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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  April 27, 2015 7:00am-9:01am EDT

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good morning. it is monday april 27th 2015. welcome to "cbs this morning." a race to rescue survivors in nepal. the weekend's giant earthquake killed thousands. climbers are trapped on mt. everest. holly williams is there. twisters slammed through texas overnight. it caused widespread damage. newly released video shows bay area officers throwing a woman down on the floor face first. but we begin this morning with today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >> it took everyone by surprise. people were just running. >> the mission to find survivors
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in nepal. >> the death toll has climbed to over 3,300 as powerful aftershocks incontue. >> oouut, t, out. >> the quake caused an avalanche at mt. everest. at least 18 people died. >> oh, my gosh. this is the biggest hail it's ever seen. oh. i'm covered in glass. >> severe weather including hail and damaging winds. hail and tornados in oklahoma and alabama. >> two people were killed when a powerful storm hit the area. >> in baltimordae tohey t funeral of freddie gray follows a week of outrage capped off by violent looting and more arrests. >> the smoking gun is the pattern of behavior. >> the clinton foundation admitted it made mistakes. >> the sloppiness is syimpl inexcusable. >> the trial of colorado shooter james holmes begins today. hele's potd n guilty by reason
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of insanity. >> demonstrators marked the disappearance of 43 college students. >> all that -- >> no way. >> what? >> no way. he caught that. >> -- and all that matters -- >> john dickerson here getting used to getting up every sunday morning, even the sunday morning after the white house correspondents' dinner. the truth of the matter is i may still be at the white house. >> -- on "cbs this morning." >> being president is never easy. i still have to fix a broken immigration system issue veto threats, negotiate with iran all while finding time to pray five times a day. >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" presented by toyota. let's go places. envelope captioning funded by cbs welcome to "cbs this morning." the ground is still shaking in
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nepal more than two days after a giant earthquake. repeated aftershocks, frightened survivors, and delaying the rescue response. saturday's 7.8 magnitude quake is the worst in 81 years. the death toll has jumped to eded to more than 3,800. that includes three americans. many are trapped on mt. everest. >> holly williams is in kathmandu where survivors are jamming the roads trying to get out. holly, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. they're still digging through the rubble here in kathmandu, hoping to find survivors but expecting to discover many more bodies. the ground began to heave in nepal at midday on saturday. this security video captured the violent tremors. in just a few minutes, the quake raised buildings to the ground
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splintered tarmac roads, and claimed mo the wounded, some with head and spine injuries poured into nepal's hospitals. many of them poorly equipped for a disaster like this one. in the ancient heart of nepal's capital, several centuries' old hindu temples were leveled. this morning we found this search team working furiously digging through the rubble with shovels and each their bare hands. most of them like this man are volunteers who are hoping to find survivors. >> slim, but we can do what we can do. that's all we're doing. >> reporter: this teenage girl was found alive by another rescue team today. they used crowbars to free her from the debris. they've already begun to cremate their dead in nepal, light hindu
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funeral pyres for their loved ones. still the aftershocks keep coming jaunting a nation already on edge. thousands of people are sleeping on the street not because their homes were destroyed, but because they're fearful of being inside if another tremor shakes buildings to their foundations. this woman has set up camp with 20 of her family members and describes what it was like when the earthquake hit. >> we thought we wouldn't be alive in the morning. >> you thought you were going to die. >> yes. >> reporter: there were more after aftershocks last night and as long as they continue people will stay here on the street, too frightened to go home. >> it is just frightening watching from new york isn't it? >> amazing. six times more powerful than the storm. >> and they say the death toll is going to get worse.
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we thank you, holly williams in kathmandu. firefighters left for kathmandu late last night. some of them are at mt. everest evacuating climbers who survived this deadly avalanche that nearly wiped out a base camp on the mountain. elizabeth palmer is tracking the incredibly difficult rescue from london. elizabeth, good morning. >> good morning to you. that everest base camp you mentioned is only roughly a hundred miles north and east of the epicenter, so the effect of the quake on the mountain was dramatic. first the earth heaved and shook. then a huge avalanche thundered toward the sprawling every rest base camp. german climber and his companions managed to take cover, but at least 18 people died including the google executive dan fredinburg from
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california who had been training hard to make his second attempt at scaling mt. everest. marisa eve girl tom tam lin linlin. >> he loved to travel. >> reporter: here's where the evidence roared through the base camp but here at camps 1 and 2 hundreds are trapped. carsten peterson was heading to base camp when the avalanche struck. >> ten minutes before the
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avalanche. had we walked slower we would have been thrown into the rocks somewhere. >> reporter: today a helicopter rescue effort is in full swing but with the high altitude only two can be rescued at a time. these among the cold were the first to be brought safely down the mountain. for now the weather is good but rescuers fear it's not going to stay that way. those aftershocks just keep on coming with terrifying consequences as one of the climbers tweeted in camp 1, it's so unstable that rocks fall and minor avalanches occur constantly. my heart leaps every time the earth moves. gayle? >> thank you, elizabeth palmer in london. scientists say this earthquake was 16 times more powerful than the earthquake that killed thousands in haiti back in 2010. we'll look at it ahead on "cbs this morning." severe storms are threatening many across the south this morning.
