comparemela.com

Card image cap



this morning saturday," may 25th, 2013. captioning funded by cbs and welcome to the weekend, and welcome, anne-marie. >> memorial day weekend. thank you very much. >> thank you for giving us a piece of your memorial day weekend. the weather not looking too promising but we'll look at tlater. we have a great group of guests for you including sharon getting ready to dish up some unique holiday burgers to set with the long awaited reopening of the jersey shore. almost seven months after they were blasted by superstorm sandy. >> joining us now for more on the recovery is sima from kdwl new jersey. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, anne-marie. memorial day is the summer kick-off here at the jersey shore, although it doesn't feel like it. temperatures here are in the 40s, which is below average, but if you take a look behind me the beach here at ocean city may not be quite ready. crews are still working on the projects but overall the jersey shore does seem to be ready for the summer. >> one, two, three, whoo! >> reporter: with the cutting of a ribbon the jersey shore is officially open for the unofficial start of the summer. governor chris christie visited seaside heights friday. >> i think we made some really great progress but until folks make their way back in their homes, it's not going to be where i want it to be. >> reporter: superstorm sandy left behind this unforgettable image, a roller coaster sitting in the ocean. crews have since removed the ride and made other changes. just check out this time lapse of the rebuilding of the city and the boardwalk. the state recently launched a new campaign called stronger than the storm. it's meant to boost tourism, something businesses on the beach appreciate. >> we put our money here yes, so we believe in it. >> reporter: and president obama will visit the shore with governor christie on tuesday. this will be his second visit since superstorm sandy hit. i'll send it back to you. >> sima hopefully it works out to be a good weekend down the shore. thanks a lot. unfortunately it looks like the weather is not going to cooperate for people across the boardwalk. meteorologist craig setzer joins us. >> in the northeast it's been more like columbus day as opposed to memorial day weekend. very cool temperatures this morning. readings in the 40s right now and some 50s. even 30s in the ohio valley and with all the clouds and rain it's not going get that warm today. forecast high temperatures only in the 40s and 50s. the rest of the country is not looking quite as cool. showers expected though through much of new england today. new york, long island under the gun as far south as philly. but sunshine throughout the ohio valley. the only thunderstorms in the midsection of the country. severe weather over the plains and the midwest. all in all the weather in the northeast should improve as we get to the end of the memorial day weekend, 70s by monday. anthony and anne-marie? >> meteorologist craig setzer. thank you very much. investigators this morning are trying to find out how a single accident caused the collapse of major bridge north of seattle. this morning we're getting our first glimpse of the bridge collapsing. it shows a truck that hit a span. it shut down the main link between the u.s. and canada in the northwest and it could be months before it's rebuilt. >> reporter: the department of transportation and the ntsb used every minute of daylight inspecting what's left for fractures, cracks any signs the catastrophic point of impact caused any more damage. >> once their investigation is completed and our inspection is completed, then we can start moving forward on getting that debris out of the water. >> you can literally see him drive through. >> reporter: robin brady says a co-worker watching his company's trailer go through last night called to say what he saw. >> i watched a vido of a bridge going down. >> reporter: it bounced off the overhead beams. the deck immediately lurches forward and collapses around two cars trapping three people inside them. we pulled the permit and found the 42-year-old trucker was cleared for anything over 15.9 feet but records show the clearance is only 15.6 feet. >> we make repairs as needed. >> reporter: 71,000 cars use the i-5 bridge every day. reopening the critical commercial corridor will take weeks or months. >> to see four lanes of major interstate in north america literally just drop into a river and disappear, it just doesn't make any sense why and how it can happen. >> reporter: we're going to see some very large equipment arrive over the next few days to pull this debris up. that's when the inspectors will get their first look of failure point. repairs could cause up to $15 million. for "cbs this morning saturday," lee stall, in mt. vernon washington. engineers and safety workers have been worrying for years about the bridges. he was the chairman at the time of the deadly bridge collapse in minneapolis back in 2007 and he joins us now from washington. mark, good morning. thanks for being here. >> good morning, anthony, good morning, anne-marie. >> this bridge -- this problem doesn't seem to be because of structural problems does it mark? this bridge was inspected every two years. how does this happen? >> that's what they're going to be looking carefully at. they're going to look at these girders that were struck. they're going to be looking for corrosion, fatigue, they're going to be looking for rust. they're going to look for standards. lots of questions are going to be asked even though it initially began with the truck striking the girders. >> this was a structure that's functionally obsolete. >> just because it's functionally obsolete doesn't mean it's an unsafe bridge. it just means it was built during an older period of time. there's not enough amount of shoulder space needed. it's a useful bridge but has the technology like a car. the technology has improve oefrd the years. >> one in nine as you know are rated functionally obsolete. how big a problem is that? >> being functionally obsolete is not as tough a problem as what we might call structurally deficient, and we have a number of those bridges, 75,000 to 80 thousand thousand ,000 that are. they have significant amounts of rehab or needs to be replaced. >> so the society of engineers give them a grade. if i came home with a report card like, that i think i'd be grounded. that doesn't really make you feel confident. do we have a problem here? >> we do have a problem here and we need to address it before things really begin to come back to home and haunt us where we do have bridges that fall just because they're too old. but with that said there are 607,000 bridges here in the united states. the amount of inspection and rigor that goes in to looking at these bridges every year every two years which is necessary to keep them operateingoperating, you can feel comfortable that that's happening. >> what about the funding needed to fund these kind of repairs, mark? >> billions of dollars. billions and billions and billions of dollars. we cannot forget that our infrastructure is our lifeline so we have to invest in it. so with that said i'm not sure with the mood today of the congress where we're going to find that money. >> all right. mark rosen kirk thank you very much. the national transportation safety board has released a report on the commuter train crash last week in connecticut. now, it doesn't cite a specific cause but it does rule out foul play. they call it an unusual condition on the track before the crash that injured many people. sexual assault in the military has to stop. this morning we have word of a new investigation involving army troops. chip reid joins us from our washington bureau with more on that. chip, good morning. >> well, good morning, anthony. cbs news has confirmed that an army missile unit at ft. greeley, alaska is under investigation of sexual relations between officers and their subordinates harassment and fear of repriceal. it came on the heels of president obama's speech to the naval graduates demanding an end to such conduct. >> our military remains the most trusted institution in america. >> reporter: along with the praise, the president had some tough words for the naval academy of 2013 about a militarywide epidemic of sexual assault. >> those who commit sexual assault are not only committing a crime, they threaten the discipline that makes our military strong. >> reporter: up to 26 million members may have been assaulted last year but most were unwilling to come forward fearing retaliation or harm to their careers. also this month two high-profile cases, one involving an officer who headed the air force's sexual assault prevention unit. he was arrested for allegedly groping a woman in a parking lot and another case where a west point sergeant was charged with secretly videotaping women in a bathroom. >> we need to march forward unified with important reforms that will protect and support the victims. >> reporter: this week a bipartisan group from both houses of congress introduced a bill to crack down on perpetrators. >> if you are convicted of sexual assault, you will be honorably discharged from the military. >> reporter: other bills are even tougher. kirsten gillibrand wants victims to go straight to military prosecutors