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to just say yes? a question for barry petersen to examine in our "sunday morning" cover story. >> some of the very people who grew up opposed to pot -- >> you store it in the fridge. >> finding it handy to have around as they age. >> i have gummy care. it has the consistency of a gummy. i use it for sleep and pain when i need to. >> pot's newest enthusiasts could be your grandparents. >> pauley: we think of borderline as something which divides one country from another. then there is the borderline that lee cowan has been to visit. >> follow the u.s. border from the pacific out to the east until it reaches minnesota, where there's an odd little bump. do you sometimes feel more
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>> aye? we are a little bit canadian. >> the remote minnesota answer surrounded on almost all sides by our maple leave friends later on sunday morning. >> pauley: for the record marc anthony is a singer with hit songs in two languages. he talks about a that and lot more with tracy smith. ♪ >> marc anthony is the biggest salsa artist in history. his songs have been known to turn full grown women into melted butter. but it didn't begin that way. >> my dad always told me, son, we're ugly, work on your personality. >> no. >> the personality and the power of marc anthony ahead this "sunday morning." >> pauley: combat outpost keating was the name of a small
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afghanistan that came under ferocious enemy fire some years ago. what happened next is the story david martin has to tell. >> the taliban attack came from all sides and it very nearly succeeded. how close is the enemy. >> closer than i ever thought i'd see them. >> about to be over run, sergeant clint roam sha came up with a desperate man. >> we can either sit here and die or go out in blaze of glory. >> ahead on "sunday morning" the combat for outpost keating. >> pauley: mow rocca questions a preacher. anthony mason follows a tireless big city walker. steve hartman hears a contrite defendant tell it to the judge. first, here are the headlines nor "sunday morning" the first
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more severe weather is expected today in the southwest. a wave of thunderstorms spawned tornadoes and flash floods over the weekend in east texas, claiming at least six lives. iraq's prime minister is ordering the arrest of violent anti-government protesters who stormed baghdad's effort fight green zone this weekend. many occupied parliament demanding government reform. jesuit priest and peace activist daniel bear began died yesterday. he was a leader of the 1960s and spent two years in prison or burning draft files as a protest against the vietnam war. he was 94. 3lions airlifted from south america were released into a big cat sanctuary in south africa this morning. the lyons were
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colombia and peru where they lad been physically aboutsed. president obama drew his last laughs as president at the white house correspondents' dinner last night. poking fun at journalists and politicians alike. >> bernie, you look like a million bucks. or to put it in terms you'll understand you look like 37,000 donations of $27 each. >> pauley: it was a tough act to follow but comedian larry wilmore continued to barb this year's presidential contenders. >> ted cruz has vowed to stay in the race, man, everybody hates ted cruz. even o.j. simpson said, that guy is just hard to like. >> pauley: now, today's weather. thunderstorms and rain are expected from the mid atlantic states to texas. snow could fall over parts of the rockies. it's a good day to be outside from minnesota to washington state.
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scattered showers, but some sun mixed in for good measure. >> wore out a few pair of shoes? >> pauley: one man's very long walk. but next, the boom in boomer pot use. >> lacks the foreign policy experience to be president. but in fairness, meeting with leaders from around the world, sweden? ranking from top to bottom. car company of the year? luxury cars just seem like they would be top awarded.
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romesha. >> pauley: can it really be true that so many older people nowadays will just say yes? yes to using marijuana that is? our cover story is record by barry petersen. >> sioux taylor works hard to stay fit and healthy. this 68-year-old is a regular at the gym. >> kale helps keep your cholesterol down, it's going to be good. >> at home, homemade is her motto. >> it's delicious. >> not bad. >> but there's one thing in her healthy lifestyle that may come as a s
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in the evening, you store it in the fridge. >> she includes marijuana in her quest to stay youthful. >> i have gummy care, has the consistency of a gummy. and i use it for sleep and pain when i need to. >> sue taylor was a high school principal preaching the dangers of drugs. but after her son got into the pot business and she began to learn more about marijuana, she changed her mind. now she's a convert. make that an advocate for aging americans using marijuana. she speaks at community meetings, explaining why pot may be good for them. the we'd lady somebody said they called you. >> yes. >> the weed lady. i am the weed lady. >> she's got statistics on her side. polling confirms that more and more americans age 55 and up are using more and more marijuana. one reason isgr
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almost half of americans live in a place where marijuana is legal for recreational or medical purposes. sue lives in california, one of the states where medical marijuana requires only a doctor's prescription. >> it is a great place, isn't it? >> what are we talking about? what kinds of things does marijuana help if you're a senior? >> number one is arthritis. there are tinctures and rubs that you can actually put on your legs, on your knees, across your back, wherever you're having any arthritic pain. most seen years use the cannabis for pain and to sleep. >> does it frustrate you that the money isn't there for research? >> of course. i do think we're turning a corner on that. >> dr. igor grant is a distinguished professor and chair of the department of psychiatry at the university of