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at least 19 reports of tornados were recorded overnight. the storms brought high winds, hail storms and flooding. thousands are without power as the threat continues. our reporter is in texas. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. this mangled mess over here is part of a canopy from a gas station. and look at this. this is a trailer of an 18-wheeler that landed on its side and damage like this is being reported well across the region. a tornado struck across north central texas syunda afternoon bringing high winds up to 80 miles an hour. more twisters touched town well after dark downing trees and power lines, tearing off rooftops and spreading debris across roads. this big rig tanker trailer overturned on its side. >> we've got softball-sized hail
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going on. i'm okay. i just got glass all over me. >> reporter: softball-sized hail blanketed cars and yards keeping experienced storm chasers on their toes. >> oh, my gosh. this is the biggest storm i've ever seen. [ sirens ] >> reporter: tdoorna warnings were happening all across. one captured the electric intensity from the air. back on the ground, heavy flooding has left many roads impassable. and that heavy flooding is expected throughout the morning. i'm told there are a number of water rescues under way right now. no injuries have been reported after the storms. norah? >> thank you. at least two are dead and five are missing after a powerful storm capsized several
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boats in alabama's bay. vicente arenas is tracking it from miami. vicente, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, norah. the weather was just fine when the regatta first got started but by 3:00 in the afternoon the national weather service issue add storm warning in mobile bay saying boaters should already take shelter, but for boaters already out on the water, it was too late. >> whoa. turn down. turn down. >> reporter: with a powerful storm quickly barreling down on them. jesh and others on this boat had no choice but to ride it out. the group finds a much smaller boat struggling against 70-mile-an-hour winds. moments later it disappears and the storm worsens. they're safe but several people are missing. >> when it was lined up people
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were all over the place. >> reporter: more than 100 sailboats were participating the dolphinauphin island regatta when the storm hit saturday afternoon. officials are investigating whether the race should have been canceled. >> at this point we're still focused on the search and rescue side of this. >> reporter: randy rutledge and his wife were rescued. >> i said, jesus. >> yep. >> and the storm subsided just enough that i could keep my head up. >> reporter: search and rescue teams have covered more than 1,700 square miles in search of survivors. >> we're working our hardest to bring those still missing back to their families. >> reporter: we reached out to the fair hope yacht club the organizers for the event but pthey didn't have a comment. today when crews go out to look for more survivors, they face a
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chance of more thunderstorms. charlie? >> vicente, thanks. the lawyers will try to show why the convicted boston marathon bomber should spend life in prison instead of getting the death penalty. the prosecutors' witnesses issued emotional testimony last week. rikki klieman is with us, good morning. >> good morning. >> how did they do in their summation? >> the prosecution's case was absolutely devastating. we have to remember what the jurors have heard and seen are things that no human being have to live through. it's as if the jurors have been part of the carnage, have been victims of the carnage. they, too, may be suffering from this evidence. so to overcome the prosecution's penalty phase borders on the impossible. >> some of the most difficult testimony came from witnesses for martin richard. >> they wrote a letter.
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it was on the front page of "the boston globe," not in the opinion section. there have been other victims who have supported life in prison. the jurors should not know about that. however, you have an interesting question here. jurors probably won't make any different to them that the richards parents did not testify in the penalty phase because they've heard from martin richards' father in the guilt phase. what is the defense to do? should the defense dare to ever call martin richards' parents in the penalty phase, i would never do it. i think it's true cruel. but might they send an emissary like an investigator to find out if someone like the richards' family or someone for them might testify. high-risk move. >> he's certainly indicated he doesn't mind if he gets the death penalty. >> he was looking for martyr dom
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in the boat jealous of his brother's martyrdom. life in prison is far worse. polls show there are more people in favor of life, that perhaps that is the best alternative. if you put him on the stand or he dares to take the stand over your objections, he might just ask for death. the jurors could spite him and give him life. >> rickykki kliemany klieman, thanks. freddie gray's death sparked a week of protests. >> he's a photographer! >> a photographer said he was taken down by police officers as it turned violent. police said it can be difficult to tell media from protesters. baltimore said police are doing a good job. >> i was extremely proud of the
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men and women in blue who worked yesterday to facilitate the peaceful protest. >> police ended up arresting 35 people. >> there are new revelation this morning about the u.s. drone program that mistakenly killed american hostage warren weinstein in january. "the wall street journal" said president obama signed off on loser rules for those drone strike inside pakistan. the policy gives the cia flexibility to bypass standards to put flexibility in place to protect people in other countries. julianna goldman is in washington with the evolving debate. julianna, good morning. >> good morning. well, those details come on the heels of learning that warren weinstein's family paid $250,000 in 2012 to try and free him despite the government prohibiting such payments and now officials are acknowledging
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they need to be more sensitive to the families of u.s. hostages abroad. the families of u.s. hostages complain they've been kept in dark with the government holding back timely information, often dragging them through a bureaucratic rest. a close friend of murder eded steven steven. >> we had meetings with them and basically he bullied and they were scared. >> the family of james foley were threatened with prosecution if they tried to make a ransom payment to rescue their loved one. his mother diane foley told the cbs news the potential changes are a positive step but a baby step. >> the goal of the review is to try too address those frustrations whoor while they're work to retain the no ransom policy, they will recommend that families not be threatened with
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prosecution. also they'll work with a broader group of government agencies including the state department and the fbi instead of the case officer currently assigned to the families. officials are also looking at best ways to share intelligence with families including hostage whereabouts which is often classified. chris boss a former lead negotiator for the fbi says the case of warren weinstein says this is what can happen. >> this is the outcome when they get no help from the government. when the government looks the other way. a quarter of a million dollars ends up in the pockets of hostage takers and the hostages end up dead. >> a u.s. official said last week's dramatic turn of events with news of warren weinstein's death may slow down the process, but, norah, they still expect it to be completed within weeks.
