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now take a look at rescue teams evacuating the philippines' capital or large parts of it. almost 19,000 people displaced in that city of 12 million. and forecasters say the storms won't let up for at least another 24 hours. many there, of course, living in constructed homes, death tolls expected to rise before this is over. s gunman that killed six people at a sikh temple in wisconsin was a frustrated neonazi, how the southern poverty law center describes wade michael page. the organization tracks hate groups and says page was associated with the scariest, most violent skinhead group out there. page was shot and killed by police after he opened fire on the temple. authorities are investigating his ties to white supremacist groups. we're seeing for the very first time video from mars of the "curiosity" rover landing. there it was. it was shot onboard moments before touchdown. okay, it's a little grainy perhaps, but not bad for 352 million miles from earth. stick around. nasa promises more pictures in about an hour from now. chad myers is going to join me as well in 30 minutes to tell us what's happening in these seven minutes of terror, as they're called. unrelenting attacks in aleppo, forcing the u.n. to pull all of its monitors out of that syrian city today. they join the steady stream of civilians who are trying to escape the fighting between rebels and government forces. ben wedeman is in aleppo. >> we've seen a series of air raids from the syrian air force in the old city and whatnot. we saw helicopters in rebel-held areas and same steady bombardment we've seen since yesterday. overnight we got very little sleep because the artillery bombardment that really went on all night, became quite intense at about 3:00 in the morning. now this afternoon after one of those syrian air force air raids, we were outside a field hospital where we saw at least half a dozen wounded being driven up as well as several dead bodies in the back of pickup trucks. the field hospital was really completely overwhelmed. we've spoken to the doctor before the wounded arrived. he said that they're short not only of medicine and medical supplies, but he's also short of staff because many of the nurses and doctors he was working with are unable to get to the parts of aleppo that are held by the rebels. in fact, he came out of surgery with his rubber gloves full of blood and he was pleading with people on his cell phone to come and help him. because he simply could not deal with the level of injured who were arriving at the hospital. and now we've seen parts of town where there was severe destruction. these are heavily populated areas under normal times. the areas that are near the front line, it was obvious people have left. there are still hundreds of thousands, if not millions of civilians living in the rebel-held areas. this morning we're at about 6:30 in the morning, we're outside a bakery where 100 people were lined up to get what little bread is available. one man told me that his entire family sleeps in the stairwell of their apartment because of fear of the bombing. he said that they have very little in the way of supplies. one other woman told me that they've run out of cooking gas and that she's cooking on firewood she's picked up from public parks. and we just got video in actually from another city in syria. have a listen. the automatic weapons going off there. rebels apparently taking on government forces in the north of the country. a syrian opposition group says 115 people have been killed nationwide so far today. more gunshots. people trying to escape the violence have been crossing into neighboring countries by the tens of thousands. they have for months now. barbara starr is going to take us to a refugee camp that recently opened in jordan. >> reporter: for the syrian refugees, the swirling sands, the heat. now, everyday life at the refugee camp in jordan, a short drive from the syrian border. long walks across the camp for food and supplies. the camp has been open just one week. a water pipe provides a cooler moment. even as the girls do the family wash in a bucket. 13-year-old amani has been here just a few days. escaping from her home in dara with eight oer family members. we learn her heart is broken when she tells us -- "my mother was murdered. she was outside. we were inside and there was a bomb." she was hit by shrapnel. amani simply says -- "she was everything to me. she brought us up and died. she would take us wherever we wanted to go. i was the one most attached to her. what else can i tell you?" amani says there was shelling every night before they left. the family escaped with the free syrian army which took them to the jordanian border. the syrian regime claims its fighting terrorists, but 22-year-old tells us more about what happened to the family. she says "my cousin was out at a demonstration after friday prayers and was killed by a sniper. then a female cousin killed because her brother defected." the jordanian government says more than 140,000 syrian refugees are already in jordan. the united nations is prepared to house another 100,000 here. it's trying to improve grim conditions. >> it's a terrible situatio but the question is, would you want to put your family in a place like this? no, but we're in emergency operation. people are being bombed. they're running away. they're losing family members in syria. >> reporter: for some children, there are moments just to be a kid again and play with new