tv CBS This Morning CBS March 12, 2016 9:00am-11:00am EST
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captioning funded by cbs rning. it's march 12th, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." donald trump rally explodes protesters shut down the event as our team is caught in the turmoil. plus, deadly storms down south.aking point as the unrelenting rain continues. a growing controversy over paperless tickets. it could cost you more in the long run.
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eve of selection sunday. we talk with the man who heads theontroversial look at today's "eye opener." your world in 90 seconds. trump! >> this after donald trump in chicago. >> the number of protesters supporters. >> bernie sanders doesn't do it like this. >> five people arrested including a protests began at a rally in st. louis. >> there is nothing like a trump rally! >> a sad day. >> how can you be shocked?uy who was sure that i was born in kenya. >> southeastern u.s., at least four people have died in record breaking rain and two stateslared states of emergency.
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>> in california, nancy reagan's funeral was a celebration of herffair with ronald reagan. >> just had the primary in michigan. >> i absolutely get bernie and the revolution but i love ve the fact that bill clinton is going to be upstairs if it ends up being her. >> are you sure that is where he is going to be? >> well, i don't know! i don't know! >> all >> a mysterious sea creature washed up on a tourist beach in mexico. >> all that matters. >> mercy! he hurt hifacial! oh, baby! >> on "cbs this morning: rump also won michigan. in a press conference after his big victory on tuesday said i'm the most presidential one than
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stood there. you saw this in front of a table of trump water, trump wine, trump vodka, trump steaks! who ad's working! e to the weekend, everyone. we have got a great lineup for you this morning. a bit later, we will you you to der with mongolia. our reporter walked from siberia to australia. trip. >> on a closer look, the iconic photos include john malkovich. the actor who amazing images. >> owner influences range from her birth place in belgium to the texas roots of her father.
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his own. we will show you the moments that changed her career and she will perform in our saturday session. first, the top story this morning.ng donald trump's presidential campaign reaches a boiling point in chicago. last night the republican front-runner cancelled a ecurity concerns. when thousands of protesters gathered outside an arena at the university of illinois and then flooded the venue where he wasspeak. >> trump's campaign events have turned increasingly hostile, with sometimes violent reporter: they did not recommend cancelling the event. that decision was made by the trump campaign. >> for safety of all tens of thousands of people that have
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arena, tonight's rally will be postponed until another day. >> reporter: the announcement by a trump staffer set off celebrations for some. and disappointment for others. as police tried to clear the ights broke out. demonstrators many of whom are st illinois-chicago said trump received their message. >> this is our yuvert o our university and we shut him down. >> reporter: trump loyalists say the attack was on free speech. >> they can't stand that nion that is not theirs! >> reporter: as theges continued outside the arena, trump explained why he
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>> i don't want to see any of the people hurt, either inside law enforcement said, you know, they just don't have enough men to cover it. >> reporter: but chicago police say that is not the case. >> i can tell you that we did campaign that we had more than adequate resources. >> reporter: one officer was hurt outside when he was struck with a bottle.f here! get him out! get him out of here! >> reporter: tensions at trump rallies have been stewing for some time. dozen people were arrested at an event in st. louis. and this week, a protester being led out of a north carolinad to be sucker-punched by a trump supporter. trump's chief republican rival ted cruz called it a sad day andesponsibility at the feet of the gop front-runner. >> when you have a campaign that affirmatively encourages when you have a campaign that is facing
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against members of the press, youironment that only encourages this sort of nasty orter: donald trump has taken to twitter again this morning writing the organized group of people, many of them our first amendment rights in chicago have totally energized america. anthony? >> dean reynolds in chicago, a cbs news journalist covered all of last night's events until he, himself, was detained. we want to show you what he captured one. he was on the floor of the arena as tensions built.
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>> reporter: he interviewed both protesters and trump these people are protesting and exercising their free speech and the irony of that is we don't get to have our ations all over the campus got together and meetings all week to stop this from happening. >> reporter: police cleveland tensions were high. deb shot video of an arrest. police surrounded a man whose face was bloodied. protesters screamed atb continued to roll as police kept watch. without warning, deb was grabbed from behind and thrown to the [ screaming ] >> back off! off! do not -- whoa whoa whoa whoa!
