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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  February 14, 2014 7:00am-9:01am EST

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match that reignites a cold war rivalry. >> but we begin this morning with today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >>e just keep getting snow. the snow doesn't stop. >> i'm so sick of this. >> the northeast digs out after an epic wrinte asblt. >> over 500,000 homes and businesses remain without power. >> more than a thousand flights grounded today. >> new york city's mayor chose to keep schools open, a decision that left parents, sttsuden,nd a even teachers outraged. >> the school's chancellor really set some people off. >> it's a beautiful day out there t righnow. >> shocking death of a lawyer and his wife when they were killed by a bomb. >> the son-in-law richard parker, police say heer pllsonay delivered the package. >> more than 100,000 people had to evacuate because of major volcanic eruption.
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>> usa, 7, slovakia, 1. >> evgeyey vgenplyushchenko lefe ice for the final time. >> i'm not thrilled, but the message, i tried my best. >> general motors has recalled vehicles due to faulty ignition crashes. >> six people killed. >> thousands of people. all that -- >> the diver was snapping photos when the okay potus decided it wanted the camera. that started a tug-of-war. >> "sports illustrated" marking the 50th anniversary with three models on the swimsuit. not a lot of swimsuit there. >> talk about ani uque gift. they were surprised with a flash mob in boston's public place. >> happy valentine's day, boston. >> a mcdonald's in tampa is
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transforming for valentine's day into a sitdown restaurant. it's fully booked. >> that's true. they're getting a lot of tables for one. >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" presented by toyota. let's go places. captioning funded by cbs welcome to "cbs this morning." charlie rose is off so anthony mason is here. happy valentine's day. >> happy valentine's day. >> where's your red tie? >> i'm partially colorblind, so that's my excuse. >> we're going to get straight to the weather. heavy snow fell in new york overnight. the city got around a foot of snow in the last 30 hours. >> the storm is now blamed for at least 21 deaths. about half a million homes and businesses have no electricity this morning. terrell brown is with us.
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good morning. >> reporter: good morning to you both. we had the heavy snow falling across the area yesterday followed by sleet and rain and more snow on top of that. that's created this heavy wet snow that's being blamed for at least three roof collapses across the area. right behind me, this is interstate 95. commuters back on the roadway but being warned of winter driving conditions and the speed limit has been reduced to 35 miles an hour. nearly 15 inches of snow accumulated. snowfall this year has already doubled from what it was last year. 40-mile-per-hour wind gusts led to a nasty commute whether walking or driving. on new york's long island, visibility was so poor a woman collided with a train after unknowingly driving her car on the tracks. it wasn't a flight delay that
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stranded these passengers at the parent. so many tsa agents were unable to get to work. air transfers took hours at secuty checkpoints. ice mixed with snow, sleet, and rain created headaches across new york city and parents walked through blustering snowfall. mayor de blasio was left defe defending his position to keep schools open thursday. >> unlike other cities in the country, we don't shut down in the face of adversity. they have to go to work. they need a safe option for their kids. >> but new york city's chancellor painted a different scene. >> it is absolutely a beautiful scene out there right now. >> still the school district reins below 45% and those who did get their kids to school admitted it was a challenge. >> a lot more dangerous to be out in thi kind of weather. >> much of the state is expected to get more snow this weekend. >> it's not stopping and it's not like melting either, so it's just snow on top of snow and it
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turns into ice. >> bayville, long island, is already covered in more than 14 inches. >> i want summer to come. i want to be on my beach on a paddle board. >> reporter: with a foot of snow on the ground, plows will be back out again today. they've been out for the last 24 hours or so, and more snow, anthony and norah in the forecast, about 1 to 3 inches could fall in the overnight hours tonight. >> oh, my goodness. terrell, thank you. and this morning washington, d.c., is dealing with its biggest snowstorm in 4 years. 9 inches of snow fell on the capital. baltimore got more than a foot of snow and parts of the south are slowly recovering from a devastating ice storm. wyatt andrews is with us. good morning. >> not before dropping another layer of snow and ice.