friends. for many like amani, childhood seems gone. dying with her mother. "we cried a lot. we cried a lot. they buried her and what happened happened. god bless her soul." although the agencies running this camp say they are doing everything they can as fast as they can to improve conditions here, things are very grim right now. you know, michael, we could not have brought you that story without cnn's own photojournalist mary rogers and our producer. most of them veterans of many conflicts. i know they are colleagues of yours, close colleagues. the refugees tell us all the same story. the camp is in desperate situation. and some of them say it is so desperate that they are beginning to wonder if they should have gone back to syria, if they ever should have left. the jordanian government, the u.n., is really trying to make very urgent improvements to the situation there, michael. >> yeah. mary, joe, and yourself, barbara, of course for that report. you've been there for the last couple days. curious whether you've heard anything about the syrian prime minister, or former syrian prime minister, riad hijab who deflected yesterday. there was conflicting reports whether he was in jordan, whether he wasn't, whether he was going to qatar. have you heard anything? >> reporter: right. you know, michael, topic number one around security circles tonight, still he has not officially turned up here. but, in fact, talking to sources throughout the day, and there are still opposition forces who are saying that he has defected, that he is in a neighboring arab country. they will not say, they say for security reasons, where exactly he is. but the situation is expected to resolve itself in the next few days and he is expected to emerge, shall we say, somewhere in this region. these defections, as you know, are very dangerous, very critical circumstances till everybody gets out, all the family mbers get out and they are sure that everyone is safe. so it is, perhaps, now sadly somewhat routine that everyone is waiting to see him emerge and that wbe the signal that everyone who is trying to get out on this round, at least, is safely out of syria. michael? >> yeah, of course. couple of arab countries that are unneighboring, it does boil it down a bit. barbara starr, thank you for your reporting. appreciate it. here's more of what we're working on for this hour for "newsroom international." we're more than halfway through the olympic games. so where has australia again? the country has only two, yes, two gold medals so far. we're going to look into that if i can keep it together. plus beach basics usually include a swimsuit, sunscreen, a towel. but a ski mask? some parts of china that's what you'll see. we'll explain when we come back. is backed by an equally powerful and secure cloud. that cloud is in the network, so it can deliver all the power of the network itself. bringing people together to develop the best ideas -- and providing the apps and computing power to make new ideas real. it's the cloud from at&t. with new ways to work together, business works better. ♪ [ male announcer ] you work hard. stretch every penny. but chances are you pay a higher tax rate than him... mitt romney made twenty million dollars in two thousand ten but paid only fourteen percent in taxes... probably less than you now he has a plan that would give millionaires another tax break... and raises taxes on middle class families by up to two thousand dollars a year. mitt romney's middle class tax increase. he pays less. you pay more. mitt romney's middle class tax increase. so, i'm working on a cistern intake valve, and the guy hands me a locknut wrench. no way! i'm like, what is this, a drainpipe slipknot? wherever your business takes you, nobody keeps you on the road like progressive commercial auto. [ flo speaking japanese ] [ shouting in japanese ] we work wherever you work. now, that's progressive. call or click today. try capzasin-hp. it penetrates deep to block pain signals for hours of relief. capzasin-hp. take the pain out of arthritis. yes, day 11 of olympic competition. the stage set for another big gymnastics show down actually. jordyn wieber was team usa's main hope for olympic gold. so far she's been performing in the shadow of her teammates, and spoiler alert for you. put your tv on mute if you don't want to hear. i'm going to tell you. jordyn's teammate aly raisman won gold for her floor exercise. maybe you hit mute. that happened moments ago for the u.s. women's gymnastics team. good news for the u.s. in track and field, american lolo jones is looking for redemption after her stumble in beijing in the women's 100 meters hurdles. she's going to compete in the semifinals. and in the beach volleyball semifinals the money is on the usa's misty-may treanor and kerri walsh jennings to take their third straight gold medal. they've been playing brilliantly. australia has a hope in the 100 meters hurdle. may have a population smaller than texas but my home country sure does know how to breed olympic champions especially in the pool. we did anyway. in sydney and athens australia was fourth in gold medals. in beijing four years ago finished with a haul of 46 medals. days out from the end of competition in london, the aussies don't have even half of that. yes, i'm choking up. for a country surrounded by sea, australia has in the last few decades, anyway, put on a pretty good show, especially in the water. i interviewed five time gold medalist swimmer ian thorpe fondly known back home as the thorpedo