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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  April 14, 2015 7:00am-9:01am EDT

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♪ good morning. it is tuesday april 14th 2015. welcome to "cbs this morning." an airport worker trapped in a cargo hold of an airliner forces e anenmergcy landing. cell phone video captures panic on the plane. we're in iowa where hillary clinton started the her last presidential bid. marco rubio calls for a changing of the guard. plus he's here masters champion jordan spieth in studio 57. but we begin with today's "eye opener," your world in 90
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seconds. >> the time has come for our generation to lead the way. >> marco rubio jumps into the republican race. >> three republicans in the race. how many will there be? >> most ever. a deputy who fatally shot an unarmed suspect turns himself in today. norovirus outbreaks on two cruise ships. federal officials are investigating. another wet start to the day. another wet finish in the plain state. a potential for flash flooding. >> hillary clinton arrived in ohio. she stopped ate chipotle.>> em an ncergey landing when the crew realized someone was trapped in the cargo hold. >> in the baggage department there could be a person in there. >> vladimir putin has approved the delivery of the air defense missile system to iran. a mountain lion found living
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under a house in los angeles. >> wildlife officials hope he comes out on his own. >> all that -- >> the pit crew member waving his driver in when the car slides on that wet track. incredibly, he was able to walk away. >> the dick frates signed the one day contract. >> you didn't sink that putt? >> i missed. >> thank you. >> you're welcome. >> on "cbs this morning" -- >> jennifer hudson is going to sing. ♪ ♪ give me a cheeseburger ♪ ♪ ♪ >> and one diet coke yeah ♪ ♪ this madness ♪ >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" is presented by toyota. let's go places. captioning funded by cbs
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welcome to "cbs this morning." alaska airlines is investigating a baggage worker fell asleep inside a plane's cargo hole and started panic on the aircraft. the plane took off from seattle yesterday. passengers and crew heard you banging and screaming from below. the the pilot returned to the airport for an emergency landing. >> the passengers say the pilot did not explain white the plane had to turn around. jeff pegues is in washington with how this whole thing unfolded. jeff, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, you can understand why the passengers on that plane were getting nervous. the flight was just about 14 minutes long but it may have seemed like an eternity from the passenger as alarmed by the sound coming from the cargo hold. alaska airlines has identified the sleepy stowaway as a ramp employee who works for one of the carriers contractors. >> that's him, i think, standing in the middle. >> reporter: flight 448 had just taken off from seattle's tacoma
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airport heading for los angeles when those aboard had heard noises cupping from below the cabin floor. it was captured on a passenger's cell phone. >> all of a sudden we heard all this pounding underneath the plane. and we thought there was something wrong with the the landing gear. >> there are a lot of children on the plane. i thought maybe someone was kicking or doing something on the plane. >> reporter: minutes after takeoff, the pilot radioed that he was returning to ctac airport. >> i think we have -- hearing a noise in the baggage department. >> reporter: one passenger tried to reassure the trapped worker. >> a u.s. marshal made his presence known and started yelling and screamed really loud. we're getting ready to land hang on to something. reason alaska airlines said the worker had fallen asleep in the full cargo hold. he was supposed to be part of a
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four-person team. the team lead noticed the employee was missing, called and texted the employee's cell phone but did not receive an answer. his co-workers believed he finished his shift and went home. >> it's important that the crew acted quickly and correctly to resolve it. >> this morning, alaska airlines said the employee was in a pressurized temperature-controlled portion of the cargo hold. he was taken to the hospital and discharged after passing a drug test. gayle. this morning, a sheriff's deputy in oklahoma faces a charge in the death of a black man. robert bates fired one shot during the man's arrest. investigators say he intended to use his taser not his gun. elaine quijano of our digital network is here looking at the details with the sheriff's office. elaine, good morning. >> good morning. under oklahoma law if convicted a second degree manslaughter
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bates could face four years in state prison. the tulsa county reserve deputy said he was sorry immediately after he shot harris. nowbates' policing experience is under the microscope, as well as donations he made to the sheriff's office. >> i need to you roll on your stomach, now. >> i shot him, i'm sorry. >> reporter: reserve deputy bob bates might have meant to pull his taser but fired his revolver shooting eric harris in the back. >> you've got to see, there's no way an officer can get this confused for this. >> reporter: 73-year-old bates was charged monday with second degree manslaughter. >> the circumstances were not intentional, it was an accident. and this unfolded in front of him very rapidly. >> you'll see that will bates has a yellow taser strapped to his chest. .357 revolver in his right hand. >> reporter: the tulsa police department said bates worked for
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them for one year in the 1960s. that's a different force than the tulsa county sheriff's office where bates was a volunteer deputy. according to documents bates has been a longtime benefactor buying vehicles and equipment, and even a $5,000 machine that extracts fingerprints from evidence. bates was assigned to the sheriff's task force on april 2nd while it carried out a sting operation. >> a luger. >> a luger? >> reporter: eric harris was seen on video during an operation targeting illegal guns trying to sell a gun to under cover operatives. he ran away and resisted arrest. >> i'm losing my breath. >> -- breath. >> reporter: andre said the day after the 44-year-old was killed andre met with sheriff's officials including a sheriff's chaplin in a qwik-trip convenience store. >> you were saying you would
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have something contact -- >> the sheriff asked me, he said did you hire a lawyer. and i said yes. and he told me if you hire a lawyer, it will gum things up. we don't want to gum this thing up. >> "cbs this morning" originally received the surveillance without audio. late lastnight, we reached out to the tulsa county sheriff's office and they urged the harris family to release that audio. they did send that to us hours before the broadcast. we called the sheriff's office for comments we have not heard back. the passenger in a car of a south carolina man shot and killed by a police officer has broken his silence. pierre fullcum was in the