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>> put your hands behind your behind your back! >> oh! >> you got cuffs. says as he was handcuffed an officer placed his boot on february's neck to keep them in places. another news crew captured theseng taken into custody. illinois state police charged him with resisting arrest, although there is no sign of that in either of these videos. on the tape, hentifies himself as a credentialed member of the news media. >> i have credentials i can show you. >> reporter: deb was placed in the back of a police van while eft nearby. it was returned to deb after his release. deb has been covering the trump trump announced his candidacy last summer. last night, he tweeted this. i've never seen anything like what i'm witnessing in my have been in
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they can be terrifying. >> very scary. earlier in the day the talks surrounding trump was about unity as he picked up theof his onetime campaign rival ben carson. a news conference in florida on friday, carson said he and trump have buried the hatchet and theer has been misjudged. >> there are two different donald trump's. the one you see on the stage and there is the one who is very >> major garrett asked trump about carson's comments. >> do you agree with that characterization? >> i think there are two donald trump's.ersion and people see that. it's probably different, i trump. >> carson also warned that a failure to rally behind quote ote, fracture the party in an irreparable way. >> reporter: another round of
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target the already eas in the south and days ofal rain. three weather-related deaths have been reported and hundreds of rescues have taken place. david begnaud is in bossier, where the worse could still be to come. >> reporter: we are along the red chute bayou. when i went live last night for i was here and no water in front of me. 12 hours. they say the water has come up about a foot and the getting predicted. here is where it is. the water is there. the levee is here. now they say it's a matter of time bvee. workers and volunteers spent another long day laying down sandbags along a line of homes in bossier city.t's only a matter
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>> it is going to come and get you. we don't know how long or how keep. >> reporter: more than 45 homes are at risk of flooding here because of this week's near record rain, water is rushing the bayou at a rate of seven to ten times the normal flow. how far is the levee from your >> it's probably 300 to 400 yards. >> reporter: this firefighter has been rescuing people two days. now his home is at risk. >> we have lived here six years,n water standing in the street, ever. >> reporter: throughout louisiana, the rain fell so fast and so hard it's caught many >> i was told when the water came from the back side, get out. and that is when we started seeing the water come up and we had to hurry and get out.in 20 minutes, you see. >> reporter: near new orleans, more than 200 people rescued from their home as nearly 10
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lights going out. kid hollering. it's a catastrophe. >> reporter: back at bossier continue throughout this weekend to keep the rising water away from those homes.eason i'm out here, trying to save homes. i could have stayed home in bed but trying to help. >> reporter: you may be they using sandbags to line up against this levee to protect the 1,600 homes west of here? y didn't have the time. rain fell too much, too fast and they couldn't line up 3,000 sandbags so they say it is water will rush over the levee. when it's going to happen? we were told this morning and may be later today. on top of the water flowing over the levee, they say more rained this afternoon. >> not a fun waiting game. david begnaud, thank you.
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>> good morning. we continue to watch the rains moving in through louisiana and into mississippi as well.e more of this as we go through today and into tomorrow. the flood threat continues with the runoff and 1 to additional rain for that area. northwest, relentless rain continues there. rains at the lower elevation' snow to the upper elevations. and winter storm watch and high winds and winds to 60 miles an hour and snow in the mountains two to three feet. ed curran at chicago station wbbm-tv, thanks. nancy reagan is once again husband, the former first lady's life was celebrated on friday by a thousand guests, including first lady michelle obama, former bush, and three former first ladies at the
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funeral, the ceremony, and the . here likely wouldn't have been a president ronald reagan without a nancy reagan. >> reporter: close friend and family honoring nancy reagan say the onetime actress and first lady may best be remembered as a devoted wife. >> ronald and nancy reagan were for each other. they were as close to being one person as it is possible for any two people to be. thousand guests, including first lady michelle obama and representatives from nine former white house families, gathered to honor mrs. reagan.patti and ron, paid tribute to their mother and their parents' loving 52-year marriage. >> my parents were two halves ofd tight around a
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each other was the only sus tennance they needed. y may have gone far but, together, they could and did go anywhere. >> reporter: while president reagan passed away more than a decade ago, his love for his ll very much present. >> for there could be no life for me without you. >> reporter: a love letter he wrote to his first lady in 1981 was read by former canadian prime minister brian muscle lrooney. >> i hear those bells and i feel good all over, even if i tell a joke, times before. >> reporter: and now nancy reagan will be laid to rest at her husband's side. same place she spent so much of her life. >> they will look out across the valley. my father will tell her the
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the moon and stars will endlessly turn overhead and here they will stay, as they always wished it to be, resting in each only each other's arms until the end of time. >> reporter: it was president reagan's request that the burialard the pacific ocean, which on a clear day, you can normally see on this hilltop. for "cbs this morning: saturday," ben tracy, simi >> what a nice service. >> beautiful service. lovely. >> she will be missed. russia is pressing washington police for details about the mysterious murder of a former aide to whose body was found last fall. authorities do not have any suspects and what is being described as a brutal attack. here is jeff ter: when lesson's body was found inside this washington, d.c. hotel back in november, within hours, russian media reported that the former f a heart attack. but now the d.c. medical
