tv News4 Midday NBC February 24, 2016 11:00am-12:01pm EST
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dense fog and the threat of severe weather. i've got the hour by hour timing coming up. big issues this morning for commuters on the roads and rails. i'm barbara harrison with this fire that brought trains to a stop. i've got new information from the news4 i-team. we explain why the move for inmates. right now on storm team 4 radar, we have an area of rain and some embedded thunderstorms and snow. it's quite a complex system that
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and east and will continue to get a little bit closer to us. right now just getting some showers coming through, virginia into maryland. these pockets where you see the yellow and darker green. coming down a little harder in damascus, maryland and then farther south getting showers and we have temperatures that are hovering just in the 40s for much of the region. by late this afternoon, 1:00, this zone, potential showers and some thunder. but it's later in the afternoon. this may be settling down. but by 4:00 to 6:00 p.m., they will likely get thunderstorms coming through with heavy downpours, perhaps even some damaging winds. a look at the severe weather risk and the hour by hour timing coming right up. more than 120 inmates had to be moved in recent days at d.c. central detention facilities southeast. the news4
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this morning. heavy rain caused the roof to leak. water got into cells and the control room. the inmates were moved into a separate part of the facility. an i-team report in november revealed the city asked for $800,000 in emergency funding to make repairs. the first phase of the project was completed in september, but a complete roof replacement won't start until april. now, the rain wasn't the reason for the messy commute if you took the rails this morning. a fire on the track at union station caused all kinds of delays. news4 erika gonzalez will tell us if it's cleared up now. good morning. >> reporter: hi, barbara. i just got off the phone with amtrak and they tell me this morning's fire happened in a small electrical box that was running to underground cables. and that fire has long been extinguished and there should be no more major delays. but you know if you live around these parts, any slight hiccup in the morning commute is just bad news, for lack of a beter
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phrase. trains were halted coming in and out of union station this morning for about an hour. after thatdq-eisp)c so the a co delays after that. they are investigating the cause of that fire. for a lot of folks, that meant abandoning their trains for metro with delays up to a half hour or more. >> there was a delay in seabrook, and we had to sit there, and then we went to carrollton and had to sit there for 25 minutes. then we pulled out slowly and finally got to union station. >> i had to ride the marc to get on the metro. >> there's always something going on. we've had derailments and people hit on the tracks. there's always something that could happen. it's nature commuting. >> reporter: just a few residual delays remain. things getting back to normal here. live at unon
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gonzalez. back to you. a tractor-trailer crash caused a big mess on the beltway this morning, and backed-up traffic wasn't the only problem. several cars were damaged. it happened around 4:30. a truck hit the jersey wall on the outer loop just before jersey avenue. it crushed part of the wall sending debris on the beltway. drivers had to swerve to avoid the mess. several cars hit rocks and had to pull over. we spoke to a man whose oil pan got busted. >> i had to dodge one, so when i realized what had happened, i pulled over to see what had happened and i just seen the car. >> they are still trying to figure out what caused the crash. a big win for donald trump in the nevada caucuses. trump took about 46%, senator marco rubio took second place with 24%, senator ted cruz comes clo b
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dr. ben carson beat out ohio governor john kasich for the fourth position with 5% of the vote. kasich took 4%. skp and you'll hear from candidates and more with problems at the polls. a shooting death of a falls church man. a maintenance man found him inside an apartment at skyline towers yesterday afternoon. a childhood friend said he didn't know why someone would want to hurt him. they said it was not a random crime. a 16-year-old who shot a man on a metro train may be tried as an adult. the 19-year-old, andre brody faces murder charges. the man he shot is now out of the
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here are some of the stories lighting up social media this morning. the drudge report has donald trump as the republican nominee. it came just minutes after the mogul was declared tuesday's winner of the caucuses. i guess people will still say time will tell. we're watching the first ever adapted clothing line made for people with disabilities. the collection is the same as hilfiger's exist
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collection, but the pieces have been modified so they're easy for kids with disabilities to wear. such a wonderful idea there. and take a look at this incredible video. a minivan crashed right into a home in west hartford. see there? went right into the porch, collapsed the house. just incredible. it happened yesterday morning. it seems the minivan jumped the curb and went barrelling into the house. there were people in the house but no one was hurt, thank goodness. the d