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vehicle. the officer fired eight shots and faces a murder charge in the death. in a statement he called walter scott a dear friend. he wrote, i miss him every day. i'll never know why he ran. but i know he did not deserve to die. florida senator marco rubio said it's time for his generation to take charge of america. the 43-year-old entered the gop race last night. he joins democrat hillary clinton and republicans ted cruz and rand paul. manuel bojorquez is in miami where rubio made the announcement. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, more than 1,000 people came to the freedom tower here in downtown miami, a place that has special meaning for cuban-americans like rubio and his family. it's where refugees were processed more than 50 years ago. and rubio tapped that american dream theme as he announced his run. >> i announce my candidacy for ter: rubio told the story of his parents coming to the u.s. in search of the
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american dream. >> they never made it big, but they were successful. >> reporter: he said many americans doubt that dream is still possible. >> young americans unable to start a career or a business or a family because they owe thousands of dollars in student loans for degrees that did not even lead to jobs. >> reporter: 43-year-old rubio is trying to cast himself as the candidate in touch with the wants and needs of the younger generation. >> this election is not just about what laws are going to pass. this election is a generational choice about what kind of country we will be. >> i'm running for president. >> reporter: hillary clinton's announcement on sunday may have stolen some of rubio's thunder. but he folded it into his message as the fresh face of tomorrow. >> a leader from yesterday -- began a campaign for pretty by promising to take us back to yesterday. yesterday's over.
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>> reporter: democratic national committee chair congresswoman debbie wasserman schultz also took to twitter to blast a possible president rubio tweeting he stuck his head in the sand on climate change. and proposed budgets that would hurt florida families. senator rubio doesn't inspire confidence. a rubio ticket could help the gop gain some of the highly sought-after hispanic votes but not all of it. yet, demonstrators protested outside of rubio's event on his current stance on immigration which calls for closing the borders before fixing the . the only democrat in the race is campaigning this mor iowa. hillary clinton is there after a 1,000-mile road trip from her new york home. when she stopped monday some people did not seem to recognize. she's in iowa clinton's first campaign stop of the day. nancy, good morning.
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grr morning to you. she's going to be meeting with students and educators at this community college and it's possible that clinton will do more listening than speaking. the event is billed as a round table discussion. as you pointed out the 1,000-mile road trip came to be remarkably low key. she only sent one tweet and she's pulling into iowa with no fanfare. clinton only surfaced once monday at a chipotle in maumee ohio, where security shows her there. how many of you were clinton supporters in 2008? we met up with five democrats in beaverdale iowa. they and their neighbors were such active volunteers for president obama's election -- >> it is good to be back in iowa! >> reporter: -- they turned the nickname obamadale. >> i think he's qualified to be
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president. >> reporter: others are still on the fence. >> i hope in this hillary has learned more. listen more. talk less. and that's what the president is. >> what do you think about the way she announced her campaign? >> i'm getting ready to do something, too. i'm running for president. >> i know you like it. >> i like it a lot. attorney sean bagniewski was in the video along with his wife and the dog. he said it was filmed a month and a half ago. >> is he still eating the trash? >> he is. >> reporter: bagniewski has been a clinton fan since fifth grade. but he hopes others will get in the race including martin o'malley and jim webb. so you want more candidate it's in field? >> yeah i think it's better for voters, better for candidates to get the whole ray of opinions and i think it's better for
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iowa. >> reporter: this, after all, is a state where voters like to meet their candidates again and again. some have ruled out the possibility that clinton's democratic competition could come out of nowhere, gayle. they point out)2 at this point in 2007 a lot of people hadn't heard of barack obama either. >> that's very view. thank you, nancy. more than 200 people are sick with the norovirus this morning after outbreaks on two different cruise ships. both left ft. lauderdale at the end of the march for a 15-night cruise. one ship has arrived in san diego. the other is close to the port. vladimir duthiers from the digitial network cbs net is here. good morning. >> "legend of the seas" will join "infinity" which arrived yesterday. the 965-foot celebrity "infinity" was docked monday as workers on deck scrubbed it clean. 106 of the 2100 passengers on
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board have reported cases of the norovirus which is caused by contaminated food and water. its symptoms include vomiting and diarrhea. over-the-counter edmedication was administer. ed both are owned by royal caribbean. on the second ship "legend of the seas" 114 became sick. there now have been five flare-ups on cruise ships this year. in 2014 there were nine. on monday one woman praised the staff of the 14-year-old ship for the handling of a difficult unpleasant situation. >> i didn't see any sick passengers because they were quarantined. so, they did good. they kept us up to date on what was going on. and they cleaned everything. >> as for future cruises on the celebrity "infinity" in a
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statement, celebrity cruises, the company that runs the ship told us if any guest is uncomfortable in taking their cruise, they will assist them in sailing another time norah. and parts of the south are bracing for more heavy rain. a downpour drenched this backyard in dallas. inside florida, flash flooding slowed drivers during the afternoon rush. flooding is a threat for the rest of the week from texas to the carolinas. some areas could see more than a foot of rain. the prime minister of iraq will make an official visit to the white house, haider al abadi will ask president obama to finish it. and the pentagon said iraqi forces are pushing isis out of areas.