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>> all right julianna. thank you. the clinton foundation admits it made mistakes in its public listing of listers. they say government grants were not properly identified to the grantses. instead those contributions were lumped in with other donations. questions about the foundation's fund razes have arisen since hillary clinton started her campaign two weeks ago. a woman is suing over what she caused excessive force.
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>> announcer: this national weather report sponsored by kay jewelers. every kiss begins with kay. >> the massive nepal earthquake was so possible it shifted the capital city ten feet in 30 seconds. ahead, professor michio kaku
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behind that huge jolt. >> the news is back in the morning right here on "cbs this morning." ♪ ♪ ♪ hershey's spreads. bring the delicious taste of hershey's chocolate to anything - everything. with hershey's spreads, the possibilities are delicious. body pain? motrin helps you be an unstoppable, i-can-totally-do-this- all-in-one-trip kind of woman. when pain tries to stop you, there's motrin. motrin works fast to stop pain where it starts. make it happen with new motrin liquid gels.
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. i invited luther my anger translator to join me tonight. in our fast-changing world, conditions like the white house correspondents' dinner are important. >> i mean really. what is this thing and why am i required to come to it? >> we do need to stay focused on big challenges like climate change. >> listen y'all. in case you haven't noticed. california is bone dried. it looks like a trailer for a new mad max movie. >> one of the halves of key & peele. i thought he was hilarious. they said where did he come from? >> you said, on our show. >> yes he has achlt couple of
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times and he's on the 100 funniest list. coming up this half hour, hampering atempts to rescue after aftershocks. we look at the incredible power unleashed in just seconds. >> plus the maryland alternative that's becoming a big health concern. it's called spice. it's laced with deadly chemical concoctions and can be deadly. that's ahead. "usa today" says the islamic extremist group called isil is waging an unprecedent recruiting campaign. they say the slick marketing is a persistent threat in this country. one official said its use of social media and peer-to-peer communication are proving to be effective. "the new york times" says former president george w. bush is against lifting sanctions against iran. his remarks came this weekend. the ex-president was skeptical
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about president obama's efforts at a nuclear deal with iran. he said the u.s. would lose leverage if the sanctions were released too soon. also "the new york times" says russian hackers accessed president obama's unclassified e-mails. hackers got into the archives only some of white house communications. it does not seem as if they got into his blackberry. corinthian colleges close doors. about 16,000 students will be leaving without certificates or degrees. they face millions in fines and fraud allegations. >> if you think you've been paying more for gas at the pump you're right. aaa says the nationwide average for a gallon is now 2 fnt$2.54. that's a spike of 50 cents since
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january. crude oil is the cause for the increase. the big story is the earthquake in nepal. >> rescuers are still finding survivors. >> they pulled one out of a building this morning. he had been trapped for more than 48 hours. cbs news science contributor michio kaku joins us. he's a physics professor at the college of new york. good morning. >> good morning. >> after 80 years, 80 years of no earthquake why now? >> it turns out they can go back 100 years and we find that roughly 80 years there's a big one. the last one was 81 years ago and it killed 10,000 people but unfortunately people don't listen to scientists. >> why every 80 years? >> it turns out that india and china are colliding.