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cause of death was, in fact, of the head, neck, and torso, and the upper and lower extremities, fueling speculation that he may have been murdered. it's a mystery. we don't have the answer. >> reporter: this man specialized in russian affairs for the state department and works for thencil on foreign relations. >> if there were russian official who went after lesson, enemies of some ss or in government, putin would not go after them. the system he has created is one in which things like this always get covered up.r: the 59-year-old lesson, a russian press minister and media exec would be bet employee of the kremlin to end up dead. in 2015 a russian option leader
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from the in 2006, a russian intelligence agent turned kremlin critic was in 2014, mississippi republican roger wicker sent this letter to c holder informing him that lesson had acquired multiple residences at a cost of over 28s. wicker alleged that lesson was laundering money and requested an investigation. the department of justice responded it had referred the matter to its criminal division and the fbi. the department of justice declined to comment. russian officials say they have sent a letter to attorney
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of the late justice antonin scalia.s insist they will not hold any confirmation hearings until the next president takes office in january. s" says newark, new jersey, school officials were aware of lead contamination in the district's water for years. a memoers to run the drinking fountain 30 second before taking a sip of water. cafeteria workers were toldrun the faus cet before preparing the food. the "los angeles times" reports former los angeles clippers owner donald sterling and his wife shelley havey married. the couple headed for divorce court last year after numerous public spats. sterling was banned from the nba and forced to sell thein 2014 after making derogatory
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the couple's attorney says the sterling's have resolved their "wired" magazine says google's artificial system has won a machineh korea. go is considered to be a much more challenging version of chess. analysts say the win comes about ten years sooner than expected 's perhaps more impressive when you realize the machine taught itself how to play. him. it's a machine. mazing it could do this stuff. google won a million dollar
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charity for this and incredible coming up, an update to our a danger most drivers are unaware of. front seats of some cars have a major defect that could result in death.little, if anything, is being done to fix the problem. later, he holds the american record for the most time in space. four missions. for scott kelly.
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over paperless tickets for concerts and sporting events. digital ticketizing convenient for customers but, in the end, it could cost you a lot more. later, get ready for marchs. teams from around the country are trying to play their way into next week's ncaa tournament. coming up, we will talk to the man in charge of themmittee.
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saturday." erican workers brought us back from the crash. now, let's move forward. we need jobs that provide dignity and a bright future. new penalties to stop companies from moving profits and jobs overseas. for businesses that create manufacturing jobs, a new tax credit. and let's invest in clean energy jobs, with 500 million solar panels installed by the end of her first term. we've gotta create new jobs and industries of the future. i'm hillary clinton and i
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we begin this half hour with more on our continuing investigation into a driving danger you may have never even thought about.our car. >> auto safety experts warn the seats can collapse backwards in a crash. the fix is surprisingly cheap. but the lack of action has manywful price. here is kris van cleave. >> reporter: good morning. auto safety experts are urging change this standard and that comes after a texas jury awarded more than $120 million to a family in a case against one automaker fort carmakers
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of dollars to fix. crash tests like these show what happened to 11-year-old jesse jr. when his father's audi rah rear ended in 2012. jess sr.'s launch brokeunching it head-first into his son. he broke the news to his wife kathy. >> it's bad. he has a real bad head injury.e it through the night. and so -- so i started praying again. i said, god, please don't take my reporter: jesse is permanently brain damaged. the jury ruled young jesse's injuries resulted from gross negligence in the company's seats the emt who responded to the accident scene talking to audi's attorney. seat is supposed to do that? >> absolutely. proudly so. it is absorbing energy.eral
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the audi seat that injured jesse met or exceeded that federal so low, even a banquet chair could pass. so that passes? >> that passes the standard. nts show carmakers and the nhtsa have known about the potential for seatback collapses for the cost to fix the problem could be on the operated of a dollar or so. >> shame on them. my boy wouldn't be hurt if they had done their job.f the 107 people we found who have been injured or killed by apparent seatback failure the majority are past 15 years alone. nhtsa insists it has looked into the issue but says it is very are so rare. >> if you don't write your legislator and tell him to do g, nothing is going to be done. and more children are going to get hurt and it could be your
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u.s., japanese and korean automakers have seen recent cases recently and now we are hearing from thestrator mark rosekind who acknowledges the seatback deaths underestimated. here is administrator mark rosekind. >> we need to make sure, again, the people make the good choices now. then we figure out for the lost we need to use those lives as motivation to make sure we figure out what else we could be doing and we will do that. case the jury found the rivera family partially responsible because jesse sr. was not wearing a seat belt and his son was not in a booster seat. they are reviewing their next steps in this case. >> kris van cleave, thanks. it was one woman's walk into explorer sarah walked for a