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where more than one tornado hit. three people died tuesday in north carolina. some schools are closing early. right now florida governor rick scott is checking out one small part of the destruction. >> and this is an enormous storm that has a wide variety of weather associated with it affecting the weather from southern canada all wait dothe n to florida and from the atlantic seaboard all the way to the northwest. from st. louis all the way to montreal. south of there it's mostly rain and we have some embedded storms in north carolina. this may be turning into a tornado watch in the next hour or two. this is on track to come up our way, maybe into our southern suburbs in about another six hours or so, so we're talking 4:00 or 5:00 this afternoon. right now just getting pockets of light to moderate rain in loudoun county, and the metro area getting downpours. a little farther south seeing those pockets of yellow. the fog we have
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lifting. an explanation this morning for those deadly takata airbag explosions that forever changed 150 families. they found multiple factors in the explosions. among them, moisture and high humidity. researchers found those factors caused some bags to inflate with too much force and hurl shrapnel at drivers and their passengers. airbag explosions are responsible for killing 10 people and hurting 139 people nationwide. after the break, reaction from the winners of last night's nevada caucuse
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we love nevada! thank you. >> i didn't become a conservative until about a year and a half ago when i decide to do run for president. >> i love the educated, i love the uneducated, i love the poorly educated. >> if you want lower wages, you have two candidates to choose from. >> make america great again! remember that! [ chanting of "trump" ] >> chants for donald trump after his third win in a row, this time in nevada. turnout has been high so far in this presidential race, and last night that turnout was a problem. almost immediately after
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of sites began trickling in. people on twitter called it chaos. the huffington post reports that some places ran out of ballots. others stopped checking i.d.s in an effort to get people through faster. entranceolling showed nearly 60% of voters last night consider themselves angry with the federal government, and that anger likely helped trump win his landslide victory. >> we won with young, we won with old, we won with highly educated, we won with poorly educated -- i love the poorly educated! >> trump has nearly 80 delegates now. keep in mind, candidates need more than 1200 to gain the republican nomination. marco rubio says he'll continue to do better as candidates drop out of the race. >> a number of republican voters in this country do not want donald trump to be the nominee. i think that's been pretty clear now. the problem is they're divided
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in south carolina it was five people, before that it was seven people. so until there is some consolidation here, you're not going to have a clear path to donald trump. when jeb bush's campaign ended, donald trump's numbers continue to climb, not senator rubio's. in the democratic nomination, days from the south carolina primary, bernie sanders went after critiquing hillary clinton that he's a single issue candidate. >> i'll tell you something, if i may. people are asking, how does it happen and why does her super pac receive millions and millions of dollars from wall street? >> clinton reassured voters that she plans to clamp down on wall street. she has a luncheon in south carolina in a couple hours. clinton leads the polls the,
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take a single state for granted. you can continue to see presidential campaigns in virginia ahead of next week's super tuesday vote. you can use our app to find out where candidates will be. former president bill clinton will be in alexandria this afternoon. bernie sanders was in norfolk yesterday and we should mention john kasich was in fairfax earlier this week. tom? right now getting some dense fog in parts of the reasonabgio once the rain moves in, the fog is going away. farther south, we're seeing it come down a little harder. the areas in darker green here and then west of there into faulk county for the shenandoah valley. we have this wedge of very chilly air playing a role this afternoon. in west virginia it's only in the upper 30s right now, metro area we're in the 40s, but look at cambridge, it's 61 degrees. that mild air trying to come
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all about the wedge -- it's going to be hanging in here this afternoon, which will threat our diminishing weather. we've got all this area in green under a flood watch including the metro area and west virginia until late tonight. we could get three inches of rain causing high water. watch out for that. in the day ahead, if you had problems with snow removal after the blizzard, you might get a chance to speak up about that. there will be a snow forum tonight at key elementary school in arlington. 54% of you were satisfied or neutral about arlington county's response. officials will also read other results from the survey. the forum starts at 7:00 at key elementary's cafeteria. a push to make it easier to buy a gun could cost prince william county a lot of money. the county board of supervisors says it's no longer charging a $35 fee for a concealed handgun permit. s
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$140,000 with that change, that according to insidenova.com. it still costs $15 for state and court fees. after the break, diagnosing mental illness. how brain scans are now being used. and remember, you can catch news4 midday anywhere. all you need is your smartphone or your tablet. open the nbc washington app, hit watch live tv