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so most schools remain closed and drivers for one more day are being asked to avoid the roads. north carolina began inching back to normal on thursday as most drivers forced to abandon their cars returned to push them out. james greg came to help his roommate who was stranded at the height of the storm. >> he was driving up the hill and he veered off to the left, and that's all that happened. people gave him a ride home. >> across the south the storm encased power lines with more than an inch of ice, capable of bringing down trees. this daunting cleanup in part led georgia's governor nathan deal to extend a state of emergency through sunday. >> we're hopeful that the federal authorities will follow suit. that would give him some help with what you're going to need a great deal of here in this area, and that's debris remoovlg. >> crews are working around the clock to clear the streets and restore electricity to hundreds
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of thousands of people, but officials do not know when power will be fully restored. in south carolina which was hit by a heavy blast of ice, eugene clungs ton spoke to us from his candlelit home. >> we're roughing it out and battery powered, anything battery powered right now. >> reporter: officials are warning drivers that this morning they may encounter black eyes on the roads and highways, but this afternoon as temperatures dramatically rise, norah and anthony, this will be other. >> wyatt andrews, we hope so. thanks, wyatt. bwi airport is facing thousands of delay this morning. 75,000 since december 1st. >> and there have been 14,000 flight cancellations this week alone. that includes 1,100 just this morning but there are signs of improvement on the way and for
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that meteorologist megan glaros from our station wbbm joins us in studio. good morning. >> good morning to you. happy valentine's day to you. mother nature left us a little bit of a gift over the course of the last few weeks. as of yesterday, 49 of the 50 states were covered in snow. the only holdout, the sunshine state of florida, and i think we may add to those states here potentially with more snowfall impacting these areas. take a look at the radar. take a look at where the storm system is now. it's now beginning to still snow in boston but push out to the north and east. ice was a huge factor to the south and many major cities picked up snowfall accumulations. what we see is this area of moisture is going to work toward the east coast. snow dropped into the valley and
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new york city and part of atlanta as well. as the system works up the coastline there's a potential to deepen once again and impact new england with more snow. 6 plus inches possible by the end of the weekend there. so here we go again, norah and anthony. >> megan glaros. thanks, megan. all this nation's weather may be having a chilling effect on the economy. retail sales dropped 0.4%. the colder air means higher home heating bills and less spending on other things like car sales. several restaurant chains like mcdonald's blame the weather for cutting into sales. >> this morning afghan's president karzai remains defeent. he said his decision to free 65 taliban fighters is, quote, of no concern to the u.s. but it's adding strain between washington and kabul. major garrett is at the white house where they say they're
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very disappointed. good morning. >> good morning. repeated u.s. protests against this prisoner release not only fell on deaf ears but may have accelerated and intense filed karzai's defiance. united states believes these prisoners are indeed dangerous, have committed acts of terrorism and they fear they have returned to the battle field. if they haven't, they will. the afghan government ignore much of what the ufs provided and claims that they violate afghan's sovereignty. the u station claims there's more than enough to do it. now, karzai leaves office in april. the one remaining question is whether he will sign an agreement already negotiated with the united states to keep a residual force of u.s. troops in afghan began after 2014. the u.s. says it must be signed soon or the u.s. forces will
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pull out entirely. the question remains whether they'll sign it or they'll wait for if the new afghan government post april to make a decision about the u.s. force. the president is heading to california to address the extreme drought out there. what is he hoping to accomplish on that trip? >> reporter: a couple of things. one, bring federal disaster assistance, just under $200 million. he'll be in fresno. it's worth pointing out, california, 91.6% of that state, my home state, is experiencing severe drought conditions. the president will talk about federal efforts to minimize water use by the federal government and do things to help those most immediately affected by the disaster. hi will immediately thereafter meet with the king of superijor king abdullah, to talk about the syrian crisis. >> thank you. we have results.