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time for "morning rounds" with holly phillips and we are talking how much processed food americans eat. a new study finds ultra processed foods make up more than half of all the calories in the u.s. diet. i know that sounds scary. i don't evenwhy. >> ultra. >> it's the ultra. what is ultra processed food? >> it is a term that sort of past couple of years. to acknowledge different degrees of processing with food. anything that has an ingredients list can be considered an example of, say, whole grain bread where the ingredients are whole grain, salt, sunflower oil and maybe baking at the base of it you could call
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food and real ingredients in them. ultraittle food in them at all. the corn is reconinstituted down to nothing and additives are put back in to make that food taste real. preservatives, coloring, flavoring, multipliers and transfats. everything you need to give food that basically doesn't exist hat ultra processed foods are. >> when you think about those foods, i think most people think of junk food.ing on our health? >> one of the most striking things about this study was not think about it. half of the calories in the american diet you could buy at 7-eleven. but even more striking, 90% sugar we get in our diet comes from this type of food. we know added sugar directly causes weight gain and obesity. that health
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there. the top problems that affect us today -- heart disease, , high blood pressure, high cholesterol. when we focus on these ultra processed foods just by cutting down on those, we can make aifference to our overall health. >> how do we do that and break away from this stuff, samantha? >> what isng interesting, not only is it difficult to break away from these foods because we are used to them and they are convenient but formulated by theke us crave them. the chemicals in our brain light up and make us eat those foods. to get off that treadmill ofrocessed foods, we have to cook more at home from scratch. if you bought a french bread frozen pizza with 21 grams of fat and it had made your own at home you could get a baguette and put your own ingredients on instead of the 60
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put in 15ike tomatoes and mushrooms and things like that, you'd slash the sodium and the fat and you wouldn't have any added sugars. cooking home at scratch doesn't lot more time is the way we need to go to reduce our intake of these ultra processed food. >> not fair the chemicals are tricking us. >> they are tricking us and we that. >> so samantha's point, you would never go out and if you're making something at home, purchase methyl -- things on the ingredients list we can't even pronounce or spell. >> you know what your family and kids are eating if you fix food at home from scratch. can have big benefits for your health. they are called pulses. what are they? >> it's a pulse and not a heartbeat. legume and bean family.
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chickpeas and beans and lentils. they help fix nitrogen in the soil and helps the soil get health care.dable and incredibly versatile. internationally they are a wonderful food to be adding and encouraging people to grow and consume. because they are highly available and we can buy them anywhere. >> they are called super food and what makes them so good for you, holly? very good things about the pulses, they are zero cholesterol but more importantly they are high in soluble fiber and that helps control the in our body and keep our blood sugar levels steady which helps to prevent diabetes, ultimately. they are very nutrient rich. and minerals and especially iron, iron is one of the top deficiencies worldwide. what i like about emphasizing the pulses or this group ofis that we talk a lot
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and that sort of seems abstract. when we say actually you can ow, once a day, once a week with these high protein foods, that's a really clear way to do it and something that can make a big difference >> it's so easy. you can have hummus and throw it in soups and make dips and sauces and tacos and can make cookies so beans are forget the cross word puzzles puzzles. a bit of chocolate could help keep your brain sharp! a thousand individuals were they found people who eat chocolate once a week tend to better cog navety nave cognitively. >> the bad news and i'll defer to samantha. >> no bad news about chocolate! >> the thing is more is not better. we should only have small
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in these studies aamined and we don't know how much each study the participants were consuming. the bitter, the darker, the better. you'll get the healthy t holly mentioned and it can boost cognitive performance. >> thank you both for coming on. up next, the case of the ticket. whether you resell them or give them away or keep them for we may tell you why the move may be costing you money. morning: saturday." waiting so long we're a nano-business. windows 10 really helps us get the word out about how awesome bugs are. i've got two tickets to paradise language of bug.a, find my katydid video." oh! this is so good. if you'about a proboscis. i don' screen on my mac, i' you put a big bug in a kids hands
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let your eyes decide. flonase changes everything. the demand for streisand tickets were unprecedented. >> people of a certain age might remember doing this. standing in line for hours, even days for a chance to get ticketsgame. or the concert of a lifetime. >> wednesday, 25th. that's great. >> but the rise of the internet
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end to another tradition. saving and treasuring those ticket stubs. so in the digital age, are we closing in on the death of the paper ticket? to answer that we turney roged, rodriguez. if it's not paper, how are we getting our tickets now? >> the whole process is moving rted off buying your tickets online through nd then pay for the tickets at home so you didn't have to wait in line to get them. now you don't need a paper of times all you knee is your mobile phone. some venues you might be able to pull up a pdf or the e-mail your ticket. other times an app you yon load