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the buckling effect and the two are ramming into each other at a known rate at around two inches per year. that's the rate at which your fingernails grow. that's not very much. spread out over a thousand miles and propelled by a sub continent, we're talking about an enormous amount of energy that's regularly plowing into each other. >> what's your biggest concern of an earthquake following that size? >> we're going to see a crisis of proportions. we're going to talk millions without sanitation and medical care. look at cholera. in puerto rico cholera was a tremendous problem that killed scores of individuals. we're talking about homeless people without access to food shelter, sanitation. it's going to cause a health crisis of unparallel proportions. >> i thought you were going to sayaff shocks that we need to be worried about aftershocks. >> they could go on for not a
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few hours or days but weeks. and so people don't want to go back into their houses because they're so flimsy. they collapse like a house of cards. >> we've seen the devastating consequences but what does it mean when we heard the word shallow quake? >> it turns out the actual center was released about ten hydrogen bombs worth which is rather shallow. if it was much deeper into the earth. the effect of it would have been minimal. because it was so close to the surface of the earth, people got the brunt of the shaking. the city of kathmandu shifted ten feet ten feet. an entire city was shifted by the force of this kwaek. >> avalanches kill people in mt. everest. can you have any warnings? >> sometimes people who are seasoned climate, they get overconfident. they think they know where the tipping point is. we physicists have studied
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tipping points. it's extremely difficult to calculate at which time they take place. >> there was a warning even last week right? >> that's right. because of the fact it's easy to tip over a snow mass so there becomes an avalanche. in fact people get overconfident thinking that they know these things they're seasoned climbers, but these are unpredictable. >> all right. professor kaku we thank you for coming in today. three of the people killed on mt. everest are americans. we'll get the latest on the story and the desperate attempts to pull climbers off the mountain. that's ahead this morning. police in california face a lawsuit claiming they used excessive force on a drunk woman last year. she says new le released video of the incident says officers knocked her down to ground for no reason. ben tracy shows us the video that left the woman with broken bones. >> reporter: that's megan,
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admittedly drunk waiting for a train after heavy drinking when bay area transit officers arrested her. >> i can't believe the videos. i was so bell lidge rant and foolish. >> reporter: she said despite what she did nothing justified what happened to her at the jail. in these reports the she said, quote, they suddenly turned toward me and began punviolently punching me with a closed first at my face. in his defense he said to protect myself from her attack i used an arm bar takedown. >> we don't see her punching them several times in the face. we don't see anything that
quote
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caused the imnet threat that caused this kind of force. what we see is without any of this is the officers held megan back and threw her to the ground. >> i had a gash above my left eye and had stitches there, four broken bones around my socket. stitches in my teeth. they knocked o it my tooth and chipped another one. >> reporter: sheehan has filed a lawsuit claims they used excessive and unreasonable force. >> whether they thought she was so bilge rant and so drunk that she had it coming i don't know. >> i was already arrested. was already in custody. there was police all around and i don't know why they had to use that much force. >> reporter: a spokeswoman for b.a.r.t. said the agency would not kplenlt because of pending litigation. for "cbs this morning," ben tracy, los angeles. >> difficult to watch.
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>> very good definition of guiding her to the ground. you're right. difficult to see that. coming up drug overdoses that's sweeping the nation. the dangerous manmade high is marketed as a safe alternative to marijuana but is it? that's ahead. tomorrow on "cbs this morning," charlie goes one on one with nfl commissioner roger goodell. wow. you do? charlie's everywhere. the stark concussion settlement and the return of "thursday night football." that's coming up tomorrow. but if you're heading off to work right now you've about got stuff to do please set your dvr. a lot of people tell me you do that now so you can watch "cbs this morning" any time you feel like it. we'll be right back. what makes a woman beautiful? happiness. and energy. happiness is the most attractive form of beauty. the one that comes from deep within. discover rénergie lift multi-action our number one lifting and firming moisturizer from lancôme, to visibly tighten all
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this morning public health officials are responds to a new
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drug spiechls it's sold online or in convenience stores often as potpourri or innocence. jericka duncan is here with more. good morning. >> good morning. the drug enforcement administration finds defines some of it a controlled substance. calls are coming in at a rate almost four times higher than this time last year. they're sold in shiny and colorful plastic pathckets and have anonymous sounding names like spice, scooby snacks mad monkey and green giant. they have thc the ingredient in marijuana. this doctor has treated several overdose cases. >> do you think people actually think this is safer than other
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forms of marijuana? >> i think they think that -- you know, they hear the world marijuana and they think it's a safe drug. it's manmade synthetic marijuana and the effects are going to be that much harsher. >> hospitals have reported dramatic increases in visits across the country. it's sickened more than 160 patients in new york in alabama 462 people were sent to er in five weeks. two of them died. and in mississippi 473 people were hospitalized. it's also suspected in seven deaths in the state. these two brothers from southern mississippi spent seven days in medically induced comas after smoking spice earlier this month. users report experiencing seizures and tremors, hallucinations and psychotic episodes. suicidal and other harmful
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thoughts. >> i watched everything around me repeat orever and over and over again. it was a horrible experience. i couldn't move. they had to put me in the car and take me to the hospital. >> kit be made in the u.s. and overseas. >> it's going to be mushed more because it's a high profit margin. it's three times the high profit margin of marijuana. >> reporter: the chemicals used the constantly changing. in 2009 there were only two known synthetic marijuana substances. now there are 300. >> because it's manmade hand has no quality control, you may not be getting exactly what you're buying. >> public health officials warn that the paths sometimes also contain pesticides and rat poison. they don't know if the current uptick is due to increased use of medical marijuana or a sign that the new more potent version
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of the drug has hit the streets. charlie? >> thanks. only on "cbs this morning" we'll reveal the national >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by international delight. leave a little room for delight.
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it was fighting for my life too. >> they changed a lot of blows. >> very dangerous but the guy's in custody so that's good. workers race the clock to save earthquake victims in nepal. holly williams is in kathmandu and she'll update us on the rescue effort. that's ahead on "cbs this morning." ♪ ♪ the avengers have assembled. get your gear now at target. introducing lunch at outback every bloomin' day! hurry in for all your outback favorites. plus new aussie tacos, new savory ribeye melt and our delicious burgers. over 70 lunch combinations starting at just $6.99.