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if you don't want to see, turn away now. norway is first in the medal count followed by netherlands, united states, and russia. alphonso van marsh is in sochi where the americans are still celebrating a medal sweep. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. they're having an amazing run in sochi, but for one champion, the experience is bittersweet. >> he learned a triple out here. will he go for it? yes. >> reporter: after the u.s. made a clean sweep in the men's slopestyle skiing thursday, gold medalist josh christensen paid tribute to his father who passed away last year. >> i brought a picture of my dad over here and brought it with me to opening ceremonies which is pretty cool and put it in my pants pocket and kept it with me all day. >> reporter: there were tears in eyes. the first skater to medal in
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four olympic games never started his routine. plyushchenko hurt his back and knee during warmup, told the judges he was pulling out of competition and announced his retirement. team usa didn't fair much better. jeremy abbott fell flat on his face after a quadruple jump. he laid on the ice for ten seconds before competing his performance. >> she became the first chinese woman ever to take the top spot. the united states came away empty-handed. but on the other ice, the hockey rink, russia and the u.s. showed their dominance. >> they score clam. >> reporter: the americans put a round of hurting on them. while the home team toppled slovenia, 5-2, setting up a usa versus russia grudge match on
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saturday. 34 years after the two countries clashed in the cold war era clash that became known as the miracle on ice. now, norah and anthony, don't let the fleece fool you. temperatures are here in the 60s again. at this rate, look for hash tag #toastysochi. >> i love it. gm is recalling cars because of a faulty ignition switch. they say the problem is linked to deadly accidents. it involves chevy cobalt models from 2005 to 2007 along with a pontiac g5, a heavy key ring or bump can turn off the ignition, killing it. if that happens front air bags might not work. 22 crashes under scrutiny. five happened off road. six people dialed.
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gm will replace faulty switches but ujed you to remove needless items from your key ring. this morning the police believe they have the man responsibility for killing a coup couple. a bomb exploded outside their home in lebanon onmond. as anna werner reports the strang suspect is no stranger to the law. >> this was an isolated incident with no terrorist connections. yesterday police arrested richard parker, the son-in-law who killed his in-laws. they're searching for evidence as well as a motive. on monday investigators say 74-year-old jon setzer picked up a package and was almost back to his house when it exploded, killing him instantly and blowing out the windows in a nearby home. his wife marion also in her 70s
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was critically injured. she died at a nearby hospital yesterday. >> although we do have the suspect obviously in custody, this remains an ongoing investigation. >> reporter: in a press conference yesterday they say the package was hand delivered. >> people should know it didn't arrive by mail or any other shipping service. >> reporter: the suspect, 49-year-old richard parker lived behind the setzers in a rural area 30 miles east of nashville. police would not say if he was still married to the couple's daughter or how he was linked to the bombing. but he has a criminal record and was convicted of arson in 1993. william gavin says law enforcement will focus on the device. >> everybody thinks you can go on the website and figure out how to make a bomb. it's not easy. >> reporter: they will also try to determine why he decided to use a bomb in the first place.
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gavin says it may come down to psychology. >> when you send a letter bomb you kind of remove yourself from the reality of the whole thing. you send it to them, they open it up, and somehow you say to yourself, well, they're responsible for their own death. >> suspect richard parker is being held this morningn a $1 million bond. >> thank you. and for a third time this week hollywood is mourning the loss of an entertainment giant. veteran actor richa eor john wa. he started in "the wall on tton" during his long career, waite appeared in several movies and tv shows including "csi" right
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here on cbs. ralph waite was 85 years old. "the wall street journal" says comcast's $45 billion deal to buy time warner cable will be a test of its ceo's clout. brian roberts of comcast is around ally of president obama. regulators plan to look at the merger closely. the lost cars include the 1 millionth corvette. chevrolet says it will help them repair them. politico says federal judges strike down virginia same-sex marriage ban. and the "detroit free press" says it's a good things the great lakes are nearly completely covered over. ice covered 90% of the lakes. the record set back in
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the fighter jet changes the face of the military. the pentagon needs thousands of them. >> ahead, "60 minutes" how the price nearly doubles. >> the news is back on "cbs this morning." stay tuned for your local news. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. has every amenity. booooriiiing!!!! ah, ah, ah. hit it, guys! ♪ ♪ it's got a bin for your chickens ♪ ♪ a computer from the future ♪ ♪ and some giant freaky room for eight ♪ ooh, yeah! ♪ but it ain't got no room for boring ♪ i'm spacing out on all this space, too! ♪ no, we ain't got no room for boring ♪ whee! ♪ for boring, we ain't got no room ♪ [ male announcer ] the all-new highlander.