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another chance today to see something pretty unprecedented. spacex is launch ing a rocket, then it's going to try to land back on earth in one piece. the company did it successfully a couple months ago, however, a space launch is more complicated. in fact, it's expecting the experimental landing to fail. the first time doctors are linking certain mental disorders with brain
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because the link could help doctors more precisely diagnose problems and treat them. we're joined this morning by a doctor to tell us about this. what does that mean, brain circuits? what are we looking for? >> what doctors are looking at, they're primarily looking at brain scans for things like functional mris or cat scans, pet scans, along with eegs and they're trying to figure out, are there particular areas of the brain that are either overactive or underactive with certain mental conditions? the goal is if we can identify certain areas of the brain that are implicated, we might be able to recommend treatments to address those issues. >> so do they sit down and ask you a series of and have a checklist to decide how the person answers whether they are mentally ill? >> if you're experiencing difficulties, you come in and talk to a psychiatrist like me. i'll be asking about different things you might be experiencing. based on th
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one. what these people are trying to do and what sicientists are trying to get towards is having more subjective data. they're looking to be able to find, are there particular areas of the brain that are clearly implicated? i think this is important for a couple reasons. one, i think it will destigmatize mental illness even further because we can say, look, it's not that person's fault. they don't just need to pull themselves up by their bootstraps. you can see they have an area that's not working correctly. and maybe we can recommend a treatment to specifically address their problem. >> with brain waves, you can map the brain by using a test swab to test someone's genetic ability. >> what you're doing with those tests, you're taking a cheek swab and you're trying to find out if it gives you information of how they may
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certain treatments or whether they have neurotransmitter frequencies. this is not a game changer. we're not really there right now, and my main concern is i don't want people out there to think, oh, my gosh, i can't afford to get my family member, my loved one, these tests, and therefore, i'm not doing well by my family member. because these are expensive tests and they don't really make a big, big difference at this point. hopefully down the road we will have some tests and treatments that can, but right now we're not there. >> when it comes to mental illness we need to talk a little more about what can be done at this point. let's do that in a little bit. we'll be back with you. >> thanks, barbara. well, it's a weather alert day, and after the break we'll tell you when to expect the
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(elephant sound) there's a big difference between making noise, (tapping sound) and making sense. (elephant sound) (donkey sound) when it comes to social security, we need more than lip service. our next president needs a real plan to keep social security strong. (elephant noise) hey candidates. enough talk. give us a plan. the dense fog we h
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next 24 hours. radar showing light showers over maryland, all advancing to the north, and there's a lot more coming in. here's the latest. heavy to moderate downpours at 1:00, over shenandoah valley. that moves to the metro area by 2:00 p.m., maybe breaks up a little bit. but the areas you see in the red and orange, that's where there could be really heavy downpours with thunder and lightning. that's going to be around 3:00 for the southern suburbs to around 4:00 to 6:00 to 7:00 p.m. right in the metro area, then the eastern suburbs about 5:00. it crosses the bay at 6:00 p.m., pulls away. things settle down overnight tonight. maybe a few lingering showers as we get into the evening hours. so have the umbrella handy. when you hear thunder and lightning, get inside. turn to nbc4, turn on the nbc washington app and find out what's going on where you are. committees
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house and senate will see if the cdc is doing everything possible to stop the spread of the zika virus. the director of the cdc will testimony at both hearings about the agency's response in the u.s. and abroad. >> as part of its effort to fight zika, they have added trinidad and the marshall islands to the travel list. we also learned the cdc investigated 14 cases in the u.s. where the virus may have been spread through sexual contact. among those 14 cases are two pregnant women whose cases have been confirmed. until then, there had only been two confirmed cases of zika in the u.s. a
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. we're back with some scary video at a convenience store in kentucky. it shows sparks flying from a man's pants pocket, setting his pants on fire. he had an e-cigarette in that pocket. government statistics show there have been more than two dozen e-cigarette explosion orz fires in recent years. they claim batteries were inserted the wrong way in many of those cases. new today, president obama is acting like there is nothing wrong with him suggesting someone to