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good morning. it is monday april 27th 2015. welcome back to "cbs this morning." more real news ahead, including race to help earthquake survivors in nepal. we'll go to holly williams in the capital and check on the rescue efforts. but first here's today's "eye opener" at 8:00. >> digging through the rubble hoping to find survivors but expecting to discover many more bodies. >> the aftershocks just keep on coming. >> about five miles or so beneath the service. if it was much deeper the cteffe would haven bee minimal. >> oh, my gosh. we've got softball-sized hail going on. >> damage like this is being reported well across the nation. >> they say boerts should take
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shelter. for those already on the water, it wasea alrdy too late. >> if you put him on the stand or he dare takes the stand he might just ask for death but jurors could spite him and give him life. >> sense january poison control calls are coming in over spice. four times higher than last year. >> it's going to be pushed more, i believe, because it's such a high profit margin. >> rick carlisle. >> is there a question about the officiator? >> no, no. i brought something -- i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. relief workers are arriving all over to nepal. the kwaek killed more than 3,800 people. >> we have video from a restaurant moment as f the quake hit.
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aftershorks hit still this morning. many are sleeping outside because they're afraid of damage. holly williams is on the streets of can man due. good morning. >> good morning. this is the historic heart of kathmandu, and it used to be filled with hindu temples. as you can see, many are lying in ruins. they were demolished in a few minutes when that earthquake hit nepal after the earthquake on saturday. we still don't know what the final death toll will be but what we can say is this disaster is severely testing the resources of an impov racing nation because nepal is one of the world's poorest countries. international help is making its way into the country but as you can see here these people, most of them volunteers, are degreeing through the ruins with their bare hands and shovels. the reason they're working sore
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feverishly is because they believe there may be more survivors. the reality is they may find more bodies. gayle? >> there's always one story where somebody survives after a long period of time. thank you, holly williams. rescue workers are taking climbers off mt. everest where the avalanche took at least 18 leaves. three of the americans are. >> and filmmaker tom taplin was making a documentary that was nearly wiped out by the avalanche. vladimir duthiers is tracking the rescue effort. good morning. >> good morning. they're reuniting at base camp this morning. many were stranded at higher elevations when the avalanche barreled through on saturday and now rescue helicopters are pulling climbers from the
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mountain making stops on the way down. saturday's massive avalanche took the hikers' station at everest basep cam by surprise. some dove for cover from falling snow, ice, and rocks. eight colorado climbers were stranded including ryan waters of boulder. the professional mountain guide called his partner back home to tell him he was okay. >> he was okay and very lucky in the sense that where their base camp tents were positioned was outside of the major debris and avalanche zone so his first priority was making sure his team was safe. >> reporter: spring is everest's spring climbing season. they wait for sherpa guides to determine when the weather is just right to scale the summit. from base camp they ascend to four intermediate camps where they wait and adjust.
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along the route they approached dead bodies. a stark remiermd. last year 16 sherpas died that ended the climbing season. it happen at the kum bu ice fall. >> to get up to base camp 1 that's kum bu ice fall. it's traditionally a very unstable area. >> reporter: this is larson traversing an ice fall in 2010400 feet above a glacial ravine. >> because the kwaek destroyed what's there, the climbers are trapped there. now they're transitioning to base camp 1 where they're waiting. the powerful aftershocks have been hindering the helicopter rescues but it seems today conditions are better. overnight there was a tweet weather good on everest.
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evacuation of c1 and c2 going well. >> we'll watch continuing coverage on cbsn. that's our 24-hour news on cbsn on cbsn.cbsnews.com. powerful storms are moving across the south. many people captured tornados touched down in texas. they toppled trees and power lines and tore roofs off homes. hail hammered the area. this morning more than 10,000 people are without power. heavy flooding is expected throughout the day but no one is hurt. this morning we're walking around and feeling a little puffed up and great because cbs is celebrating 24 daytime emmy awards. sunday morning host osgoode excepted the award. the young and the restless won
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and the bold and the beautiful, can't forget them they won ten. "ten ter tanment tonight" was named outstanding news program and we congratulate or cbs morning crew named outstanding technical team during friday's ceremony. a tip of their hat. our director randy lennon queue charlie. and fountain. he accepted the award on behalf of the crew. as you might expect we couldn't do any of this without them. we could but we'd be sitting in the dark. congratulations. >> congratulations to all. very well deserved. >> the best of anyone anywhere. >> i think so too. >> i think so too. jay z rolled out big names to launch his streaming c
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it may be the wildest ride
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on two wheels. with collisions and crashes history shows this bike race is not for the timid. a look at the cyclists racing through streets with no brakes or room for error. that's ahead on "cbs this morning." good. very good. you see something moving off the shelves and your first thought is to investigate the company. you are type e*. yes, investment opportunities can be anywhere... or not. but you know the difference. e*trade's bar code scanner. shorten the distance between intuition
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jay z is not happy this morning about a backlash over his new music streaming site tidal. he posted more than a dozen tweets from critics who say it will fail. he tweeted tidal is doing just fine. we have 770,000. we have been in business less than a month. another says the itunes store wasn't built in a day. it took spotify nine years to be successful. he says there's a smear campaign against him. >> he's reacting to bad press,
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bad reaction around the big tidal launch. he said, why are these millionaires asking for my money. a lot of artists were lined up and then just last week there was a story that tidal has dropped out of the top 700 itunes downloads and one piece labeling it a flop was referenced by other articles online and all of a sudden three weeks in there's a bunch of stories calling it a flop. >> over and over. >> that right. it's an echo chamber. >> doesn't he have a right to be judged when he's just three months in. >> >> three weeks in. usually the kind of things they're doing is trying to celebrate it. they're trying to innovate offering exclusive music which no one in the streaming game has done yet. it probably will be happen. usually they've had extraordinarily bad reaction. >> who's he unhappy with?
