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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  March 5, 2015 7:00am-9:01am EST

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a; it is thursday, march 5th 2015. welcome to "cbs this morning." america's ambassador to south korea is wounded in a bloody attack. a new winter storm brings snow, ice, and misery from texas to new england. >> new technology to rescue a dying cell phone. we're testing a pocket charger that works by storing your energy. but we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. south korea police say that they should be unified slashed him with a knife. >> a u.s. ambassador attacked in south rekoa. recovering from successful
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surgery. >> he needed 80 stitches. >> the ambassador is in good spirits. this is a kitchen sink storm. states of emergencies have been declared in ala,abam mississippi, new jersey and west virginia. >> flooding a big concern in many areas. >> the boston marathon bombing trial, the jury was shown new video of the chaos immediately after the explosion. >> during an opening statement the defense admitted that tsarnaev took part in the inbombg. >> a protest in new jersey following a scathing report on the police department. at least two demonstrators were arrested overnight. >> personally ink thi you e-mail troubles help fill up the senior vote. they can relate. >> in denver, passengers had to be evacuated from an american airlines flight after smoke filled the plane. >> in michigan a driver hit a bus. >> the crash scene was actually
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a half a mile long. it was back in the united states. she was greeted by her family in portland, oregon. >> and all that matters. >> but is there any message you want to leave for charlie rose? >> just ttha i love and admire him, that's all. but i'm glad you're gone charlie, because i got to talk to gayle. >> on "cbs this morning." >> hola. >> the conan o'brien show traveled to cuba to take the talk show to havana for the first time since 56 years ago. >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" presented by toyota. let's go places. captioning funded by cbs welcome to "cbs this morning." the united states ambassador of south korea is in stable condition this morning after violent attacks. a korean man took a knife to ambassador mark clifford at a
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breakfast meeting in seoul. the woulded diplomat was rushed to the happen. >> it happened in the capital's city in the downtown area. margaret brennan is at the state capitol with a positive motive. good morning. >> good morning. ambassador lip ert had just arrived. that's whan a man approached him with a knife. splatter with blood the stunned ambassador was escorted from the event his cheek and arm slashed. he was rushed into surgery at the hospital where he received 80 stitches to his face. his injuries are not life-threatened. the suspect identified as 55-year-old kim ki j.v. ong was wrestled to the ground and arrested by seoul police. armed with a 10-inch blade kim shouted for demands of a unified north and south korea. the war exercises need to be
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stopped he's heard yelling outside the police station likely referring to the joint military exercises u.s. and south korea began this week. he was reportedly imprisoned for two years in 2010 for throwing a piece of concrete at the japanese ambassador in seoul. mark lipert was confirmed ambassador in september after serving as a key foreign policy aide to president obama. since arriving in seoul, he's kept a visible presence on social media and the korean press. he and his wife have a 6-week-old son who was given a korean name. lipert tweeted this morning he's in great spirits and eager to return to work. but, gayle, this slashing is going to raise tough questions about someone with a known history of violence was allowed
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into this event by authorities and got past the u.s. agents guarding the ambassador. >> that's what i was wondering margaret. does he not have security, and clearly he does. >> u.s. security provides detail to all u.s. ambassadors. the host country is usually in charge of providing security outside of the office and at events but still a lot of tough questions to be answered. >> just glad he's okay. thank you, margaret. a new storm is hitting nearly 100 million americans. that includes the 8 mill upin new york city where it started snowing a few hours ago. >> the storm stretches more than a thousand miles from texas to new england. if it's snowing in cities like little rock and louisville and washington and philadelphia that's where vinita nair is right now. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the temperatures here in philadelphia are expected to plunge. throughout the course of the morning they've been hovering around 30 degrees. by nightfall they could be at 8 degrees.
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after these museum steps made famous by rocky, we're already starting to see some accumulation. they'll be covered in about 4 to 8 inches by nightfall along with the rest of the city. for millions of americans, winter is refusing to leave quietly. rain snow and bitter temperatures are combining for yet another morning of misery. flooding and fresh snow were a problem overnight in kentucky with whiteout conditions putting drivers at risk. clouds struggled to keep up with the rapid accumulation in west virginia. earlier in the day floodwaters were the issue collapsing a bridge and blocking dozens of streets. the roads were difficult to navigate in oklahoma. >> look how hard the snow is. the visibility is just terrible. >> reporter: in arkansas where the tires of this truck struggled to grip the pavement.
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on this new york interstate slick roads weren't obvious, but they were dangerous. 23 vehicles were involved in this pileup that sent ten people to the hospital and ripped the front off this semi. now, the snow is predicted to stop tonight, but the biggest problem is tonight after it stops, another round of freezing could happen which means all of this could turn into ice. and, gayle, in addition to all of the grand transportation issues there will be some air transportation issues. about 50 flights in philadelphia are canceled at this point. >> stay warm. >> that's good to know if you're heading there. charlie says stay warm vinita. we second that. thanks a lot. here's a look at the driving conditions just outside philadelphia. commuters from pennsylvania to tennessee face a slippery kind of ride. heavy snow is falling around memphis. some areas could see up to 9
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inches. was cuthbert langley has more good morning. >> good morning. the snow has been falling for hours. heavy winds at times. it feels like single digit degrees here in kentucky. 18-wheelers have pulled off the interstate. they're not risking it in these types of conditions. it's been snowing, as i said for several hours. some areas in the state of kentucky are seeing close to 10 even a foot of snow. this is the second major storm in a state that hardly sees any type of serious weather like this. it's affecting the interstates, one of the major interstates throughout kentucky is actually shut down for the time being. charlie? >> cuthbert thanks. the storm hit the highways hard. planes at the dallas-ft. worth
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airport are covered in snow. travelers are feeling the impact across the country. airlines have canceled more than 2,500 flights so far. more than 200 are delayed. lonnie quinn, chief forecaster for our station wcbs is tracking the storm's path. lobny lonnie, good morning. >> reporter: hey, charlie, good morning. it seems they've had a beeline toward boston. not this particular storm. let's take a peek here. i'll show you what's going on. it's going to be south. you heard from cuthbert in kentucky. that's going to be the hardest hit area. we have winter storm warnings that extend all the way from the very end of long island through texas. 1,500 miles of a winter storm warning. you can see here on the futurecast, this is a one-day event. it's gone by tomorrow. and we heard from vinita cold air is setting out. a little bit of black ice with anything that's not frozen. totals look like this. anywhere from new york city to philadelphia, 4 to 8 inches.
