watch is the end of march. it's going to be that next time the government has a funding fight and that's really where you could see the power of the purse come into play. unfortunately the dynamics have not shifted so this intrenchable how are they going to deal with the border wall, the young immigrants, has not been resolved. >> a lot of questions here, anna palmer. thanks very much. tomorrow on "face the nation" gun violence will be be among the topics discussed when margaret brennan makes her debut as the new moderator of the broadcast. president trump was inside the white house on friday when it was put on lockdown following an attempted security breach. the see krut service say as woman intentionally crashed her vehicle into a security barrier on the southwest side of the white house near the old executive office building. she was quickly apprehended. mola lenghi is at the white house this morning. mola, we're learning this was not the first time this woman has tried to breach security at the white house. >> reporter: that's right.
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good morning. the secret service says that it has had previous encounters with this woman at the white house resulting in numerous arrests. she's been identified as 35-year-old jessica ford of laverne, tennessee. and while no shots were fired during this incident, ford has been charged with possession of a gun. moments of confusion outside the white house friday after this minivan with the smashed out rear window barreled into a security barrier. >> the person kept trying to push through the barricade. the tires were burning rubber, they were smoking a lot. >> reporter: security personnel moved quickly, arresting the driver, without firing any shots. the driver has been identified as jessica ford. records show she has been arrested at least three times for getting too close to the white house. according to police reports, ford was arrested last april for trying to jump a security barrier. one month later she was arrested for allegedly trying to scale a white house fence. and in july she was met by secret service agents at union station and told to stay away
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from the white house. when she was arrested a few blocks away, police say she had a copy of the stayaway order in her purse. the commotion occurred during a white house meeting between president trump and australian prime minister malcolm turnbull. after ford was taken into custody, the president tweeted, thank you to the great men and women of the united states secret service for a job well done. no law enforcement officers were hurt in the incident. ford is facing several charges as she was ultimately turned over to the d.c. metropolitan police department. >> thanks, mola. heavy rain today could lead to more flooding across the already saturated central and sunday u.s. in covington, kentucky, the ohio river is swollen and preparations are under way for the river to rise further. the high water is forcing water over their banks from michigan to texas. meteorologist ed curran of our chicago station wbbm-tv is keeping an eye on the storm.
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ed, good morning. >> good morning. we see it once again, an area of heavy rain across the country, an area that has flood watches and warnings up again from texas all the way up through pennsylvania here. and within this area, the threat that we could see severe weather, an enhanced risk of severe in the orange, damaged wind, large hail, tornados even possible and within the highest risk there, 10%, a challenge of a couple of large tornados could form. we have to watch that during the day. winter weather advisories up across the country. and in parts of minnesota and northern wisconsin, a winter storm warning. 5 to 8 inches of snow. alex? >> yikes. meteorologist ed curran of our chicago station wbbm-tv. thanks, ed. the winter olympics are drawing to a close this weekend but team usa is adding more medals to its collection including a gold in culturing for the first time in a big win
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over the team from sweden. ben tracy is at the games in pyeongchang. ben, good morning. >> good morning. probably a lot of people waking up and googinogling how does cug work. this was a great 24 hours and you have this men's curling team that are america's heroes this morning. they struggled but then they knock off canada where they battled sweden and won. this is the first ever gold medal in curling for the united states. there was another one in the big air final. 20-year-old kyle mack walk aid way with silver. red gerard who won the first gold medal of these games missed the podium and came in fifth, and ivanka trump is leading the closing ceremonies. on friday she had dinner in
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seoul with the president moon jae-in. she briefed him on the new sanctions and that targets 50 companies and ships suspected of smuggling goods into the north. white house press secretary sarah sanders is also here in pyeongchang and i asked her today if the trump administration is willing to use force to impose those new sanctions and she simply said president trump will be strong. anthony. >> ben tracy at the winter games in south korea. thanks. curling gold. something i thought i'd never see. >> i'm googling curling. >> time to show you some of this morns headlines. the "los angeles times" reports former miami dolphins player jonathan martin was questioned by police friday after a disturbing instagram post appeared on his account. the quote said, quote, when you're a bully victim and a coward, your options are suicide or revenge. it showed a shotgun with the name of martin's high school
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written across the barrel along with two former nfl teammates who bullied him. that prompted them to close the school in los angeles as a precaution. police say they take every threat seriously. "usa today" reports the nasty and deadly strain of the flu virus sweeping across the nation has claimed the lives of 13 more children this week. it pushes the seasonal total of pediatric deaths to almost 100. the centers for disease control and prevention does not keep totals of adult deaths. "the new york times" reports american businessman sheldon adelson, a staunch supporter of israel, is putting his money where his mouth is. adelson has offered to help finance the construction of a new u.s. embassy in jerusalem. the state department puts the total price tag around $500 million. officials cause adelson's proposed donation could put a strain on american diplomacy in
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the middle east. and a german shepherd who took bullet to protect a teenager this week is recovering from surgery. rex was dubbed hero dog after fending off two gun-wielding burglars who beat him first. they opened fire after discovering the teen and the dog hiding in the closet. the burglars got away, but support for rex keeps coming in. so far the family has received $40,000 in donations for his medical bills. >> that's great to hear. >> i love my cat but he will never go down as hero cat or put his life on the line for me. >> rex is braver than most of
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new charges have been filed against the riverside, california, couple accused of holding their 13 children captive for years. up next, details on their day in court and more about how the victims are being helped, slowly moving toward living normal lives. and later as the gun control debate rages on, we'll look back at the tragedy in scotland 22 years ago that changed the uk's gun laws. we'll travel to scotland to see just how hard it is to buy and keep a gun in britain. you you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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oo8z z12fz y2oo8y y12fy as sisters, they're inseparable. as athletes, they've been on opposing teams, fighting it out at the winter olympics. wheel hear their remarkable story. plus how an object that surfaced in the aur kievs of an american college may provide a
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rare link to our nation's
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good morning, i'm jan carabao. talk about a rude awakening for some drivers in south philadelphia, smashed cars, lined third street, between ritner and porter street, police say more than a dozen cars there were damage overnight. investigators have a suspect in custody on suspicion of dui now to the eyewitness weather forecast with meteorologist chelsea ingram, hi there, chelsea. >> jan we are waking up in a fog this morning, lets look at our live neighborhood network camera in kutztown you can hardly see a thing at least temperatures around 40, so it is mild, 44 degrees in philadelphia we are waking up to 45 in wilmington and we have lots of moisture that is going to be heading on your way so you can expect the afternoon to get a little bit more active as far as rain is
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concern, and then we will be dealing with areas of drizzle and rain heading in to the afternoon and evening, and then a high temperature on the mild side of things, right around 54 degrees. as we head into the upcoming week, sunshine returns, in full, by tuesday. so jan, looking forward to the sunshine, just got to get through the weekend, new back to you. >> tuesday looking good, thanks, chelsea. our next update is at 7:57 , see you then have a great day.