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>> wheel who don't like him and don't want to pay him money. he's unhappy with the criticism and some of it is widespread. some is coming from the general public who's had a very bad reaction to this big tidal launch which has announced an evolution. generally lyly the public doesn't want to pay for music and they don't think they should. >> he's suggesting there's a smear campaign that competitors are putting money out there to generate bad press. >> which competitors? >> he's not saying but apple and spotify. do people try to generate bad press? sure. >> what does jay z and his team have to do to make sure it's a success and when should they be fairly judged whether it's working?
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>> i would say a couple of months. this is not just one battle. we're one battle in. we should be looking a month or years down the line. what do they have to do? >> consider delivering exclusive music from the big range of superstar artists. they're showing videos streaming jack white concerts. they're going to have sporting events. they want to have an entertainment company. it's a little too soon to judge. >> i agree. we just announced it two weeks ago. >> things move quick. it's the technology world. the apple watch is already passe. >> let's everybody calm down. streaming is the future and jay z cease in on the game. >> as they stay on the streets, back back. thank you, joe levy. thank you very much. it's a pop-up store that gives an advantage to women. ahead, trying to fight the wage gap by paying men more. how does that work? you're watching "cbs this
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one of the most dangerous bicycle races in the world is gaining popularity. more than 300 rode on the st riders compete on fixed gear bikes with no brakes. adriana diaz was at the annual race and experienced first hand what it takes to compete. good morning. >> good morning.
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thousands showed up to watch racers. it's a high-speed competition. riders can top 40 miles an hour without the benefit of brakes. at top speeds around hairpin turns and at the competitor's own risk the red hook criteria or the crit for short is a high stakes bicycle race. without brakes sudden stops are not an option. they continue push against the fast spinning pedals to slow down. >> it is your video game and you're in it. if somebody crashes and burns it could be you literally. >> reporter: the crit takes place at night and they ride around 40 times. if the mixed bag of riders all
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sharing a crowded track can lead to major wipeouts and injuries. ambulances are always on standby. the crit has expanded. >> it's exciting that way. >> reporter: that energy has kept her returning to the course since winning the very first red hook race. this international cycling movement began as a birthday party. in 2008 david was looking for a way to celebrate his 26th birthday in his red hook brooklyn neighborhood but it is sanctioned which would provide strict layouts and provide deep insurance pocketses to cover injuries. in 2013 joshua fractured his nose, eye sockets, and jaw while competing in brooklyn. participant are required to sign
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a a waiver which lays it out. >> when you're going that fast, i don't think the red hook race is more dangerous than an annual race in central park. >> i think people would be horrified to know they're racing bikes without brakes. >> that's the thing. people are like what? racing without brakes? how do you slow down? >> people don't understand. for them to understand is hop on one of the bikes and go, okay, i get it. one, two, three, push bring your other foot up peddle. lookfood. loadfood. >> it's very wobbly. >> straight through. you're good. you're good. adjust your pedals. >> it is seen as being more risky in general by most racers. >> is that part of the draw to the race? >> yeah, i think so. it's hard core you know.
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it's badass all those things, and people like to be part of that, right? oh, yeah i did that. >> riders from around the world want those bragging rights. they included cyclists from 11 different countries and an italian won the men's race and another took the big spot. >> a big international draw. >> absolutely. >> did you come back with no brakes? >> i decided to leave that to the pros and i'll ride my bike that has brakes on both handlebars. >> sh win. thank you so much. up next on "cbs this morning" we're revealing the 2015 national teacher of the year. the winner is in studio 57. we want to celebrate teachers see how the former deejay medical assistant, and journalist made the grade. that's ahead after your local news.