instead of going up the chain of command. for a new graduating class, there may soon be new rules on sexual assault in the military. the president has called for the national security council to closely monitor the military's renewed efforts to review sexual misconduct. defense secretary chuck hagel now holds weekly meetings on the topic and plans to echo the president's remarks this morning at his commencement speech at west point this morning. >> chip reid in washington. thank you, chip. now to that brutal attack that killed a british soldier on the streets of london this week. it turns out the knife-wielding suspect was known to london's security. good morning, anthony. >> how they are able to slip the net is just one question facing british intelligence services today. now there's an astonishing claim that agents actually tried to recruit one of the men six months ago. >> we must fight them. >> reporter: long before he showed up with blood-soaked hands moments after the murder, intelligents agents had their eye on michael adebolajo but a childhood friend says he told him intelligence offered him a job. he said his friend repeatedly rejected the request. >> he mentioned that they -- initially they wanted to ask him if he knew certain individuals basically. that was the initial issue, but after he said he didn't know these individuals and so forth, what he said is they asked him if he'd be interested in working for offenses. britain is still reeling from this. there's been an outcome of grief over the death of rigby, the father of a 2-year-old son. >> it's such a sad case. he didn't deserve to die. >> reporter: british media has been reporting on afghan duty in afghanistan's helmand process. on friday they expressed their anguish of the attack. >> we condemn the public acts that occurred two days ago in this area. this is clearly a misrepresentation of islam. >> despite that widespread condemnation from the muslim community, the killing has prompted a backlash. there's been a huge increase in anti-muslim incidents. they said they once got eight cases a day. it's spiked to 150 since including attacks on mosques. anthony and anne-marie. >> charlie d'agata in london. thank you, charlie. meanwhile there will be no rest for the we'rery residents or moore. vinita nair is in moore with the latest. vinita, good morning. >> reporter: good morning to you anthony and anne-marie despite scenes of devastation everywhere, there's signs of progress throughout the city. the traffic is back to normal. there are fewer roadblocks and most of the residents have now returned to their homes. standing next to the debris of their now decimated home it's hard to believe they consider themselves lucky. >> we are a family intact. >> i feel bad for myself, but then i look around me and i'm like -- i feel bad for them and them and them. >> reporter: not a single home around them could withstand the brunt of monday's tornado. it's the same story across much of moore oklahoma where residents are now salvaging what they can. it's a painful process watching the neighbored do the exact same thing. >> once you -- onee shoe. i found one grand baby's shoes. >> in the process of finding public things have ended up on public walls. whoever found these pictures knew they were precious. they just didn't know how to return them. at la plaza elementary the principal can barely speak about the ordeal. >> i did not feel the walls moving at first, but you feel things trickling down on you from the ceiling, and then it gets -- those things become chunks of things and at that point in the bathroom people were quiet, people were screaming screaming, and at that point i believe that's the only time that i yelled and i said in god's name go away. go away. i said it about four times. and then it was gone. >> reporter: on sunday president obama arrives to see the destruction firsthand. he'll talk to residents who lost their homes and first responders who are still busy working. he has the heavy task of comforting the city, understanding there are 24 lives they've yet to fully mourn. >> just knowing that he's coming down here, that's pretty helpful. i know a lot of people mentally it helps them out a lot. >> reporter: despite losing everything they own, sharon and kenny have no plans to move. this pile of rubble was just a house. it was their neighbors who made it a home. >> reporter: you want the neighborhood. you don't need this house. >> yeah. the neighbors all around me not just this whole circle that we lived in that's what would bring me back. >> if they all came back yeah. that's the neighborhood. >> i wouldn't hesitate. if it took four five years. if i knew that everybody would come back here i'd be back here, no doubt about it. >> reporter: well one bright note to tell you about that couple. in all of that mess sharon tells me she miraculously found her wedding ring. it was a family heirloom that she never expected to see again. anthony and anne-marie? >> that's a wonderful discovery. vinita nair in moore, oklahoma. thank you, vinita. if you i'd like to go go to cbsnews.com and see how to help. elsewhere on the extreme weather front we learn thad this could be a harsh hurricane season. with an above average number of storms no washington,aa the national oceanic and at monthsmosphereic administration is noting storms. marshall shepherd is at the university of georgia and he joins us from atlanta. good morning, marshall. >> good morning. >> so this is not the kind of news we want to hear. why do you think this is going to be a particularly intense hurricane season? >> well with all of the ingredients that we look for as meteorologists are pointing toward an intense season we're not in an el mean yeo year so that certainly favors an active season. the sea temperature of the ocean waters are particularly warm and we're essentially in a long-term pattern of active hurricane activity that we entered in around 1995 so all of those together point to an active season. >> marshall, is there any link between the severe weather we're seeing like superstorm sandy and, say, the strong tornado in oklahoma? >> you know although there are certainly independent events i know there's a tendency to sort of want to link everything together, but the storm sandy occurred during the hurricane season, and the tornadoes in moore, oklahoma, occurred during the severe weather season. in fact, if you look at a map of where you would have expected a tornado on may 20th that region was certainly one of the high probability regions. so these are representative of the types of weather systems we would see, but there is some concern that some of our weather systems in general are becoming more extreme. >> so just last week pretty good timing. noaa updwraded its computer system to increase its ability to forecast more accurately. did that make a difference, particularly when it came to oklahoma and the tornado there? >> yeah. computers are actually how we make our day-to-day weather forecast and the more competing horsepower that we have the better. so over the next several years, noaa and the national weather association will be updating its computer capacity. that's a game-changer. it really brings us up to be where it will spawn out these types of tornadic storms. really we're entering an era of improved computing and coupling that with other things like next generation satellites and polar radar, we're in exciting times in terms of technology for weather. >> at the same time earlier this week marshall four satellites went down. a backup kicked in but what kind of problems does that cause. >> i was joking the other day. kids can't imagine listening to music on cds and we as the public can't imagine not knowing that a hurricane is coming and that's thanks to satellites. this is the second time we've lost that satellite for a bit the last two years. luckily we had a spare, but we're sort of riding on a spare tire that's in trunk. what happens if that goes out? the next satellites will be launching within the next two to three years but with the budget cuts we hope that doesn't cause a delay, otherwise, we won't get our new tires after all. >> marshall shepherd thank you very much. >> it's about 22 after the hour. here's the weather for your weekend. this weekend of course, is the start of summer vacation season, but before you take a trip, there you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." female narrator: through monday get 36 months interest-free financing and save up to $400 on beautyrest and posturepedic. even get three years interest-free financing on serta icomfort and tempur-pedic but this special financing offer ends memorial day at sleep train. ♪ ♪ [ roars ] ♪ ♪ [ roars ] ♪ ♪ [ roars ] ♪ ♪ [ roars ] ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] universal studios summer of survival. ♪ ♪ this isn't good. anthony weiner he's running for mayor of new york city and he had to change his campaign website yesterday because it accidentally showed a picture of the pittsburgh skyline instead of manhattan. or as weiner calls that an embarrassing photo i can live with. >> and so it begins right? speaking of our fans of "law and order," they would recognize elizabeth rowan from the films. she bm here's an idea whose time may have come. it's called car sharing and they're trying it out at san