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welcome back to "cbs this morning: saturday." still to come this morning, the cause of many cancers may be a mystery but some may be directed to a single virus. we'll look at how prevalent it is and weather warnings are being heeded. talk about traveling far for a good cup of coffee, we'd meet a man who traveled thousands of miles to his homeland where the first successful cup may have been brewed and it was full of a few more than jolts. >> from citrus fraughts to sweet corn, usually a frozen crop spells disaster. but the opposite is true for one
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harvest where freezing cold temperatures are the secret ingredient. that's ahead. but we begin this half hour with the california couple dharjed with torturing, shackling, and torturing their children. three new accounts of child abuse were add and luis turpin has been charged with felony assault. >> they plead not guilty and remain behind bars on $12 million bail. mireya villarreal has the latest. >> this is a vivid reminder that the house of horror case is far from over. a trial could be months down the road, but for their 13 children, the heal progress says has just again. corona mayor karen spiegel has kept an eye on the seven adult siblings. >> these are adults chronologically, but they're
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children, you know, in every other fashion because they're so stunted both physically and emotionally. >> reporter: the 13 children were imprisoned and shacked by their parents. now they understand they have a voice and rights. treatment has been mixed with new experiences like watching harry potter movies and playing music. >> so music was something they embraced, and so when music was played for them at the hospital and it was out in the community, fender guitar stepped up and got each one of them a guitar. all 13 have their own guitar. >> jack represents the older siblings. they smaller daily life decisions are making big changes in their world. >> deciding what they're going to read, deciding what they're going to wear, picking their own meal in the day. that was their big deal. they love lentil soup. new things like that are really good. >> the seven older kids live in
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a customized area of a local hospital where they can go outside and exercise but the younger simmings are in foster care. they have not been reunited but communicate using skype. talking about their parents is intentionally limited. >> they do know their parents are in custody. we really haven't talked a great deal about that or even whether they have a role in that going forward. it's just not something they wanted to talk about. >> but what they do talk about are some of life's simple pleasures. >> they want to go to the beach. they want to go to the mountains. they want to do all those things that most people their age do and have done. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning: saturday," mireya villarreal, riverside, california. >> so much psychological damage to undo here. >> and our hearts go out to those kids as they try and put their lives back together. >> sure do. still ahead this morning, a surprise discovery at an merge college is providing a hair-raising link. there's a tease in there, to the
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it's one form of cancer for which the cause is known, and prevention is possible. up next on our "morning rounds" medical new, dr. jon lapook on whether the advice of medical experts is actually being followed. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday". if you have moderate to severe plaque psoriasis, or psoriatic arthritis, 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 differently. for psoriasis, 75% clearer skin is achievable
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♪ the 2018 camry. toyota. let's go places. time now for "morning rounds." look at the latest medical news. this week, cancer caused by a virus. according to the sterns for disease control, 31,000 men and women die every year to cancer
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attributed to hvp. >> we're joined by s medical correspondent dr. jon lapook who took a look at hvp and how it can be avoided. good morning, jon. >> good morning. for one man in particular, getting the word out has become a personal crusade. michael becker has spent a lifetime in the business of diagnosis and treatment of cancer. that's why a glance in the mirror two years ago frightened him. >> i saw this huge lump on the right side of my neck. >> you're somebody who has worked with cancer and now you're feeling this large lump. >> and so i think it's cancer. >> reporter: it was advanced throat cancer from human pap low miss virus or hpv. there's no screening test for cancer of the throat. a recent study found about 7 million adult males have high
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risk strains of hpv. there is a vaccine to prevent hpv usually given at age 11 or 12, yet only 43% of teens complete the recommended doses. >> when you see how low the uptake is, what's your reaction? >> anger. anger. we have a moral obligation to wipe hpv off the face of the planet. >> reporter: becker has detailed his experience in a blog and a memoir. his wife laurie. >> i've about had different people reach out to me saying, you know, i was on the fence about my son and then after looking into it, they're like, you know, thank you. >> reporter: last year becker was in an imuno therapy national institution at health but it failed. he's finished up a chemotherapy cycle. his ninth and final visit is next week.
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tumors have shrunk but may be showing signs to this treatment. >> i know my condition could have been avoided. >> jon, you talk about the vaccination in the piece and obviously there's room for improvement here when you've only got 43% of teens complete the vaccination. what kind of outreach is being done? is it enough? >> there's not enough but there's a lot of it. the cdc has an outreach and the american pediatrics association has a huge one. they're targeting the pediatricians. you have to make it routine, educate the parents and specifically address the questions they have. one of the big questions they point out is a lot of parents come in and say my kid's 11 or 12. why are you giving it at such a young age. they're not jsexually attractiv. that's true. it works better when they get it earlier. you want to get them before they're sexually active.