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welcome back to "cbs this morning" this morning. coming up this half hour the dinner in washington. some funny stuff. right now the store where it pays to be a woman. see how the spirit of 76 is taking on a different morning in pennsylvania. ellen mccarthy is in our toyota green room. her new book on how couples stay together. >> plus living together before tieying the knot. that's ahead. "the new york times" says starting today chipotle will only serve foods free of gmis. it wants to change the way people think about fast food. the "los angeles times" says
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a new generation of graffiti artists is tacking parks. hardest hit are the parks hit near population centers such as joshua tree and golden gate national recreation area. coyotes invading manhattan. nypd captured one this weekend. the animal led police on an hour-long chase. they tranquilized her and she was taken away in a cage. at least four coyotes have been spotted this last year. >> that was on the upper west side. >> yeah, yeah. i heard about that guy. bucks county courier times says there's a new record for solving the world's rubik's cube. colin burns of pennsylvania
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shaved 13 seconds off the old record. do you know how many hours i used to spend on it? didn't we love the rubik's cube? >> i don't think so. i got close, one or two. >> did you ever do it charlie? >> no. >> i could never get it. you could take it apart. harry's going miss the bilkt of his new niece or nephew. he's got a good reason. he's on a tour. kate and william are expecting their second child any day now. and bleacher report says a pair of nike sneakers that michael jordan wore during hesitate rookie season sold for more than $71,000. jordan wore the red and white airship s airships years ago. the buyer remains anonymous. the pop-upshop is called 76
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is less than 100. women get less on boutique. the owner calls it a tongue in cheek way to drive home a serious message about salaries. >> i don't believe in discrimination, so that's why i'm doing this. i think people get the joke. >> the store will reopen on thursday. it will reopen in new orleans later this year. that store will be called 66 is less than 100. wow. >> we get the joke and i like the point she's making. don't you? >> i do too. >> very much so. >> all right. only on "cbs this morning" we're please toidd to announce the 2015 teacher of the year. it's america's oldest one of its kind. students play an active role in the community. the teachers earn respect in and out of the classrooms. hundreds of thousands were nominated. this year's winner is shanna
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peeples. she teaches in paloduro high school in amarillo texas. >> it helps them discovers their dreams and goals and pushing them to help them achieve them. >> miss peeples instilled in me to do great things to be a great has never faltered and even now she's still advocating for me even though i'm a junior at harvard, you know well out of her class. >> shanna welcome. >> thank you. >> what does it take to make a great teacher. >> i think a great teacher is someone who love as what they do loves kids and loves to bring out the potential of every kid. >> but you tried to run away from it. >> yeah. >> you were a pet sitter a medical assistant.
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not that there's nothing wrong with pet sitter. medical asince stand. reporter. you did everything you could to resist teaching. >> why? >> that's true. >> and what finally got you in? >> i think i was afraid of it because i knew i would love it in a way that was going to be really consuming, and it was. as a reporter the more i covered the classrooms the more i wanted to stay in the classrooms. i just thought i need to get over myself and do this. >> what do you think is the number one thing missing in schools or in class roochls? >> i think it's easy to forget that each person in front of you, you know they're coming with all of these different experience s experiences and different home lives and it's really important to make a relationship with each kid. that's the first you can do as a teacher. each one is different. >> yes. >> you say that your students shape the kind of teacher that
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you are. what do you mean by that shanna? >> so many of my students come from traumatic backgrounds. i teach in a title 1 background. a lot of my students are refugees from all over the world. knowing what they come from makes me understand that i don't make promises easily or that i'm very aware of what they're coming from, so i try to honor my word. >> one of the things you're known for is teaching the dr. seuss book. tell us about that? >> one of the book is called the "sneetches." it's about how we separate people by anything. race, class, gender anything. and that story is one that anybody from kindergarten up through adult learners they can really relate to and it really gives that message in an
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interesting way and like all of dr. seuss, it really stays with you and makes you think. >> what do you think of the common corps initiative? >> in texas we're not a common corps state but the standarded are kind of what we want for all of our kids which is critical thinking, high-level reading and writing and those skills as we know it, regardless of technology kids are going to need to be able to do that read and write at a high level. >> on wednesday you're going to the white house. the president will introduce you. >> yes. >> you're going pull him aside and say what? ? >> first of all i'm grateful for him to have the program there. that's amazing. teachers don't get thanking enough. >> i wanted to ask you about that. do they not get thanked enough and do we not appreciate our teachers? >> i think -- i mean it's an easy job to sort of take for
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granted, i think, because so many teachers are in their classroom every day with their head down, you know taking care of business and so it's easy to kind of see them in the background. but if you think everybody has a teacher's story. andy rooney said that. he said most people only have five or six people but teachers have thousands that remember them. >> you say it's the toughest job you'll ever love. >> yes. >> and you love it because -- one sentence. >> you can help write the end of the story for every kid and that's the most exciting and the most privileging thing about doing this job. >> it was nice to see your students talking about you as you were introduced. congratulations. >> thank you. >> teacher of the year. >> thank you. >> going to white house. >> thank you for all that you do. >> thank you. here's a question. what is the one word she heard most when asked why they're together. here's one. it starts with a "c."
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>> it may surprise you what it is. it surprised me. >> she's in the green room with the answer to that question with insights from
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hillary clinton kicked thinks off by going completely unrecognized at a chipotles. and bernie sanders might run. i like bernie. bernie is an interesting guy. apparently some folks really want to see a pot smoking socialist in the white house. we could get a third obama term after all. >> he has great comedic timing in the room as everybody always says. people should go online and look at his bucket routine. it was hilarious with a capital "h." >> a playoff of a certain word. >> very well done and very well delivered. the person you fall in love with may not be exactly who you had in mind. ellen mccarthy knows. she writing about weddings. she's the author of the "the real thing:lessons on weddings and life, a reporter's notebook."