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california, san diego. and he has a rare federal grant to study the potential benefits of pot. >> first of all there is increasing evidence that cannabis is helpful in the management of concern kinds of pain. >> and it's the kind of discomfort experienced by seniors, like sharp pains felt by nerve damage, caused by things like chemotherapy or diabetes. keep in mind, over 65 americans only account for 14% of the nation's population. but they use more than 30% of all prescription drugs, including some highly addictive pain killers. >> an interesting question is, if people are prescribed cannabis, does that have then an opennoid sparing effect, because, again for chronic pain we do
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>> we need studies to understand that. but i think the preliminary evidence suggests that may be true. >> i drop it under my tongue about five or six drops and that helps me sleep. >> kerry stiles 78 and wears a pacemaker. he discovered pot here at the rossmoor retirement community in walnut creek across the from san francisco. they have clubs for everything from swimming to cars. >> cannabis has many medical applications. >> now a club for medical marijuana use. >> these are the three different types of plants. >> in the retirement community of more than 9,000, the club has about 100 regs. renee lee is the club's president and the kind of pot guidance counselor. >> we caution, especially the seniors, to stay away from edibles. really start slow. we start with
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in the early evening, telling them not to drive, not not to mix alcohol. there's a lot of cautionsa lot of education that goes along with it. >> but for some in the over 65 crowd, lingering stereotypes and stigmas from another time are hard to overcome. why do you think seniors are resistant to this, as opposed to 20-somethings and 30-somethings who don't seem to pay any attention to the stigma at all? >> probably the 1906s. >> our nation's pot paranoia actually dates to the 1930s. remember "refer madness"? >> a condition called by the drug marijuana. >> we are making a major effort that's going to pay off. >> during the nixon administration the federal
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schedule one drug. the same cot gore rethat includes heroin and lsd. >> it was publicity by the federal government and by state governments how terrible it was and what it could do to you? >> these are raw cannabis flowers? >> will you change minds if more and more seniors become comfortable with this? do you think that is going to force government to change its mind, the federal government? >> we're certainly hope so. i don't know if it will be in my lifetime. >> keep in mind that even today pot is still illegal under federal law. but in colorado, the first state to sell marijuana for recreational use -- surprised how this worked out over the last few years? >> just to b honest, i have been. >> governor john hickenlooper who initially
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legalization now says he sees how it can work far those over 65. >> seniors that want to relax and don't want to use alcohol, this is a choice that maybe that they will embrace more than others. >> and that could tip the balance this fall when states across the country vote on legalizing marijuana. seniors seem to be people who vote more often have some influence. is it going to have some effect? >> that's an interesting point and i think you're probably right. the perception against legalizing marijuana, which, you know, historically in this state when we passed it, seniors were probably the most adamant against it. and if more are using it, then that probably is going to change, probably not just in colorado but across the country. >> california, the first state to legalize medical marijuana, this fall may vote to approve pot for recreational use. making it even yes, sirier for
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pro-pot folks like sue taylor. >> if you over do it at the gym. >> to get access to the drug they now consider a vital weapon in their battle against the aches and pains of aging. >> seniors don't want to get high. they want to get well. the cannabis helps. >> pauley: ahead, a tall tale. then we asked some older people when they actually did start saving. this gap between when we should start saving and when we actually do is one of the reasons why too many of us aren't prepared for retirement. just start as early as you can. it's going to pay off in the future. if we all start saving a little more today, we'll all be better prepared tomorrow. prudential. bring your challenges. for lowe's personalized everlawn care plan,ed up i've been up on my hind legs trying to get a better view of his grass.
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jinx now a page from our sunday morning almanac. may 1, 1931. 85 y aearsgo today. the day things started looking up during the deepest depths of the great depression. for that was the day the empire state building opened for business in new york city. >> rising above new york's glamorous skyline is the empire state line. >> pauley: construction had begun the year before on st. patrick's day. in contrast to the economic strag nation all around it, the empire state project was a model of productivity. the tower rose at the phenomenal rate of four and a half stories a week. on dedication day, ribbon cutting honors
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daughters of former new york governor al smith. the new building's top executive. the tallest building in the world at the time, the empire state checked in at 1250 feet. 102 stories in all. its profile got a further boost in 1933 when king kong memorably climbed to the top. in 1945, the building made headlines again. >> over the streets of new york. >> pauley: when a b-25 bomber lost in morning fog crashed in to its 79th floor, killing 14 people. the building survived the blow. and five years later it gruesome 200 feet with the addition of a broadcasting antenna. the empire state building reigned unchallenged as the world's tallest for some 40 years. until new york's original world
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1972. since then, many other skyscrapers around the world, including the newest world trade center, have soared past the empire state. still, with a recently outfitted system of l.e.d. lights, it remains one of the world's most beloved skyscrapers, visited since its opening by well over 100 million tourists. not to mention that one very large ape. >> most people up here adventurous or crazy. >> pauley: get your passport ready we're off to northwest angle, next. you've finally earned enough reward miles on your airline credit card. now you just book a seat, right?