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then you get into the pinks and that's what i'm talking about. those mountains of west virginia seeing the 8 inches or more. again, this is not boston's storm. yet boston needs that much, that much, norah, to set an all-time record it's going be a tough one. norah, back to you. >> they don't need any more snow in boston but they're probably saying, why not let's go for the record. lonnie thank you. this morning hillary clinton is trying to get around the controversy other the e-mail she used. last night she tweeted i want the public to see my e-mails. i asked the state to release them. nancy, good morning. >> good morning. now they're actually issuing subpoenas for those e-mails. what prompted the move was not only did clinton exclusively use private e-mails when she was secretary of state but she housed them on a private server set up in her home in chappaqua new york. the republican-led house
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committee looking into the benghazi attacks issued subpoenas for all communications related to libya. they also sent letters to internet firms to protect them relevant to her old e-mail address. hdr22 @clintonemail.com. it gave her the ability to retain what she wanted and remove the rest. >> with a private server you have full autonomy. if you want something deleted, it is clearly deleted on that server. >> she issued over 55,000 pages of private e-mail in december and in mid-february 300 e-mails were passed on to the benghazi committee. but that doesn't satisfy trey gowdy. >> i have no way of knowing whether she provided everything to the state department and i frankly have no way of knowing if the state department has provided everything to us.
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>> white house press secretary josh earnest was asking if clinton violated the rules. >> i also want to be crystal clear about the fact that this is a responsibility they assumed. >> clinton was not required by law to use a government e-mail but democrats still worry that this is going to give republicans more ammunition against her if she runs for president. and increasingly they fear that if she is the only major democratic candidate, that she's going have a huge target on her back, gayle. >> all right. thank you, nancy. testimony continues this morning in day 2 of the boston marathon bombing trial. jurors viewed video yesterday including this video where the bombs exploded near the race's finish line. you see the second blast down the street. jurors also saw surveillance video from inside a sporting
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goods store. employees grabbed clothing off the racks to make tourniquets if the wounded. >> victim rebecca gregory wrote this on facebook after seeing accused bomber dzhokhar tsarnaev in court. today i looked at you right in the face and i realized i wasn't afraid anymore and today i realized that sitting across from you was somehow the crazy kind of step forward i needed all along. cbs news legal analyst rikky klieman, good morning. >> good morning. >> you have the prosecutor showing the blast from another angle, you have the defense attorney saying it was him. >> powerful language. powerful language, by the way, on both sides. opening statements are the most important part of a trial, i'd say. there have been studies that say that 80% of jurors' minds are made up at the end of opening statements. now, what you have here is you have the defense, it was him. so there's no issue about
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whether or not he committed these crimes. so the prosecutor could just accept that, but the prosecutor won't and shouldn't. what you have in this prosecutor is he paints a gory scene of gory. he payments a young man who really wanted to do the most murder and mayhem that he possibly could, who stands for four minutes by children and knows what he's going to do a radicalized muslim who wanted to take out revenn't and someone who believes this is the first step to paradise. the prosecutor's picture gets finalized by the horrendously calm acts of dzhokhar tsarnaev afterward, walking away we see in the video, going to buy a quart of milk or a gallon of milk in a whole foods. the following day tweeting out i'm a stress-free kind of guy. so what is a defense lawyer to do in the opening?