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the terror group has lost 25% of territory that it once held inside of iraq. isis still control, a large section of northern iraq. a pentagon spokesman said it is too soon to know if the momentum has shifted against isis. this morning four former blackwater security contractors face decades in prison. one received a life sentence monday. david martin's at the pentagon with detail of the sentencing david good morning. >> good morning. you know, the judge choked up when he handed down the sentences. it's clear that these fine young men just panicked he said but added, they were -- they were armed with deadly weapons, and their conduct cannot be condoned. >> reporter: life for nicholas slatten who had been convicted of first degree murder for firing the first shots in the 2007 which killed 14 unarmed iraqi civilians. the courtroom, filled with 100
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supporters of the four blackwater guards let out a gasp. then 30 years each for paul slou evan slibt and dustin herd, all of whom had been convicted of manslaughter. none of the defendants who earlier read statements expressing regret without admitting guilt showed any emotion. the judge pronounced the sentences after hearing emotional testimony from the family of a 9-year-old boy killed in the shooting. nobody likes america because of what blackwater did, the father said in english. video monitors showed photos of the dead and pictures of the cars shot is up by the blackwater guards armed with assault rifles and grenade launchers. following convictions by a jury last october attorneys for the defense asked the judge for mercy. arguing the sentences were intended for drug dealers, not security guards assigned to protect the state department convoy in the middle of a war-torn city.
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but the judge responded based on the seriousness of the crimes i find the penalty is not excessive. it's been eight years since the shootings, but these sentences do not bring the case to an end. even before the trial started, defense lawyers made clear they intend to appeal. norah. >> all right david thanks. golf's new superstar jordan spieth's going to join us here in studio 57. we're going to ask him about his historic masters win and what the future
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>> announcer: this national weather report sponsored by e-trade, are you type e? a los angeles icon is found hiding under an unsuspecting couple's home. >> ahead, how officials used beanbags to try to coax this stubborn mountain lion from his temporary shelter. >> the news is back here on "cbs this morning."
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♪ and looks like a coronation for pepiot. he's getting the crowd, he wants the crowd to cheer his performance. at the end, he gets clipped by myuran simon of washington. >> oh started his victory lap a little too earlier. tanguay pepiot begins celebrating before he crosses the finish line this weekend. while he's trying to pump up the crowd, it gives washington's simon time to catch up and win the race. in a sign of sportsmanship, simon helps pepiot collapse. isn't that running 101, you guys. >> i was going say, someone who ran track, you never celebrate until you cross the finish line. >> it's not over 'til it's over.
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>> it's not over 'til it's over. welcome back to "cbs this morning." masters champion who just arrived in studio 57. wearing that green jacket in studio 57. hello, jordan spieth! we'll ask him about his historic win at augusta national. and where it turns for inspiration. plus it's a common drug you might have in your medicine cabinet right now. a new study shows how acetaminophen can calm your headache but blunt also. and vladimir putin lift a ban to iran. russia could deliver the air defense system to iran by the end of the year. some analysts say it could under undermine the plan by washington. and "the washington post" at a va medical center in aurora colorado, that is not finished
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yet. it's one of several va hospitals overbudget and behind schedule. the new va facilities are supposed to improve wait times for veterans. the daily news case there's a crackdown for students in spokane, washington who cannot prove they have legally acquired vaccinations. it is believed be to the first district in the state to take this action. more than 700 students lack complete vaccination. "usa today" reports that smartphones could help detect some earthquakes. a new study shows that phones for serve as an early warning system. the devices could detect ground motion and give several seconds of warning. but the report says phones can only really detect bigger quakes of magnitude 7 or larger. and the cincinnati inquirer
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reports that lauren hill was remembered as a fierce get competitor. the service was held in the very same arena where she scored her only points for the mount st. joseph's basketball team. this morning, a 21-year-old golfer is on top of the sports world. jordan spieth won his first major championship on sunday at the masters. >> one of the epic performances in the annals of the sport. >>
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you had a putt? >> yeah. at the time, it was not really on my mind it was more enjoying that last hole knowing i had a couple putts to win and making a dream come true. >> what did you want to say to your sister? >> what do i want to? >> i just want to tell her that i won. she's asking me after each round if i won. i said no it's not over yet. just to tell her i won. and get to share it with us.
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>> we love the story of your 14-year-old sister ellie who you is your inspiration. how so? >> he's my biggest fan, my brother's biggest fan. it puts it in perspective when you look at the big picture the struggles that she goes through each day just to go through simple tasks that we take for granted. to see her and her friends, how happy they are. it also puts a bogey or missed putt in perspective a little bit to maybe settle down. >> your mom said you wouldn't be you without her. >> oh yeah. >> i was very touched by that jordan. but this is the thing. you seem like so damn cool like cucumber cool when you're out there. >> i'm not. >> that's what i'm wondering. do you have that never let them sweat philosophy what do you say to yourself to let yourself seem so poised at all times.