and c australia is floundering this time around. >> maybe because we haven't had quite as much funding in sport as we would have liked. we haven't had the results that australians have become accustomed to, and, so, too, the world. >> do you think australians have had too high an expectation? a country of 22 million people and people expected the aussies and americans to go at it in the pool. that's not the case anymore. >> look, i think the expectations have been too high, and i think we've been lucky for a while as well. we've been happy to perform and perform well, but i think we've become too used to being too successful, and we need to get back to basics and appreciate individual, each individual result for what it is and really appreciate when we do win a gold medal. >> yeah, not qualifying for the olympics this time around, thorpe is hoping to get to the world championships, however. on the medal tally board austraa sits below kazakhstan, north korea, and a more painful blow, the prospect of being trumped by australia's smaller neighbor and big sport s rival, new zealand. becky anderson joins me now from london. i just got back from aust raral on vacation, becky. people down there are really feeling this. they're not crying in the streets but pretty close to it. who are we, if not olympic champions in the pool? they're talking about having independent investigations now. what's going on? what are they saying there? is it big talk in london? >> reporter: you are making it so uncomfortably easy, having a pop has been a national sport. we've begun to feel uneasy about it. this is all wrong. don't forget, in the last three olympics, you had by day ten at least 11 golds. you got two golds, 12 silver and 8 bronze as it stands at present. and much worse for you than that sort of result -- you're right to point out that new zealand have got eight medals and three golds at this point, with a population of 4.4 million. is you're being trumped by them as well. what must be much more uncomfortable for you guys is that team gb's performance is possibly the best in 100 years. listen, we've been having a pop with the australians here. cameramen are surrounded by them. great job. b i don't know. i've done some research. i wondered what's gone wrong. ask me what i think has gone wrong. >> i don't know if you want to, becky. it is painful. it's your turn. all right. what's gone wrong? >> reporter: well, this is the deal. one of your athletes has made a very good point. mitchell who walked away with a silver medal for his efforts in the long jump has said, listen, all australia has ever cared about, and rightly so, because you've done so well in the past, are gold medals. 12 silver and 8 bronze is a really good haul at the moment. what the athletes are saying is there is actually quite a good feeling. they're not blaming themselves for a terrible haul. and if you look at the actual medals, themselves, you're doing all right. but this is real emphasis. because you've done so well over the past few decades, particularly, as you say, in sailing, swimming, and, for example, rowing, that we got past that phase here and you haven't got that significant haul. so it's tough, but the team, at least as far as i can tell and from speaking to some of the athletes here, aren't as disappointed as the media and perhaps the general public back home. >> yeah, no, you make a good point, though. you know, australia has finished in the top ten of the medal nations since 1988. it's the first time since 1976 they haven't won an individual gold in the pool, and you're rik right, the media is having a bit of a go. we should be counting silvers as golds. ali pierceman came out saying australians expect nothing less than gold and it's a shame. what you're saying there, that people are saying they're not given enough credit. thorpey said this, too, enough credit for getting a medal. rugby is going to be an olympic sport in 2016. that will be the time to shine. >> reporter: will it? how are we doing at the moment? i can't remember. >> doing good. >> reporter: let me make this point. you make a very good point. also cricket could one day be an olympic sport as well. you can't be waiting until these new sports come in. i think this is the crux of the matter. i know that thorpey brought this up with you. at best, if you look at the funding over the past sort of 10, 15 years into olympic events, it's $505 million betwn i think 2001 and 2006. and as you increase the number of events that you competed in, this is important for all countries around the world. that there was a declining amount of money that was actually invested by australia in these olympic sports. and you see a decline in the medal haul accordingly. and when you look at the kazakhstans, the belaruses, these new countries, we ought to be celebrating these countries who are doing so well. i can wage -- i haven't done the figures, there's an awful lot of money going into developing these sports. 20 years ago you had centers of excellence and a really good budget. you haven't got that in australia at the moment. you should have it. people should start talking about that. >> one of the aussie olympic committee guys said you can get a lot of silver and bronze, but the difference between silver and gold is money. and becky, i thank you. you're being rather gentle. i think it could is been a lot uglier. >> reporter: later. >> drop me a note and give me hate. good to see you, becky. thanks so much. becky anderson doing a great job there in london. all right. madonna always speaks her mind. you knew that. now she's supporting members of a russian band. a punk band who were put behind bars for their anti-government demonstration. we'll tell you what she said. