inside what s known as the bunker, the underground high-tech control room where kurt schwartz, director of the state s emergency management agency, showed us around. more than 100 newly installed cameras along the 26.2-mile route will be monitored, twice as many as last year. we have expanded across the board. reporter: last year, surveillance cameras helped to pinpoint the alleged bombers but only days after the attack. the challenge this year is to stop any possible attack before it happens. anything of trouble, any person that s presenting a concern to us, may be monitored very quickly. reporter: in addition to the cameras, some 4,000 police officers will be on patrol along the route. 500 of them will be undercover in an effort to keep the festive spirit from being overwhelmed by the police. i don t want it to be an armed camp, that people feel intimidated by the police presence. reporter: boston s new police commissioner, bill evans, a runner himself who was in last
good monday morning, everybody. we begin with the grim work of recovering bodies from that sunken ferry. it continues it this morning in south korea. 64 bodies have now been removed, about 240 people are still missing. at least seven crew members have been detained, accused of failing to protect passengers. the south korean president says the actions of the captain and his crew amounted to murder. abc s gloria riviera has more. reporter: new details from the ferry s frantic call for help. at 9:07 a.m., the vts, the korean center that monitors ship traffic, asks the sewol, are you capsizing? the ferry replies, yes. 9:14 a.m., the sewol warns it is leaning too far and evacuation is impossible. by 9:23 a.m., officials on land tell ship s officers to get out of there, at least give them a life ring, a life preserver, and send them to the water quickly. but it wasn t until 9:30 the ship s captain gives the order to evacuate. by 9:37, communication was lost. the u.s. navy is ai
martha: good morning to you in boston, bill. and i m martha maccallum. live here in new york city. so today s race is the second largest in boston s history. yesterday, look at these scenes as hundreds marathoners in their sneakers lined up at a local church to receive the annual blessing of the athletes. remembering victims from last year s terror attack. bill: a lost police too. martha, we ll go throughout the security measures the city has taken. they have planned now for seven solid months to make sure that today stays safe. these right here, these backpacks, absolutely forbidden. if you have one, it will be eliminated, or to be checked throughout the entire route. for runners, fannie packs are allowed. it has been reduced to this size this year to make sure things stay okay. molly line live from the emergency management command center in framing ham, massachusetts. molly, begin with you. the security this year more than doubles last year s on multiple front. how will the
explosions killed three people, they imposed new restrictions on what spectators bring with them with the 26.2 mile course. according to wcvb, spectators carry clear plastic bags and no backpack oer coolers or blanket and no surveillance cameras along the marathon route. kurt schwartz, how did you widdle down the suggestions given to you and your team to this specific list? good afternoon. we have been the public safety community in the greater boston area has been meeting and planning for several months. we have partnered with local regional, state, and law enforcement agencies. we had members of our planning team travel to other cities and states and countries to look at the practices and other events.
microbes don t just bounce back, they actually struggled to come back. so when you get those 10 or 20 doses over the course of childhood, you may seriously impair the micro biome, and the result can be affecting our health in all kinds of ways we did not suspect before. host: according to your article, the most recent research on microbes found that infants exposed to antibiotics in the first six months are 20% more likely to be overweight as toddlers. and then a lack of normal gut microbes early in life disturbs the central nervous system in rodents, may do the same to humans. and starving children might lack the right digestive microorganisms to fix malnutrition. guest: yes. that was a study done in africa this year, him allowing in malawi. they looked at kids in the same households, with the same diet. one had a severe form of malnutrition and another did not. the kid who did not have the disease did fine, the other kid did not. he would do fine for a little while, at th