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>> it's certainly not on the inside. >> what are you doing on the inside? >> on the inside i'm trying to bobble so many thoughts in my head to stay focused on a goal for that day. the minute you start showing weakness, they jump on it. they take advantage of it they're the best in the world. >> what are you thinking about? i see you going through the rhythm of your swing every time before you make a shot. >> yeah i'm trying to visualize the shot as well as just kind of get a feel for the rhythm. get a take away. a smooth transition for the ball ahead of time, to makes it easier when i step to it. normally, it's just getting the vision. >> no one got closer than three shots of your lead you had a big lead on the very first day. was that part of the strategy to open up a big lead in the beginning? >> well it was unexpected
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maybe. ideally, that's how it happens. that's the easiest way to do it i guess. yeah. it is challenging, though i put those expectations on myself when i start out with the lead. hey, i'm in a position to win this thing, i put my own target on my back. it's tough at times. >> did barely miss tiger -- many at augusta say tiger has been tiger-proofed. it's a much tire course. that tiger used to hit over. i was playing with tiger on wednesday, he kept pointing out i made history here at hole 5. it's great for the game. it's cool to see. everyone was very excited to see him playing well and hearing his voice. >> how about this you're now number two, rory's number one,
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are we going to look at a competition like jack and arnie betweens two of you? >> i think it's too early to tell. rory has had success in their career. this is my first one. but right now, i think it's a little early to put myself in that position. there's a lot of great young talent, american talent too. >> i heard you were named after michael jordan is that true? >> that's true. >> how did you find this love of golf? i thought maybe baseball is your game. >> yeah, it's in our family. we're just a big sports family. enjoy going to games. but it was also cool i was named after michael jordan who was my dad's favorite athlete, when my dad met him at the ryder cup last year he was trembling. >> i love the hug with you and your dad at the end. that was one of the sweetest things. i don't know if you've had time to look at that. >> i have. the sacrifices they went through
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to get me in this position. it was really really special. it was the first time they'd been there on the 18th green after a win. this was a good one to be there, too. >> what's the most important thing that has put you where you are in the game of golf today? >> the most important thing is probably my family and our team. as far as taking the next step which is the hardest step from college to transition to the real world. to get out into managing a lot of different situations. and just i've got an incredible team of guys around me that support me that look after me. and they're all dedicated to the same goals that i have that's really key. they want to be the best in the world at what they do. and they really are. >> when did you know this would be possible? >> i wanted to be professional and i thought it might be possible at about 15 or 16 when i first tested my game against the pro, and thought i really enjoyed this. and i was having fun at this.
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>> i'm pretty good. >> yeah, i might be able to do this. >> all right. and speaking of the girlfriend annie, should i tell the other girls to back back? >> annie's been my longtime girlfriend, we're doing well. >> let's put that on the record. what's it like to bathe in a green jacket. >> they don't want anything on this jacket. and i don't want anything on this jacket. it hasn't left my side often. >> congratulations. >> thank you very much. >> jordan spieth we thank you. maybe we'll see you next year. right here. a hollywood celebrity is trapped under a house. ahead, how the hiding place of l.a.'s most famous mountain lion was discovered. and if you're heading off to work, you got something to do you don't have to miss the rest of this broadcast, you can set your dvr to watch "cbs this morning" anytime you feel like it. we'll be right back. ♪
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a popular california mountain lion has gotten a little cozy this morning in the crawl space of a home. workers found this big cat yesterday but it would not budge as you see. ben tracy shows us the attempts to move the stubborn feline from the new-found shelter. >> reporter: normally finding a cat stuck in your basement would not attract this kind of attention. >> come on out. >> reporter: but this is not on average stray. it's adult male mountain lion known in the neighborhood as p-22. workers installing a security system discovered the lion trapped under this los angeles home early monday afternoon. >> it had gone into the crawl space and come face-to-face with the lion. he was like dude i got to finish this job another day. >> reporter: overnight, p-22 frustrated rescue teams who had no shortage of strategies to try to coax the stubborn feline
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caught in the crawl space. starting out simple, they deployed a pole with a lead taped to the end of it. but he wouldn't budge. more high-tech approaches involved launching projectiles in p-22's direction, hoping to startle it out of the home. even firing beanbags into the crawl space, but still no luck. >> hoping he'll get out of the way, allowing him to come out on his own. probably hasn't eaten. he's not responding to a physical thing. >> reporter: he's become sort of a local celebrity in los angeles after it's believed to have crossed two freeways to get to its usual home in griffith park. the national park service said he stayed there the last three years and has been photographed numerous times even appearing in national geographic. animal rescue teams hope to free p-22 and get him back to griffith park without hurting
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him or anyone else. for "cbs this morning," ben tracy, los angeles. >> what a story. all right. the red sox find a spot on the roster for the father of the ice bucket challenge. plus what happened when tom brady threw out the first pitch on opening day. >> oh! >> oh! >> he's got an arm. started my camry. this portion of "cbs this
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♪ ♪ ♪ pete frates welcome to the boston red sox. >> opening day at fenway park went to the man who inspired the world with the ice bucket challenge. the red sox gave pete frates an honorary contract monday. and tom brady bounced the pitch into the dirt before it reached home plate. he looked better taking batting
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practice. the former red sox pitcher pedro martinez. >> oh boy. i wonder why tom brady threw it like that. i think he was trying to to be funny. it's a new trend brewing among caffeine users. matcha, a it up of tea here to stay. and protect my joints from further damage. this is humira giving me new perspective. doctors have been prescribing humira for ten years. humira works for many adults. it targets and helps to block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to ra symptoms. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers including lymphoma have happened, as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb
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♪ it is tuesday, april 14th 2015. the day before your taxes are due. welcome to "cbs this morning." there is more real news ahead include nug research or acetaminophen. dr. holly phillips shows whether it can cure emotions as it takes care of aches and pains but t firshere's a look at your "eye opener" at 8:00. >> the flight may have seened like an etern bityy passengers with the sound coming from the cargo hold. >> if convicted of manslaughter bates could face five years in police. >> rubio announced his white house run. >> i live in an etixceponal country where the son of a bartender and a maid can have the same future as those who come from power and privilege.