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move to another treatment, ask if xeljanz is right for you. xeljanz is a small pill for adults with moderate to severe ra for whom methotrexate did not work well. xeljanz can reduce joint pain and swelling in as little as two weeks, and help stop further joint damage. xeljanz can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections, lymphoma and other cancers have happened. don't start xeljanz if you have an infection. tears in the stomach or intestines, low blood cell counts and higher liver tests and cholesterol levels have happened. your doctor should perform blood tests before you start and while taking xeljanz, and monitor certain liver tests. tell your doctor if you were in a region where fungal infections are common, and if you have had tb, hepatitis b or c, or are prone to infections. xeljanz can reduce the symptoms of ra, even without methotrexate, and is now available in a once-daily pill. ask about xeljanz xr.
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>> pauley: when does a borderline confuse things rather than clearly define them? when it's the border our lee cowan has been inspecting. that's when. >> the sound of distant deer hunters is about all you'll hear along this remote tree-lined corridor, a stretch of the longest land border between two
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countries. on one side, canada, the other u.s. but this lonely spot is also the gateway to an american geographic oddity, minnesota's northwest angle. >> most people up here are adventurous or crazy or both. >> on a map it looks as if someone put a substantial part of minnesota in canada by mistake. in fact it was a mistake, made in 1783 during the treaty of paris. the border being drawn between the u.s. and then britain was supposed to cut through lake of the woods, at a northwest angle, hence the name. problem was the map the founding fathers used of lake of the woods was completely wrong. the lake actually looks like this. they were way off, but that weird boundary bump stuck. ever since, the angle, as locals like to call it, has remained an outlier.
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part of minnesota is actually through canada on a gravel road. there's no fence, no guard, no official looking anything really, until you come upon this shed called jim's corner. >> passport. >> it houses a video phone so that you can check in with u.s. immigration before driving on. no grocery store, no hospital, no theater, no fast foot strand not even single traffic light. lucky to have a post office. but what it does have -- >> i got tiger by the tail. >> is fish. sprawling chilly waters of lake of the woods offer some of the best walleye fishing in all of north america. most come here to put a hook in the water and then go home. but there's about 60 or so hearty minnesota answer who live in the angle year round many
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whom run fishing lodges like jason and lisa goulet. >> it mesa unique blend of personality traits. >> making a go of it here usually means leaving here. even the most mundane tasks involve certain amount of shuttle diplomacy. >> grocery shopping is once a week that's an hour and 15 minutes one way. >> first residents have to notify canadian authorities that they're about to cross the border. >> i'm at jim's corner and i'm heading into the warroad boarder. >> then trek back to the u.s. boundary line to crass back in to minnesota and nearest town. >> takes up your day. i realize it's only 150 mile round trip or whatever but with all your stops, that's like five or six hours every time. >> the goulets at least have help managing this lifestyle they have eight kids. yes, eight. the girls, all seven of them, help out their mom making cu
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>> all right, buddy, you can take over. >> while jack, their only boy, helps his dad with the ice fishing shacks. the goulets brood make up about a third of the student body at the angle's tiny one-room school house. minnesota's last. >> wow, good. you're picking these up. >> linda has been teaching here for 30 years. even teaching her own children, whom she raised in the angle, too. >> to have a slumber party, my girls were so disappointed because their friends had to have a passport for a slumber party. it is different. but we've just gotten used to it and it just seems normal. >> there isn't room to house high school students here, though. for that, the older kids have to border hop. for some it starts long before dawn. they arrive by boat from some of the angle's islands, also part of the u.s. to catch a school bus. fe
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finds himself at that roadside video phone. >> hello, i'm calling from jim's corner. >> reporting the names of every student on the bus. >> carlson, meagan -- heading to their minnesota high school by way of canada in the dark. by sun up we got to wondering if it may life to be easier if the angle were just part of canada. turns out they tried that back in the '90s. >> it is a part of the united states called the northwest angle. >> the angle made big news, when it threatened to secede from the u.s. over a fish dispute. walleye caught on the canadian side of the lake couldn't be brought back to the u.s. side. that made fishermen and northwest angle resident gary deiztler pretty mad. >> just a couple of fish. keep the resort going. >> it was partly his idea to join canada mainly astu
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get publicity for the fisherman's cause. and it worked. the great walleye war it came to be door. the northwest angle became part of u.s. and walleyes nationality seemed to matter no more. things remain quiet and serene and remote. the northwest angle may be an orphan of the atlas, but that's just the way the folks at the top of the nation like it. ♪ >> pauley: still to come. singer marc anthony. but first -- >> how can evangelicals be pro life and pro gun. >> pauley: a minister chooses life.