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>> there's the doctor aspect of this but when you look at the numbers, this seems to be a bigger part of the public health conversation. >> it really does, alex. the numbers are kind of amazing. 14 million new infections a year. now before people panic, 90% of those go away on their own, but the 10% can be persistent, and if there's a certain strain, then potentially that could be the kind that causes cancer. now, there's some research that definitely has to be done. for one thing, there are studies going on. i spoke to andrew giuliani who's doing some of the work on this, you have to prove -- and these studies are going on, that giving the vaccine that protects against certain strains that causes head and neck cancer prevents it. it makes sense. i have to prove that. the other thing is they need a diagnostic test. you know, we talk about the pap smear for women. you need something that can pick this up early because earlier diagnosis, earlier treatment, better results. >> all right. dr. jon lapook. thanks for coming in, jon. >> great to be here.
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up next, a trip to scotland for a history lesson. it was 22 years ago the country was hit with a horrific tragedy similar to the parkland shooting. we'll travel to dunblane and we'll go to a gun tore to see how it changed the uk's gun laws. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." copdso to breathe better,athe. i go with anoro. ♪go your own way copd tries to say, "go this way." i say, "i'll go my own way" with anoro. ♪go your own way once-daily anoro contains
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the shooting massacre at the high school in parkland, florida, is once again raising questions about gun violence in america. it comes more than 20 years after a gunman killed 16 children and their teacher in dunblane, scotland. here's roxana saberi. >> good morning. the outrage over that shooting led to what became some of the strictest gun legislation in the
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world. we sat down with a man who campaigned for those laws. he now has a message for people calling for an end to school shootings in america. each mass shooting in america echoes what happened in scotland. >> you tend to pick up on things that happened in your own life. >> reporter: in 1996 he and other parents rushed to dunblane primary school after a gunman armed with four handguns opened fire there. >> absolutely newsrooumb. i can't believe something like this happened. >> reporter: a teacher and 16 children were killed including their daughter sophie. >> she was shot five times. >> five times. >> reporter: among the survivors was future tennis star andy murray who's still clearly affected. >> i think everyone knows that i'm extremely proud of where i
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come from. >> reporter: the shooting here devastated the town of dunblane and the entire country and led to a nationwide campaign to ban private handguns. within a year north and other parents pushed politicians to pass some of the toughest gun legislation in the world. today in britain all handguns and semiautomatic firearms are prohibited. you can only use manually loaded rifles and shotguns for hunting and hobbies like shooting clubs like this one. this member says getting a gun license from the police can take months. >> they check how many parking tiktds you've had, whether you've ever had a drink and drive. >> the police will also visit your home to make sure you store your home in a safe like this and may ask your doctor about your mental health. >> if you've had depression or anything like that, you will not
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get a firearms license ever, which is probably a bit harsh. >> reporter: but at beretta gun shop in central lun, tim king says overall the regulations seem to be working. >> i've been selling guns for 40 years legally and as far as i know, in that 40 years, none of those guns have caused a problem or my customers have caused a problem. >> reporter: 22 years since the shooting in dunblane, britain has experienced only one deadly mass shooting while the u.s. has had more than 75. >> our response in the uk matched the culture here, which is not one that's an issue of guns. >> and the u.s.? >> the u.s., i still don't understand what goes on in the u.s. >> north has traveled to america to advocate for tighter gun control in the u.s. he now has a message for the florida students calling for
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more action. >> keep reminding people what happened to you. don't take any notice of people who say, well, you're only teenagers. >> do you think these kids can really make a difference? >> i sincerely hope they can. >> he wants them to know while tragedy can tear families apart -- >> i'm sure she would have been proud of me. >> it can also give people the power to create change. in 1996, the same year as the mass shooting in dunblane, a gunman in australia kill 35d people. that led the country to pass sweeping gun reforms. germany did the same after school shootings in 2002 and 2009. in those countries, gun violence has not disappeared, but deadly mass shootings are very rare. >> red sox a neysa barry. thanks. prime minister turnbull was meeting with president trump and asked whether they should pursue some of australia's reforms.
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there was kind of a rejection of casting similarities. >> again, it's the different culture point. but there's -- there's a number of cases worth looking at. up next, the story of an incredible find in the archives of an american college. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." i'm trying to manage my a1c, and then i learn type 2 diabetes puts me at greater risk for heart attack or stroke. can one medicine help treat both blood sugar and cardiovascular risk? i asked my doctor. he told me about non-insulin victoza®. victoza® is not only proven to lower a1c and blood sugar,
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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. ♪ otezla. show more of you. they say history comes alive in the pages of books, and that couldn't be truer for a college in upstate new york. late last year, researchers at
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union college discovered what they believe is a lock of george washington's hair. it was tucked into a 225-year-old almanac inside an envelope labeled "washington's hair." >> i think the first thought was omg, i can't believe this is washington's hair, we have washington's hair, and i think there was a thought of how do we know for sure, we need to do more research, we can't say for sure. >> reporter: with the hair being over 200 years old, experts say dna testing is likely to be inconclusive. luckily the historical evidence leads scholars to believe the hair is indeed from the first american president. the almanac belonged to the son of general philip skyler who served under george washington in the revolutionary war and later co-founded union college. >> it wasn't unusual in those
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days for people to give locks of hair to their colleagues, to their close friends. a lock of hair was left with people. >> reporter: this historic hair tucked away for centuries will soon have a new life to remind future generations about one of this country's founding fathers. >> i want to be able to display it after that process. we'll have it on display at the college for everybody to come see and we'd like to connect it up with the skylers with a little bit of our own history here. >> i did not know that george washington did not wear a wig and, in fact, powdered his own hair, as if he needed to burnish his legacy even more. he had a great head of hair. >> and that's real hair. >> real hair. >> parentally giving people hair was like an 18th century of a selfie. >> you and i exchange locks of hair in every show. all right. still this morning, its is an icy beverage while still growing
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on the vine. >> reporter: i'm don dahler at a vineyard in upstate new york. frigid temperatures are usually the enemy of agriculture, but coming up on "cbs this morning: saturda saturday", i'll introduce you to a wine-making family for whom the cold makes gold. >> for some of you, your local news is next. the rest, stick around. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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good morning, i'm jan carabao. philadelphia police are now looking for the gun man who shot two men in logan overnight. call came in around 1:30 this morning for a shoot ago the broad and rockland a 27 year-old man was shot in both legs and 35 year-old man was shot in the knee and leg, both are in stable condition and there is no word on a motive. now to the eyewitness weather forecast with meteorologist chelsea ingram, hi there, chelsea. >> good morning, everyone. let me give you the temperatures where we will start right now and they are mildest specially for this time of the year, it is 45 degrees in philadelphia, 45 in wilmington and we're in the 40's in reading, allentown. only spot in the 30's this morning in the poconos right around 39 degrees. storm scan three shows we're
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quiet in our region but looking out to the west, well, that that is moisture that is moving in later this afternoon probably by noon time we will see areas of drizzle and rain, 54 degrees for that high temperature today. rain continues overnight in the first half of sunday, and drying, occurs by sunday evening and then the sunshine returns in full as we head into tuesday, jan. >> chelsea, thank you. our next update at 8:27 see you then have a great day.
