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from new yorkorth korea's top g plus concerns about teenagers using ece-cigarettes after new research shows they may not be safer than tobacco. but we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >> holy hell. >> devastating damage. >> debris as far as the eye can see. >> deadly storms carve a pass of destruction across the south and midwest. >> it is a mess out here. a wave of storms, floods, devastating wind, lightning, hail, and tornadoes. >> roofs were ripped off homes. >> i was crying. >> florida demands the broward county sheriff resign. >> it's not the responsibility of the general if you have a deserter. >> the president of north korea is ready to open talks with the united states. >> i think we'll make that first on our list because we have to end what's happening. >> deadly fighting continues in syria, ignoring the u.n. resolution, demanding a 30-day cease-fire. >> all that -- >> a fiery crash at a racing event. believe it or not, both drivers are okay. >> -- and all that matters -- >> usa, usa. >> fireworks and ice to mark the end of the world olympics in south korea. >> it ends with a prospect. >> sports bring us today. >> -- on "cbs this morning." >> we didn't know if we wanted to play or not. >> the hockey team from stoneman douglas winning a state championship in improbable fashion. >> this wasn't for us. this was for the 17 victims. we paid for them. so passionate, so emotional. it's all for them. >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" presented by toyota. let's go places. >> i saw interviews with those kids. we had a mission and a purpose and we were not going to be defeated. >> so nice to have a positive story come out of it. welcome to "cbs this morning." a power. storm system caused powerful wind and rain and has caused four deaths in the area. >> record rain left flooding along the ohio river in indiana yesterday. 12 tornados were reported across tennessee, kentucky, arkansas, and missouri on saturday. >> those powerful storms ripped off roofs and flattened homes. david begnaud is in clarksville, tennessee, about 40 miles northwest of nashville in one of the hardest hit areas. david, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. this is what happened. it's 9:00 at night when the tornado rolled through. it takes off the second-story of this home with a clean cut, almost like somebody had a knife and sliced it off. then it tossed it about five yards. no one was hurt. the tornado then hopscotched through the area. winds, we're told, was up to 100 miles an hour when it ripped through a cover of darkness. across the central and soern u.s. tornadoes ripped off roofs scattering cars and debris in every direction. >> we turned around and the roof was just gone. >> reporter: in mississippi, arkansas, a possible tornado rolled through sucking off this roof. newlyweds heather and her husband adam watched their barn fly over their house in robertson, tennessee, as a tornado plowed through their property. >> we're lucky to be alive. everything can be replaced. >> reporter: the sheriff here in clarksville said four homes were destroy and dozens more injured as two tornados hit the area. that house was flattened. but among the wreckage, hope. rescuers removed debris to free a dog. just across the tennessee border in logan county, kentucky, 79-year-old dallas jane combs died when her home collapsed on her in a tornado. her husband was outside laying sanltdbags. he's okay. sandy brown is their daughter. >> it took the roof off. it sucked him through the basement. >> the koems would have celebrated their 60th year anniversary. >> all he told me is the love of my life is gone and i can't live by myself because i never lived by myself. woe even about had the longest stretch from may of last year until saturday night when this all happened. gayle, i was just talking to the public information officer here in montgomery county, tennessee, and she told me there was one home where a family took shelter in a bathtub. the home was destroyed, collapsed around them, but they were unharmed in that bathtub, which is always a good place to go. >> good note to remember. thank you very much, david. flooding threatens thousands in the midwest after record-setting rain in the region. cities and towns along the ohio river face some of the worst floods in more than 20 years. demarco morgan is in utica, indiana, where many face the rising waters. good morning. >> good morning to you. take look at this neighborhood. it's completely covered in water. emergency responders have been pretty much working throughout the night to make rescues and keeping an eye on those who are choosing to stay around. now, we're going to take you to cincinnati because this is pretty much the picture across the midwest. they're dealing with their own issues. the ohio river in cincinnati crested yesterday. in nearby new rich land, folks needed kayaks and boats to combat the flooding and there was flooding in downtown louisville. flooding in that state killed two people over the weekend and flooding is believed to have killed a 48-year-old man in kalamazoo, michigan. parts of the state will see flooding. in indiana, there will be record-setting flooding. water is expected to recede in the next couple of days, but we're expecting more rain on wednesday, which could mean more flooding. >> thank you. broward county sheriff scott israel is facing new calls to resign after more than one of his deputies failed to confront the gunman at marjory stoneman douglas high school. parents and students returned to the campus for the first time since the shooting. manuel bojorquez is outside the high school. good morning. >> good morning. sources tell our miami station wfor that as coral springs police officers responded to the shooting, they say they found multiple broward county sheriff's deputies waiting outside the school. meanwhile teachers and counselors met with students as they prepare to head back to class. flowers and letters filled a memorial along the sidewalk outside campus on sunday. for many students the emotion is still raw. >> it hurts. i'm broke. and it's hard. >> reporter: 17 people dressed as angels, one for each person killed gathered nearby. >> walking into the school, i feel empowered to see all this love. >> reporter: as students prepare to return to class, the broward county sheriff's office is facing mounting pressure ore its response to the shooting including at least one deputy who resigned after failing to enter the building after the rampage. sheriff scott israel said he has displayed amazing leadership. >> deputies make mistakes, police officers make mistakes, we all make mistakes. >> reporter: israel is looking into claims that at least three other officers failed to enter the building. there were at least 18 phone tips. >> 16 of them were handled exactly the way they should. two of them, we're not sure our deputies did everything they