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brilliant, judy clark. she was there saying it was him. >> he has a guiltynot guilty plea but admits it was him. >> it's a legal formality. obviously judy clark would have liked to have him plead guilty and have life imprisonment. that wasn't in the offering. what you have here is judy clark who i've known for 30 years, one of the great lawyers, her whole idea is trust me i'm the arbiter of trust. i'm the person telling you he did it i'm the person telling you why. >> rikky klieman, thank you. this morning iraqi forces are trying to push into the suburbs of tikrit. it's the fourth day they're trying to retake the city from isis. holly williams is there in kirkuk. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the front line here in kirkuk province is the closest we can
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get to the battles of tikrit. we can see the black flags of isis 30 yards in that direction and beyond that in isis territory is iraq's main north-south highway. iraqi forces need to recapture that road if they're going to defeat the extremists. a new isis video claims to show the militants fighting off the assault on tikrit. but on the city's outskirts, iraqi forces are still trying to encircle the extremists cutting off their supply routes. saddam hussein's hometown is a pocket of them since the invasion of iraq. since then tikrit has been an isis stronghold. fighting alongside the iraqi soldiers are troops from neighboring iran and iranian commanders are reportedly leading at least part of the
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operation. >> they realize their close allies are threatened, and i think that they would rather deal with isis here than they would on the gates of iran. >> reporter: retired colonel harry chuet took part in the invasion and told us the battles could turn the tide concerning isis. it now controls a third of iraq. >> it's a test to see if iraqi security forces are up to going after a major urban area. >> and perhaps taking mosul, iraq's second biggest city. >> exactly. >> reporter: as iranian influence here in iraq increases, the u.s. has no direct involvement in the fight for tikrit. american officials say that bitters iraqi air forces. the protest last night were in response to the justice
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department's decision not to charge officer darren wilson in the shooting death of michael brown. justice officials released a report. one depicted president obama as an chimpanzee. another mocked the perceived heritage of first lady michelle obama. you can read about the details at cbsnews.com. the city's mail yore said three police supervisors who sent the e-mails will face investigation and one has already been fired. this morning the supreme court appears divided as it considers a challenge to the affordable care act. the justice has heard nearly 90 minutes of arguments yesterday. anthony kennedy who recently ruled against the president's health care law is parentally reconsidering. they make coverage affordable for millions of americans. the court is expected to issue a decision in june. this morning american airlines wants to know why smoke filled a plane in denver. it happened yesterday while flight 445 was taxiing to the
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terminal. 164 passengers and crew had to slide down the emergency chute. there was no sign of a fire. passengers described the evacuation as calm. one suffered a minor injury while getting off the plane. all right. it's 7:19. and ahead on "cbs this morning," pharrell williams testifies he loved marvin gaye
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>> announcer: this national weather report sponsored by ex-pead ya. the world is at your fingertips. download the ex-pead ya app today. chinese communists embrace billionaires. >> ahead how the super wealthy are swelling the rank of a party founded to empower the workers. >> the news is back in the morning right here on "cbs this morning." >> announcer: this portion of
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a surprise shakeup under the golden arches. how a change in what mcdonald's buys from farms could help stop the super bugs in humans. >> plus capturing the resilience on canvas.
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meet the artist who experienced the one world trade center. say th it is sen 26. lauren ya bernstein will join us in a moment. we have to talk about what's happening. a big winter storm, still snowing back in memphis, just ending in little rock. that's 1000 miles away. all this moisture flowing up. i think boston will get two inches today, they'll have the snowiest winter on record. the rain transitions to snow across part of the district. north and west, it's almost all snow right now. we have been keeping track of what's happening. snowing in manassas. i got a tweet about a few minutes ago. as you head into western and
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northwestern fair fox, loudoun, montgomery county and howard. road conditions are quickly deteriorating. we have hail bit of sleet. that's like ball bearings on the road and then, we snow snow on that, and that is icy. 32 in gaithersburg and winchester, 29 in haggerstown. the snow is ticking. first part of the snow is going to be a little bit wet and then it will dry out as the colder irmus in. that's when we'll get significant snow. winter storm warning. four to eight across the region. 32 to 6 in southern st. maries. frederick, most of montgomery county, howard county, 6 to possibly 10 inches of snow. these folks have the best chances of getting the highest amount of snow today. this is the ow amounts. we may need to revise this. for the most part, a snowy deck. impact still pretty much the
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same. mid-30s early. we'll be in the upper 20s with snow ending late afternoon evening. let's go to the road conditions. >> quickly and fast. we should say. right now, we are talking about an accident on 270 southbound. between hyatts town and clarkburg. nothing significant, just residual day. light traffic on the road keeping these accidents far and few between. a lot of ice on our camera there shows you what these drivers are having to deal with as they try to make their way southbound towards the beltway. if you can stay off these roads, we suggest you do. manassas towards the beltway, no major issues at this pipe. eastbound and westbound lanes free and clear of any problems. another update
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colorado's legal marijuana overburdens police and courts and causes money in overtime. the "washington post" tells us the alarming findings of a report on school books. they reviewed 20 sets of math materials from grades k through 8 in classrooms nationwide. it found one series was properly aligned with the common core requirements for all grade levels. the "san francisco chronicle" tells us about rare six-kay kidney transplant today. it involved 12 paetschet ends at
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california's pacific medical center. here's hour it began. a sacramento woman donated her kidney to a stranger. the stranger's relative is giving it to another patient, continues that chain. it's the largest to take place at a single hospital on the west coast. "huffington post" looks at new sugar recommendations. people worldwide should cut the amount of sugar they consume in half. that's 12 teaspoons for adults. one can of soda has ten teaspoons. cutting sugar will help lower obesity risk and tooth decay. and manning is taking a pay cut to stay with the broncos. he'll be taking $4 million less. the $15 million contract has incentives he can earn back the $4 million if they win the super bowl. blurred lines will be in sharp focus today in an l.a.
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courtroom. closing arguments are expected in lawsuit that's pitting robin thicke and pharrell williams against marvin gaye's family. we're shown how it could have a huge impact on the music industry. >> reporter: pharrell williams left court wednesday after telling the jury he loves and respects marvin gaye but would never copy his work. but a jury will soon decide if his and robin thicke's song "blurred lines," the top selling song in 2013 infringes on marvin gaye's classic "got to give it up." in court pharrell said blurred lines channels the feel of marvin gaye but it's not infringement. >> the argument is this. can you copyright a groove? the answer is this. the question is there more similarities between rob rob
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robinthick's song "blurred lines" to marvin gaye's "got to give it up." robin thicke said any similarities are coincidences. the trial forced thicke to admit that he didn't actually write the song pharrell did. "blurred lines" has made more than $16 million. he got paid $5.6 million than that. pharrell a little less with $5.1 million. >> i imagine those are figures a record company does not like to be airing. >> oh, absolutely not. record companies guard this stuff like ft. knox. >> if a jury comes back and says, yes, this is copyright effect and, yes, you did rip off this song do you think it's going to have a chilling history. >> there's going to be a
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floodgate where every artist is going to look at songs that came out and say, you know what? maybe we have a claim here. >> reporter: the jury could decide the case at the end of the week. ben tracy, cbs news los angeles. >> they're both great songs. you can hear the similarities and i hear differences too. >> how do you measure the difference of what is and what is not. >> i they're all talented musicians putting out great music. we'll see. >> we'll see. this morning another los angeles hospital is reporting cases of a deadly super bug. four patients at cedars-sinai medical center has a sbug known as cre. they blame it on their medical scope. that's the same type of outbreak that affected seven people between october and january. chief medical correspondent dr. jon lapook is with us this morning. jon, good morning. >> good morning. >> another hospital but involving this same medical device. how concerned should we be?