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scalia. he wants someone with top qualifications and understands how the job, quote, really works. some members of the senate said they won't even meet with the nominee, let alone vote for one. here is what speaker of the house paul ryan said less than an hour ago. >> everything, everything is at stake in this election. with the passing of justice scalia, an icon, a lion in the supreme court. with the passing of justice scalia, everything is on the line. congress, the supreme court, the presidency. >> we are learning new information about what could have caused justice antonin scalia's sudden death. the doctor for the supreme court says the 79-year-old suffered from coronary artery disease, obesity and sleep apnea. a breathing apparatus was discovered next to the bed but it wasn't hooked up or turned on. there will be no autopsy in this case. the attorney from the county where scalia died said the justice's long list of health
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unnecessary. scalia was found early this month in his bed in a ranch in texas. i'm melissa at the looifr desk. right now they're campaigning ahead of saturday's primary and just days ahead of the march super tuesday primary. sanders just wrapped up an event in a hotel in columbia. he spent much of the time focusing on poverty and african-american female voters. >> today in america, women, often single moms trying to raise their kids, are making 79 cents on the dollar compared to men. if you are an african-american woman, that discrepancy is much, much greater. >> now, sanders talked about raising the minimum wage to $15 an hour and making public college tuition free, something he said he could do by implementing a tax on wall street. hillary clinton speaking this afternoon in west columbia at a nf
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college for an event. her husband, former president bill clinton, will be in alexandria this afternoon for a rally. you can find more coverage on that rally in alexandria on the nbc washington app. right now we're getting some light to moderate rain across virginia and maryland. it's all advancing off to the north coming into the metro area. we had some really dense fog downtown. the fog quickly dissipated. and it's still rather foggy, though, much of the region. as the rain pushes on in, we're getting decreased visibility. you could barely see the tower there at national airport. right now it's starting to move in. temperatures at 2:00 will likely make it into the 50s, very briefly maybe at 60 degrees, then thunderstorms roll in between 4:00 to around 7:00 p.m., temperatures holding in the 50s. risk is mainly for some high winds, some hail and maybe eve
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downpours. there is low risk of any tornadoes. again, that's 4:00 to 7:00 p.m. >> john, thank you. safety concerns this morning after a gas line blew up a home in woodbridge county. they are expecting to replace some 800 service lines in homes in the woodbridge area. the entire process could take a year and a half. they investigated pipes in the area after similar lines were thought to have caused a home explosion earlier this month. no one, though, was hurt. we're learning what apple plans to do to preserve your phone's privacy. it's fighting an order to help the fbi break into a san bernardino shooter's phone, you remember the story. this week apple requests that congress makes a decision in this case. that's according to the associated press. apple spent nearly $5 million lobbying congress last year. after the break, changes in what female
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for the first time in 40 years, female midshipmen will wear trousers in graduation this year. the naval academy class graduates in may. according to the baltimore sun, changes in the dress code come after a major push to emphasize the equal role of women in the service. this morning we continue our look at washington's soon to open national museum of african-american history and culture. yesterday we showed you how great american stories are going to be told there with simple collected artifacts t
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on display. one piece will tell the story of one of america's greatest athletes. he is a boxer known for having a lot to say. in 1964, 22-year-old boxer cashius clay had left his home in kentucky to train at the big street arena in miami to work with sonny liston. when the museum of african-american history and culture opens, one of the exhibitions will be the story of cashius clay, mohammad ali and his celebrated career. >> he has blockrought several ps of material when he trained. >> with the room that has thousands of pieces to exhibit, we see several pieces from the prize fighter. >> this is a boxing glove from
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cashius clay. it is signed, and he has always been a confident person. >> i'm young, i'm hand sosome, fast, and i can't possibly be beat. >> cashius clay was hand some, and in those days he was known as the louisville lip for what some saw as his cocky arrogance. >> it says cashius clay, 1964, next heavyweight champion of the world. >> he was very confident. >> confident. he was claiming what was to come. >> what he wrote on that glove proved to be prophetic. months later, cashius clay defeated sonny liston to become heavyweight champion of the world. he then punched his way through joe frazier and joe foreman, and a personality full of
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poetic wit. like his famous float like a butterfly, sting like a bee. his controversial conversion to islam, changing his name to mohammad, and refusal to fight in vietnam on religious grounds shut down his career for a few years, temporarily taking away his titles. he was down but not out. and in standing firm for his principle on racial justice and religious freedom, he won the respect of many. he made a comeback in the ring, regaining his lost titles, and he remains today the only man who has three times been crowned heavyweight champion of the world by the world boxing association. mohammad ali proudly earned his place in history books as one of america's greatest athletes, earning the praise of presidents and people around the world. while books tell his story, the museum hopes to do more. >> people get excited when