francisco international airport. >> we explain how it works. >> reporter: it looks like any other long-temp lot but most people dropping off cars here are making money instead of airport fees. >> depending on the car, you can make up to $20 a day. >> reporter: he's one of the teenage founders of flightcar. he put college on hold to do this startup. >> at this one airport you have the parking lot with the rental cars and then there's one for long-term parking. >> it's a leap of faith. >> reporter: for the first time linda powell says the idea of driving a straver's car takes a bit getting used to. but she likes it and paying $30 a day and so does david jensen who's borrowing this mercedes-benz. >> i'm renting from a person than a big company. >> reporter: much cheaper than professional. they must have fewer than 150,000 miles. for car owners payments are modest, $10 to $20 a day. they only get paid if their car is rented but they don't get paid for long-term parking. he admits it's not for everyone. >> we know there are people who wouldn't have let others drive their care. >> would you let someone drive your car? >> no one wants my car. i bought it off craig's list. we'll be right back. this is "cbs this morning saturday." it happened on v d-day when japan surrendered ending world war ii. a sailor kissed a nurse and a photographer alfred i extend stat captured it on film. >> today the camera that he used to capture that iconic image is up for auction. like the photoit's a classic. made in 1933 it's expected to sell for up to $32,000. >> a piece of history, right? welcome to "cbs this morning saturday." i'm anne-marie green. >> and i'm anthony mason. we begin this half hour with a kick-off to the summer travel season. for most of us it means a getaway on the calendar but how we travel tells us a whole lot about our economy. good morning, sherese. >> good morning. >> how many folks are going to be hitting the road this morning, do you think? >> you're going to have about 31 million people that are going to be in their cars and another 2.3 million people that are going to fly to get away for the memorial day weekend. >> okay. that's a lot of people on the road. do you think the price of gas is affecting whether they choose to drive. it's sitting at $3.65 on average a gallon. >> a lot of folks are choosing go closer to home to kind of save on cash and gas and they want to get away. they were cooped up for so long during the recession that summer is starting and they want to get away. so fly or drive. >> it's interesting. air travel is going to be down 8% this weekend. what do you think is the reason for this? >> people are tired of the fees. if you chamg your flee, you get charged. if you want a pillow want to eat on the plane. some folks are getting a little tired of it. if they can drive where they go they'd prefer that. but the airlines is predicting this summer's going to be a record-breaker. they predict they're going to have more over the long run. >> maybe for the short trips they're not but for the longer trips they are. >> yeah. you can't drive to paris. >> that's a good point. it's a critical weekend for the travel industry too. >> absolutely. airlines barely make a profit in the best of times so during the holidays and travel season they need folks to go to make some money. >> sherese jones, thank you for being here. >> thank you. >> and now here's a look at the weather for your weekend. up next actress and now author elizabeth rome on her very private battle that she's now making very public. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." ok so i've been having an affair of sorts with greek nonfat yogurt loaded with protein 0% fat that thick creamy texture, i was in trouble. look i'm in a committed relationship with activia and i've been happy and so has my digestive system. now i'm even happier since activia greek showed up because now i get to have my first love and my greek passion together, what i call a healthy marriage. activia greek. the feel good greek. ♪ dannon ♪ if you have moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis, like me, and you're talking to your rheumatologist about trying or adding a biologic. this is humira, adalimumab. this is humira working to help relieve my pain. this is humira helping me through the twists and turns. this is humira helping to protect my joints from further damage. doctors have been prescribing humira for over ten years. humira works by targeting and helping to block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to ra symptoms. for many adults, humira is proven to help relieve pain and stop further joint damage. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal events, such as infections, lymphoma or other types of cancer have happened. blood, liver and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions and new or worsening heart failure have occurred. before starting humira , your doctor should test you for tb. ask your doctor if you live in or have been to a region where certain fungal infections are common. tell your doctor if you have had tb, hepatitis b are prone to infections, or have symptoms such as fever fatigue, cough, or sores. you should not start humira if you have any kind of infection. ask your doctor if humira can work for you. this is humira at work. i like it - i just... you can't change color like we do. valspar has the love your color guarantee. if i don't love it, i get another color free. i'm thinking more this. yowza! valspar signature, look for it only at lowe's. well you know actress elizabeth rome best for her long running role on "law and order," but she kept her infertility private. her new book is titled "baby steps." good morning. >> good morning to you. >> here's what's interesting. you're successful you're beautiful. no one knows about this struggle with infertility. why write this book about a time you were not subccessful and it wu not a pretty time? >> i start add blog and i went through this process about writing the blog that perpetuated the myth and then writing a blog that started to tell the truth and moms and women want to hear it as it is. they want straight talk and as i started to write that blog from my point of view i decided there was a point of my life that i hadn't been straight with other women about, and being an advocate for women, which is my number one priority other than for my little woman, my daughter, i decided to write about my fertility struggles because i felt i had never had those moments with women where they had been forthcoming with me and said, well i have this beautiful child, but i did five rounds of ivf. and so as i went through it it was like i was side blooind ed-blinded. i never knew i wasn't going to be able to have a child naturally. sometimes women get pregnant at 42, 46. miracles happen every day. we're all very different. for me it happened early. i had accelerated ovarian ageing, which is unusual for a 34-year-old. >> what's interesting here you talk about being a very private person going into this. and in the end you open up about all the feelings you had, a lot of feelings of inadequacy that you run through. how difficult was it doing that? >> i think when you have a purple and maybe the purple is to bring awareness to something, you can forget your fear of you know wanting to keep yourself private. i think keeping your family sacred is the most important. but if you can educate women, knowledge is power. i'd like them to know the statistics are scary once you reach 35 and 40. 70 million, 80 million suffer from fertility issues and it's not something to be ashamed of. if men struggle with fertility and women, you're not less than, you know someone else who doesn't, and to just speak about it openly. just to have a conversation. you know i hope the book is a call to action. i hope it makes women think at 30, maybe i'm go check my ovarian reserve and hormone levels and leave it at that. i think that's information. >> i think a lot of people are going to appreciate that book. elizabeth rohm, thanks for joining us. >> thank you. up next money can buy happiness if you know how to use it. that's what one harvard professor says. you'll see it next. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." [ male announcer ] the subway® $3 custom breakfast combo is here! a hot six-inch breakfast sandwich and a cup of coffee or 21-ounce fountain drink for three dollars. ♪ breakfast made the way i say ♪ [ male announcer ] hurry in today for the subway® $3 custom breakfast combo. subway. eat fresh®. maybe today you'll run some errands maybe another headache will get in the way. if you have migraines with 15 or more headache days a month, you're living a maybe life. and you may have chronic migraine. go to mychronicmigraine.com to find a headache specialist. and don't live a maybe life. if you're seeing spots before your eyes, it's time for aveeno® positively radiant® face moisturizer. [ female announcer ] aveeno® with soy helps reduce the look of brown spots in 4 weeks. for healthy radiant skin. aveeno®. naturally beautiful results. [ male announcer ] erica had a rough day. there was this and this. she got a parking ticket... ♪ ♪ and she forgot to pay her credit card bill on time. good thing she's got the citi simplicity card. it doesn't charge late fees or a penalty rate. ever. as in never ever. now about that parking ticket. [ grunting ] [ male announcer ] the citi simplicity card is the only card that never has late fees, a penalty rate, or an annual fee, ever. go to citi.com/simplicity to apply. [ female announcer ] discover weightless shine. suave professionals infused moroccan argan oil into our new moroccan infusion line. the results were incredible. [ amanda ] i love it! all this shine yet it feels so light! [ female announcer ] suave professionals works as well as salon brands. can money buy happiness? our next guest says yes, you can, if you know how to spend it. michael norton is an associate professor at harvard and author of "happy money," a book buy simon & schuster, a division of "cbs this morning." michael, good morning. >> good morning. >> why is happyiness tied to their wallet? >> most people think how happy they are and how much money they have. we spend all day trying to make money and we spend all day am i happy, could i be happier, can i be happen doing something else? and just because of that they turn out to be very tightly linked. we try to do research to see what is the actually relationship between money and happiness. >> in the book you come up with five principles to follow. the first one is buy experiences. what do you mean? >> absolutely. if you ask people what i they spend their money on they give you a list. i think about it. what do i spend money on all the time. usually it's stuff and usually it's stuff for yourself. one of the things you can do instead of buying stuff all the time is buy experiences instead, so dinners out. >> travel. things like that. >> absolutely. >> and that makes you happier why? >> turns out experiences are more fun to look forward to. buying a tv is great but you don't daydream about it at work. but a vacation that's coming up you're day dreaming. when you're on it it's usually great, there's other people there and you're having fun and when the experience is done you have a whole lifetime to look back and remember it and when you're stuck in your cubicle in february and it's cold. >> there's a photo. >> exactly. you have it on your deaf tock remember how happy you were. tv doesn't do that for you. >> the second thing about spending is make it a treat. what do you mean there. >> it's a hard one. i include myself. >> i thought so too. >> this is an idea the things you like the best you should give them up for a little while. imagine i gave you chocolate and said eat as much as you want or you can't have any and then next week i said here's some chocolate: the people that gave it up they're so good to have it. it's amazingly good for our happiness to take a little break and then treat ourselves. >> you also say buy time. how do you buy time? >> hard one. when you think about buying something, i think about how it's going to change your time. is it going to make your time better or worse. the biggest mistake people make here is buying a house in the suburbs. >> yes. i have one of those. thanks for bringing that up. >> it's a lot of people. is it a good thing. you have a commute, you get home you're grumpy. is it a good experience? it seems great because it's great house but it doesn't help your time at all. >> one of the things you say, it seems to me it kind of goes along with the "make it a treat" idea. pay now, consume later. put off the gratification. >> the best example of this is if you think about a vacation again. the worst thing to do with a vacation is pay as you go because every meal you take your credit card out and it hurts to pay. if you pay ahead of time it actually feels kind of free. everything is beautiful and you enjoy it and you get the anticipation of it's coming in two weeks, i can't wait to get there. >> and the last tip for happiness is invest in others. >> that's right. we in a lot of our research look at if what mainly people do is spend money on themselves all the time the most radical thing we can do is actually just give it away to somebody else. we do experiments where we actually give people cash and send them out into the world and say today you have to spend it on yourself but someone else -- you have to spend it on somebody else. and then we measure their happiness at the end of the day. >> andsome. >> it turns out that people who spend it on themselves buy coffee, other things. people who spend on other people that i do nice things. buy people gifts and homeless people coffee. at the end of the day they're happier than usual. >> the name of the book is "smart money." >> i needed an excuse to book a vacation. coming up next he was one of the martyrs of the civil rights movement. 50 years later, find out the nas fating story how medgar evers fought to open the television airways. you're watching cbs this morning saturday." can be a moment of delicious wonder. the latest -- new mccafé blueberry pomegranate smoothie.television airways. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." and a splash of pomegranate juice. there's always something new to love from mccafé. [ male announcer ] so you used the wrong flea killer. don't blame him. instead, rely on frontline plus. it kills adult fleas and ticks plus flea eggs and larvae, destroying future generations. ask your vet about frontline plus. [ female announcer ] unlike other sour creams daisy is made from only 100% natural 100% pure ingredients with nothing else added. meals are simply better with a dollop of daisy. ♪ do a dollop of daisy ♪ [ alarm clock ringing ] [ female announcer ] if you have rheumatoid arthritis, can you start the day the way you want? can orencia (abatacept) help? could your "i want" become "i can"? talk to your rheumatologist. orencia reduces many ra symptoms like pain morning stiffness and the progression of joint damage. it's helped new ra patients and those not helped enough by other treatments. do not take orencia with another biologic medicine for ra due to an increased risk of serious infection. serious side effects can occur including fatal infections. cases of lymphoma and lung cancer have been reported. tell your doctor if you are prone to or have any infection like an open sore or the flu or a history of copd a chronic lung disease. orencia may worsen your copd. [ male announcer ] now learn about a program committed to you and copay assistance that can reduce monthly orencia out-of-pocket drug cost to $5. if you're not satisfied after 6 months you get that money back. call 1-800-orencia. an emotional ceremony at the white house yesterday. president obama sign add bill honoring the memory of four young girls killed in 1963 by a bomb planted at the 16 street baptist church in birmingham alabama. the bombing shocked the nation and helped propel the civil rights act through congress the following year. >> now, those children were among the youngest but certainly not the only victims of white supremacist violence in 1963. civil rights leader medgar evers was murdered in his own front yard in jackson, mississippi. at the time of his death he was deep in the battle to challenge the nation of television. randall pinkston reports. >> we're not just interesting in voting so that conditions will be improved for negroes. we want conditions improved for everybody everybody. >> reporter: that was medgar evers in 1962. he could not get on television. was he ever asked to comment on civil rights matters by tv stations? >> in mississippi? >> yes. >> no of course not. >> reporter: few people of color appeared on jackson, mississippi's, main tv station wlbt. his mother recalls how sometimes the screen would go dark even when black entertainers came on. >> we were blocked from seeing successful people of our own race appear anywhere. i can recall my elder son saying to me, mommy, the television is broken again. >> reporter: as the civil rights movement grew the dominant point of view on wlbt was from the segregationist civil council it's currently being studied by the congress. these range all the way from blackmail to bribery to threats. >> reporter: for six years evers wrote letters to the station pleading for equal time and was turned down repeatedly by station manster stermanager edward beard. former mississippi governor said they were mostly white segregationists at the time. >> on local tv and in the print media it was a one-sided story all the way. >> reporter: but evers did not give up. what kept your husband going? >> his determination to do whatever he could possibly do to turn this state and help the nation accept us as citizens with full licensed citizenship. >> reporter: here in jackson there's not one single negro policeman. >> reporter: he called for the end of segregation in schools and called for television accommodations and then he criticized wlbt as outside agitators. he was granted a time to respond in may, 1963. the setting is different but this is where medgar evers made his debut speech on wlbt. evers spoke for 17 minutes. we were unable to find a recording of the speech. mrs. evers read excerpts. >> the negro has been in america since 1619. this country is his home. let me appeal to the consciousness of many silent responsible citizens of the white community who know that a victory for democracy in jackson will be a victory for democracy everywhere. >> reporter: many white viewers who flooded the nation's switchboard were outraged. >> wlb tt. >> caller: will you please get that [ bleep ] off there. >> caller: there's one thing you can do. get that [ bleep ] off. >> caller: what's mississippi going to do let the [ bleep ] take over? >> reporter: she believes her husband's groundbreaking speech made him more of a target. >> i can't emphasize enough if you challenged any tradition, certainly in mississippi, your life was on the line. >> reporter: one month after his tv appearance evers was killed by an assassin's bullet. he was 37. the national archives in maryland retains the records of evers' quest for equal time. it bake a legal battle to revoke wlbt's license and award it to new owners that shared evers' vision. his efforts began the process to open the doors to people who had been shut out. that's me in the blue blazer and orange shirt. i got my first on-air job at wlbt in 1971 anchoring the 10:00 news. more blacks are registered to vote now than ever before in mississippi's history. the industry became a leading industry in diversion and it began with medgar evers. >> he was the man on the horse leading the charge and gave courage and support to people who largely had been without home. >> he broke barriers and more people of color did away with their fear and joined the movement to crush, crush segregation. >> reporter: randall pinkston cbs news jackson, mississippi. >> what a great story. >> jay. >> what i like is we see randall's pinkston's career come full circle. he looked sharp in that pink suit. i came up with him. that was one of his lat stories after 30 years with cbs news. he will be missed. we'll speak with oklahomans in the wake of the disaster. stay tuned. with all of the destruction in moore, oklahoma there are some tearful reunions happening. >> cbs news correspondent edward lawrence shows us. >> reporter: amy looked everywhere for bambi after the tornado. she never thought she'd see her again. overjoyed lewis could not hold back her emotions. >> we went to home depot and they gave it this site to start look for her. i thought it kind of looked like her. we came over to see. >> reporter: bambi escaped when a fence on lewis's property was splintered by the tornado. she ended up here at this shelter with 100 other cats and dogs. >> the animals are very stressed out. you feel so sorry for them. >> reporter: most of the dogs and cats came from homes like this, ail confused after the tornado came through the area. dozens of shelters help them. the shelter has a 75% reunion rate, something lewis now appreciates. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning," edward lawrence moore, oklahoma. >> there seemed to be so many separations in moore, oklahoma after that tornado. >> you know a pet is part of the family and when you get the pet back, it helps you move on. >> during the aftermath of that we actually caught on camera one woman finding her dog, and it was so emotional. >> stunning. >> it was really sweet. stay with us. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." we'll be right back. welcome to "cbs this morning saturday." i'm anthony mason. >> and i'm anne-marie green. coming up this half hour the outrageous style of liberace and his semisecret life behind the candle la bra. we'll take a look at the new movie starring michael douglas. >> and then flame-throwing pitchers are dominating baseball like never before. details on the new arms race. and pack your whole family up and take them on the road. a nostalgic look at the station wagon. but we begin this half hour with the reopening of a major playground in the northeast, the jersey shore. nearly seven months after superstorm sandy devastated the region. >> the return to business is certainly a relief to many but it comes with cautious optimism. here's michelle miller. >> reporter: on the jersey shore, customers rang in the business summer with an urge to buy. he says it's the promise of brighter things to come. >> mom look at this. >> relatives come in. travelers come in. you know our business between memorial day and labor day is probably 20%, 25% more. we're ready. we're stocked as you can see. >> first we got it from the river. >> reporter: we first met george outside of his original sea brite store after superstorm sandy hit it. what's holding it up? >> we were devastated. our business was completely obliterated and through the help of our vendors and, you know prayer, we were able to reopen temporarily and then come back. >> reporter: right next door the mad hatter bar reopened just in time. customers poured in hours after city inspectors approved the building. >> it's a huge feeling of relief right now just to be open. i feel like a big burden has been lited off our shoulders for -- it's been on there for at least seven months. >> reporter: in march, owner scott kelly had just begun the cleanup. he had struggled with his insurance company. >> there was six, seven feet of sand in this building as of october 29th. >> reporter: that's when he decided to get creative. instead of just waiting, kelly built a temporary restaurant/bar on the back of his building. >> we need income. we haven't paid our billing and vendors in six months. >> reporter: what happens come september? >> we'll be knocking it down and starting over again. >> reporter: all the work you put into it? >> it's for those 102 days. >> reporter: everyone lives for the 102 days which accounts for as much as 60% of the tourism dollars the state earns ever year. for "cbs this morning saturday," michelle miller seea brite, new jersey. meteorologist craig setzer has details on what looks to be a rough weekend for some. good morning. >> good morning. unfortunately it's not looking like a great start to the memorial day weekend. temperatures are going to be cool. skies are going to be cloudy. today, they're going to struggle to get into the 50s. some areas not getting out of the 40s. and maybe even wet snowflakes across parts of vermont and new hampshire. 60s in the ohio valley. it looks like a rainy day. they'll take its time getting out. some improvement tomorrow. still rain showers and clouds. highs in the 60s. finally on monday we'll see temperatures move back into the 70s for much of the northeast. the rest of the country looking pretty good, lots of sunshine. warm temperatures. hot in the plains. the only threat for severe weather will be over the upper midwest and northern plains and some showers expected in the pacific northwest. other than that the memorial day weekend looking pretty nice. anthony and anne-marie? >> snow in the northeast. thanks for nothing, craig setzer. the mammoth tornado recovery effort is in full swing on this the first weekend since that storm. vinita nair is in moore with the very latest. vinita, good morning. >> reporter: good morning to you. despite scenes of devastation behind me, it's hard to believe it, but this is playing out across moore, oklahoma. people are salvaging what they can. the good news is all of the roads have reopened. on sunday president obama plans to tour the most devastated areas. he plans to talk to victims and first responders. after people have lost most of everything they own, i can tell you right now they're just preserving, looking for family heirlooms and they're trying to make sure that neighbors who lost these valuable items have a chance to claim them and to find them. in terms of the victims themselves, 24 people lost their lives after monday's tornado. eight of them were elementary children and the funerals have begun. in fact, there will be two funerals later today. also on sunday there will be a memorial for all 24 victims. residentings tell me they hope it will offer some sense of closure. anthony, anne-marie? >> thank you. oklahoma has a long and tragic history of tornadoes but as "48 hours'" correspondent rich ard schlesinger reports, he shows you how serious it can be. >> reporter: it's too married to headlines about strategytragedies like this. moore may seem to have a bull's eye on it. five tornados since 1998. but this state is no stranger to appalling acts of nature and man, man. carrying on has become part of the culture. >> in the midst of strategy and fallen life we have seen the strength and courage of the people. we will get through this we will overcome we will rebuild, and we will regain our strength. >> reporter: oklahoma got through the manmade carnage in oklahoma city, that threatened to define this proud american town when timothy mcveigh bombed the building. over the years, dozens of towns have buried scores of neighbors. families buried their children. in 1999 samantha carlson's son ashton was just three weeks old when a tornado destroyed their home in bridge creek and killed him. >> i held my son in my arms and i kissed him on his face and that's my last memory i have of my son. >> reporter: she lost her son, she lost her house, she lost everything, but today she told us she found a way to keep going. >> i knew that it would get better. i knew that -- you know i didn't know how. i didn't have those answers, but i knew it would be okay. >> reporter: today she has three children and a new house, and she's still in oklahoma. >> it's my home. this is oklahoma you know. it's what we do. we get knocked down and we get back up brush ourselves off. it's all i know. it's how we do it. >> reporter: it is a sadly familiar routine. they train for this. they drill for this. and they do it over and over again. but none of that makes this any easier. >> that was our "48 hours'" richard schlesinger reporting. tomorrow on "face the nation," bob schiff 'eers guest will include oklahoma governor mary fallen and tom coburn and also chuck schumer. check your local livestings for times. critics say those working for sheriff, arpaio denies it. he's gained a national reputation billing himself as america's toughest sheriff. the fda is investigating a pharmacy distributor in tennessee. several in several states were sickened with a powe ted chally damaged steroid. main street pharmacy already on probation has agreed to recall its products. last year's fungal meningitis killed 55 people and sickened 740. that compound was baseded i inn massacachusetttts. itit's ten m minuteses after t the hour.. now herere's a l look atat the w weatherer for yourur weekekend. up next a peek behind the candelabra. >> i'd like to try a little experiment. i've been playing this boogie woogie for eight weeks. i'd like to play it at 16 beats per bar. >> michael douglas as liberace who did sequins long before michael jackson pulled on that glove. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] celebrate memorial day. choose 18 month special financing on purchases of $299 or more with your lowe's consumer credit card. ♪ ♪ ok so i've been having an affair of sorts with greek nonfat yogurt loaded with protein 0% fat that thick creamy texture, i was in trouble. look i'm in a committed relationship with activia and i've been happy and so has my digestive system. now i'm even happier since activia greek showed up because now i get to have my first love and my greek passion together, what i call a healthy marriage. activia greek. the feel good greek. ♪ dannon ♪ bm surely something must get under your skin once in a while, doesn't it? >> well about the only thing that bothers me is when people accuse me of having a following of nice old ladies. i have nothing against the nice old ladies but i like nice young ladies too. >> the nice old ladies did like him. liberace interviewed in 1966 by edward. >> referee: murrow on the cbs show "person to person." tomorrow we get a very different look on liberace starring michael douglas as the flamboyant pianist and matt damon as his lover. >> why don't you come work for me? >> doing what? to type. >> i don't type. >> hell scott. i can pay people to type. i need a bodyguard, someone to talk to the way we talked to tonight. you can take care of the animals. please. say yes, scott. >> mike, good morning. he got the voice down anyway. you've seen the film. what did you think? >> it's really good. and, you know steven recently made "magic mike." you ee taking a world that seems absurd, people thing of it as craziness. at the end of the film you really feel for liberace you feel for scott thorson his much younger lover and think there's a critique in there of our celebrity culture and the way we put people in gilded cages. liberace was put in a gilded cage. he won a lawsuit where he was called gay but he was actively hiding it. >> he's obviously had a very interesting life. this movie focuses on one part of his life. what part is that? >> it starts in the 1970s when he meets scott thorson who was 17 years old when they met and liberace was 40 years older than hip. he had scott work for him and they were together for a few years and it ended in 1987 when liberace died of aids. at that point they had a falling out. liberace sued him in a paternity suit for $40 million saying liberace promised to adopt him. he ended up getting $90,000 which might lend to the merits of the claim. >> why hasn't it been released this theaters? >> nobody would finance it. steven sotoberg said he went to everybody in hollywood and the words he used were it was too gay. they wouldn't make the move. he said i don't understand it. "brokeback mountain" was a great movie. hbo picked it up. they would be this the oscar picture if this had been released theatrically. >> they're a-list players. >> we heard the voice. we were talking about the finger movements whether he was actually playing or stunt doubles for it. did he capture liberace? >> he really does capture liberace. it's not an under-- or it might be an understatement where you've about never seen michael douglas like this before. he's gordon gecko, a tough mean guy with a chunky giant cell phone on the beach and here he's this very soft kind of tender -- there's a few flashes of you know, a harshness, but for the most part you really feel for this guy. he's kind of a nice man is what michael douglas said. he said i like being able to play a nice man. >> that is not what i thought of when i saw liberace as a kid. mike, thaerng you for being with us this morning. up next, the boys of summer are bringing the heat. how power [ jennifer garner ] why can't powerful sunscreen feel great? actually it can. neutrogena® ultra sheer®. its superior uva uvb protection helps prevent early skin aging and skin cancer, all with the cleanest feel. it's the best for your skin. neutrogena® ultra sheer®. [ male announcer ] the subway® $3 custom breakfast combo is here! a hot six-inch breakfast sandwich and a cup of coffee or 21-ounce fountain drink for three dollars. ♪ breakfast made the way i say ♪ [ male announcer ] hurry in today for the subway® $3 custom breakfast combo. subway. eat fresh®. detroit tigers pitcher anabel sanchez was two outs away from throwing the first no hitter for major league season last night. mawer singled up the middle to end the bid. there have been five one-hitters so far this season. when it comes to pitchers in baseball, the faster the better. >> indeed. heat is a big factor for pitchers and terrell brown is here to explain why. good morning, terrell. >> hey, anne-marie anthony. good morning to you both. we're talking about heat coming across the plate, fastballs sometimes clocking over 100 miles per hour. the pitchers that throw them have been called flame throwers and there's more of them in pro baseball now than ever before. you may not see it during pregame warmups, but the seattle mariners have three of the hardest throwing pitchers in the big leagues with an average fastball of nearly 96 miles an hour. is your catcher saying anything to you before or after the game when you throw a ball that hard? >> yeah he'll come up and say, oh, my gog, or fuego or my hand hurts. >> reporter: his fastballs saved his career. after six years away from the game bartending his blazing speed at an open tryout got him back in the game. >> having a few extra miles an hour helps quite a bit. >> reporter: why? >> you're able to miss miss a spot and able to get away with a little more, think, if you've got some of this chapman kind of speed. >> reporter: aroldis chapman or the cuban missile as he's known clocked the fast l pitch in history a few seasons go. all 25 of his pitches in a game hit triple digits. >> that's the winner o the nine. >> when he gets it up there, 103, 104er the crowd, you hear the whoos and the ahs. >> reporter: most nights catcher hanigan is on the receiving end of his pitch. >> a little faster than 100 hours an hour is about as fast as a human being can throw a baseball but what we're seeing is so many more people being able to throw at those speeds. >> reporter: just ten years ago biggy wagner was the only pitcher to throw 25 pitches in season at 100 miles per hour. last season there were seven. and in 2003 at least 20 pitches threw 25% of their fastballs 96 miles per hour or higher. last year 62 pitchers hit that mark. >> from a hitter's perspective, that extra velocity is going to be huge. it's not that they can't see it. they can't hit it. >> if a guy throws 90 he's going to get some attention. if he throws 95 he's going to get a lot of attention. >> reporter: this sports writer has been following it. it has trickled down to the little leagues. >> if you go to little league games you see dads and moms holding radar guns as they watch their kids throw pitches against the monster raiders. they'll be saying my kid threw 68 or 71 or he finally broke 75 and he's 17 years old. >> carter cass started his freshmen year at college as a catcher until his coach suggested he try pitching. by graduation he was throwing 97. last season he lead the majors with an average fastball of 98. >> it helped get me drafted, helped me a lot, helped me move the system real quick. >> reporter: is it's affectivesome. >> it can be. >> reporter: kapp says it helps to have a great fastball only if you have a great long ball. >> the phillies have won it. unbelievable. absolutely unbelievable. >> so here's the thing. look. you've got to wonder if battlers can even see a pitch moving that fast. researchers reviewed it. a pitch of 104 miles per hour takes about as long to reach home plate as a blink of the eye. one of those. so if the batter blinks when the ball is released he won't see the ball until it's in the catcher's mitt. >> that sounds hopeless. >> why even swing. you hope for the best shoo swing as he's winding up. >> cross your fingers. >> you just 40e7. >> the fear factor on the receiving end of that has got to make you nervous, the hitter or the catcher. >> here's the thing. if you encourage kids to throw that fast young, you have to wonder what the damage is go every family drove one and a new move with the rise and fall of the station wag. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." the national football league is spending tens of millions of dollars to try to figure out how to prevent or reduce concussions with players. >> some barn area sixth graders may have come up with a way that costs a lot less. as ken mcleod says their solution is getting some attention. >> reporter: for these three, the idea gelled when they noted sew many football players suffered from concussions. a debate from pop warner to the pros. >> we saw concussions is really serious and it can actually kill someone. >> reporter: the contest is called ecryber mission. they look at real world problems and try to solve it using science and math. it involved a hockey helmet a home made divide to measure force and several types of padding which they tested inside and outside the hard shell, grafting the results with some amazement. >> it was amazing. >> we all had that a-ha moment. >> our eyes just lit up. >> reporter: indeed their figures added up. >> we realized putting the padding on the outside worked. >> reporter: they took their findings to a helmet manufacturer and a neurologist. >> it caught my attention that these young people were looking into the same ir. >> reporter: and now each could pocket a $2,000 savings bond at a national competition in d.c. where a little confidence could serve them well. >> do you think you can win? >> yeah. >> the e psy ♪ ♪ [ roars ] ♪ ♪ [ roars ] ♪ ♪ [ roars ] ♪ ♪ [ roars ] ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] universal studios summer of survival. ♪ ♪ the rolling stones claimed the title the greatest rock 'n' roll band a long time ago. they've been getting their ya-yas out for more than half a century and the hall of fame in cleve left hand has everything. >> it including keith richards tett caster to the class photo. >> welcome back to "cbs this morning saturday." i'm anne-marie green. >> and i'm anthony mason. we take another look back at the automotive equivalent of apple pie and baseball. the all-american station wagon ruled the family road trip for decades until the mid-1980s. it's celebrated in the new film "wagon masters." >> the car came from my parents. i can remember. i can remember sitting in the back seat of this car playing with hot wheels on the back panel. i sat way in the back. there was three boys. i had the whole back seat to myself. i would sit back here just -- i'm a lot older than i was back then. ow. basically like this and i would turn around and look up front or whatever, but this was my -- this was my play area. i mean you could have all kinds of stuff going on back here and no one bugged you. >> same smart and christopher zielewski co-directed the film. i love that. when you were a kid that was your space. it's like your own little world back there. how did you guys get interested in station wagons? >> the story came about organically. volvo was discontinuing its wagon and we thought it was the end of an era. as we dove into it everybody hat a story. they were cool vehicles that you don't see around. >> take us back. when did the first station wagon first roll off the assembly line? >> you can go way, way back to the 1920s when the term was first coined but it didn't become a cultural phenomena until the end of the war. i remember the ford country squire. it seemed like every other car was one. i don't know whether it was wide or fake wood. >> the wood paneling. i want to know who designed that actually. >> the wood paneling? >> yeah. >> it was the actual structural wood that was built in the '20s and '30s and then in the '50s it symbolize add car that looked great. and then it became an uncool car sniet was a cultural i cop. they were everybody. >> absolutely. it symbolized the family. it sort of symbolized the american dream in a lot of ways and the fact that it's fallen by the wayside, the fact that it's considering so uncool a lot has changed. >> what was the heyday for the station wagon? since i've known it was corny. >> it was in the '60s and '70s and by the early '70s with the gas crunch station wagons starting to see their demise. >> the perception is the minivans put them out of business. but as you say, it was the gas. >> gas, smog all those things sent it downhill and the minivan kicked it downhill. >> they were gas guzzlers. >> absolutely. 8 miles to a gallon. it's hard to imagine. >> yeah, especially when you have dogs and kids back there. >> yeah exactly. four, five kids. >> you mentioned volvo. they were making station wagon and that was the end of the line. >> yeah. most viewed the '96 buick roadmaster as the last wagon. voe volvo called theirs the station wagon. other companies try to stay away from that term. when volvo named it it marked the end of the era for us. >> are companies still making it? >> they won't call it that. they call it a sport wagon, cross-country wagon. that it're mid-size. you can't set up an 8-foot piece of plywood. >> they don't want the mom wagon. >> you saw that with chevy chase. that was the final nail in the coffin. >> that's right. sort of a little bit of a nostalgic comeback. people still have obviously more fuzzy feelings about this. >> a lot of people are cheering to come back. they're sort of getting tired for the crossovers. you get a lot of the mid-size ones that are coming back. we'll see. if the mid-sized ones come back it's hard to say. >> they're up to $50,000. >> oh yeah. >> christopher zielewski, sam smart, thank you very much. >> thank you. now for a final look at the weather for our weekend. up next chef sara moulton dishes up her ultimate welcome to summer burgers and lots more. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." ok so i've been having an affair of sorts with greek nonfat yogurt loaded with protein 0% fat that thick creamy texture, i was in trouble. look i'm in a committed relationship with activia and i've been happy and so has my digestive system. now i'm even happier since activia greek showed up because now i get to have my first love and my greek passion together, what i call a healthy marriage. activia greek. the feel good greek. ♪ dannon ♪ [ female announcer ] love. it's the most powerful thing on the planet. love holds us in the beginning. comforts us as we grow old. love is the reason you care. for all the things in your life... that make life worth living. ♪ ♪ ♪ sweet love of mine ♪ hello. is this where we do that bundling thing? let's see what you got. rv -- covered. why would you pay for a hotel? i never do. motorcycles -- check. atv. i ride those. do you? no. boat. house. hello, dear. hello. hello. oh! check it -- [ loud r&b on car radio ] i'm going on break! the more you bundle, the more you save. now, that's progressive. i woke up to a blistering on my shoulder. the blisters were oozing and painful to touch. i spent 23 years as a deputy united states marshal and i've been pretty well banged up but the worst pain i've experienced was when i had shingles. when i went to the clinic, the nurse told me that it was a result of having had chickenpox. i wouldn't wish it on my worst enemy. on "the dish" this morning we're delighted to welcome back chef sara moulton. >> this day she hosts "sara's week knight meals" now in its third season of pbs. and to start the unofficial summer she's brought her ultimate burger and lots of trimmings. welcome. >> thank you. >> this is going to be as close to a cookout as i get here. what do we have? >> let's start with the watermelonwater mel watermelon screwdriver. it changes from the first sip to the last because the ice cube keating melting. can i start with dessert? >> we have everything backward in this segment, by the way. >> why not. i love blueberries. not only are they tasty but they've got five and antioxidants. some of them are cook. i did a cheating crust. ite goets three ingredients. you don't have to know about pastry. it's cookies, walker's vanilla shortbread and almond paste and one egg. i'm so proud of that. in case this oven baked chicken that was not enough for you, it's been dipped in melted garlic butter. >> the blueberries are incredible. >> isn't that yummy? >> it's dipped into three parts bread crumbs and one part park parmesan. then we have this bar burger. it's the debt weiler burger. he's from ann arbor, michigan. mushroom, olive, cheddar cheese grilled onions and it's steamed in beer. you can get to the point where you don't steam it in beer for the kids but the beer adds something to it. and cheddar cheese. did i mention that? >> you mentioned college. you went to the university of michigan. >> i did. >> you majored in ideas? >> history of ideas. i wrote my thee cease on the lighthouse, virginia woolf. mainly i grew up in college. i'm sure my mom didn't want to hear that. my mom pushed me into cooking. >> she didn't. >> she did. >> she wrote to craig and julia child. she wrote everybody back so she must not have gotten the letter but craig did and he said your daughter should go to cooking school. i applied and got into the institute and i said i didn't, i didn't want to leave my boyfriend. he wanted to see other women. he was right. he's now my husband of 31 years. we needed time away. because i was peeling hard boiled eggs i talked about julia's method and she said i work for julia. i asked if i could, could