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other instances you bring your credit card or i.d. and swipe that and you go in. r or better for xurms consumers? >> it makes the line move quicker. you have copies of your ticket orry about losing them so much or shuffling around and finding that paper and cuts down fraud a little bit as well because you don't have as many scalpers counterfitters counterfit counterfitters counterfit most important to have the photo of yourself and friends you can share on social media or instagram than to have the paper ticket forever. >> we are seeing anthe minnesota timberwolves and now they are sued over it. the more you learn about the case, this notion whoever is selling is going to get more it. why are people upset in the timberwolves case for people to
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>> the timberwolves have a speed. in addition to flash sheets offering this technology they are a market face you can buy, sell and transfer ticket.se, you can flash seats and i think what upset a lot of fans on those who are season tickets before they knew this was the case is that they don't have the openness to goplaces, go to stub hub or ticketmaster and move those tickets. flash seat sets a minimum for resell that you can charge. >> in the case of like the as a horrible record this year, it means they may not be able to sell those tickets. >> exactly. exactly. buyer and seller side you have to consider. >> you can't give it to someone? >> you can transfer but it has to be done through flash seats and haseat user. if i bought tickets for me and a
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transfer it to their name, i to enter the venue, they need to sign up for . >> getting very complicated to give away your tickets! >> somebody seems to be making money. >> now it's the team. rocking the vote. 25 years ago today r.e.m.'s classic album "out of time" was it changed the way we go to polls. unique piece of american history ahead. you're watching "cbs this
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od for you. new activia fruit fusion. i'm chris bosh. when iots in my lung, it was serious. fortunately, my doctor had a game plan. treatment with xarelto . hey guys!somebody i can look up to... ...besides arnie. xarelto is proven to treat and help reduce the risk of dvt and pe blood clots. xarelto is also provenrisk of stroke in people with afib, not caused by a heart valve problem. for people with afib currently well managed on warfarin, there's limited information on how xarelto compare in reducing the risk of stroke. you know, i tried warfarin, but the blood testing and dietary restrictions... don't ge i didn't have to. we started on xarelto . nice pass. don't stop taking xarelto without talking to your doctor, as this may increase your risk of a blood clot or stroke. p and it may take longer for may increase your risk of bleeding if you take certain medicines. xarelto
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fatal bleeding. r get help right away for unexpected bleeding, unusual bruising, or tingling. if you have had spinal anarelto , watch for back pain or any nerve or muscle related signs or symptoms. do not take xarelto if you have an artificial abnormal bleeding. tell your doctor before all planned medical or dental procedures. before starting xarelto , tell your doctor about or bleeding problems. you know xarelto is the #1 prescribed blood thinner in its class. that's a big win. it is for me. there is no regular blood monitoring and no known dietary restrictions. treatment with xarelto ... pask your doctor about xarelto . that's me in the corner that's me in the losing my religion >> 25 years ago today, the
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the music scene and our current voting system. 1991 album "out of time," was one of the early mainstream successes of the alternative music scene, but it t helped bring about real change in the country. at the time, most cds were released in cardboard long kaging helped with sales. but was seen as environmental r.e.m. so when it came time for the release of their new album, thend label came up with a compromise. they decided to use the back of the big box as a petition. the cause? a law that had failed to pass for decade, the bill, which would allow people to register to vote when they got their licenses at the dmv. >> dear senator.tor voter bill. >> reporter: the result is history. the album flew off the shelves
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>> on my right are the cards f the back of the cd boxes and there is over 10,000 of those in one week. >> reporter: eventually, after two years of politically ill became law, increasing voter registration in the years that followed. and cementing out of time status most important political records of all time. trying >> r.e.m. did it again with their for a different cause. they put a coupe op on the bottom of the box. our senior producer brian applegate still had this which ic geek he had. >> if you watched the show, you would know that. >> that is really cool. >> it was. up next the wait is nearly rch madness time and the brackets are just about set. let's do it this year, you and me, the brackets. up next, meet the man in charge es controversial selection committee. your local news is next for some of but you rest, stick around.
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welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." i'm anthony mason. >> i'm vinita nair. this half hour, after a year in space, he now wants time to travel.stronaut scott kelly's retirement from nasa. years walking alone. meet the woman miles from siberia to australia. the images are as iconic as the actor who recreated them. we will show the collaboration wn photographer and his views john malkovich. a
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protesters exploded at the university of illinois, shortly after trumpvent because of security concerns. >> it was the latest confrontation at a trump rally in recent weeks. denial raeneleds dean reynolds, good morning. >> reporter: at times last night at the uic pavilion, looked as onstrators as supporters. the demonstrations were mostly peaceful but this is a friday on a college campus, so the elements for trouble were in place. the police said they made five arrests, but said theyid not recommend cancelling the event and they said that decision was made entirely the trump campaign. it is the latest in a series of
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voters. trump took to twitter this t the organized group of people, many of them thugs, who shut down our first amendment rights in chicago, have totally america. anthony? >> dean reynolds in chicago, thank you very much. a cbs news journalist who was covering the events in ht was detained by police. deb captured on video the rising tensions between protesters and trump supporters. later, outside the arena,started making arrests. deb says he was thrown to the ground and handcuffed without warning. [ screaming ] >> back off!