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indirectly associated with him as a person and the context and experience that he had. >> a small glove that tells a very big story. and today on news4 at 6:00, i'm going to show you an artifact that was resurrected to help tell one of the many stories of music and musicians in america. we'll show you how the soul train sign was brought back to life by a local artist. that story will be part of the larger exhibition showcasing music in black american culture. >> fascinating items. >> amazing. incidentally, today is the 52nd anniversary of the clay-liston fight that made him heavyweight champion. >> i have to tell you, i met him at age 10. he kissed this cheek and i didn't wash it for a week. >> he was pretty. very, very handsome. still a great guy. after the break, the key to l
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fog in the metro area and along the i-95 corridor. points west is where we have scattered to slightly moderate showers. fog here and some heavier downpours just to the west. it's going to be tracking closer to us beginning of the afternoon. temperatures struggling to make it into the 50s where we're right now at 40. stronger storms 4:00 to 7:00 p.m. with wind damage, maybe even some flooding and some hail. again, that's 4:00 to 7:00 p.m. then blustery winds tomorrow. chilly weather moves in friday and saturday. in fact, saturday morning may be in the upper 20s, saturday afternoon in the 40s. sunday gets mild again, 50 to near 60. dr. joshua wiener is back to talk a
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of diagnosing people with mental illness and specifically about genetic testing. >> so there is a cheek swab now that you can do for people where you're sending their dna off to a lab, and what the lab is analyzing is a few things. they're trying to figure out, are there particular medications that this particular person, based on their dna, may be more or less likely to respond to. it also can test things like whether they lack a certain enzyme critical for production of some neurotransmitters or brain chemicals. it can also show whether you need higher doses of medicine, or maybe you're a slow metabolizer, so maybe you need less medicine so it's more helpful. i don't want anyone to think they can just go to a doctor, get a cheek swab, and based on that cheek swab, they're going to be able to find out exactly what treatment they need. we are n
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some patients. >> aren't we at a point now where we have a baseline for what is normal with brain activity and with some of the metabolism things you were talking about. do we know what's normal? >> we do have an idea of what's normal, so yes. but you got to keep in mind, we are still in the infancy stage with a lot of this stuff. there's more we don't know about the brain, even normal brain functioni functioning, than we know about abnormal brain functioning. there is so much out there that's left unexplored. that's why there is this big push to explore the brain now and really make that the new effort for this century, is to really understand what's going on so we can develop more appropriate and effective treatments for mental health issues as well as alzheimer's, et cetera. >> and the treatment would be medication or some other things you're thinking about? >> in the ideal world, maybe we don't need medication. maybe in 20 or 30 years, you can go in and use an electrode and
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directly stimulate a particular area of the brain. who knows, maybe there's things we can't even dream up right now that will be able to alter issues in the brain and more cure mental illness rather than just treat the symptoms of it, which is the way it is currently. >> a lot of people are calling in for something new, a new way to treat mental illness. >> there hasn't been anything new in many years, so we need something to change the game. now, you may want to get out of your seat if you plan to learn something new. researchers in the netherlands have second and third graders get out of their seats and exercise while they learn math and language. after doing this every couple of days for two years, the kids did better on their testing. their spelling and math scores were higher than other students' scores. the scores equal about what they would have gotten in four extra months of learning. after the break, a
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they are working to learn that 16-year-old's name who helped them identify that suspect. we'll have more at 4:00, 5:00 and 6:00. right now communities in northeast florida are stunned and dealing with damage left behind from violent tornadoes last night. we're in southwest louisiana where dozens of mobile homes took a direct hit. >> reporter: behind me is what's left of sugar hill mobile home park, 150 homes now just piles of rubble, some thrown blocks from where they were originally. two people died here, more than 30 were hospitalized, seven of those critical. and they have been searching for three people missing who may be trapped in the rubble. a desperate search for survivors, hope nearly lost. some 150 mobile homes ripped to shreds, trucks twisted like toys and neighborhoods wiped o