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>> the only democrat in the race is campaigning in iowa. hillary clinton is there after an 1,000-mile road trip. >> it's been called the least exciting road trip in spring break history. >> and they're now taking samples from the ships to determine what made so many people sick. >> i read that you were named after michael jordan. is that true? >> that's true. >> how did you find this love of golf from your dad's point of view, maybe basketball was the game. >> yeah. >> while you're a way, he can thank you. >> that's right. >> you wanted a handsome young man from africa? had hello! >> yes. [ laughter ] ♪ i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. an alaska airlines plane was forced to make an emergency landing after a baggage handler got caught in the cargo hold.
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passengers and crew heard banging from below just after the plane took off yesterday from seattle. >> the pilot returned to the airport. the worker told authorities he had fallen asleep in the plane. he was discharged from the hospital after passing a drug test monday afternoon. >> he must have been a real good sleeper. you don't hear the engines and the doors closing. presidential candidate hillary clinton campaigns in iowa this morning after a 1,000-mile road trip. she made a stop monday at a chipotle restaurant in toledo ohio. she and her staff got in a van outside of new york two days ago. she sent one tweet sunday in pennsylvania before the stop in ohio. they arrived this morning in monticello iowa. a new study says acetaminophen has a side effect. most people know it as tylenol.
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researchers say it may7w change your mood and relieve your headache. dr. holly phillips is with us. good morning. >> good morning. >> i was surprised when i heard the headline of the study. we all take tylenol frequently. >> actually 1 in 5 americans take it every single week. what i found fascinating about this study, we've known for a while in addition to relieving pain, it may blunt emotional pain. this study took it a step farther. and said that in addition to affecting negative emotions it may also affect positive feelings as well. so what the researchers did, they took two -- i think it was two small studies. they gave participants 1,000 milligrams of acetaminophen which is the active ingredient in tylenol and waited an hour. and showed them a group of photographs. the first should make you happy or laugh or smile. the other group was sad photographs, that should make
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you feel uncomfortable or even cry. what they found, compared with people who took placebos those who had had taken athe teeeet acetaminophen had a less reaction across the board. they don't know what the cause is. but we know that pain is not a local phenomenon, right. if you have pain in your knee it's is not just there. it moves through your central nervous system and your brain which affects emotion. importantly, that affects both positive and negative emotions. so if you might relieve negative feelings you may also relief positive feelings with that. >> so any pain medication that has acetaminophen might have this affect? >> right, this is where this is headed. again, it's very early research. if you take tylenol daily, or acetaminophen daily for your
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pain, we wouldn't want you necessarily to stop. but it is a red flag for people who take it every day. we don't want to blunt feelings of happiness. >> what should we do with this information? feeling good is a good thing, i agree. >> when you have a good feeling, you want a good feeling. >> yeah you want to keep that. >> you don't want to tamp that thing down. >> a good feeling. >> what good feeling are we talking jab. >> about? >> the kind that makes you feel good. >> right now if you do take it don't necessarily change. there are other things liver failure and overdose we need to try to minimize how much we take. and then we have to look at further research to see how big this effect is on our happiness. >> holly did that with a straight face. she said i'm not going to take -- >> i could have let the metaphor
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do what it does. let it breathe. >> thank you. former treasury secretary hank paulson ran the bailout that helped wall street keep from crashing in
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trading in a cup of joe for a morning matcha. the import from japan, plus it's easy on your stomach and they say it packs a punch like espresso. we'll show you some of the effects here ahead on "cbs this morning."