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she covers thilgs from what she reported and experts she met and people on the beaches in california. welcome. >> thank you. >> this is how you book started. you break up with a longtime boyfriend and on the very same day you're assigned to cover the wedding beat. >> yeah. >> to me it's like someone in your family dies and then you're assigned to cover funerals. >> yes. it was very dramatic and very real and i felt like a walking cliche as i interviewed all these happy couples and then cried privately. i didn't know what the impact would be of spending all of my time talking about other people's wedded bliss as i sort of feared that would never happen to me but it had a really interesting impact which is interviewing all of these couples and experts really changed my perspective and my approach to dating. >> how? >> you know, what i was looking for was different and the number one thing i learned is we could
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learn to be good at this. and i felt like -- >> good at what? >> good at love you know. that we could by learning about this stuff increase our chances to have a successful relationship. >> everyone at home is saying tell tell, tell. >> now, now, now. >> i thought what could she tell me in this book? it's wonderful. you go through all these different things. first you say, the one, the idea there could be one person your soulmate out there. you say -- >> i say let me tell you about one of my favorite kpuples. betty and edgar. i wasn't to knock on their door. they both in their 80s both about 3 feet they both had matching canes. they have a great rapport and i thought you guys are soulmates. i said what do you think about this idea of the one, the soulmate. betty wanted to slap me, she really did. she said if i had. been married to edgar for 65
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years i would have been married to somebody else for 65 years. it was about commitment. >> i agree with that. >> you say the most important word about why they choose the person they do, you would think it's love chemistry, passion. >> humor. >> how moreumor trust. they had the same word again and again. the word was comfortable. many say it sounds so terrible. what they meant is they could be themselves their whole selves they could relax, breathe, felt like they had come home. >> the other thing is you found out they want someone for longevity to be nice and polite. >> nice and polite. >> bob and henry taught me that one. they met during world war ii. they had a tough relationship. they had been in the closet for so many years. finally got married after d.c. made saks seks marriages legal. i asked them what was the
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success to their relationship. they said, oh, you have to be polite. you have to treat your partner with the same respect. say please say thank you. these are common things but simple things that anybody should do. >> you say love doesn't have to be a thunderbolt. i thought this was really good. you say never say never. quit uses words like never, only must and most marital disagreements do not have a solution and we should be aware of that. >> they don't and the point is you can learn to accept things about your partner that are not perfect and it's okay to fight. that was a big lesson that i learned in my reporting. as i said i gathered this. >> how you fight. >> it's important. you can do it with respect and constructively, but it's okay to fight. that's the sound of a train moving one therapist told me. >> you haven't mentioned this. what about sex? >> obviously it's hugely important. one thing that a sex therapist told me was when it's working,
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it's not that big of a deal. when it's not working, that's when you have a problem. >> it's a really big deal. >> and you say people always have high expectations, that a lot of people are just too picky. what's the difference between being too picky and knowing what you want? >> i think when it's about superficial stuff, when it's about the resume things. when you're talking about the guy who's 45 and divorced with three kids and doesn't want to date anybody who's older than 28 and that's his cut-off. when a woman 5'2" needs somebody who's 6'4". she had to mary a jewish man and she ended upn indian man. she said it will never come in the package you're expecting. >> you did a good job. ellen mccarthy. and the book is called "real thing. "on sale now wherever you like
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to buy books. how she took her dad's nfl support all the way to the football field. that's coming up next on "cbs this morning."
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which car company is the first and only to offer built-in 4g lte wi-fi in cars, trucks and crossovers? ranking from top to bottom. i'm gonna say mercedes is the innovator. bmw just because they're pricey. the final answer... wow...(cheers) chevy. this model has the wi-fi in it? -yep that's the dream to have wi-fi in the car. get cash back for 15% of the msrp on select 2015 models.
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that's almost thirty-seven hundred dollars on this chevy malibu. find new roads at your local chevy dealer. she's on her feet at 50, now 40. run, leah run. >> cancer couldn't stop her. neither could the temple university owls. we brought you the story of leah and her dad. cincinnati bengal devon still. she begins her stem cell treatment next week. devon hopes it will be
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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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>> here's what's breaking today on the doctors.
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>> how far would you go to protect your little one. >> a controversial workshop sparking major heat. >> the easiest way to carry a baby and a gun. >> a doctor's exclusive. >> the rock hit sharon in the face. >> this mom's unforseen recoveryom fr a teen prank. >> and know exclusive interview with kim richards. >> you are drunk in a bar fighting with a cop. >> is this an intervention? [ crowd cheering ] [ applause ] ♪ ♪ >> how far would you go to protect your little one? one new mother's controversial parenting course is literally packing heat. >> the old saying babies and guns don't mix may not be the case any longer. one pistol packing mom in iowa, is proving that

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