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welcome back to "cbs this morning: saturday." i'm anthony mason >> and i'm alex wagner. the controversial debate over arming school teachers following the deadly florida high school shooting. we'll get the take of someone who represents 3 million educators and school security. and then they're sisters and opponents in the winter olympics. one plays for team usa and the other for the unified korean team. and you'll meet a man who went to great lengths all for a cup of coffee. his incredible story is the subject of a new book by author
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dave egg gers who joins us in the rare interview. that's ahead. but first a gltd plea by rick gates. >> gates guilty plea is to charges of federal conspiracy and making false statements. he says he will cooperate with special counsel robert mueller's russian investigation. paula reid is at the white house with more. paula, good morning. >> good morning. the gates plea deal caps off what has been a busy week for special counsel robert mueller. gates pleaded guilty for conspiring against the united states and also to lying to investigators during a recent interview. under the terms of this plea deal, he now only faces about five to six years in prison instead of the decades that he was facing and even that five to six years could be shortened if he cooperates. gates is now the third trump associate known to be working with mueller's investigation and his plea deal puts the spotlight
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squarely on paul manafort who has given no indication that he intends to cooperate with mueller, but over the past few days, special counsel has really been intensifying the pressure on manafort. they filed 32 new counts against him. they also charged a dutch attorney he used to do business with and now they have the gates plea deal. and if gates testified against manafort, it's very likely manafort will be able to avoid any criminal conviction. now, there is always the chance, though, that he could be pardoned by the president if he was convicted. now, manafort in a statement on friday, he reiterated his desire to continue to fight what he describes as untrue charges. he is expected to go to trial in the fall. anthony? >> paula reid at the white house. thanks, paula. president trump may face a backlash from gun rights advocates. mr. trump spoke to conservatives at the conservative political action conference outside washington friday.
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the president said he would rather see trained teachers with a gun instead of sheriff's deputies who had a chance to stop florida shooter nikolas cruz but did not. >> would rather have somebody who loves their students and wants to protect their students than somebody standing outside who double know anybody and doesn't know the students and frankly for whatever reason decided not to go in even though he heard lots of shots being fired inside. >> the president said an armed teacher would have shot the gunman quickly. florida governor rick scott says he wants to make it illegal for anyone under 21 or someone with mental illness to purchase a gun. he also wants an armed law enforcement officer at every school. >> for more insight on how educators are responding to this push, we're joined by becky pringle, vice president of the national education association which represent 3/million
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educator as krois the country. good morning, becky. >> good morning, alex. >> can i ask first, what is your response to the president's suggestion that armed teacher would be better deterrents against school shooters than perhaps sheriff's deputies? >> alex, i'm an eighth grade science teacher, the wonder years. i cannot imagine having the additional responsibility of using a loaded gun to protect my children. that's not what our students are asking for. it's not what educators all over this country are asking for. that is not what we need to protect our children. >> becky, what are you specifically hearing from teachers on these proposals? >> well, you know what? i'm so proud of our teachers, anthony. they're so creative. what they have responded with is a movement. they're saying arm me with counselor, with social workers to help me address the growing
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needs that our children are bringing with them into the classroom. they're saying arm me with tools and resources so that i have the opportunity to attend to the individual needs of students. that's what they want to be armed with, not guns. >> becky, the president was also critical of the around deputy at stoneman douglas high school. he said a security guard doesn't know the children and doesn't love the children in making his call to arm teachers. your organization also represents school security guards. what's been the reaction there? >> we do, but, you know, it's very easy to criticize and blame when you're not in that environment. you know, i listened to a teacher from parkland talk about guarding 65 students that day, and she was trying to imagine what it would be like with hundreds of students as they were that day running at her and her having that additional responsibility to have a loaded weapon in her classroom. that's not what she's asking for. it's not what the students are
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asking for. they're asking for changes to our gun laws so that no one has the ability to have military grade assault weapons that are designed for one purpose, to kill as many people as possible in a short period of people. that is the issue at stake and that's what our students are asking us to do. >> so, becky, what do you think of governor scott's proposal in florida to put a law enforcement officer in every public school? >> this is what our educators are asking. they're asking for each community, each school community, our patients, our students, law enforcement, our administrators to come together and to come up with solutions that work for them. they want to listen to their students and to the educators who are with them and figure out how they're going to prepare, how they're going to protect them. we need to listen to those who are closest to our student and
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do what's best to protect them. >> becky, what kind of effect is this conversation around teachers and the responsibility with guns or without in the classroom? what effect is that having on the recruitment of young teachers to the field of education? >> that's a really good question, alex. we certainly have had challenges to encourage our young people to go into education. we know that they don't go into education for the big bucks or the shiny apples. they go into the education because they love their students and they want to be there for their students to, in my case, open up the wonders of science. they're not going there because they are going to have that extra responsibility of protecting them with a loaded gun. and so not only are we worried about attracting new teachers to the profession but also about retaining those in the
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profession. we're hearing not only from teachers but school secretaries and other support staff in our schools that this is not the kind of environmental they want to work in. and any time somebody's proposing more guns, that is not the solution. we do not want to turn our schools into prisons and our teachers as armed guards and our students as prisoners. is not the learning environment we need for our students. >> becky pringle with the national education association. thanks for your time. students in west virginia have no plans to return to the classroom. union leaders said monday will be day three. teachers are demanding higher pay and health benefits. west virginia teachers rank 48th in the nation in pay. it is about eight
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you know when that caffeine craving hits and you feel like you could walk through war to get your fix? well, the man who really did find himself in a combat zone as he pursued his coffee curiosity and the quest for a cup with ancient origins. we'll speak with him and best-selling author dave eggers who helped put the story to page in a new book. that's ahead. with expedia one click gives you access to discounts on thousands of hotels, cars and things to do. like the garland hotel for 40% off. everything you need to go. expedia touch is how we communicate with those we love,
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if you're drinking coffee this morning or mainlining it like we are, you may not be thinking about what it took to get those beans from crop to
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cup. but the man you're about to hear from sure did. mokhtar alkanshali lived through a harrowing journey and dramatic escape to bring one of the oldest coffees from yemen to the rest of the world. his story is now being told in a new book by celebrated author dave egg gers. "cbs evening news" anchor jeff glor sat down with them at the hudson hotel library and lounge here in new york. >> reporter: he was 24 and working as a doorman at a san francisco high-rise when he got a dill leerous idea, leave the bay area for yemen and start a coffee business. what he didn't plan on was getting trapped in the middle of a civil war. it was a story dave eggers felt compelled to tell. >>'ve always been attracted to stories of self-invention and entrepreneurship and self-creation. >> and that's what he's done.