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♪ in our "morning rounds" matcha madness. the green tea popular for centuries in japan has crossed the pacific ocean now. tea sales in this country have increased five-fold in the past 25 years to more than $10 billion worth of tea a year. and matcha is poised to break
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through, thanks to a caffeine kick, they say, and health benefits, too. vinita nair has the specialty brew. and tells us what it's like. >> i certainly did, you'll see my unfiltered response to the taste. the united states drinks coffee three times more than tea we're slowly beginning to embrace matcha and understand why the japanese have consumed for centuries. >> it's more sustainable as far as the jolt. >> reporter: graham fortgang was a daily coffee drinker. he needed the jolt. >> i had reflux issues i was looking for something that would jump-start my body but result in what i call a more sustainable fuel. >> reporter: that's when he found matcha ground up tea leaves harvested primarily from the kyoto region in japan. it is low on acidity and left
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him alert for hours. >> not only do you have the steady release of caffeine but you have a calming factor which we call a calm synergy. >> reporter: quickly a convert, graham and his brother max decided to open up matcha bar in brooklyn becoming the modern matcha cafe in new york city. how many people who come through your doors is this their first experience of matcha? >> yeah, on the weekend, i'd say it's about 60%, 70%. weekdays, we have regulars. they're coming back every day. saturday morning espressos. >> reporter: that morning matcha is much more accessible with cafes popping up from l.a. to miami to boston. do you have japanese people coming in here who say what's going on here is this not matcha? >> i wouldn't say japanese. but tea experts who say -- >> reporter: kyoto tea has been
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preparing matcha in the kyoto shop. three years ago, they opened up a manhattan store. tea expert kathy is a regular customer.p>> it's been trending for years. but it's not new at all. it's been around for centuries. >> reporter: to make traditional matcha first, the tea powder is scooped and sifted to make it more uniform. then hot water is added. >> make sure it's not boiling. you want hot water somewhere between 165 to 170. >> reporter: the tea master uses handcrafted bamboo to serve it licking his wrist, not to touch the bottom of the bowl. it's not everyone's cup of tea. >> what do you think? >> reporter: it tastes a little like seaweed. match that was used in japan to settle themselves during meditation. over time, it became part of
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traditional japanese tea ceremonies and then an everyday drink. since you consume it instead of a bag steeped in matter matcha has three times more than regular green tea. >> tea leaves are shaded a few weeks before picked. you get anti-oxidants. >> reporter: you can find it cropping up in cutting edge restaurants. sprinkled on starbucks green tea lattes or used by models during new york's fashion week. matcha has taken to social media sharing idea creations or civilly beautiful photos. >> you know in this world like instagram and social media, visual is such a huge part. and matcha happens to be pretty. >> reporter: while graham
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fortgang admits the flavor takes time getting used to he believe it's a new goal. you say the benefits are real? >> proof is in the pudding. new yorkers are the biggest skeptics in the world. if you can turn them against coffee, you can turn anybody against it. >> reporter: the brothers of matcha bar told us the next goal is mass production. they're hoping to make a bottled matcha sold in stores around the country. >> your mother raised you right. it's potent. looks like a lot of work. thank you. >> thank you vinita. all right. it's the weapon that landed the life of one of the greatest presidents 1 have the50 years ago. >> one shot from this tiny gun changed the course of american history. coming up on "cbs this morning," a look at the assassination of abraham lincoln. >> announcer: "cbs morning rounds" sponsored by flow
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♪ here is where abraham lincoln was shot by john wilkes booth. after the surrender at appomattox. bill plante is inside ford theatre in washington where the deadly shot was fired.
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good morning. >> reporter: good morning, norah. this theater is the site of one of the greatest dramas in american history that played out not on the stage, but up here in that box. that's where president abraham lincoln was shot. his legacy abolishing slavery, preserving the union, still, all these years later inspires the nation. professor allen grosso has devoted his life to studying president lincoln. >> lincoln's death generates the greatest what-if question of all time for americans. what if lincoln had lived? >> reporter: lincoln's assassination plunged a nation already on edge into uncertainty. millions mourned as his body was taken back home to illinois for burial. they lined the tracks to pay their respects. today, in illinois, history is being rebuilt. dave coky is restoring one of the lost treasures.
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the funeral car that carried the fallen president in that journey. >> he didn't want to ride on it during the war people getting killed, he thought it was too fancy. it was the air force one of the day. >> reporter: instead it was his final resting place. from washington along the east coast through the great lakes to springfield. 180 cities in seven states. the railcar was destroyed in the 1911 fire. >> it was hanging like this. >> reporter: forgotten until dave cloaky from the group of volunteers brought it back. from history to reality, usinging historical blueprints to create the original car. now that the carpet is in wood follow lish polished and the original lanterns waiting to be hung. >> we got it done. >> reporter: he did it so people could know remember what happened 150 years ago. >> people weren't paying that
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much attention to history anymore. they kind of forgot about it. and we should remember the history of the country and why things are like they are. >> reporter: to help us remember that history, ford theatre's is displays memorabilia from the day lincoln was shot. it's the first time all of these item vbs together sincehave been igtogether since that time. his top hat. >> the hander chief, two pair of glasses. one of them you can tell he repaired himself with a piece of string. >> reporter: even the murder weapon itself. it's amazing this is the actual pistol used to assassinate the president. >> it's so small, only .44 caliber, and yet this one small weapon caused so much damage so much grief. >> reporter: all that was needed to kill the man, but not his