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 let's talk about that 401(k) you picked up back in the '80s. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 like a lot of things, the market has changed, tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 and your plans probably have too. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 at charles schwab, we'll give you personalized recommendations tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 on how to reinvest that old 401(k). tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 so talk to chuck tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 and bring your old 401(k) into the 21st century. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 rollover your 401(k) or ira and receive up to $600. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 see schwab.com for terms and conditions. well, they wanted to make their voices heard when they protested against the russian president vladimir putin. ♪ extraordinary and unexpected scenes, a demonstration in a russian cathedral that landed members of the punk rock band in jail and on trial. the prosecutor demanding they get a three year prison term for that performance. the group is receiving some outspoken support for their cause. for more, let's go to nichelle turner. madonna speaking out in russia. >> they were hoping she'd speak out in support for them and she has. she was in moscow on tour and also there to launch her own fitness club. here's what she had to say. listen to this. >> i'm against censorship and, you know, my whole career i've always promoted freedom of expression, freedom of speech, so obviously i think what's happening to them is unfair and i hope that -- i hope that they do not have to serve seven years in jail. that would be a tragedy. through history, historically speaking, art always reflects what's going on socially, so for me it's hard to separate the idea of being an artist and being political. >> and we have definitely seen her, you know, speak out in support of a lot of these things and do a lot of things in her concert that have been a bit controversial. what she says are in the name of art. >> yeah, she's not the first musician to speak out about the band, either. they are getting some support in various areas. who else has come out? >> yeah, there's actually been a lot of big names that have been backing this group. sting, peter gambrio, members of france ferdinand, beastie boys, red hot chili peppers. all speaking out in support. anthony from the peppers wore one of their t-shirts during a recent moscow concert. a statement on his website, sting makes the point he believes it is an important part of democracy. here's what he had to say in part. he said, a sense of proportion and sense of humor is a sign of strength, not a sign of weakness. surely the russian authorities will completely drop these spurious charges and allow these women, these artists to get back to their lives and to their children. so, yeah, there are a lot of people that are stepping up and saying, you know what, art is expression, expression is art. you may not always agree with it, but there is a bit of a method to the madness. that's their view. >> president putin known for having a little bit of a thin skin. it will be interesting to see what happens. good to see you. nichelle turner with the latest on that ongoing thing. we'll let you know how the trial turns out. it costs more than $2 billion and travels more than 350 million miles. that's a heck of a commute. now nasa's "curiosity" spacecraft sending video from mars. pretty cool stuff. extra strength bayer advanced aspirin. in fact, in a recent survey, 95% of people who tried it agreed that it relieved their headache fast. visit fastreliefchallenge.com today for a special trial offer. and sounds vying for your attention. so we invented a warning you can feel. introducing the all-new cadillac xts. available with a patented safety alert seat. when there's danger you might not see, you're warned by a pulse in the seat. it's technology you won't find in a mercedes e-class. the all-new cadillac xts has arrived, and it's bringing the future forward. welcome back, everyone, to "newsroom international." we're breaking format a little here, leaving earth for news from our mayneighbor, mars. you're looking at the very first video of the "curiosity" rover landing, shot onboard moments before touching down during monday's so-called seven minutes of terror. chad myers joins me now to discuss this. eight months of work, i think it was how many billion dollars, couple of billion dollars? >> $2.6 billion u.s. >> $2.6 billion u.s. what are we seeing and is it worth it? >> well, if we find dinosaur bones on mars, it's worth it. there's no question about that. what we're looking for in this whole process is could life have ever been sustained in the 4 billion years mars has been up there? this thing landed perfectly. we just talked about this, kind of chuckled a little about it. that's the elipse and gale crater they were shooting for. they would have gotten a gold medal in mars shooting. no question they got the gold here. they put it right where they wanted it, a very deep spot on mars. the reason why they wanted to go here, imagine a deep spot in the u.s. that's where the water would drain. this could have been an old lake. if there was an old lake, the lockness monster could have been swimming in there. >> i heard the other day there is google mars. go around like they do here and see if someone is standing up on their house. we have photographs. tell us about those. >> the grainy photographs are important. we found out which way this landed. 