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>> pauley: for the past few months we've been exam unking the role of guns in our society. whether or not to own a gun is one of the life choices many people face. and as mo rocca tells us it's a choice one evangelical minister
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is determined to make a matter of conscience. >> i am here to make a statement about the integrity and the value of every human life. regardless of position. >> for more than 0 years reverend robert schenck has been a leading opponent of abortion. >> it results in a dead baby. >> a fighter on the front lines of the culture wars. but recently the reverend says he's had a revelation. >> god and guns. a christmas sermon. how can evangelicals be pro life and pro gun. >> that's put him on the other side of the aisle of one fundamental issue, guns. >> who will ultimately save us? christ or a glock. >> a man or a woman who wants to defend his or her family legally
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comes in to their home. how is that unchristian? >> well, first of all, you're making an immediate decision, that if someone invades your home they are going to die. so you are ready to kill another human being in your home. that brings about big ethical question for the christian. and we're told in the bible, we're even to love our enemies. >> even a potential intruder? someone who has been coming into your -- >> absolutely. >> to hurt you? >> is it always god's will that i survive a violent confrontation with another human being? i'm not sure that's always god's will. >> schenck is not a pacifist nor is he opposed to guns for hunting. the problem he says is civilians using guns for self defense.
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the armor of light, airing may 10 on pbs. >> is that a pro live et snuck. >> in it we witness his disagreements with fellow evangelicals. >> you're afraid of firearms, don't own one. >> troy, listen. you know one of the reasons i don't own one. i don't trust myself. in the moment of crisis. >> an armed society is a polite society. >> it's a disney movie, though not from the disney you know. director abigail disney is walt disney's grand niece. she's also a liberal supporter of abortion rights who struck up an unlikely friendship with rob schenck. >> so i was expecting a fire-breathing dragon, i was expecting somebody i really didn't like. >> how soon did those feelings lift? >> instantaneously. he was so warm. >> reverend schenck can be full
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he was raised jewish, which is why he says he's pro life. >> dad gave all of his children a thorough education in the holocaust. i can remember being, oh, maybe six or seven years old looking at the photos of mass graves. he emphasized how critical it was to respect the value of every human life. >> at 17 he converted to christianity. by the early 1990s was a conservative evangelical minter. he led protests at dr. barnett slepian's buffalo clinic. years later, slepian, who performed abortions were shot and killed by a pro life activist. are you haunted by the murder of dr. slepian? >> i'm haunted, not just by the murder of dr. slepian, which is enough, but by the other murders committed in the name of pro life cse
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hard at compartmentalizing that, kind of putting it on a shelf and saying, well, some day i'll address that. >> that day came in 2013 when a gunman killed 12 people at the washington navy yard, right in schenck's neighborhood. >> and it was within a stone's throw of my house. i could see it from my living room window. >> he's now traveling the country evangelizing about what he says it means to be pro-life. and about what christians should not be turning for spiritual guidance. >> i'm concerned about the nra promoting the best way to solve the most vexing problems in our society is be prepared to shoot people dead. >> do you want to see gun laws change? >> i have no legislative agenda. i'm a minister. for me, the most powerful part of it is the conscience. and that's the heart and that's the mind.
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now. >> as for abigail disney, since becoming friends with ref vend schenck she had conversion of her own. >> i went back to this church that someone had told me about. and all of a sudden on "sunday morning" i find myself looking forward to going to church. >> so you are going to church now? >> i am in church now. >> would you call yourself a christian? >> yes. i've always -- i think i've always been willing to call myself a his can. but you hear the tentativeness. >> but not apologizing for going to church. >> working hard, yes. >> pauley: coming up, is this our national mammal?
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>> pauley: it happened this past week. recognition, at long last, for a beloved, but nearly decimated beast. both the house and senate approved legislation designating the bison as the national mammal of the united states. the measure now goes to the president for his signature. once numbered in the millions, bison, also known as buffalo, long ruled the great plains. but beginning in the 19th century, overhunting to the point of mass slaughter nearly wiped the bison off the face of the earth. by the time protective legislation was passed in the plate
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or so survived. still, the mystique of the bison never faded. it graces the seal of the federal department of the interior, not to mention the state flags of wyoming and kansas. and from 1913 to 1938, there was a buffalo on the back of every nickel struck by the u.s. mint. today, tens of thousands of buffalo roam the american west once more. some 200,000 others can be found in commercial herds. not quite a full restoration. but a return of the bison to its rightful place by any measure. >> this is lena horn's house. >> pauley: stepping out. >> james brown. >> pauley: with anthony mason, next.