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do not --hoa whoa! whoa! whoa whoa. >> put your hands behind your back. >> hand behind your back! >> another being taken in custody. he is doing okay. illinois state police charged him with resisting arrest. he was camera rah returned to him. the violence in chicago is indicative of the high level of animosity of this presidential not lost on president obama. he was at a fund-raiser in texas on friday before the problems at trump's rally. he wondered why republicans did ner to the trump campaign's provocative tone. >> how can you be shocked? this is the guy, remember, was sure that i was born in kenya. who just wouldn't let it go. and alllican establishment, they weren't saying nothing.
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me, they were fine with it. they thought it was a hoot! his endorsement. and then now, suddenly, we are shocked! that there isin this establishment. >> mr. obama's comments came one day after he denied playing any role in what he as the, quote, republican crackup. tomorrow morning on "face the nation," john dickerson will haveich and bernie sanders. more rain is expected to drench the saturated south today following a string of deadly storms and days of torrentialll has triggered flooding and some rivers will crest the next few hours and fear some levees could spill over. the storms are blamed for at nd led to hundreds of rescues from high water, primarily in louisiana.
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as many as a thousand people es flooded by the swollen leaf river. for more on the rain that is expected to soak parts of the ts of the country, let's turn to meteorologist ed curran of our chicago station wbbm-tv. to louisiana and mississippi as we go through the day today and into tomorrow. flood threat continues with the runoff from 1 to 2 inches of ing through those areas. now to the pacific northwest, where the rain just will not shut off.nd in northern california for today, we have rains that could bring flooding. we have winter storm warnings that can bring 2 to 3 feet oe mountains and high wind watch on top of that. some gusts in some areas to 60 miles an hour. don't forget, tonight, change the clock.. you move the clocks ahead one hour. anthony? >> meteorologist ed curran, tronaut scott kelly is retiring.
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after almost a year at the international space station. he holds the american record fornt in space. 520 days over four missions. kelly's retirement from nasa takes effect aprilcebook kelly made clear he intends to stay involved in space exploration.ng on facebook. >> congratulations on an extraordinary career.ziel is looking for a new job! the cleveland browns released him after two poor seasons. thehy winner has had several problems on and off the field. he is under investigation for an alleged domestic violence incident in texas and he could faces. his future in the nfl is uncertain. this is a big weekend for men's college basketball. march madness is about to begin. last night, some of the top were battling to win a spot in the
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the completion of the remaining conference tournament this weekend will decide who gets invited to the big dance. >> no pressure. the men's basketball selection committee announce the bracket for 68 teams and 40 millionl out this bracket. joe is the chairman of the committee. we are pleased to have him here to tell us more.>> good morning. not only a pleasure, but a great honor to be with both of you. >> an honor to have you. you have an enormous tell me, how many games do you watch to make these selections? how much time do you spend making this deliberation? >> several hund all in its entirety. my committee members are all doing the very same thing, but with technology, we can archive and then take some of the commercials out and watch them a little faster. >> you mentioned technology. i would imagine a lot of people look at your job and the ten
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so many people are upset about their teams not seeded. how do you do it, aside from pening? we do use a lot of metrics and trying to support our decisions in a quantitate ive way. know the characters of the teams and what makes them strong and what are some of their weaknesses and player availability. and say, wow, how did that team win that game or lose that game? you realize their left player ed or something of that sort. we have to provide that context. so we are not just computers. otherwise, we would just put it in the computer and you put out >> right. >> then go forward. but it's a comprehensive evaluation. >> you got 32 teams getids and leaves 336 teams battling for 36 at-large spots. which seems like an impossible job sorting this out.here is outside
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we know it's a big task. and we are trying to balance that with the jobs that we have l of the current committee members are athletics directors at various institutions around the united states. >> so you have day jobs? >> but we only get a chance to >> right. >> the other 32 of the 68 in the field are eligible through >> there is a little yelling in that room when it happens between you guys. what happens in the next two days? we mentioned the decisions can't be made yet. for some tournament decision. >> that's true but we already have 33 of the 36 spots filled with teams. 14 automatic qualifiers that are in the field. we have 12 that will be determined today. i think six tomorrow. >> right. ll said and done, not only are we finishing field, but we have to see and then, tomorrow, we will get into brackets. >> okay. joe, sorry. we have to run.it's an enormous job. we are looking forward to seeing
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you can see joe on the up next, john malkovich has played many roles in his 40-year but nothing quite like this. 41 famous figures captured by one of our most talented photographers. this is "cbs this morning: saturday."at whitening without the mess? think outside the box. colgate optic white toothbrush plus whitening pen for 5 shades whiter teeth. brush, whiten, go! ing, no rinsing. colgate optic white toothbrush plus whitening pen. e was another way
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as the man of a thousand faces. well, now that title might be passed on to john are going to show you why. working with his long time collaborator the proclaimed photographer miller, malkovicho 41 famous figures and all in a new coffee table book and due out apr miller joins us with more. i love this project. you knew john malkovich because you shot him 18 years ago? >> our relationship start about 18 years ago. john was with the theater. i was doing all of the shots for the ensemble members. john walked in one day. john has a huge presence.ing to be a great day. we had a great session together. that session just led to a friendship of 18 years. through that, he became -- he first conversation, though. how do you arrive at this idea? these are iconic images. how did you guys first decide
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>> the whole idea came n illness about four years ago. i had stage iv 4 cancer.n bed very, very ill, probably high on morphine. just trying to get the pain to quit. know, the idea came to pay homage to the great photographers who meant so much in my life and my career. it inspired me to think of a different way. i had a wonderful career and i say thank you. i made a list of 40 plus images. most of them were already in my they are images that are iconic. you just don't forget them. >> how did you persuade john to do this? >> i got on an airplane to go to his home. something i want to drop anemia off to him. france. catching up and stuff like that.