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>> i'm very concerned about this one, okay? and i want to point out we're not talking about a colonoscopy or endoscopy. we're talking an special kind of scope. the problem is they followed the protocol and they're cleaning and they still got the infection. so that makes you wonder if the protocol is correct. >> does it have something to do with the new medical device. >> at the very tip of the scope they changed that and, yes, they were pending approval of that. they point out all three manufacturers have had the same type of infections reports so it's not just that. >> so they've had o'complaints. >> what is the scope used for, jon? is it the scope or the way the scope is cleaned? >> it's the combination. the scope is used most typically to look at things like gallstones. you have gallstones that's stuck in the gallbladder.
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you want to try to deliver that stone. it's a terrific a year. it saves is a more complicated operation to remove the stone. the problem is that tip of the stone has an elevated device that's tough to clean. you have to get under it and scrub it. right now the protocol is to try to do it a certain way. there's a description of it in the manual and you do it maybe a combination of scrubbing it with brushes and an automated cleaner but even doing that they're still getting it. they're saying i want to do belt and suspenders. i kind of know what the belt is. that's scrubbing it like crazy. i'm not sure what suspenders are. what are they supposed to do? >> what are patient suns posed to do? >> colonoscopy or endoscopy, it hasn't been reported with that. if it's a c.r.e.p. that's a specialized type of procedure, you should talk with the doctor what type of cleaning they're doing.
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i this i this may be the tip of the iceberg. the reason it was discovered, when you're infected with cre, that's how they found it and it pops up. but they're saying it may be the other types of intestinal organisms that are there too. i think we're seeing just the beginning of this. they'll monitor it. >> thank you, dr. jon lapook. ahead, the growing influence of billionaires and chinese politics as the nationals people's congress opens. and if you're heading offer to work and some of you have to take your kids to school you don't have to miss u us. set your dvr so you can watch "cbs this morning" any time you like. we'll be right back. sir, we're going to need you on the runway later. don't let a severe cold hold you back. get theraflu... ...with the power of three medicines to take on your worst pain and fever, cough and nasal congestion. it breaks you free from your toughest cold and flu symptoms. theraflu. serious power.
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dramatic video to show you this morning. a bus driver in suburban detroit. he fell asleep at the wheel in october. the bus slammed into the back of an suv and slammed into several other cars. the bus finally came to a stop after hitting a guardrail.
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the crash scene was half a mile long. only one passenger hurt was not hurt. two people in a car were seriously hurt. the bus driver was charged with a misdemeanor violation. he admits he fell asleep at the wheel. >> that woke him up quickly. the national peoples congress opens its ten-day annual meeting. increasingly the gathering is to represent the masses and it's become a club for ultra wealthy capitalists. seth doane is in beijing to show us the billionaires who say they're ready to give back. seth, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. some people call it a rubber rubber stamp parliament. it's the biggest legislative body in the world with personal fortunes of some involved that would blow you away. some of these similar looking grey suits have very deep
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pockets. there are more than 2,900 delegates to the national peoples congress or npc and another 2,000 plus in an advisory body that meets alongside it. in these two councils we counted 59 billionaires yes, 59. their combined wealth is 178 billion dollars, roughly the gdp of kuwait. delegates approve the communist party's agenda designed by those with real power sitting on stage. we've printed out pictures of some of the billionaires with their fortunes next to their pictures, and now we'll try to find them. >> before delegates enter the great hall of the people they have to pass you could say, cloth by the media. can we just talk to you briefly? >> we spotted a beverage tie continue worth $11 billion. do you feel that you can represent the average chinese
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person? >> i was poor he told us. i understand poor people's difficulties. >> the difference between a poor pes amount and these very wealthy entrepreneurs even makes the income gap in the united states look rather modest by comparison. >> orville schell is with the new york-based society. >> it's an effort to keep this kind of power inside the political system. >> reporter: the super rich are almost celebrities here. in the middle of all of this is lejeune. he's worth about $9 million. made his fortune selling smartphones. we pushed in where there's an interview amid the chinese press. mr. le i'm seth doane with cbs news. you're a billionaire, why did
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you want to get into the politics? i feel it's the obligation of every single citizen to try our best to push for change in our society, le told us. we wanted to see who the wealthiest member of the u.s. congress was. we found representative darrell issa worth at least $350 million. i suppose in china you could say only $350 million. compare that to the richest person, the highest net worth of the delegate of the npc. krc $15 billion, nearly four times more. interestingly they'll be discussing income and equality. >> yes. robin lee, of course which is their version of google. interesting to see that report. >> only $350 million. still okay. >> yeah. >> i think you could do all right on that. >> absolutely. >> funny. what's really in your chicken mcnuggets.
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ahead, how mcdonald's is changing its food supply. plus co-nap o'brien learns a lesson in >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by macy's.