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in england this morning prince william and prince harry join the british military to help sand bag one town facing severe flooding. they formed part of a human chain to defend the airy from rising hours. the river thames spilled its baks east of london. >> it's good to see them helping out. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up this half hour, the nation's stores want your business, but some of them are tired of seeing the same people returning things over and over again. is that you? well, jill schlesinger is in our toyota green room. she's going to show us how online retailers are fighting
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back. >> uh-oh. hello, my name is gayle. plus, mark phillips is in sochi. we'll show you how everyone is putting pressure on the home team including president putin. that's ahead. the goal to replace nearly every fighter in the u.s. military with the f-35. but cost overruns nearly doubled the price tag to almost $400 billion. national security correspondent david martin on assignment from sunday's "60 minutes" looks at the most expensive weapons program in history. he's in washington with a preview. david, good morning. >> good morning. the pentagon is counting on the f-35 to give american pilots control of the skies and the future conflict against the likes of china and russia, but it is seven years behind schedule and $163 billion
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overbudget or as the man in charge of the f-35 told us, basically the program ran itself off the rails. lieutenant general chris bogden is the man in charge of the f-35 and every morning has to deal with problems asap. this morning it's a valve that's been installed backward and has to be replaced. >> how long does it take? >> it's about a seven-day operation. >>kay. you know what i'm going to say next. >> yes, sir. >> what am i going to say? >> we're not going to pay for it. >> that's correct. >> we're not going to pay for mistake after mistake after mistake. >> reporter: when he took over a year ago it was overbudget. it bordered on dysfunctional. >> how would you characterize with the pentagon and lockheed
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martin. >> i'm on record for being on the job for only a month saying it was the worst relationship i have seen in my acquisition career. >> reporter: these planes coming off the lougheed assembly line cost $115 million apiece, a price tag bogden has to drastically reduce if the pentagon ever wants to buy the 2,400 planes it wants. >> i know where the plane is on any given day. you know why that's important? because lockheed martin doesn't get paid their profit unless each and every airplane meets each station on time with the right quality. >> reporter: so if this plane didn't get from that station to this station that on time with the right quality, they're going to lose some of their faith. you've about got to perform to make their cost. >> they must love you at lockheed martin. >> i try to be fair, david. if they want what i call winner's profit, they have to act like and perform like
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winners, and that's fair. >> reporter: although the f-35 won't begin to enter service until next year at the earliest, pilots are already conducting test flights and missions at bases in california, maryland, arizona, and nevada. it's supposed to replace virtually all of the fighter jets in america. there's one that's designed to pull off an aircraft carrier and a third for the marines which seems to defy grat gravity with being able to stop in midair and landing on a dime. after pumping $4.5 billion, they now believe the f-35 plan is under control. still, the plane's software is behind schedule and that's a huge problem because the f-35 is basically a flying computer using 24 million
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states considering bills. michael boulton's model think tank wrote the proposal that most of this legislation is based on. >> the legislation is saying, hey, the state is not going to participate on them spying on the united states. >> reporter: last month president obama laid out a path to reform for the data collection program. >> it should give american people greater confidence that their rights are being corrected. >> reporter: the bills are all in the very early stages and their chances of passage are uncertain, but their author's messages are coming across loud and clear. >> turn it off. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning," john blackstone, cbs news, san francisco. if you shop online and you news, san francisco. if you shop online and you return more than you ,
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t jussnow on top of snow and then it turns into ice. >> plows will be back on the road again today. >> theos mt destructive storm so far this winter is taking one last shot at the northeast. >> 49 of the 50 state wsere covered in snow. the only holdout, the sun shine state of florida. >> u.s. esprotts against this prisoner release not only fell on deaf ears but may have accelerated karzai's defiance. >> it is seven years behind schedule and $163 billion over budget. >> prince william and prince harry join the british military to sandbag one town nation severe flooding. >> temperatures here are in the 60s again, and at this rate, look out on twitter. we might see #toastysochi. >> if you shop online and turn back more than you keep, tread likely. >> retailers are tracking this information online and in stores. they're sayi>>ng,he sure will.