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and showed it to john. and john was like, i love thisll that it was a challenge for john. and being a great, great theater reenact great images. >> how did you guys pull this all became research. research. we dissected every single shot. screens. we looked at every single littlei brought in the best hair and makeup stylists in the country, randy wilder. we took a look at every detail. we had to order theseetics, hair, makeup, whatever we needed we went out and ad it made especially for each character. it was a tough one but no room for failure, no roomd oklahoma rasy here. >> let's look at the pictures
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first, identical twins.ane arbis shot. >> true. >> what made you pick this one? >> one of the most powerful shots that your mind. hysterical. the one girl who was shy and be shot to the camera! >> give us unsentence. so many to go through. albert >> he nailed that on the first eye shot. got it! >> so good! >> marilyn monroe? >> bert and marilyn were drinking martinis at the aumont. bert got marilyn's top off and i directed john into that moment. he took the top off and red roses overnd this talks about the history pain
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much in their lives. it was the toughest shot to do children in the shot. very difficult to direct three children to stay still for as long as we need them to stay still. john was brilliant. >>ograph. the last is earnest hemingway. >> toward the end of his was being gafed photographed. photographed. he can far away eyes and i needed to cover that one. >> you came up with this wile you were stage iv cancer. you are now cancer-free? >> i am. >> so good to hear. >> the images are wonderful and made you rethink photography but but smile when you look at these. >> thank you very much. >> up next, we take a walk and what a walk. sarah walks from siberia to australia, 10,000 ook her a thousand days and nearly three years across some of the world's most remote and spectacular countrg:
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growing up in switzerland, sarah marquis had never heard of extreme walking but by 17 she was walking through continentsre is a new book authored by her. i met her and this story begins near russia's border mongolia. >> here we are. time to go now. >> reporter: when sarah took her first steps she knew she would be unprepared. it takes her six months of sically adapt and how long it takes to declutter her mind. >> you've got voice of your fame going through, your friend. and thenhis amazing moment where one morning, you
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hearing all of those voices and tun it do you appreciate more? >> you are in the moment. things are sharp and clear and things are really, really focused.e belonging with the planet. >> reporter: she says the initial idea to walk from siberia through the desert to china and then to laos andore taking a cargo boat for australia to walk across that continent came to her while she was walking home from the grocery store. around. behind me was this little shop. mongolia. you can feel the picture was taking you in. so then i came back home. didn't think much about it.idea, this picture actually grow in me. >> reporter: do you remember the first person you told the idea to?
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and i said to her, imagine! it's a line! i'm going to cross the world. or her trip across the world, sarah spent two years walking. she meticulously studied all of the terrain and researched whathe would need. she also modified her diet to gain weight. >> so you can plan as much as asou have to let it go. there is this really two different world, where you plan ou do the first step, have to let it go and be ready for the unknown. i'm in australia. and cup of tea. >> reporter: marquis documented the trip. you get a sense of out isolated she was and see how self-reliant night. >> reporter: you also get a with nature. >> i'm going from one world to an world to
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this bridge and come back here and say we areted so much. >> reporter: where do you think the imagine majority of people misplace their focus? >> we don't understand how the surviving start life is short. we don't know when it's going to end so we need to eat every minute! we need to go for it! we need to actually enjoy everyit. >> reporter: long before she studied her journey, marquis took this tree as her stopping point. here. when the land stop and where the water begin. this tree, i met this tree ten years ago and i took to the tree and i said to him, darling, i will be back. so i kept my >> reporter: do you remember the first time you saw it after the three years? >> oh, yeah, yeah. i knew it was that tree.f magical to actually walk three
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this is my connection with the land. >> reporter: about two years journey, marquis was on to her next australia. each trip allows her to see the world and explore what she's of. do you learn something new with each journey? >> yeah. definitely. it's really a humbling road. it's a long a painful process most of the time but the reward from that journey, from every journaly, so deep and so ming back here being alone for so long, i actually understand people better because i know myself now.h an interesting people and a lot of people could not do what she did and a lot of danger involved. she said at some point she had who wanted to attack her during this trip. >> an external and internal
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born and raised in dallas and ft. worth, yerned yes or noed yearned to be a chef. his farm-to-table cooking philosophy. >> after leaving business school he enrolled in the culinary america and across the country, two years after returning to texas in 2013, he opened his own restaurant clay pigeon in ft. worth and it t. we are delighted to welcome chef
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thank you so much for having me. >> this looks incredible. let's start ve some whole rack of lamb here which we have grilled and crested in herbs and on a bed of we have vegetables. roasted potatoes as well as carrots, grill asparagus and a beat salad with goat cheese and rest. >> what is for dessert? >> cashew cake with gnache topping and olive oil and sea alcohol? this is called the daily grind. and coffee and whiskey are two of my favorite things. james heads up our bar program there at our restaurant and came
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>> we mentioned you grew occupy a farm. is it true you were at the university of oklahoma and decided to become a chef and in a kitchen? >> i didn't grow up on a farm but my grandparents had a farm and a little garden and a lot of early exposure to omething i considered seriously as a career going into the culinary industry. halfway through my business i just wasn't fulfilled and wasn't satisfied. so scratch that itch that was kind of yearning in therant business and ended up at cia at hyde park and great ride ever since. >> you went off and worked all over the country in restaurants? >> i did. my wife and i didn't have enough money to vacation in these spots so let's go work in it. >> where were you?