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7:57. starting with a picture at reagan national, live shot here. you can see it the flakes coming down mixing in with some sleet. getting reports of snow in bowie and over towards college park, northwest, even in old counsel alexandria. north and west of that, primarily snow. you can see snow continuing to fall, snow heavy at time through mid- to late afternoon, tapering off at 5:00 or 6:00. doppler 9000, this snow goes all the way back towards memphis. storm in tennessee will have to go through us. that's going to take a while. we are trans significanting in the d.c. proper, it's coming your way from that rain to sleet so snow. north and west, areas of dark blue, that's a moderate to
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heavy snow. we are getting reports of half inch, 3/4 inch, sleet and snow accumulating in many surfaces right now. most of charles, st. mary's in a rain situation. we're down to 36. look at how quickly north and west, we see temperatures drop to the freezing mark. we are looking at a general four to eight inch snowfall by the time the snowfalls away. just north of d.c. to baltimore, frederick, montgomery county, howard county with that dark blue area, 6 to possibly 10 inches of snow by the time we are done with the storm. day planner, 35. 30 by lunchtime. snow tapers off late. upper 20s for the drive home. larry miller is coming in now because the roads have been going downhill quickly. >> good news is that people are staying off the roads and that's lucky because that allows people to clean the
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road. people are staying home. good job to awful you. let's take a look at the beltway to show you how things are shaping out. a lot of green, an indication that there are not a lot of cars on the road and no accident or incidents on the road. inner loop or outer loop. we talked about the deteriorating road. let's show you what that is looking like. this is at river road. things are certainly getting more interesting and drivers get toward the height of this storm. if you can stay off the roads, of course, we advise that you do because we want you to stay safe out there. in the meantime, those of in you virginia, you are seeing a similar situation out there. a live look right now. this is just west of gainesville you can see how the snow is starting to accumulate on the roads again. give yourself plenty of time to
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murder and mayhem that he possibly could. >> if a jury did come backnd a say, yes, this is copyright infringement, do you think that would have a chilling convenient in history. >> they're going to look at songs coming out and say, you claim here. >> how concerned should you be? >> i'm very concerned that these two hospitals followed the protocol and yet you still got the infections. >> democrats worry this is going to give the republicans more ammunition against her if she runs for president. >> do you think maybe wrong e-mail address ghazi will be a big boost to her democratic primary rival tbd? i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. this morning the ambassador of south korea has 80 stichls after an attack. mark lippert is recovering from knife woulds. it happened yesterday just
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before a planned speechen the divided korean peninsula. >> police say 55-year-old kim k ki-jong attacked him. he was talking about righteous empowerment. the storm front extends for more than a thousand miles. forecasters expect more than a half a foot of snow from arkansas to new jersey. there are lots of traffic problems in texas. cars are spinning out in the ft. worth and dallas area. if boston gets 2 inches of snow today it will set an all-time record. the city has got almost 9 feet of snow this winter. it is dampening people's spirits and hurting the local economy. anna werner is a diner in south boston where customers are hard to find. anna, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, charlie. if you want to get an idea just
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how hard it can be to get to work or to shop or to get to a restaurant, take a look at this sidewalk. they call it a sidewalk where not only is the snow over your head, but everything is very slippery, very icy. and you can imagine if you're trying to come out to eat, it's a lot of work to get out here. the result is a lot of people aren't coming out to restaurants and shopping and that is hurting business. at the gallie diner in south boston there's plenty of the award-winning corn beef hash and eggs on the grill. what they've been missing lately are customers. >> almost like a ghost town in the morning. >> you guys all set? >> reporter: colleen campbell runs the diner with her husband. she said on a good day a hundred hungry customers will come through the door but since the snowstorm hit -- >> yeah the weekdays are awful. >> awful. >> awful. >> how awful? >> one day we had 15 customers the entire day.
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>> reporter: mark may be one of the view tourists visiting here. >> i had no idea i'd be walking past 5 foot snow drifts but it's great. it's totally worth it. >> reporter: all across boston businesses are suffering. paul guffy is ahead of the boston chamber of congress. >> we're talking a billion dollars. >> that's a lot. >> that's a lot of money. can we recoup? some of it with le recoup, but the business that the local restaurant doesn't do is not going to be recouped. >> reporter: the snow snarled transportation in the city. some people can't get to work. and mounds of snow are simply in the way. everywhere. leaving local shoppers and tourists alike nowhere to walk or park. so many just aren't shopping. it's a little tricky through here. and at the campbell's diner, they wait for spring. >> how would you describe what this is like for you as a small business owner?
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>> impossible. you know you can't do much about it. it's mother nature. >> reporter: well, the mayor of boston said yesterday they removed 30,000 truckloads of snow from city streets. but as you can see, there's a lot left and they have a long way to go. gayle. >> wow, anna. that was a great standup. very dicey walking. please be careful. she said thank you. we thank you too. >> she thought thank you. the concern over super bugs is spreading beyond hospitals. mcdonald's announced on wednesday it will stop buying chickens fed on antibiotics used on people. they'll also be introduced milk free of growth hormones. jean tracks the use of antibiotics in our consumer reports and she's with us at the table. hello, jean. what does it mean to us who are eating the chicken mcnuggets? >> this is very important, a
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very important step. we're having a real problem with antibiotics losing their effectiveness. we have this hospital super bug this morning. any mother who gives a kid an injection and it doesn't work and another one and it doesn't work knows antibiotics are losing their effectiveness. this is because we're using them too much and we use most of them not on people not on sick people, but on healthy manls to make them grow faster. so mcdonald's has taken the very important step of saying that their chicken will not be raised with any antibiotics that are used in human medicine. and this is a huge step forward and a very important leadership step on their part. >> now, the fda had already announced a voluntary faze-out correct, in terms of antibiotics in feed.