365 degrees, you don't know which way it landed. east, west, north, or south? some of the latest pictures showing the martian, a little dust in the air. that's not haze, that's not humidity. that's certainly dust in the air. that dust may have been caused a little bit about the landing of the rover. things don't move around very much. it's an elliptical orbit. this could be be 250 million miles away from earth. 155 million miles away right now. it takes 14 minutes for a picture to go from mars back to the earth and takes 14 minutes for us to send a signal for us to do something. >> that's not bad really. >> except you want it to turn, don't want it to hit a rock or fall off a cliff. you want to watch where it goes. >> plan ahead. >> and wait 14 minutes. >> take a left in 14 minutes. i think this stuff's terribly cool. when are we going to expect better pictures, because there are better ones coming, aren't there? >> there are better pictures coming. some of these things won't be working for 14 to 21 days. it's going to take a while. they don't want to turn everything on at once. you can't blow a fuse. can't go up there to fix it. >> i love that stuff. all right. stick around. at 1:00 p.m. eastern, we're going to take you to california for a live nasa news conference. we are expecting to see even more pictures from the red planet. terrific stuff. now, a british bank blasted over allegations of helping iran hide billions of dollars. it's a big bank, too. standard chartered could be kicked out of wall street. we'll have a report. cadillac at. this is actually starting to feel real now. 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[ phillips' lady ] live the regular life. phillips'. well, his story begins when he was running for his life. now he's running for gold. we're talking about marial who was 8 years old when he escaped from a slave camp in essence in sudan. a victim of decades of civil war between the north and his native south, which, of course, just a year ago became the world's newest nation, south sudan. well, he has lived for years now in the united states, a refugee who qualified for the olympics in the first marathon he ran. problem is, south sudan is so new, it doesn't have an olympic committee. so he couldn't run for the country he loved. no one could do anything about it. until after some frowing the international lifric committee allowed him to run under their flag. i asked them if it was lonely running over there. >> i don't feel lonely because i don't have a country because i know my country is with me. when i line up in the line in the marathon, i know my people are going to be with me and i will know that i have a country. so it is something, i'm not feeling lonely at all. i'm meeting new people every single day, every time i go out i see different faces which is something very unique. really enjoying that. >> it's a wonderful story. he was up for the chance to run for sudan but said no. he lost 28 family members, 8 of his 10 siblings in that civil war. no surprise he declined that opportunity. guatemala has been sending athletes to the olympics since 1952, helsinki. in more than 50 years of competition, half a century, they failed to bring home one single medal. that is until now. you knew this was going to be a happy ending. guatemala has strolled to gold in the 20 kilometer walk. and it all started in a poor village when he borrowed a pair of his mother's shoes. rafael romo has his incredible story from poverty to guatemalan hero. >> reporter: he won silver, but it might as well be gold. guatemala's medal, the first one ever for his country. after winning the 20 kilometer race walk saturday, he became emotional. can you believe it, god is great, he said, after his dream of many years came true. the 21-year-old mayan athlete is from an impoverished region in rural guatemala, where people celebrated his victory with a parade. he says as teenager, he trained with his mother's tennis shoes because the family couldn't afford a pair for him. >> he went through a lot. he was hungry at times. he didn't have the support of people who should have supported him. some treated him badly, but there were others who believe in him, and i thank god for them. >> reporter: before leaving guatemala for london, he bought his family their first tv ever with earnings from last year's victories in the pan american games. the family, he says, was glued to the set when he crossed the finish line as he learned when he called them after his victory. >> translator: even when he's far away, my son doesn't abandon us. he's always sending us money so we have enough food on the table, and that gives us so much joy. >> translator: my family never had a lot of money. my coach always motivated me by telling me you may be able to change that if you work hard, so that became our main goal. >> reporter: barrondo said his coach was the key to his success. >> translator: he'll be an extraordinary athlete, he has humility, a nice chemistry. eric is like the son i never had. he's everything. >> reporter: after his impressive showing in switzerland, the guatemalan government built a house for eric, his parents