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and, of course, at school here in new york. >> how did you decide -- i know why you picked -- i'metown girl. >> but, i mean, it seems like stops. to go? >> ft. worth has always been home to me. it's one of those things no matter how far away you go from experience, home is always home. when we started to grow our family with the two kid we had now, we knew it was time to go home and near our family.ng i wanted to go to learn as much as i could around the country and bring that knowledge back home to ft. worth and open up my own restaurant. >> you call clay pigeon from means what? >> we make everything that we can right there in-house on premise. we are making our own bread, pasta, ice cream andown bacon and make some of our own cheeses. >> you make some of your own drinks. i read you do the bitters? >> right. we do that and the whole bit.
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as much as we can on-site which is kind of a dying breed in the whole. >> what do you see as the evolution? seems like a lot of restaurants are moving from that to scratch. it can't be easy for you as the chef but where do you see thingsnow? >> yeah. it's a little bit more labor intensive but it produces such a better quality of product and i think it's something that we areately kind of craving. and then once we have it, there is no going back. >> i can't wait to eat at the restaurant in ft. worth. you! >> as we get your signature on this dish, if you could have a meal with any person past or present who would that be? my wife. we don't get to sit down often enough the two of us to have a meal. also danny myer who i thinkhenomenal job for hospitality as a whole in our industry on a large scale. so it would be an honor to sit with him as well.
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>> i'm not classically trained. self-taught so i consider myself more of an expressionist. >> reporter: the daughter of singer chris whitley. trixie was drawn at a child and at age 10 announced she wanted to play upright bass. >> they completely just kind of laughed me out of school!e -- i mean, there is no way that there is an instrument that is your size! >> reporter: size. so trixie on the drums and raised in new york and belgium where her mother is from. >> reporter: whitley spent her early teens performing with anound europe but at 17 moved back to new york. what brought you back to the city? >> that was the age i knew that i wanted to start craftingn path and my musical
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>> reporter: her battling cancer. >> i knew at that time that my father was ill. so i knew that if i wasn't going to move back right then, that i g to have a chance to see him any more. so that honestly was the urgency behind the move. >> reporter: chris whitleyin 2005. he was 45 years old. texas rixie who sang on hisalbum released her's in 2008 and caught the attention of a producer. >> i got this call. trixie? this is daniel landwaa. i started orter: daniel wanted her to play with him and a drummer
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>> there is a little youtube video actually that youtube film is the very first moment of g music together. >> reporter: by that time, whitley had also taught herself you didn't pick up the guitar until you were 20. >> yeah. >> and i had a lot of resistancer for a long time because it was the instrument that my father played and i didn't want to follow in his foot steps. living in the >> the thing, too, there was than undeniable like dna thing that i couldn't escape. so i noticed i would pick up theould be like, i sound like my dad partially, whether i want to or not! i'm not trying to at all!ething that is inescapable that you still want to escape it? >> yeah.
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not any more.ause part of me was still grieving and i didn't want to be reminded by that. it's me through music, it's very confrontational. it's this constant. >> reporter: it's always >> yeah. it's you know, it's the oxygen that i breathe. >> now here she is, trixie whitley performing a single from her new album."soft spoken words." when so focused like a machine when you've soft spoken words are like machine in my ears n you're soft spoken
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brooke: hey everybody, the soul's hidden heroes and the cameras are rolling.different kind of hidden camera experience. we're on the lookout for everyday people who show courage and kindness to total strangers.the right thing. what they don't know is that we're about to share their stories with the world.ve got the best of the best. these fans are in for a big time surprise when their tour guides turn out to be none other than... animal rights advocate beth stern
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