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jane to be asked to "walk this way" is no idle challenge when it involves walking down every last street in new york city. anthony mason can tell us all about that. ♪ >> when bill helmreich set off to see new york city, n just the landmarks we know, but the hidden gems, he knew it would be a long journey. so, this is where you started on your walk? >> right. it's amazing how quickly it all adds up. >> what did it add up to in the end? >> 6,048 miles. that is like walking to los angeles and back as the crow flies then another 971 miles to st. louis. it was really a long wk.
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was to write a book called "the new york nobody knows." >> it's part of a preserve here. >> he took his first steps near the city's outer border in queens. >> you must have worn out a few pairs of shoes. >> nine. >> nine? >> look, it's 30 miles a week, 120 a month, 1500 a year and in four years you have 6,000. >> a professor of sociology at city college, the 70-year-old walked almost every street. nearly 125,000 blocks. from the best known, like times square in manhattan, to the most remote. yes, deep in the bronx, new york has a waterfall. the idea for helmreich's book came from a game he played as a boy. his father called it "last stop" they would hop the subway near their manhattan
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line then wander the city from there. >> after we ran out of the last stop, we'd go to the second to the last stop. it was totally different. >> through all four seasons in all kinds ever weather, helmreich systematically walked the city taking notes as he went about the places he saw and the people he met. >> if i could say anything about this city that sums it up, the greatest outdoor museum in the world. whole discovery. >> in an industrial neighborhood in bushwick, brooklyn, he stumbled on this art alley, an open air explosion of expression. >> when you walk every block in new york you stumble upon things would you have never stumbled upon before. i couldn't believe that there was this fantastic place here filled with all sorts of murals. >> more than 100 of them. he met local restaurant owner james lauritz who ein
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it started. >> just wanted to do something to improve the look of the area. and as soon as we put up a few murals along this one wall it just took off. started getting permission. it's really just grown out of control. >> all of this happened in three years? >> yeah. pretty crazy. >> further into brooklyn, in bensonhurst, on an otherwise quiet street he found this inviting yard filled with super heroes and villains, pop icons and starlets and homage to know stall i can't known as steve's play land. >> this is steve. >> how are you? >> how are you, steve? >> how are you? >> how long have you had this place, steve? >> going on 14 years now. >> and what's the idea behind all this? >> well, originally it started out just for me personally to bring back a lot of my childhood memories. ie
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physically, in this garage. so when i go in there it sets me back in time. >> steve's personal play land is open to anyone who happens to stop by. you must have sunk a small fortune into this. >> i did. but i don't think of it monetarily. this is strictly for my personal pleasure. i get a lot of joy out of doing it and i get a lot of joy out of coming in here and just gazing now and then. >> in the middle of the bronx, helmreich learned about this church where exorcisms were ons performed. this is a bike shop. >> this is a special bike shop. because it's continue by man who is sort of a doctor of bicycles. >> in harlem, he found donald childs who diagnosis a bicycle's problems with his fingers or a stethoscope. >> you know, i always wanted to be a doctor. but i never thought
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doctor of bicycles. everywhere i go people say, "hey, doctor." >> out in the st. albans neighborhood of queens -- ♪ he wandered through a lost center of black culture. all these people lived here? >> yes, they called lived here. ella fitzgerald, lena horn, john coltrane. >> fats waller. james brown. because of this railroad line. >> in large part put them right into new york city and it was easy hop to the saw savoy, the roseland. >> incredible concentration of talent. >> it is. >> when helmreich had finally exhausted every corner of new york city -- >> i ended up here. >> he came to the end of the road in greenpoint, brooklyn. >> this was mile 6,048.
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wouldn't say relief.
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>> all hope is lost. >> trapped unable to move, joe felt the water rise. past his legs, then waist, and neck until finally it stopped at his chin. >> how many guys got out of that truck. >> alive? >> yeah. >> just me. >> joe says it still haunts him. among his issues, a fear of being in small cramped places. >> i know what joe is going through.
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be held accountable but i just felt i had to go with him. i felt i had to go with him. >> and so, a few minutes after joe was locked up, judge lou olivera surprised the man he sent to jail by joining him for the entire night. >> we ate meatloaf and we talked about a lot of things. we talked about our families. >> and the walls got further apart. >> they didn't exist any more. he brought me back to north carolina from being in a truck in afghanistan. >> this past week joe promised the judge, no more mess-ups. >> i don't want to let you down. >> not how law and order usually works but sometimes jail is not what a man needs. sometimes the best sentence, is compassion. >> still to come.