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voluntary faze-out. what does this mean? that mcdonald's is taking step unilaterally. >> they're going further. they're saying stop using antibiotics on growth promotion. that's 80%. mcdonald's says they won't use any. not for disease prevention not for any purpose -- antibiotics that are important in human medicine. there's another class that they can use that aren't drugs that are used on people. >> any downside to this? any risk for this? >> we sure don't see any. this practice is done to make the industry slightly more profit itable. but in terms of the consumer mcdonald's obviously doesn't expect to change their price. >> so this is chicken. what does it mean for beef and pork? any changes made to the big mac or mcrib? >> no.
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and we would really like to see movement in that area because antibiotics are also given to cattle and pork. they're very big users. >> it doesn't change the taste, does it? >> ihaven't seen any evidence that this there's a problem with the taste at all. >> thank you, jean. ahead, a portrait of the american spirit. anthony mason is inside one world trade center. anthony? >> reporter: norah the tallest building in the western hemisphere may also hold the largest painting in new york. you'll meet the artist who created this 90-foot mural and see how he painted it coming up on "cbs this morning."
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a new device taps your body's energy to run your smartphone. our news associate volunteered for this one. he's got it on right now. hi monk. we'll find out how well it works
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on "cbs this morning." the world is filled with air. but for people with copd sometimes breathing air can be difficult. if you have copd, ask your doctor about once-daily anoro ellipta. it helps people with copd breathe better for a full 24hours. anoro ellipta is the first fda-approved product containing two long-acting bronchodilators in one inhaler. anoro is not for asthma. anoro contains a type of medicine that increases risk of death in people with asthma.
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it is not known if this risk is increased in copd. anoro won't replace rescue inhalers for sudden copd symptoms and should not be used more than once a day. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition, or high blood pressure. tell your doctor if you have glaucoma, prostate or bladder problems, or problems passing urine as anoro may make these problems worse. call your doctor right away if you have worsened breathing chest pain, swelling of your mouth or tongue, problems urinating or eye problems including vision changes or eye pain while taking anoro. nothing can reverse copd. the world is filled with air and anoro is helping people with copd breath air better. get your first prescription free at anoro.com. wow, i've been claritin clear for 10 days! when your allergies start, doctors recommend taking one non-drowsy claritin every day during your allergy season for continuous relief. 18 days! 17 days! 22 days of continuous relief. live claritin clear. every day. why do you want great glasses for $38, backed by a replacement guarantee?
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all right. if you're already noticing battery power training from your cell phone this morn a new invention could give it a jump start. you saw monk walking around. this is actually the new device out here. three engineering grads think this could be a portable solution. pretty cool huh? adrian diaz met the trio banking on the kinetic injury. >> reporter: it's the digital kiss of death, the moment your cell phone dies right in the palm of your hand? >> everybody's had an issue where their smartphone has run out of power at the worst possible time. >> reporter: for this 25-year-old, that worst possible time is during his nightly call with his fiancee jennifer. they're now mostly long distance after she moved from chicago to iowa for medical school. >> is he notorious for having
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his phone die at the worst time? >> he really is. he's a busy guy. >> reporter: busy creating a device. he and alex smith and mike guyer invented in class. they say it's a cure for a dead cell phone. turning energy from a person's physical movement called kinetic energy to power. >> the secret for ampe took taking existing technology and fitting it into a form factor that can fit right here in your pocket. this is ampe. >> reporter: from your pocket or your purse ampe charges when you move throughout the tay. when your padry goes red when your battery goes dead, recharge it at the same speed. running for 30 minutes, cycling for an hour walking 5,000 steps
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provides enough people power for one hour of active smartphone use. >> how has it not been invented yet. >> there are others on the market but they're the size of a paper towel roll. >> they're big and bulky and you really wouldn't want to fit them into your life. >> that's why ampy's small size has big appeal. in fact, 2,500 preorders have been placed many through the crowd funding kickstarter that has raised over $3 million for the device. while they're still building prototypes they're expected to mass produce this month. for nearly 100 bucks they wonder if it's worth the price. >> if ampy can deliver, it would be very impressive. there's the cost fak, to especially when you can get a spare battery for $25. >> reporter: but for consumers who forget to charge their
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battery at home ampy provides an on the go way to power up in a pinch. good news for those in love. >> there are times he would say i'm calling you with ampy because my cell phone is dead. i say, e i'm glad you invented us that. >> reporter: they cut the cord and moved toward battery independence. for "cbs this morning," adriana around. i can to that. >> it's hard to get 5,000 steps in though. all right. a kidnapped girl missing more than 17 years is found miles from where her parents live. that's next. toss the tube for good... with scott naturals® tube-free.
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teen is reuniting with her parents 18 year after the kidnapping. it turns out she was raised only miles from her real family's home in cape town. she's in a safe place and not talking but debora patta was able to track down her birth parents. debora, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. this is the neighborhood that the kidnapped girl grew up in. it's just a few miles from the home of her biological parents who have been searching for her
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for nearly 18 years. they knew their baby girl for just three days before she was snatched from her hospital cot. >> it's heart breaking. is she being loved? abused? >> reporter: it was heartbreaking. each year they celebrated the missing of their daughter and then their second daughter began high school and made a remarkable discovery. she came home and said, daddy, there's a girl that resembled me completely. so i want you on tuesday to meet this girl. >> he even managed to take a few photos. the resemblance was uncanny. the police were brought in and a nail-biting six weeks and then a
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detective was on the phone. >> i said hello, yes, yes. you're a mother again. i said no. i said, no i couldn't talk. i couldn't talk at all. my friend hat to take the phone. >> so much joy. >> she had been living just a few miles away. >> i burst into tears when saw her. she kept me like this. the first time she saw her dad and he was standing. she was standing in front and he was standing in the back. i couldn't explain the feeling. and when she came to me i just couldn't stop crying. i couldn't stop crying. i said finally i found you. for 17 years i've been looking for you. i found you finally. you're mine again. >> you're going to make me cry. >> so when i saw her, i explained to her the feeling
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that she had. it explains it all. >> the family who cared for her for 17 years and the parents she just met have to face each other in court but the mother who longed for her for 17 years says she won't keep her from the family who raised her. >> when i see the woman that took her i would like to give her a hug when i see her and say thank you for what you have done. you have done a good job. look at my daughter. she's beautiful inside and out. >> the woman accused of kidnapping her and who raised her as her own for over 17 years has been arrested. and the young girl has been taken to a place of safety as she slowly gets to know her birth family. >> that's such an amazing -- thank you, debora. that's such an amazing story. the fact that she wants to thank the woman. >> a powerful story. >> oh, boy.