and four siblings. the cinderblock home was a significant improvement over the wooden shack they used to live in. >> translator: doors don't open up by themselveses. you have to open doors with your own action and performance. >> rafael romo is here to talk about this story with me. in fact, we were just chatting there. nearly got caught up. this is a real rags to riches story from the beginning. just how -- explain to people how poor they were. >> he was hungry many times when he was a child. he didn't have sometimes -- when he was training, this is not too long ago, he didn't have one dollar to pay for his daily meals, very cheap food in guatemala. as you heard in the story, he also had to borrow his mother's shoes to train. very, very poor. it's just incredible what he did. >> i can't imagine what the reaction's been in guatemala. >> there's been parties since he won on saturday, a parade. people wearing the colors of the guatemalan flag and also the olympic rings, you see them all over the place. >> we're starting to see more and more developing countries make their way on to the olympic tally board. is there a drive in central america, south america, to produce more talent? focus on it? >> well, you've seen coaches like medina who's from cube what whose theory is there are -- there's a lot of talent in this countries and they're like diamonds in the rough. >> yeah. >> they just need somebody to come to these countries and polish them and what you saw in this case is that a real diamond emerged and he made it to silver. now, the hope of guatemala is that next saturday he's going to compete in the 50 kilometer race and he has a real possibility of going all the way. so that's what everybody in guatemala is hoping and expecting. >> oh, wow, that would be a happy ending, too. good to see you, rafael. rafael romo there. all right. there was celebration today, by the way, in the caribbean nation. a 19-year-old nicknamed the jaguar sprinted to gold in the men's 400 meters. boy, did he win, too. that is the country's first olympic medal. also. and to mark the feat, the government declared this afternoon a national holiday. you had people dancing, cheering, waving the flags as news of olympic history spread across that tiny island. and he won that pretty easily, too. all right. beach essential checklist, swimsuit, sunscreen, a good book and a ski mask. really? we'll talk about it. intellige helping business, do more business. in here, opportunities are created and protected. gonna need more wool! demand is instantly recognized and securely acted on across the company. around the world. turning a new trend, into a global phenomenon. it's the at&t network -- securing a world of new opportunities. ♪ all right. so you're headed out for a day at the beach in china. you've got your towel, the sandals. when you get there, this is what's coming out of the water. have a look at this. some women are wearing masks at the beach. why? well, to keep their skin as pale as possible. in parts of asia, pale skin is actually highly prized and some women and men will go to great lengths to get it. senior medical correspondent elizabeth cohen digs into this for us. elizabeth, what's wrong with hats and sunscreen? >> maybe it's a fashion statement, do you think? i'm kidding. i don't think that, no. you knows, hats and sunscreen are great, but it is true that maybe a teeny, tiny amount of sun is going to get through them. maybe these women are on to something. hats and sunscreen, we've been talking to dermatologists, really, you know, pretty much completely do the trick. >> right. one thing this sort of raises, though, as we said, it's about this thing of being pale in some parts of the world. i know in india as well it's a big deal with creams and lotions being sold to lighten the skin. are they dangerous? >> you know what, they're not dangerous if they're the right kind. there's an ingredient called hydroquinon which doctors prescribe and you can buy over the counter in a more diluted dosage. that's okay. there are some products that are sold, though, that are a little sketchy. it's not clear what's in them. in this country it's not completely regulated. sometimes things end up in there that maybe shouldn't end up in there. they're not as regulated, some say, as they should be. you want to be careful. >> it's good to see people at least taking care in the sun as we were chatting during the break. >> you might look at them and think, wow, how crazy is that that they want to be pale. i remember when i was a kid girls would put baby oil on to be tan. that's crazier. what they're doing doesn't look comfortable and it's odd looking. they're not hurting themselves. >> you and i are similar. i grew up in australia surfing every afternoon, no sunscreen. you just never did. if you weren't peeling every day in summer you weren't having a good summer. now, of course, it's great, but my kids it's drilled into them, sunscreen, sunscreen, all the time. >> absolutely. sunscreen is so important. even for people -- you look like the complexion of someone who definitely needs spf. even people who are darker need sunscreen. >> if you are fair skinned go to the dermatologist every now and then and get it checked. good to see you, elizabeth cohen there. role reversal for rover. people cramming into a dog cage while the dog stands outside. they're protesting the eating of dog meat. we'll tell you where it's happening when when come back. you feel that? 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