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legacy. how did what happened up in that box that night change the course of u.s. history? >> what fell and began to fell that night, play out in history, of discrimination it's what we are today, we are still dealing with the after affects of the death of abraham lincoln. >> so what might have been different had lincoln lived? well, for one thing he gave a speech four days before he died in which he said he approved of the idea of the vote for some of the freed slaves. whether or not he could have accomplished that he did leave a moral example for the ages. gayle. >> it brings up interesting questions, doesn't it? >> it does. >> to see that gun is chilling. you're
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." dumb coming up in this half hour "ncis" star pauley perrette is here. and why did they bring a plate of pastries and why does she have a book in her hand? are they connected. i'm eating some of those pastries right now, pretty good. time to show you headlines from around the globe. "the wall street journal" looks at companies trying to trademark significant scents. for a musk that is pumped into its big stores. and united airlines wanted to trademark landing fragrance at o'hare. the trademark office said it's not easy to detect a smell. francis making frequent
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references to the devil. that has brought awareness about exorcisms to the mainstream. italy and spain have noticed a number of people claiming to be possessed.church is training more people in the or the of how to perform exorcism. >> hmm. in billboard, spotify says that british singer ed sheeran dominates the playlist at bedtime. ♪ will your eyes still smile from the cheek baby i will be 70 ♪ >> go ahead, norah. >> i love it. it's a great song. >> i know the words too. >> "thinking out loud" that's the name of the song. ranks agency the most ranked song for sleepers streamed. it's on more than 3 million playlists. >> i don't know if they're
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sleeping to that song or not. >> what are they doing? >> listening to it and feeling the words in all of the way. >> it's good to sing to somebody who loves that song. it's true. i haven't sang it to anybody. but it is a good song. in 2008 the nation was teetering on the brink of disaster before the financial meltdown. treasury secretary henry paulson. he's still headed a massive rescue aboard a second great depresion. $7 billion bailout seen as a landmark movement for the economy. jan crawford recently talked to paulson, she's in washington. jan, good morning. >> charlie paulson is a man who is just in constant motion. but when he returned to private life after the financial crisis he said he suddenly came to a stop. he struggled. he said he lost his joy. a sense of purpose. today is the new mission, he's
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devoting his considerable time energy and money in finding solutions. >> reporter: if you ran into this unassuming couple on one of their nature walks -- >> see that hank? >> yeah. >> reporter: -- you'd never know the power this man once held. >> the dow tumbled more than 500 points. ♪ >> it's got to be one of the watershed days in the nation's market history. >> reporter: as treasury secretary, henry paulson bailed out the banks and guided the nation in a financial crisis. >> american people can remain confidence. >> reporter: his influence so great he was called king henry. >> right there, yeah. >> reporter: this is paulson today. a conservationist bird-watching with his wife wendy, and soungd the alarm on two issues he says are even more critical with the financial crisis. a relationship with china and the environment. >> as bad as it was with the financial crisis the united states government was able to come in pretty much at the last
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minute when there was a crisis and take steps to avoid the worst outcomes. when you look at the climate change crisis, it's killing us. >> this is more dire or? >> it is more dire because it could change the way of life as we know it on our planet. >> reporter: key to solving the problem is china where paulson has more than 25 years of experience going back to his days as ceo of goldman sachs. through his work at the paulson institute, which he calls a think and do tank. and his new book "dealing with china" he urges the u.s. to engage and cooperate with the communist superpower. >> stop and think a minute. almost any major global problem, whether we're talking about the environment, in climate change.
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wherever we're talking about minimizing terrorism or nuclear proliferation, all of these will be easier to solve if we're working with china. and more difficult if we're working across purposes of china. >> reporter: he points out that china will soon have the world's leading economy, marking the u.s. off the top spot for the first time in a century. and with 1.4 billion people and more than half of the new buildings in the world going up in its cities china edged out the u.s. in the production of greenhouse gases. >> if they're not successful in dealing with the environmental problems and dealing with climate change, it's going to hurt us all. and the world will feel the impact. i'll tell you if they can't grow their economy and if their economy would fail every single one of our economic problems in my judgment would be more difficult to meet.
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so for all of those who are rooting against china to fail be careful what you wish for. >> reporter: he is a man fully engaged but in his book paulson reveals after returning to private life and the aftermath of the finance crisis he lost his sense of joy and purpose. >> i used the extraordinary knowledgeable ways there's almost certain to be criticism. it's one thing to understand that intellectually. it's another thing to emotional live it. >> reporter: paulson said he eventually came to terms with the criticism. what brought him back was his grandchildren. >> a little granddaughter crawling up on your lap and saying papa your hair. you don't have any hair. it's melted. >> we start up the institute -- >> reporter: today at 69 years old, he said he's found his purpose. >> i want my children and my
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grandchildren to grow up in a safe world pipe want them to grow up in a world that's prosperous. that's got a clean environment. and that's going to be much more difficult to do. if we're at odds with china. or if we're in conflict with china. i'm an optimist that we can make it work. >> now, he and his wife wendy are putting their money behind that mission. they're reportedly worth about $800 million. and they told me that they plan to give away most of their estate to charity to support conservation. and their two kids are fully on board. gayle. >> what a great story. >> it was, too, jan. >> he is so right. >> this is what we tried to get to a little bit with our profile of caroline kennedy, the ambassador to japan. with the rise of asia so important. with the military power.
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quadrupling the military budget we have to keep our eye on this. >> and because of the eflsvolution there. >> a guy with perspective, even if his hair is melting. thank you, jan. millions of fans know her as forensic scientist abby. pauley perrette is her new name. she's in studio 57. >> she's got that book too.