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them pulled from the rubble barely alive. >> we're asking for calm for this area, we're asking for prayers. we need that, this community needs that. >> reporter: some 19 million people were at risk during round 1 of the massive winter storm. all the way to pensacola, florida where this neighborhood took a direct hit. >> we just held onto each other and said, maybe we'll make it, maybe we won't. >> reporter: there were overturned semi trucks, a gutted gold's gym and thomas howard, who watched the tornado blow right pasf him. >> there was a big whoo. >> back in louisiana, nobody is giving up yet. and the search for those three people still happening, and the cleanup will begin when the storm moves east and northeast, producing more tornadoes and even blizzard conditions. back to you. right nowth
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carolina, parts of south carolina, the area in yellow, and there are some strong storms there. there is all snow from quebec, canada through chicago. blizzard warning out now for chicago. could get up to a foot of snow there. quite a storm. here we're just going to be dealing with rain. we'll get some light to moderate rain coming through with the fog, maybe somewhat heavier downpours just west of fredricksburg. that will stay west of us. as we get to the latter part of the afternoon, though, we have this big area in yellow that is under a severe weather risk. it includes everywhere east of the blue ridge, across the bay on the east shore. we could have stores producing damaging winds, maybe some hail as well as some heavy downpours that may cause some flooding. so stay with us. the impact for the afternoon commute will likely be high. because of that, heavy rain risk and damaging winds. a 17-year-old who said
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live under isis control is now speaking out. kurdish police rescued the teen from iraq. she said she had no idea what isis was before she left home. >> i didn't have anything, and we didn't have any money, either. and it was a really hard life. >> the teenager is still in iraq right now in the kurdistan region why she will be handed over to authorities. president obama smeegt with king abdullah of jordan. they are struggling to address the thousands and thousands of refugees crossing the border. the first lady is host ing work shop on the musical legacy of ray charles. tonight more music at the white house. demi lovato and the band perry will perform. we'
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kevin spacey and what kathleen matthews: imagine paying 20% more for a cup of coffee just because you're a woman. so why does congress think it's ok that women get paid 20% less than a man for doing the same job? i'll fight for pay equity, to protect planned parenthood, choice for women, and expand paid and family leave. now some politicians will belittle this as a women's agenda. more proof that we just need more women in congress.
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there is a new portrait of a president hanging in the portrait gallery, but it's not a real portrait. >> frank underwood, the character kevin spacey plays in the tv show "the house of cards." spacey talked about the unveiling. >> it was a really remarkable thing. it's a real portrait. this young artist named jonathan yo who had done a portrait of me when i was richard iii really did good work. >> you should know the portrait is hanging near the gallery's entrance not with the rest of the presidents, the real presidents. >> probably a good thing. well, it's just ugly outside right now. >> take a look. we're still getting a lot of fog in a lot of places and some light rain falling. afteth
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the hot dog wars have begun. burger king rolling out its new line of hot dogs on tuesday. but 7 h-eleven not letting it happen. they put out a tweet, the burger king hot dog wars. there can only be one weiner. going to get some rough weather this afternoon. how much, tom? >> right now we're just getting some rain and fog. the eastern half of the country with rain and snow. for us we're getting light and moderate rain come through with the fog, but we have a possibility of severe storms between 4:00 and 7:00 p.m. that's if we can get the chilly air that's in place now to erode. all models are showing that it will
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sort of overdo it. so if the chilly air does remain, our chilly air will diminish. but it looks like it will erode and get warmer, so we have a low risk of tornadoes but a higher risk of high winds and wind damage, hail and flash flooding due to some really heavy downpours. some isolated storms could produce as much as two to three inches of rain in a short amount of time, generally between around 4:00 to 7:00 p.m. temperatures in the 50s, then tomorrow we'll have a blustery wind with showers and strong gusts of wind tomorrow. we could have gusting to around 40 miles an hour, temperatures in the low 50s. chilly on saturday and sunday. but then higher temperatures return on monday and tuesday. thanks, tom. that's news4 midday. >> we'll be back on the air this afternoon at 4:00.
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you can't deal with something, by ignoring it. but that's how some presidential candidates seem to be dealing with social security. americans work hard, and pay into it. so our next president needs a real plan to keep it strong. (elephant noise) (donkey noise) hey candidates, answer the call already.
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today on the meredith vieira show, we are talking the shocking reason one teacher was removed from her classroom afte 30 years on the job. would use be suspicious of your husband start suddenly started getting in shape. plus lance loves a good prank. and yaminika takes it to anothe level. and then from the powerful new film race, carice van houten. it starts right now on meredith.
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