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singer marc anthony. what were your dreams early on? >> for the record. >> to get out. neighborhood. >> pauley: later -- on average we get hit three to four times a week. >> pauley: defending combat outpost keating.
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♪ >> it's "sunday morning" on cbs. here again is jane pauley. >> pauley: "i need to know" was a big hit for marc anthony way back in 1999. all these years later he's still thrilling audiences and speaking his mind. most recently he's been speaking to our tracy smith "for the record." >> off stage he seems almost like the rest of us mortals, more a compact bundle of nerves than an international superstar. but when marc anthony stands in the spotlight and sings, the transformation happens. he becomes larger than life.
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♪ >> each song is like a short movie. each character is different. >> thought hot and heart melting characters have made marc anthony the best selling salsa artist in history. >> what are we looking at here? >> collected over the years, i look at it, like a snapshot. >> with two grammy awards, five latin grammys and so many other honors you can't really fit 'em on just one wall. ♪ when he's performing it feels like he's bear can his soul but in real life marc anthony is intensely private. and almost always shields his eyes in trademark dark glasses.
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i have a tattoo in my handwriting that i say "those who say, don't know. those who know, don't say" your power and influence is largely based on what a steel trap your mouth. >> he's gotten plenty of attention. ♪ especially his marriage to and split from jennifer lopez, with who he has two kids. >> i have to say that every time i tell somebody i'm interviewing marc anthony first things love him. second thing is, are you going to ask him about j low, does that drive you crazy? >> i have a different perspective. i mean, we were married what, seven, eight years. she's the mother of my children. i'm proud of it. i'm proud to be in the same sentence as someone who has accomplish had he's accomplished
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life. not a bad thing. trust me, it could be worse. >> anthony's since remarried to venezuelan model shannon de lima. and truth is the tabloid stuff isn't nearly as interesting as what marc anthony has been able to accomplish on his own. ♪ born in 1968, the puerto rican parents, anthony grew up in knock's spanish harlem. his dad had hopes of being a musician, but paid the bills by work can in a hospital lunchroom. what were your dreams early on? >> to get out of the neighborhood. >> anthony figured out in order to change where he was he needed to change who he was. what kind of kid were you? >> to my mom, i was a pain in the as. to my dad, light of his eyes. to me, awkward. my dad always told
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honest truth. son, we're ugly, work on your personality. >> no. >> swear. >> he said that? >> best thing. what happened is i'd stutter. i couldn't put a sentence together. so when i sang, i didn't stutter. >> stutter went away? >> yeah. and that was my preferred way of communicating. ♪ >> as a teenager he sang in commercials and offered to work for free as a backup singer for works like menudo. >> before i had my first single i worked on over 300 records. >> by the time that first single came out -- >> i had all the experience in the world. >> that first spanish language album took off in 1993. and since than he's had hits in both spanish and english, selling more than 1 million records worldwide.
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he has a line of clothing at kohl's and owns a piece of the miami dolphins. thanks to his business sense he gets frequent calls from other artists asking him for advice. >> i was always a phone call away. >> you were kind of tutoring people. >> mentoring. and we're just beginning. it's my baby. >> anthony founded magnus media. to help fellow musicians and athletes target the $1.5 trillion latinos spend each year. >> it was born out of frustration. i saw an absolute need for quality representation. i was doing it anyway. i was advising them on a daily basis as to how to streamline their business. >> the miami offices are decorated with anthony's rather eclectic collections. badges, hats, military uniforms. >> i'm sort of a history fanatic. it's very easy to imagine who wore that. somebody earned that. >> i have to say
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you're a man of many hats. >> one hat he wears proudly, philanthropist. >> all this started as a dream. it became a reality. >> he has built three orphanages so far in the dominican republic, colombia, mexico, three more are under construction. >> the fact that marc has been my friend for more than 20 years, has devoted himself this, is really wonderful. >> it all started with a visit he made to a not so wonderful orphanage several years ago. >> basically a three bedroom house with 47 kids i believe. babies sleeping under the bed, on the floor. what hit me was the lack of dignity. >> as long as i have a voice, as long as i can do something i'm going to do it. >> anthony's determined to use his voice in other ways, too. at a recent concert in madison square garden he made a speech
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latino. >> another thing to say that i'm latino in the united states of america. >> and ended be. >> [bleep] donald trump. >> a slam at donald trump. why did you feel like you needed to say something? >> i wasn't speaking for myself. i was speaking for my people. there are so many dreamers out there and i represent them. being born in america. but being identified as a latino in my heart, my soul, my upbringing everything i am. you mess with a latino you mess with me. >> while anthony is proud of the power he's earned he says it came at a price. >> the one regret would be that what i chose to do took so much of my time. what i would have done would have been stay at home dad and just, you know, witnessed every second of everything. you sorta start to wonder, was it all worth it? >> how do you answer that
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>> i don't think you do. ♪ or maybe the answer is in marc anthony's music and all it's allowed him to become. ♪ >> i have nothing to complain about. as long as your energy goes towards making something better. it's worth the sacrifice. we gather around the maypole, next. to help us pay for a college education for our son. we've enclosed a picture of our son so that you can get a sense there are real people out here trusting you with their hard-earned money. ♪
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the delicious taste of nutella takes pancakes to a whole new level. nutella. spread the happy! xerox personalized employee portals help companies! make benefits simple and accessible... from anywhere. hula dancing? cliff jumping! human resources can work better. with xerox. which allergy? eees. bees? eese. trees? eese. xerox helps hospitals use electronic health records so doctors provide more personalized care. cheese? cheese! patient care can work better. with xerox. that's it. >> pauley: our "sunday morning" milestone a. lasting impression from a foregone 1st of may. e
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march but there was a time this day marks true spring awakening. may day. it was here long before any association, arms or military or intimidating super powers. at a center the may pole. perhaps you recall it, maybe you even danced around one. varied as the compos tomb. popular at camp grounds as well as campuses, the may pole even did a cameo on the lawn of the white house. you can also find the may pole on the cover of magazines. "the new yorker," vanity fair," better homes and gardens. these days, it's a faded custom. but in a few places across the country there are signs of a comeback.