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>> nobody dreams the american dream better than immigrants and the sons and daughters of immigrants. >> his journey is documented by egg gers in the monk of mokha, the port city, on the red sea, is where the first ever coffee beans were exported in the 15th century. >> the amount of pluck and what he calls its naive arrogance that goes into sort of starting a business from scratch, going to yemen, not knowing anything about coffee cultivation and creating a business. and rallying and organizing all these farmers around a new idea of a new way of life. it was incredibly spiring. >> i've arrogance. >> yeah. i think the lack of norj really helped me because in the early days i had these diagrams i would write up, strength, weaknesses, opportunity, and threats. so under threats i had things like al qaeda, pirates, political instability. you know, things that -- >> minor things. >> standard for any startup, you
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know, algerian pirates that and, you know, looking bag at these reports i wrote myself i'm thinking, what was i thinking. >> on the pro side, it was this might work? >> on the pro side it was building a bridge between two worlds. >> eggers is known for telling personal stories including his own. his first book, a heartbreaking work of staringing genius was a memoir about raising his younger brother after losing both parents to cancer. it went to number one on "the new york times" bestsellers list. for this beak eggers spent years listening to his story, traveling with him from california to africa. >> your story's your most personal asset that you have. and i couldn't have anyone else. dave was very caring and very loving and that made it much easier to do. some of the parts of the book are really hilarious, but others, we had a lot of tissue
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paper. >> during one trip to yemen, he found himself trapped as bombs from the houthis rebels rained down on the capital. yemen's civil war had begun. >> the blasts and air strikes. you heard children crying. it was hard to live in that moment. people were really weeping. at one point they stopped weeping and there was a sort of tranquility that came about. you know, we just -- we decided to submit and let go and know that we're not in control anymore, and that feeling really helped me a lot. >> what was that process like, talking to him and taking him through your story? >> well, in particular because dave had the foresight of starting backwards. a lot those traumatic experiences had just happened to me just a few weeks before, so going really deep into the pain, you know, into those moments with dave in a way was somewhat therapeutic for me. >> it's a good idea. tough idea but a good idea. >> well, we -- i always go into
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it knowing at any point we can stop. and nothing gets printed without mokhtar's approval. and we meet when he wants to meet and we talk about whatever he's comfortable talking about. that's why it takes a long time. almost three years in this case. >> what surprised you most about the process with him? >> i guess i came in to coffee as a skeptic. i had my first cup of coffee when i was 35 when my daughter was born and i needed some mental acuity during the day. i needed a different kind of caffeine and i used it just as fuel. i put a lot of sugar in and just drank it to stay awake. i was still kind of cynical about the $4.75 cup of coffee or more expensive. i thought,ridiculous, so pretentio pretentious. and then to backtrack it was like, well, what should something cost. and the coffee gets picked
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individually. every cherry has to be chosen by a picker, put in their bag. i'm always thinking of the person who first picks that ripe ruby red cherry. you can't get these people out of your mind. >> the monk of mokhah gradually we'ves together the coffee and his an central home. three years later the war continues. >> it's a horrific situation. the single worst humanitarian crisis in the world. 18 million people are food-insecure. that's 70% of the population. there's over 3 million refugees now because of the war. for me, on one hand i do good and i feel i'm helping my farmer make a better living and helping people learn more about yemen but sometimes i feel like it's a small dent compared to the suffering that's going on.
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i know this war will end and my project will outlast these bombs. >> he thinks coffee can heal division here at home as well. >> this cup of coffee, it's crossed cultures and borders and political hardships to find its way to you and i think it's an incredible opportunity for us to engage with each other. >> for "cbs this morning: saturday," jeff glor, new york. >> i love what dave eggers said at the beginning of jeff's story. nobody dreams the american dream better than immigrants. >> kudos for him to drawing global attention and domestic attention to the absolute crisis unfolding in yemen. that's a beautiful story. >> it is. from coffee to another beverage, wine is so precious it requires ten times the usual amount of grapes to produce. what's more, the grapes have to be frozen on the vine. wheel gerch you a taste of what it takes to make it coming up. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." and the wolf huffed and puffed...