i be a volunteer and julia hired me to work on her show. this is 1979. i was just 12 of course. it was within f our shows called julia child and more company. i worked on that and it started a lifelong relationship. >> was she nice? >> so nice and she was one of funniest people i ever met. one time we were at a huge conference of 2,000 people all food people the international culinary and the topic of the day was how bad fatuous for you. this was the late '90s when they told you you couldn't eat any fat. the lectures and people weighing in and damn fat. julia raises her hand and of course everybody knows who she is. she says, i don't understand i really don't understand. i mean i just love butter. i mean it's so wonderful. i mean she just didn't care. why she was so funny, she said exactly what was on her mind. >> right right. >> so what have you got coming up, sara? >> well one really exciting thing. we're working on season four of my shows but i'm work on this contest contest. i'm collecting recipes. you can find out more. saramoulton.com/facebook and i'm asking people to send in their rep respies based on seasonal local ingredients. if you win i'll come to your house and cook with you and even videotape it. even alaska. >> are you going to sign our plate? >> i will. my best handwriting. my husband calls it my kindergarten handwriting. where do i sign? >> anywhere. >> i don't have much flair. oh this is fun. >> for more go to our website. coming up next madelyn's new c d-dayd debuted on the charts. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." (cat purring) mornings are a special time for the two of you... and you can make them even more special... with fancy feast mornings. mornings are delicious protein-rich entrées... with garden veggies and egg. each one perfectly designed... to start her day with a little love. fancy feast mornings gourmet cat food. the best ingredient is love. [ female announcer ] with mccafé, any moment can be a moment of delicious wonder. the latest -- new mccafé blueberry pomegranate smoothie. sweet blueberries, raspberries and a splash of pomegranate juice. there's always something new to love from mccafé. i like it - i just... you can't change color like we do. valspar has the love your color guarantee. if i don't love it, i get another color free. i'm thinking more this. yowza! valspar signature, look for it only at lowe's. maybe today you'll run some errands maybe another headache will get in the way. if you have migraines with 15 or more headache days a month, you're living a maybe life. and you may have chronic migraine. go to mychronicmigraine.com to find a headache specialist. and don't live a maybe life. appearing in our "second cup cafe" this morning is jazz zinger and songwriter madeleine peyroux. she began as a street musician in paris, then scored an instant hit with her first album in 1996. >> her new cd "the blue room" topped the traditional billboard chart and here she is with buddy holly in all those changes. madeleine peyroux. ♪ ♪ now you're gone and i find i'm wrong and there's nothing i can do ♪ ♪ but to challenge up all those changes that i made when i left you ♪ ♪ but to challengenge up all those changes that i made when i left you ♪ ♪ ooh sweetheart ♪ ♪ whet well i didn't think when i left you knoll i know i'm wrong because i can't find you anywhere ♪ well i should have reconsidered all those things i said i'd do but now i'm changing all those changes i made when i left you ♪ ♪ i'm changing all those changes that i made when i left you ♪ ♪ ooh sweetheart ♪ ♪ ♪ well now you're gone and i find i'm wrong and there's nothing i can do to change up all those changes that i made when i left you ♪ ♪ i'm changing all those changes that i made when i left you ♪ ♪ ooh sweetheart i am changing all those changes ♪ ♪ yes i'm changing all those changes that's right ♪ ♪ i'm changing that stuff ♪ ♪ changing all those changes sweetheart ♪ stay with us. we'll be right back with more music from madeleine peyroux. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." if you have moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis, like me, and you're talking to your rheumatologist about trying or adding a biologic. this is humira, adalimumab. this is humira working to help relieve my pain. this is humira helping me through the twists and turns. this is humira helping to protect my joints from further damage. doctors have been prescribing humira for over ten years. humira works by targeting and helping to block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to ra symptoms. for many adults, humira is proven to help relieve pain and stop further joint damage. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal events, such as infections, lymphoma or other types of cancer have happened. blood, liver and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions and new or worsening heart failure have occurred. before starting humira , your doctor should test you for tb. ask your doctor if you live in or have been to a region where certain fungal infections are common. tell your doctor if you have had tb, hepatitis b are prone to infections, or have symptoms such as fever fatigue, cough, or sores. you should not start humira if you have any kind of infection. ask your doctor if humira can work for you. this is humira at work. ok so i've been having an affair of sorts with greek nonfat yogurt loaded with protein 0% fat that thick creamy texture, i was in trouble. look i'm in a committed relationship with activia and i've been happy and so has my digestive system. now i'm even happier since activia greek showed up because now i get to have my first love and my greek passion together, what i call a healthy marriage. activia greek. the feel good greek. ♪ dannon ♪ joo tomorrow on cbs sunday morning i'll have a profile of the number one album this week vampire weekend, plus magician and illusionist david copperfield. and now here's a look with gayle king of what's coming up on "cbs this morning" monday morning. >> letters written in code are only now being cracked. they come from a brit in soldier who foiled the nazis. his son tells us what they say 678 we'll see you on "cbs this morning" monday morning. >> have a good weekend, everybody. >> thanks for joining us. we leave you with more of madeleine peyroux. this is classic, "i can't stop loving you." ♪ ♪ i can't stop loving you i i've made up my mind to live in memories of a lonesome time ♪ ♪ i can't stop wanting you it's useless to say so i'll just live my life in dreams of yesterday ♪ ♪ those happy hours that we once knew tho tho' long ago, they still make me blue they say that time heals a broken heart but time has stood still since we've been apart ♪ ♪ i can't stop loving you i've made up my mind to live in memories of a lonesome kind ♪ ♪ for i can't stop wanting you it's useless to say so i'll just live my life in dreams of yesterday ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ they say that time heals a broken heart but time has stood still since we've been apart ♪ ♪ i can't stop loving you i've made up my mind to live in memories of a lonesome time ♪ ♪ i can't stop wanting you it's useless to say so i'll just live my life in dreams of yesterday ♪ >> announcer: for more about "cbs this morning," visit us at cbsnews.com. -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com area... now -a murder suspect. how police connected the s-f state basketba a star athlete from the bay area now a murder suspect. how police connected the sf state basketball player to a homicide case on the east coast. >> an emotional reunion in moore oklahoma. how residents and businesses in that tornado stricken town are getting back on their feet. >> and the bay area lab testing diy technology that may help astronauts build their own spare parts in space. it's 7:00 saturday morning may 25th. middle of a long holiday weekend. >> i'm anne makovec. >> i'm brian hackney. we're off to a mostly sunny start. while we have a nice

Related Keywords

Alabama , United States , Ann Arbor , Michigan , Alaska , Vermont , Helmand , Afghanistan , Washington , District Of Columbia , Reunion , Connecticut , San Francisco , California , Morocco , Hollywood , Cuba , Jersey , Greece , New York , Canada , Japan , New Hampshire , Atlanta , Georgia , Ohio Valley , Oklahoma City , Oklahoma , London , City Of , United Kingdom , Ocean City , New Jersey , Mississippi , Tennessee , West Point , Maryland , Paris , Rhôalpes , France , America , Moroccan , Greek , Britain , Afghan , British , Oklahomans , American , Cuban , Scott Kelly , Scott Thorson , Dannon Joo , Vinita Nair , Ken Mcleod , Linda Powell , Uva Uvb , Robin Brady , Chuck Hagel , Chris Christie , Medgar Evers , Terrell Brown , Anabel Sanchez , Rosen Kirk , Michael Douglas , David Copperfield , Carter Cass , Elizabeth Rohm , Bob Schiff , Kirsten Gillibrand , Chuck Schumer , Edward Lawrence Moore , Elizabeth Rowan , Peter Greenberg , Sea Brite , Randall Pinkston , Simon Schuster , Keith Richards , Gayle King , Michael Adebolajo , Timothy Mcveigh , Anne Marie Anthony , Tom Coburn , Michael Jackson , Brian Hackney , David Jensen , Craig Setzer , Sara Moulton , Samantha Carlson , Anthony Mason , Edward Lawrence , Michelle Miller , Anthony Weiner , Richard Schlesinger ,

© 2024 Vimarsana

comparemela.com © 2020. All Rights Reserved.