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in fact atabrine march college near philadelphia it's never gone away that's katharine hepburn when she was a student in 1928 performing in a mayday play. ahead, how sergeant clint romesha earned his medal of honor. >> we can either sit here and die in our last final position or go out with a blaze of glory. ♪jake reese, "day to feel alive"♪ ♪jake reese, "day to feel alive"♪
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>> pauley: combat outpost competing was a remote u.s. army position in afghanistan that attracted a taliban attack nearly seven years ago. the medal one of its defenders earned that day still weighs heavily on its recipient, as david martin now tells us. >> on his third combat tour sergeant clint romesha, by his own description a tiny cog nestled deep inside, earned the medal of honor. >> i grew up in family of military service. my grandfather. >> now sporting a full beard he tells audiences wearing the medal is a burden. >> things aren't given out when something went right. a lot of stuff went wrong. and it's a heavy weight at times. >> eight of his buddies were killed on the day in 009 when he earned his medal defending an
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carrying to arm investigation had no tactical or strategic value. now seven years later he's written a book about it. a saga whose characters are less heroic than one might wish, exceptionally ordinary men who were put to extraordinary test. in a place called combat outpost keating. in romesha's words, the most remote, precarious and tactic tee screwed combat outpost in all of afghanistan. >> you never take the low ground. you always take the high ground. we're here doing this? this is in sane. >> this is what keating looked like to the taliban who were taking their own videos. when you went out on patrol to the high ground you saw what the taliban were seeing of keating. >> yes. >> what did it look like from the enemy's point of view? >> at times it looked like fish in a barrel. >> as an army sergeant the only
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their attitude distilled in the motto, it doesn't get better. >> that s mentality. yeah, this sucks but we can't control it. we can't affect it. >> starting long before romesha's platoon arrived the taliban routinely fired down from keating. >> on average get hit three to four times a week. >> what was the purpose of those attacks? >> they were testing us to see what our battle plans were, how we would react, what our response times were. >> there were 52 american soldiers at the camp and six main fighting positions. the attack came at 5:59 in the morning of october 3rd, 009. >> it wasn't uncommon to get shot at at that time in the morning. it was kind of like a wake-up call most mornings. >> but this morning was different. it was all recorded by the taliban. the taliban had opened up on the
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pinning them down so they could not return fire. keating sent out its first call for help three minutes after the attack began. fire coming from everywhere. we need something. soldiers not pinned down had to pull back from the perimeter to a cluster of buildings at the center of camp which they called the alamo position. >> the call came out that we were still going to what we called the alamo position. >> that doesn't sound good. >> no. >> what did you think when you got the order? >> i didn't like that idea. it felt like we were giving up, that we were kind of waving the white flag and admitting defeat in that moment in time. >> when you pulled back into the alamo position, you must have had to leave a bunch of guys out there. >> yep. >> all the guys on the perimeter. >> yeah, we knew we were leaving nine guys isolated on their own. which
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to sit there and kind of have to call up another man say you're going to have to held on tight for a second. we're hoping to get back to you, but this might be the last time say anything across the radio. >> romesha came up with a desperate plan. >> we can either sit here and die in our last final positions or we can go out with in a blaze of glory. >> he turned to lieutenant andrew bundermann the officer in charge. >> that was the mission? >> short to the point. >> you got to get men to follow you out there. >> yes. that's always the scary thing about being a leader. >> were you sure they were going to follow? >> all i could do was ask. >> what happened when you asked for volunteers? >> i had five guys stand up. didn't ask, what are we volunteering for. didn't ask any of that. just stood up. >> low on bullets they first ran
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>> how close is the enemy. >> closer than i ever thought. 10-15 feet away. >> the taliban were inside the camps perimeter. the command center sent out this chilling message. "enemy in the wire, enemy in the wire." one hour and eleven minutes into the attack, the first apache helicopter gun ships arrived overhead to find competing in flames. had they arrived five minutes later, romesha believes, keating would have been over run. >> i just watched these three guys just walk on in like the game was over, the fighting was already done. they just literally strolled on. they don't understand we're still here? we're still fighting? their mistake. you're not going to just stroll in here like you own the place. like you don't have a care in the world because we're about to make you care.