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we're only about three weeks from the first day of spring and that means the end of harvest time for a very special crop. >> while most produce suffers in freezing cold weather, it is the magic ingredient in a very special variety of wine. don dahler takes us to upstate new york with the sweet story of rare vintage that relies on old man winter to bear essential fruit. >> reporter: each year at the casa larga vinyard in finger lakes district of new york, some grapes are intentionally left to freeze on the vine. when harvested, they will become the coveted delicacy called ice wine, a dissent drink with origins dating back to 18th century germany. although most of the world's ice wine is made in canada, the u.s. is brunging the best.
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for casa larga's vineyard, it's a family affair. >> it started with nigh dad. i was in the wine shop on the tasting bar and i had a lot of people requesting the product and said to my dad and brother, we should find some winery that makes this and bring it in. he said, oh, no, we're going to make our own. >> how are they harvested. >> it has to be have harvested by hand. they're so frozen that the stems literally just kind of break right off. >> a lot of manual labor. >> a lot of manual labor. you have to press them the day you pick them. it's not a 9:00 to 5:00 development. some years we started at midnight. some years, at 4:00 a.m. >> and it has to be cold nurnd, around 14, 15 threes to harvest and then press the grapes. >> this is the bottling room. >> yes, it is.
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>> is it trickier to make ice wine than regular wine? >> i think it is. it's hard to keep the grapes healthy for that extra month or two waiting for the freezing temperatures. >> what is it like when it comes out of the cask? >> it's extremely sweet compared to most wines we're used to. when we pick the grapes they have twice the sugar regular grape juice has. when you press out the frozen grape, barely any juice coming out of it. for a ton of grapes where i would normally get 150 gallons, i get about 15 gallons of ice wine grapes. >> this is your magic elixir. >> yes. this is our ice wine. you can see it's thick er and richer. because of the price, ice wine usually starts at about $40 a bottle but prices can range to the 100s. >> this is a prokt where you're hoping for a cold winter. >> that's right. the climate is changing, so it
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hasn't been as easy as in the past. for every wine bolt we produce, we could make four bottings of tradition a wine. >> is this more for the recover of the tradition than profit? >> yes, definitely. there's a lot of profit with ice wine but there's risk as well. with it comes a lot of satisfaction. >> a toefts. >> a toast. >> to cold winters and warm hearts. >> exactly. >> i'm glad don dahler like thad assignment i can see. >> a real tough one. a heavy lift pulling ice wine to your lips. it's delicious stuff. >> and they're having an ice wine festival. >> indeed they are. >> a pair of hockey twins played key roles for the olympic gold medal this week. but two other sisters have been giving it all at their games. their story is next. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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good morning, i'm jan car baye. talk about a rude awakening for drivers in south philadelphia, today, smashed cars, lined third street between ritner and porter streets, police say more than a dozen cars were damage, overnight, and investigators now have a suspect in custody on suspicion of dui. now to the eyewitness weather forecast with meteorologist chelsea ingram, hi there, chelsea. >> a lot of us stuck in the fog as we wake up this morning lets lot at kutztown area you can see foggy conditions, there, hardly even pick out where those soccer goals are off in the distance. current temperature 40 degrees forty-five in philadelphia. that is saving grace, right, it is warmer, milder compared to this time yesterday that
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trend will continue as we head in the afternoon, where we are just going to have to take witt some rain heading our way , storm scan three shows that moisture located off to the west, that will be pushing in, later on this afternoon and we will be dealing with areas of rain, drizzle, a high of right around 54 degrees, rain continues overnight in the first half of the sunday, and then sunshine does return, jan as we head into next week. >> chelsea, thank you. our next update is at 8:57 we will see you then. have a great
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the u.s. women's ice hockey teams provides one of the most dramatic moments of so far. a shoot-out win over rival canada gave the american women their first gold medal since 1998 and ended the canadians' 2014 winning stream. >> the olympics were an international affair for the brandt family of minnesota. hannah brand helped her team usa to a gold medal while her sister marissa helped the eun fieds korean team. dana jacobson sat down to share their olympic experiences. >> it bus great to be here with my sister.
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i kind of imagined what it was like to do it but to live through it and do it with her was one of the most incredible feelings whatsoever. >> i didn't know what to expect going into the olympics, but now that it's almost overing it's sad. but we had so much fun together and with our teams. we couldn't have asked for anything different. >> opening ceremonies, different teams, but did you get to see each other? >> yes. for a short time. my team was late for some reason. there was lots of traffic. found the usa sign, took a picture, and then we said bye. >> i was sad. i was like, oh, i'm not going to see her. it was like, you need to get here now. i didn't hear from her and all of a sudden we were about to walk outside aunede and outside suddenly appeared. i got a little emotional. to have that dream come true for both of us is pretty exciting. >> hannah, obviously for you, this was the gold medal you all
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sought. can you take me through what it was like for you and for your team? i mean you get to overtime. you go to a shoot-out. what was that shoot-out like for you guys on the ice? >> it felt like -- we had a lot of confidence going into overtime. we had played well, coming from behind. going into a shoot-out, it was like, we've got do this now. >> that cool, that relaxed? >> yeah. i mean you can't overthink it at that point. it's just a shoot-out. we do it all the time. obviously this meant a little more, but you have to stay calm, cool, and collected. i don't know if it's sunk in yet. it's been a dream come true and great to experience with my teammates. >> can you take us into that moment, that second when you knew usa had won? >> we were sitting together. i remember she made the save, we all scream and we ran down because we wanted to be -- we wanted to try to see you and be with other parents but it was just excitement, pure excitement and joy and happiness for her
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team and they finally won gold. it was stressful to watch just because, you know -- yeah, it was very back and forth. like you said, it went into overtime and a shoot-out. i was on the edge of my seat the entire time, nervous for her and her team. they won and it was complete -- just, yeah, so happy and relieved it was over and she could celebrate. very happy and proud. >> i know you guys spent about two years where you guys really weren't in the same place with your family. not just you but your parents. one of your sponsors helped bring you toechlkt intel. how did they do that? >> intel was awesome. they came and shot both of us in our respective training locations. >> hi, mom. >> hi, mom. >> but for us to be able to share our story with our family and friends that hadn't seen a whole lot of us -- >> even when you're not there, i know i have something to play for, and that's you guys. >> it was incredible the way they put that together. >> what do you think the impact was on girls in america and
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korea from seeing you girls play hockey? >> i've heard from people back home tweeting us, we've inspired many people to start playing hockey. i think we've generated a lot of new fans, and i think for us to be able to do that, that's what we're here to do. we spread the gamt, be role models for little girls back home, and i think we were able do that. >> right on, brand sisters. >> they sure did become role models. what a great experience for two sisters. >> unbelievable. >> really, really exciting. all right. now here's a look at the weather >> he's known for extracting the very essence of raw materials that come to "the dish."