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♪ the hit cbs series "ncis" is now in its 12th season if you can believe that. 57 million globally. that's worth repeating. >> and i think it's 59. >> vin. >> correct, pauley perrette. you would know. abby sciutto. in tonight's episode abby helps agent gibbs, that's mark harmon investigate the murder of a marine. >> gibbs gibbs, gibbs, i know you don't like kept waiting. >> absolutely. on my way down. >> blade pattern is not consistent with the wounds.
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>> it's not the murder weapon? >> no. >> but i found prints on the handle that don't match. guess who they belong to? >> who. >> me. >> well you kind of stole my thunder a little bit, yes, gibbs, him. >> him. >> they haven't seen the clips yet. oh, i can't wait. >> there's a twist that that episode. pauley perrette, with a co-author as charlie has been pointing out all morning. "donna bell's bake shop" produced by simon & schuster that you might know is part of cbs. it's judge a juggernaut. you are considered one of the most popular actresses on tv. >> in the world. >> in the world. that's what people say about you, all because of abby sciutto. it started 12 seasons ago. pretty good that used to walk around hell's kitchen with a
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white mow hackpiercings. an you ended up here. >> i wanted to be a cop. i wanted to work with the fbi or something. it was a complete accident. it it absolutely was. but i'm so grateful and so happy. i mean i was here. i overheard somebody say they had done a commercial and made $3,000. and i was like what! $3,000. >> acting for a commercial. >> had i was a bartender here in new york. walter from the book it's also a biography, said i know this director that would love you. i was like i went and found him. i literally walked into this director's osffice and said hey, walter said -- he hired me that day. then sent me to l.a. i've been working on it ever since. >> one of the things i love because of the popularity of the
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show and you there is something called the abby effect that's fascinating. >> yeah the abby effect is this character, abby she's been on tv so long that young girls from around the world have been super inspired to go into math and science. it was like five minutes ago when women weren't allowed to vote much less be inspired to go and seek scientific fields and mathematic fields. they've been watching since teenagers and going into college and doing things that abby would do. >> this is real. it's documented. >> a huge spike of women wanting to go into forensic science because of the character. >> that's got to make you feel good to know you that did that considering you said you weren't really that good in math and science. >> you're completing 12 seasons. how have you changed the character, you and the writers, how is she different today from when she first started? >> it's interesting with abby
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she's an iconic tv character, she's like an annaime like a cartoon. things that happened in the show, like a co-worker or stuff like that but also it's very important to keep her very much the same. like if you think about your favorite cartoon characters you don't suddenly want to see charlie brown with a full head of hair. >> yeah. >> so although we include the things that are necessary and her growth or even her breaking down a little bit, but we -- i really want to keep her very consistent. i think that's what the audience wants. and i think that's what they want from abby. >> you gave everybody a scare, you dye it jet black color. you ended up in the hospital. >> yeah. >> i didn't know that was possible. >> there's a hair dye called pcd and no one uses it.
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i tweeted that very unflattering picture of myself because i wanted to raise awareness about this. i started researching it. and really sad stories people losing their life because of hair dye. because i'm very blond. i finally found a product that isn't a hey dye, it's a hair color that's like smarter than me that infuses color in your hair. icic magnitudes. >> charlie's been waiting all morning. >> what is this? >> my mom passed away from breast chancer in 2002. these are two my best friends darren and matthew. my mom from from alabama. she was amazing baker and cook.
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we made donna bell's bake shop. on 49th and 8th. so we had the bake shop and people were just so excited about it. they loved going in there. there's picks of my mom in there, handwritten recipes from her. from around the world, people not only visit here and go there, but people are asking us about what it is. what we did, we made this special little book. it comes out todayed so we're all very excited. it's part biography and part cookbook. >> but the pictures i wanted to lick the pages. jalapeno cornbread squares. strawberry scones with the lemon icing. stop it. >> yeah. there's so much. it's biographies, me and my mom, growing up. a lot of people are surprised, it's a cookbook but very touching. a lot of people read the cookbook, yesterday, somebody told me you made me cry over the stories. >> talk about your mom for a second what she meant to you.
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how she had influenced you? >> well you know she was my mom and she was a wonderful lady. i lost her way too early. i thing anybody -- >> that's you on the right-hand side. >> that's me. that's my sister andy. and that's my beautiful mom in the middle. i've said before i think no matter how old you are, it doesn't matter when you lose your mom, you feel like an orphan you feel really kind of -- my friends who are fortunate enough to not have that happen yet, my heart hurts. >> i lost my mom at 40 and i use that word orphan. congratulations. >> thanks. >> to your success and your book. "donna bell's bake
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. coming up today on the doctors. >> lost that loving feeling? >> if e'thers anyone out there who knows a thing or two about
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love? >> this 100-year-old sex reveals: . >> and then a rare disease that has this little girl fighting for her life. >> she's done rounds of chemotherapy. >> the big dream is coming true. >> plus, why this tv actress is crying over spilled breast milk. >> and an oscar winner opens about one of her big loves. >> all new, doctors! >> welcome everyone to a special edition of the doctors where we take it outside of our normal studio today. stay tuned for the "word-of-the-day". you will have a chance to win a weekly meal delivery service valued at more than $2,000. >> if you are wondering how to keep the spark alive in your

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