“What do you see?”A man sits onstage, staring intently at a huge painting. The painting, an abstract in red, dominates the stage. The artist, Mark Rothko (Brian Robert Harris), seems
Local artist Otis Bradley — “Ocho Libre”— is featured alongside beadsmith Mara Colecchia and artist Mark Tovar in an art show at the Ojai Art Center, 113 S. Montgomery St.
miles to the south/southwest of cape hatteras and moving to the north at 14 miles per hour. these are the conditions right now in the carolinas. we have strong rain bands with tropical storm conditions on the south and north carolina coast and all of that is gradually spreading up to the north. it will be across the entire northeast by the time we get into tomorrow. pelley: david, this is a massive storm. i wonder, who will feel the effects of it? well, a lot of people in short. i want to take a look at this wind graphic we have of irene. this will really give you an idea of the extent of the wind field. that yellow area are tropical storm force winds. watch how far inland those winds are going to spread over the next 24 hours. that red area are hurricane-force winds and as we go into saturday night and sunday those tropical storm force winds are going to spread well into new england with the possibility of hurricane force winds right along the coast. pelley: irene seem
hurricane that took the very same path. there was no warning. absolutely zero warning. captioning sponsored by cbs this is the cbs evening news with scott pelley. pelley: good evening. much of the east coast is preparing tonight for an invasion by hurricane irene. an estimated 65 million people could feel the impact of this powerful storm. two million have been ordered to evacuate, and that includes more than 300,000 in low-lying coastal areas of new york city. and here s why: a hurricane could cause a storm surge that would swallow up the part of downtown manhattan that you see here in blue. at last report, irene was about 300 miles off the coast of north carolina, packing winds of 100 miles an hour, a category two storm. watches and warnings are up from the carolinas to new england, covering some of the most populated areas in the country including washington, philadelphia, new york, long island and boston. we have a team of correspondents deployed throughout the area
pelley: good evening. much of the east coast is preparing tonight for an invasion by hurricane irene. an estimated 65 million people could feel the impact of this powerful storm. two million have been ordered to evacuate, and that includes more than 300,000 in low-lying coastal areas of new york city. and here s why: a hurricane could cause a storm surge that would swallow up the part of downtown manhattan that you see here in blue. at last report, irene was about 300 miles off the coast of north carolina, packing winds of 100 miles an hour, a category two storm. watches and warnings are up from the carolinas to new england, covering some of the most populated areas in the country including washington, philadelphia, new york, long island and boston. we have a team of correspondents deployed throughout the area and we begin with cbs news hurricane consultant david bernard in miami. david, what s the latest forecast? well, scott, as you mentioned, we have a category two hur