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>> as do all men and women who run for president. some experts this morning are trying to put the brakes on the growing use of medical marijuana. they say laws are getting ahead of science. they say, quote, the truth is we lack evidence not only for the efficacy of marijuana but also for its safety. medical contributor dr. agus is in los angeles. doctor, good to see you. >> happy valentine's day, guys. >> happy valentine's day to you. there are people who are implicit that marijuana is safe. >> there's a major problem here. in the 1970s the assistant secretary of health argued marijuana should be class 1 which is the highest classification of a drug which is heroin. it means there's no medical benefit at all and it has a very high prediction level and he did benefit at all and it has a very high prediction level and he did it because he said there are
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i was in my apartment for three months before i realized the oven wasn't hooked up. how expensive is it? >> it's actually very ve story .
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"the baltimore sun" says u.s. olympic speed skaters are looking at their racing suits as a cause of slow times. so far no american speed skater has won a medal. some worry the outfits created by under armour and lockheed martin could have a design flaw. the team wants a chance to wear the world cup uniforms also made by under armour. facebook offers more options for members to describe their gender. they can now include androgynous, intersection. i the pope told them living together is an art. in italian he said the journey of marriage can be summarized by these words. please, thank you,
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streets. >> you never know what a kid is going through. you know, you have kids that don't have stable homes. our kids need to be spoken to daily. how was your day. you know, just to feel like they're alive, they mean something. >> i am somebody. you are somebody. >> what brings them here is a chance to be center stage at mardi gras. >> we're dealing with a bunch of kids who never played in aand before, never marched before, never played an instrument before. anybody have a problem with this young man here? >> i do. >> what's the problem. >> i can't see him.n
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adventure. >> reporter: tommy and rebecca caldwell's actual home is in estes park, colorado, but they feel most comfortable in places like this. the routes they claim are so difficult they can't be finished in a single day or even week, so they have to camp out on the face of big walls like el capitan, 3,000 feet of vertical rock in sew yeo semty national park. there aren't many luxuries on the wall but there is wi-fi. still, it's a long way down. >> the first time i went on el cap, it's one of those likes like, whoa, not many people do this. >> tommy has been trying to complete the don wall route on el capitan for seven years. e
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well, that does it for us. we've had a good week. >> we're still thinking about that couple. >> we do. >> we hope you have a happy valentine's day. be sure on to tune in. steve hartman is on the road. he reports on a touch teach were a soft side. as we leave you, let's take a look back at this great week. we hope you have a great weekend. lots of love. >> behind me are some of the hundreds of cars that have been abandoned by drivers. >> it was like something out of a zombie movie. >> there's no way you canea dl with ice. i don't care what yankees say. >> i'm walking in the middle of the street during what should be the beginning of our show. >> they hightailed it out of town. >> we're talk about chunks of ice.
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ol on bruce jenner's close shave.
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>> ojsympt son-- oj simpson's hunger games. why he reportedly has been on a hunger strike in prison in nevada. >> ♪ doctor, doctor gimme the news ♪ ♪ >> three words for everyone! "happy valentine's day" everyone! [ crowd cheering ] [ applause ] >> thank you for spending some of it with us. we will unlock some of the biggest secrets to kick start your health. before we start the show, it's probably a good idea to send the little ones off to another room. things may get a little -- >> holt. >> heated in here. á >> anytime these things are on stage, it's a good sign to get the kids out of the room. >> no valentine's show is complete without our first guest who knows a thing or two about love and ng

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