his parents undying love. he held my mom s hand all day long yesterday, and i called him and he said, i m kind of a cry baby right now, i m not feeling very good. reporter: a parkinson s-type disease has kept the president bound to a wheelchair. but that didn t stop him from sky diving on his 90th birthday. you all right? yeah. reporter: rewarded with this peck on the lips from his worried wife. though full of vitality, famously throwing out first pitches at baseball games, the elder bush was twice admitted to the hospital for pneumonia last year. always cared for by his wife, barbara. and so let s get to matt gutman, he s with us live tonight from houston, outside the methodist hospital there. and matt, obviously, so many tonight talking about that marriage of 73 years, and the impact her loss could be having on his health, as well. reporter: could be a huge impact, david. now, we spoke to president bush s representatives tonight, they say that he is responding to thi
of two american journalists detained in north korea. but he revealed some interesting information about how exactly this regime is run. north korean north korean propaganda urges hatred for america. undying love for the supreme leader. north korea is a kingdom. the. the kingdom of kim jong-un, even described as a socialist monarch. ruling a militarized nation with a long tris of of dynasties. the leader is not chosen he is given. we met hung park. he was born in china and is now a u.s. citizen and he s made for than 50 trips to north korea in the last 35 years.
dialects, praying to thousands of different gods, divided into castes, broken by the british. how can a democracy this big, this messy possibly find a balance? how can they feed all these mouths? power all these lives and still preserve what is precious? well, the answer could be found in the fates of two very different treasures. one a man-made token of undying love. the other a wild source of fear and fascination. the taj mahal is at risk, some experts say, crumbling beneath the stress of population and pollution. and they say there are now more tigers living in cages in texas than in the forests of india. so i wonder how many we can
different languages and dialects, praying to thousands of different gods, divided into castes, broken by the british. how can a democracy this big, this messy possibly find a balance? how can they feed all these mouths, power all these lives and still preserve what is precious? well, the answer could be found in the fates of two very different treasures. one a man-made token of undying love. the other a wild source of fear and fascination. the taj mahal is at risk, some experts say, crumbling beneath the stress of population and pollution. and they say there are now more tigers living in cages in texas than in the forests of india. so i wonder how many we can