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up next robert weed meyer shares his food and philosophy. you're watching "cbs this morning" saturday. i'm worried i can't find a safe used car. you could start your search at the all-new carfax.com that might help. show me the carfax? now the car you want and the history you need are easy to find. show me used minivans with no reported accidents. boom. love it. [struggles] show me the carfax. start your used car search and get free carfax reports at the all-new carfax.com. he's a nascar champion who's she's a world-class swimmer who's stared down the best in her sport. but for both of them, the most challenging opponent was... pe blood clots in my lung. it was really scary. a dvt in my leg. i had to learn all i could to help protect myself. my doctor and i choose xarelto® xarelto®... to help keep me protected.
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guest. born to a belgian father and american mother, chef robert wiedmaier grew up helping out on a working farm. he got a job in the washington, d.c. area. >> in 1999 he opened the elegant marcel's which consistently earns among the highest marks for its french and belgian menu and it's extraordinary service. chef robert weed mire, welcome to the dish. >> good morning. thank you for having me. i'm excited to be here. >> let's talk about the table. it looks great. >> what we have is prince island mussels. i serve a lot of mussels. we serve probably 10,000 pounds of mussels in a week. after that we go over to my classic dish at marcel's is this dish with bacon and a sauce. that's probably put both of my
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kids through private school. then we have my roasted duck with chocolate and cherries. love duck. you can do so many great things with it. then we have my five onion soup that we serve. and then over here, the dessert is a bread pudding with a lemon glaze and mass nated raisins. >> what is in this glass? >> brewed in belgian. it's a double blond brew. it came after the legendary statue where my father was born where the story goes where the giant on there had his hand cut off by bravo and he's throwing the hand off. it's in the plaza in antwerp. so that's my beer. >> that's delicious. >> it's pretty good. >> american mother, european father. who taught you about food? >> you know, my mom and my grandmother were really the force behind me getting to
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become a chef and also growing up in little tiny villages that were all farmers. i worked on farms, got down with the signed slaughtering animals and going to the market with my mom. she knew where to get the best food all over the little markets in germany and belgium. that really fostered my love of food and i just continued on with it. i never looked back. i feel very blessed that i never thought i was going to do anything else other than be a chef. >> i want to talk about marcel's. it's such an influential restaurant in the d.c. area. but you went through an incredibly horrific scenario not long ago. >> yeah, just recently. >> you had a massive flood. you had renovated a few years before. >> we did. then a pipe broke during the freezing weather and flooded out the entire restaurant and we were closed for a month. >> which is devastating for a restaurant. >> yes. >> sometimes insurmountable. >> yes. i was lucky enough to be able to survive and pay all my employees and have everything fix and now
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we're back up and running. we reopened february 1st. after 20 years, e've got a great following of clientele and fans and i thank all of them for continuing to dine at marcel's and we're rocking and rolling again. >> you have a number of locations in the washington area. how have you seen that city's dining scene change since you've been there? >> it's changed a lot. when i first came to washington, d.c., we didn't have a lot of restaurants. there were some really good french restaurants and italian restaurants but not that many. now we soo a lot of good casual restaurants and a lot of chefs from other cities are coming into d.c. and opening up and doing business there. the city is really thriving with restaurants right now. the population hasn't grown but the number of restaurants have. it's a great time to come and'd in the nation's capital. >> and the restaurant business is so competitive. i'm always amazed when chefs like yourself keep so many restaurants a going and keep
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them distinctive. how do you do that? >> it's taking care of your staff, sourcing stavgs and constantly pushing the ebb vel lope to be the best you can be. i tell all my chefs, if you're going go to the game, let's go to the super bowl, get to the world's cup. if you're not pushing it every day -- >> you're not in the right business. >> you're not swimming. you're sinking. >> i like the coach met for. chef, as i ask you to sign this dish, i will ask you the question we always ask, which is if you could share this delicious bounty with anyone past or present, who would it be? >> there's probably a lot of people. my mom for sure. if i could sit with a special chef is it would be the godfather of french cuisine because he was a mentor to a lot of the top chefs in france. and i'm a big franco file obviously. >> it's all worked out. chef robert, thank you. for more of chef wiedmaier on
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"the dish" head to cbsnews.com. they've all been successful solo artists, performed on grammy albums and appeared right here in studio 57 before buck when they put their voices together third quarter opened up a whole new musical chapter and now a new album and worldwide tourle they're coming up. sarah watkins, sarah aofie o'donovan, the acclaimed treo with "i'm with her." they're up next. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." kelly! we're out of body wash! what are you doing?? i thought you had a cold?? i don't need all this. mucinex fast-max is powerful enough to handle most of my symptoms. name one. how 'bout 9? sore throat, cough, even...
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aveeno®. it's a game changer. a trip back to the dthe doctor's office, mean just for a shot. but why go back there, when you can stay home, with neulasta onpro? strong chemo can put you at risk of serious infection, which could lead to hospitalizations. in a key study, neulasta reduced the risk of infection from 17% to 1%, a 94% decrease. applied the day of chemo, neulasta onpro is designed to deliver neulasta the next day, so you can stay home. neulasta is for certain cancer patients receiving strong chemotherapy. do not take neulasta if you're allergic to neulasta or neupogen (filgrastim). ruptured spleen, sometimes fatal as well as serious lung problems, allergic reactions, kidney injuries, and capillary leak syndrome have occurred. report abdominal or shoulder tip pain, trouble breathing or allergic reactions to your doctor right away. in patients with sickle cell disorders, serious, sometimes fatal crises can occur. the most common side effect is bone and muscle ache. so why go back there? if you'd rather be home, ask your doctor about neulasta onpro.