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make us stronger. when a girl connects with a science mentor... her confidence grows. when schools connect with technology... a 5th grader's world opens up. and when a worker connects to online
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showed up. "daily news" says singing duo hall & oates is suing. they want to stop them from early bird from selling hallulin' oats. mark zuckerberg revealed his one rule for hiring staff.
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he'll onto hire someone to work directly for mihm if he would work for that person. he said it is a pretty good test and the rule has served him well. >> i like that rule. i think that's very smart. the "los angeles times" says seth rogan denies that his former office wreaks of pot. a story in "the hollywood reporter" says former sony expectation amy pascal couldn't even smoov into the space because of the spell. rogan responded mockingly on instagram saying quote, i don't know what's more irresponsible, that they would print a story that's untrue or refer to how pot smells as a stench. pot has a very distinct smell. >> you can tell. >> you can tell. >> he finished one for two in the yankees loss. he has not faced a yankee league pitcher in almost one month. he's coming offer using performance-enhancing drugs. >> one world trade center opening in september.
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62% of the building is now leased. a tower legacy like no other but it faced a common dilemma for any new complex. what should go on the walls. anthony mason saw the remarkable walls. he is inside one world trade in lower manhattan. anthony, good morning. >> good morning, charlie. the artist commissioned by the world trade center were given only one guideline by the developer. their work had to be unifying. there's no mention of the site's history in these working but all the artists understand that that had to be part of the equation. many of the 104 floors of the new world trade center are still vacant, but tenants are still moving in. the art is up on the wall. in the sky lobby on the 64th floor with its panoramic views of new york city gregory goldberg has carefully positioned his series of seven paintings.
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>> so that's three feet. should it be two inches to the right? lower it a little bit. looks good okay. >> reporter: and brian hunt has assembled his airship-inspired sculpture. >> i wanted something weightless and gravity free. >> reporter: in picking the art for this building what was the mission? >> the mission was to get people to turn their phones off and look up. >> reporter: the five artists chosen by consultant asher edelman are all american. >> and it had to be a wakeup call, but not about the building. about itself. >> reporter: the showpiece is a massive mural in the south lobby titled "yubion of the senses." it's believed to be the largest najt the city. how big is it? >> 90 feet long by 14 1/2 feet tall. >> reporter: the artist is jose parla. did they tell you they wanted you to fill this whole wall? >> wei came for a meeting and
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discussed it and i said, yeah we can do it let's do it. >> what was it like to get a commission to paint a picture for this building? >> well i mean first of all, it's the biggest honor i think an artist can have. and also i felt a huge load of responsibility. >> given that, how did you approach it? did you know what you wanted to do? >> i had been thinking about it. dreamt about it. it absorbed all 24 hours of every day before i even started. >> for ten months straight the 42-year-old painter worked on the project in his brooklyn studio. he also has murals in the barkley center and the brooklyn academy of music. but this a celebration of diversity, would be his biggest in both size and symbolism. pa parla's ka lig gra fi-type work swirls across the surface. >> as far as my arm would reach to the left i would do the
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writing. when i got to a point, i positioned myself laterally and jump off. >> you would do it as you were falling off the ladder. >> exactly. >> sometimes it threw him literally out the door. >> i wanted to keep that energy. >> reporter: in the otherwise austere skyscraper his mural is an explosion of color. the duke and duchess of cambridge admired it on their visit to the world trade center. taylor swift posted an instagram shot from here. >> i kept thinking of all my best works that i find is my favorite works, and i thought to myself, you've got to go beyond that, work harder you've got to put all you have into your painting and make it your best best painting. >> do you feel like you did that? >> i do. >> reporter: parla says all his colors of his work represent all the cultures of the city. when the observation deck opens at the one world trade center in
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the spring it's expected to be e seen by 20,000 people every day passing through this lobby. to give you an idea, gayle, that's more peen than visit the metropolitan museum every day. >> that's traffic story. i love how they did it. they jumped off the ladder and out the door. >> anthony can tell a story, conditional he? whether it's music or art. >> anthony mason can cover it all. you know charlie is sitting in for scott pelley on cbs news. i know you're watching. i had an opportunity to fill in for him. the guest, "desperate house wiefbs" felicity huffman talking about her new show. she talks about how she tied the knot with william h. macy. h. stands for hall by the way. we talked about what makes a successful marriage. >> i read that you two spend once a week, that you take half an hour to speak, 15 minutes for you, 15 minutes for him.
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does this sound familiar to you? because you're looking at me like what are you talking about, gayle. >> no, no. my husband is like should we talk about it? >> talk about it. >> when we first got married an episcopal minister brad hamm who's a wonderful guy sat down with counseling. we haven't been about it as good as were the first bunch of years with werer married. he taught us that we sit down and for 15 minutes you sit down and we listen. if we can't fill the whole 15 minutes then we sit in silence. and then we cross tauk. i don't interrupt and say, what do you mean or i -- >> is it supposed to be about problems or whatever you -- >> just where you are. it's called again, you're going to need an insulin shot. it's called meeting in the garden. that's what brad hamm called it. >> and you can't interrupt.