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>> the apaches wereo fllowed by a b1 bomber which leveled a village where much of the taliban fire was coming from. how far was the village from where you were? >> it was just less than 200 meters their closest building to our perimeter. >> they were dropping what kind of weapons? >> 500 pounders to 2,000 pounders. >> awfully close. >> it was. danger close for 2,000 pounder is 1,000 meters. would would rather take our chances with our own bombs than be shot by the enemy. >> finally this message went out. "keating reports negative contact" with the enemy. but seven americans lay dead and one, stephan mac, the platoon cut up was gravely wounded. >> mace was bagged up and ready to be put on it still conscious. we all thought he was going to
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high moment with everything that had happened. that mace was going to make it. >> that was like the end of the battle came down to saving private mace. >> it's what we were all hoping for. >> what happened? >> they attempted to do surgery on him but it was just too late. i think those medics did a whole lot for mace but i think the was mac that's correct held on to life for as long as he did until he left. once he left his brothers, he knew he could go home. >> that was in 2009, right? >> yes.
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seven years. >> oh, yeah. >> it's still with you. >> i hope it never leaves. >> three years after the battle romesha was awarded the medal of honor, which struck him as both inappropriate and wrong. >> it boils down to, why me? i didn't do anything special. just did a job like 52 other guys that were doing that day. and eight that did way more than i ever was asked of. i mean, why me? >> because you were the one that lead the counterattack. >> i think you could have replaced with any other red-blooded american soldier. it would have been another one that would have stepped up and done the same thing. >> after the battle all the soldiers were abandoned keating in the outpost they fought so desperately to defend was
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>> pauley: here's a look at the week ahead on our "sunday morning" calendar. this monday is known as melanoma monday, a day for raising awareness and encouraging early detection of the deadliest form of skin cancer. on tuesday, this year's tony nominations will be announced on cbs this morning. the award ceremony itself takes place mid june. on wednesday, congressman john lewis receives the elie wiesel award at the holocaust memorial museum annual tribute dinner in washington. thursday is cinco de mayo. it marks the anniversary of foxico's 186 victory over french
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puebla. friday is national nurses day, honoring the role nurses play in our health care. and saturday brings the 142nd running of the kentucky derby. the first leg of horse racing's triple crown. now to john kicker son in washington for a look at what's ahead on "face the nation." good morning, john. >> dickerson: good morning, jane, we'll talk to ted cruz about his last ditch effort to stop donald trump and his response to former speaker boehner's calling him lucifer. we'll also talk to bernie sanders about what is next for his campaign. >> pauley: we'll be watching. reminder that just after we go off the air this morning you can go to our facebook page to join a live chat with filmmaker abigail disney. and next week here on "sunday morning." a case of panda-monium.
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it was all pencil and paper. started out, the surface pro is very intuitive. with the pressure of my hand i can draw lightly, just like i would with a real pencil. i've been a forensic artist for over 30 years. i do the composite sketches which are the bad guy sketches. you need good resolution, powerful processor because the computer has to start thinking as fast as my brain does. i do this beuse i want my artwork to help people.
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>> pauley: we leave you this sunday morning in the hoh rain forest at olympic national park in washington state. which gets up to 14 feet of rain every year.
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jan i'm jane pauley. please join us here again next "sunday morning." captioning made possible by johnson & johnson, where quality products for the american family have been a tradition for generations captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org
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>> dickerson: today on "face the nation." has the call pain 2016 roller coaster had the last dip. donald trump started the week on a high note. dominating his competitors in the northeast. >> it's over. as far as i'm concerned it's over. >> dickerson: then looked like traditional candidate for a minute. >> the trump administration will lead a free world that is properly armed and funded and funded beautifully. >> dickerson: the weekended on more familiar note dodging protesters on a trip to california. >> that was not the easiest entrance i made. we went under a fence, through a fence, felt like i was crowing the border. >> dickerson: ted cruz trying to put up a wall. he named carly fiorina as his running te

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