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starring in our "saturday sessions" this morning, "i'm with her" made up of three veterans of this program, sara watkins, sarah jarosz, and ee faux o'donovan have been on the show before. >> four years ago after an off-the-cuff performance they realized they had something special when they combined
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forces. the trio has just released their critically acclaimed debut album "see you around" and are about to embark on a worldwide tour. making their national television debut, here is "i'm with her" with overland ♪ good-bye brother, hello railroad so long chicago ♪ ♪ all these years thought i was where i ought to be ♪ ♪ time's a changing this country is growing and i'm bound for san francis francisco ♪ ♪ i've been through more than i could take so long that i could say my farewell ♪ ♪ there is one thing more it isn't fear that shows you the
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door it's the air or the water or a war ♪ ♪ good-bye brother hello hello railroad so long chicago all these years i thought i was where i ought to be ♪ ♪ time's a changing this country's growing and i'm bound for san francis francisco ♪ ♪ ♪ mom born, hungry, scared, needed more ♪ ♪ i don't much care i've been working hard since i i was
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eight ♪ ♪ got more than my share of years upon my face upon my face ♪ ♪ i got a ticket on the union line i know we'll meet again on the other side ♪ ♪ good-bye brother, hello railroad so long, chicago ♪ ♪ all these years though i was where i ought to be ♪ ♪ but times are changing this country's growing and i'm bound for san francisco where a new life waits for me ♪ ♪ good-bye railroad, so long chicago ♪
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♪ all these years i thought i was where i ought to be ♪ ♪ but times are changing this country's growing and i'm bound for san francisco where a new life waits for me ♪ >> don't go away. we'll be right back with more mao from "i'm with her." you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." >> announcer: "saturday sessions" are sponsored by blue buffalo. you love your pets like family. so feed them like family with blue. hey, need fast try cool mint zantac. it releases a cooling sensation in your mouth and throat.
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zantac works in as little as 30 minutes. nexium can take 24 hours. try cool mint zantac. no pill relieves heartburn faster. if you have moderate to severe or psoriatic arthritis, 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 differently. for psoriasis, 75% clearer skin is achievable with reduced redness, thickness, and scaliness of plaques. and for psoriatic arthritis, otezla is proven to reduce joint swelling, tenderness, and pain.
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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. ♪ otezla. show more of you. ♪ ♪ olympic glory doesn't just belong to athletes.
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and it doesn't just happen every four years. it happens one morning at a time, and one cup at a time. folgers. proud sponsor of team usa. have a great weekend, everybody. we leave you with more music
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from "i'm with her." this is "see you around." ♪ ♪ i hear you loud and clear through all the din and commotion ♪ ♪ i hear you loud and clear ♪ a constant ringing bell or the ocean in a shell i held up to my ear ♪ ♪ while everything else is breaking like the waves down on the coastline ♪ ♪ breaking like the wine-stained glass that held my drink ♪ ♪ breaking like the heart that's stuck inside my skin will it ever beat again or just go on bleeding till it's empty ♪ ♪ till i fill it up again
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♪ ♪ i feel you baby these aren't fighting words, just a decoration ♪ ♪ i feel you so i guess i'll be going now ♪ ♪ i know you're looking out for new eyes in the crowd ♪ ♪ i'll see you around breaking like the waves down on the coastline ♪ ♪ breaking like the wine-stained glass that held my drink breaking like the heart that's stuck inside my skin ♪ ♪ will it ever beat again or just go on bleeding till it's empty ♪ ♪ till i fill it up again ♪
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♪ shiny pieces underneath my feet ♪ ♪ shiny pieces all about there's a far-off feeling i can't shake it ♪ ♪ hold it in my hands but i'm not breaking ♪ ♪ shiny pieces all around me breaking like the waves down on the coastline ♪ ♪ breaking like the wine-staine ♪ breaking like the heart that's stuck inside my skin ♪ ♪ come on fill it up again ♪ ♪ fill it up again ♪ fill it up again
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♪ good morning, i'm jan carabao. philadelphia police are new looking for the gun man and a motive after a shooting of two men in philadelphia's logan neighborhood. the shooting happened around 1:30 this morning. near corner of broad and rock land streets. thirty-seven year old man was shot in the knee and leg, 27 year-old man was shot in both legs, both men are now in stable condition. now to the eyewitness weather forecast with meteorologist chelsea ingram, hi there chelsea. >> hi there jan seeing some improvement as far as fog is concern but we have rain heading our way this afternoon let me take you to the numbers , guess what we are warmer then we were just 24 hours ago, 46 degrees in philadelphia. forty-six right now in wilmington. we will show you a look at
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storm scan three notice all of the moisture located just down to the west that is going to be moving in right around lunchtime and it will continue , later on tonight, dealing when more rain, so look for areas of drizzle and rain today, high temperature of 54 degrees. warmer tomorrow jan with a high of 60. back to you. >> chelsea, thank you. that is "eyewitness news" this morning but you can follow us on our web site at cbs philly .com. i'm jan carabao have a great day.
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narrator: today on lucky dog, a poodle mixed puppy will need to learn all the basics. brandon: no, that's not gonna...yeah, that's not gonna work. when we first began scout is jumping around, out of control, and it's a complete disaster. narrator: he'll form an inseparable bond. brandon: scout's learning through thumper's lead exactly what to do. narrator: and discover there's a big world out there waiting for him. suzanne: i'm a breast cancer survivor. i was given a second chance and now he's got his second chance in my family. brandon: i'm brandon mcmillan and i've dedicated my life to saving the lonely,

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