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>> right. and you can't go crosstalk. after you talk i can't go back in and talk about what you did. i just listen and talk about where i am. >> at the end of the half hour, what happens? >> usually your husband goes i can't bear to talk anymore. i don't want to fight about anything and you go about your day. >> charlie rose i love your team. i have to say, i sat up straighter when i was sitting in the charlie rose chair. but i said to the viewers when it first came on i said there's nothing wrong with your set. this is the scharly rose show but i'm not charlie rose. i explained very well very quickly where you were. >> we were honored to have you there, the whole staff. they said, when is gayle coming back. >> i was honored to do really. really it was a thrill for me. >> looking at what we paid her -- >> i'm coming back today. judi dench. thank you. starring in the "second best
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exotic marigold hotel." they talk about bearing it all. >> is it harder to get naked in front of the cameras as you get older? >> oh, yes. >> i go -- >> what's not to love about judi dench. >> one of my favorite guests. >> she is. the
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in one year 5.6 million hospital workers helped perform 26.6 million surgeries deliver 3.7 million babies and treat 133 million e.r. patients. now congress is considering cuts which could increase wait times reduce staff, and threaten your community's health. keep the heart of america's hospitals strong. for you and your family tell congress: don't cut hospital care. ♪
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such a shame it's labeled a "getaway." life should always feel like this. hampton. we go together.
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they get a chance to check in again to "the second best scottic marigold hotel." this time an american heartthrob joins the mix. elizabeth palmer with two of the stars. >> reporter: it's not a recipe for box office imagining. a bollywood crew a cast of senior citizens and a crumb ling hotel but yet suchit was such a hit it's back. >> lordy lord have mercy. >> joins the who's who cast. >> any other dreamsky help you with? >> bill nye. maggie smith and leading ladies
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judi dench and penelope wilson. >> i couldn't resist the chance to come back and visit the old crumb bling ruins an see how the hotel was doing as well. >> reporter: they both sat down to have tea with us in london. >> i think the strength of the film, why it appealed to people is because it kicked against everything we understand about getting older. >> how many new lives can we have? >> reporter: the hotel guests here may be older, but in the movie they start new lives, new careers, and they even fall in love. >> this is what i want. >> reporter: that's what the appeal is. that they all -- all of them of course, with money are able to do it, but that they all do something rather than just be put in a room with a lot of other people and everything's shut down. >> reporter: in life as on screen, in spite of failing eyesight judi dench is not shutting down. >> take the bloody shot. >> reporter: after her iconic
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role as m in the common role she was nominated for on oscar and even has a new beau the conservationist david mills. wilson too, is in it. >> what should we call each other? >> we could always start with mrs. drawler. >> she began her acting career in london in the 1960s. dench starts out in theater and caberet a decade earlier. they've been friends for almost 40 years. both of them now household names and famous worldwide. each on location. >> judie'syjudi is a megastar wherever she goes. >> that's not true. >> she is.
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>> reporter: they started in the same movie before. this one was called "iris." >> i see an angel. >> reporter: is it harder to get naked in front of cameras as you get older? >> ooh, yes. >> you don't want to do that. i go like this when i see myself. when i'm walking along sometimes you see yourself in a mirror of a shop and you go like look at -- oh, it's me. >> reporter: they are mildly astonished at their ages to still be so much in demand. >> it's a question of luck and where you are at a certain time and wlb somebody who's got a script thinks you could play that part but don't for a minute imagine you're the only person because right here there whole stream of people who are
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waiting to go hoomph. >> and you just had a milestone birthday. >> 50, yes. >> 50. >> i'm so sorry. were you talking to me? >> i don't know why i tell you anything. >> reporter: actually just after shooting the marigold hotel sequel judi dench turned 80. what are you looking forward to? >> i don't look forward much? >> because? >> i don't. i just get on with things really. >> live in the moment. >> yes, live in the moment for goodness sake. car pay diem. i have it written outside of a piece of slate. seize the day, i reckon. don't waste any time. >> reporter: clearly age is no reason at all to leave center stage. for "cbs this morning," elizabeth palmer, london. >> i couldn't love that more than i do. >> two class acts charlie.
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80 and a new beau. i love that. >> up next
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the largest battleships ever built. the american forces thanked them off the philippines during world war ii. more than 70 years later, an expedition apparently located the ship's remains and an underwater launch spotted the massive wreck sunday. his team began searching more than eight years ago. >> that's all sort of interesting things. but, norah, is it just me or does charlie has an extra glow today? >> he does. it's that blue shirt. >> this is a first on "cbs this morning." >> that does it for us. be sure to tune in to the evening news. i'll be sitting
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cars are able to move along this area of 495, still, be careful out there we'll have much more coming up at the top of the hour
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no one in my family has gone past high school. through the at&t aspire initiative i met my mentor, elizabeth. she believes in me. she pushes me to do better in school and in life. because of the at&t aspire initiative, i'm the first one in my family to ever go to college. at&t employees are mentoring students in communities across america. you can change a life. become a mentor.
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>> is a yellow alert day. here's first alert weather. good morning. they called for it and it is here. the snow is in the metro area we have the latest from west virginia, virginia, maryland and here in the district. >> if you couldn't identify what you see on the screen now, that's the traffic control tower at the airport, that's how heavy the snow is coming down good morning. welcome to wusa 9's extended weather coverage. >> totals, you name it, wee have it. nick is driving around the metro. >> some of the reporters joining us this morning bringing you the latest conditions we want to give

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