could have or should have. >> reporter: more than 17 lawmakers demanded florida governor rick scott suspend israel the same day scott announced an investigation in the law enforcement response to the shooting. >> who was called, how did they respond? how was it broken. give us the facts. >> reporter: the sheriff said only one of his deputies was on campus while the gunman was there. the officers said it will cooperate with the investigation and sheriff israel says he will not resign. john? >> manuel, thanks. president trump says school shootings will be on the top of his agenda when he meet as group of governors. the president hosted a dinner for the governors last night. they'll discuss an older age limit on buying firearms and more background checks. >> they singled out florida's governor for his leadership after the parkland shooting. the governor has been working with the legislature in florida on school safety. he and the president, though, don't always agree on future gun control. >> we'll be talking about parkland and the horrible event that took place last week. >> president trump told the nation's governor he's still working on a school safety agenda. saturday night mr. trump again called for arming teachers. >> if we would have had some great teachers that were gun-adept, you wouldn't have this problem. >> the president's daughter said during a visit to the olympics said that idea is worth discussing. >> having a teacher who is armed, who cares deeply about her students or his students and who is capable and qualified to bear arms is not a bad idea. >> rick scott, florida's republican governor, disagreed with the president. >> i want our teachers to each and i want our law enforcement officers to be able to protect the students. >> scott like the president supported racing the federal minimum age to 21. the alleged parkland assailant, 19-year-old nikolas cruz, used a legally purchased ar-15 semiautomatic rifle. >> it doesn't make sense that you have to wait till 21 to get a pistol but to get a gun like this maniac used, you get that at 18. >> he proposed raising the age and a spokesperson says president trump agrees. they're focusing on immigration and the budget. the president will meet with the republicans here at the white house tomorrow. >> okay, major, thanks. the house intelligent committee finally released a redacted vergsz of the classified democratic memo over this weekend. democrats wrote the document as a rebuttal to a republican memo released earlier this month. the gop accused the fbi of hiding democratic ties to a controversial dossier on president trump in order to obtain a surveillance ward of a campaign associate. democrats in their newly released memo quotes the affidavit which says the source came with political motives. this shows the fbi was transparent, contrary to republican claims. on twitter, president trump dismissed the democratic memo at a total and complete political bust. a warning these images graphically show what happened in this chemical attack. an estimated 100 people died here. 200 others were injured. the video was not shown publicly until scott pelley's report last night. >> these are the people small farming town. the individual lies in territory held by rebels fighting against the dictator ship of assad. new air strikes hit the area this morning even as the u.n. security council is rjing a cease-fire there. they have the latest this morning. seth, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. we are close to the border with syria, the eastern suburbs of the capital damascus, have been bombbarded by sources loyal to the syrian government as they try to regain control there, using some of the most aggressive assaults of this seven-year-long war. young children, some of them infants, were treated at a hospital inside rebel-controlled due ma in eastern ghouta. forces allied with the syrian government continued bombing the damascus suburb despite a cease-fire yesterday. i was hit by shrapnel all over, this man said, and my 9-year-old son was killed. the 30-day cease-fire did not specify a start time. it's estimated more than 500 people including at least 130 children have been killed since this latest assault began last week. pictures released over the weekend by syrian activists show patients including children apparently suffering from symptoms consistent with a chlorine attack. the 16 patients were being treated by the syrian-american medical society operating inside the syrian rebel held suburb. they have always denied using chemical weapons and their russia allies have always accused them of using toxic materials to later blame the government. eastern ghouta has been described as hell on earth. the cease-fire is designed to allow if much needed humanitarian aid to be delivered and evacuations. >> thank you. in a possible diplomatic breakthrough, north korea says it is willing to hold talks with the u.s. the message came through south korean president moon jae-in. ben tracy joins us from seoul with the south korean talks pushing to take place. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. in recent months they said they're not going to beg the united states for dialogue. and just this past weekend it says it won't talk to the u.s. for 100 or even 200 years. now that hyperbole seems to be history. the winter oh preliminaliympics they began, with pomp and politics. seated a few seats away from ivanka trump was general yon yong-chol. isaac stone fish is an expert on korean relations. >> i think there's an idea that they're showing themselves to be eager but not that eager. they want to be able to present themselves as a little bit reluctant to come to the table but willing to come to the table as a sort of sop to american and korean needs. >> the white house responded denuclearization must be the result of any dialogue with north korea. the national pressure campaign must continue until north korea denuclearizes. north korea might try to demand preconditions for talks such as a suspension of u.s.-led military drills set to resume this spring. today in seoul, protesters railed against king jong-un's rejeej and even burned the north korean flag. they see it as an apiece mnlts to the north korean regime. what do they actually talk about? the u.s. has said north korea is must give up nuclear weapons. kim jong-un said it's something they can't do. it could be an awfully short talk. >> the ruling communist part has opposed eliminating permanent power. how significant is that? >> very. president xi makes no bones about it. he believes china is at a critical point in history. he believes that it needs strong and stable leadership to do that. of course, others might call that authoritarian. keep in mind china has only allowed presidents to serve two five-year terms was to avoid the former figure. but president xi is known as president for life. this move will allow him to quash any remaining opposition. >> it will be interesting to see how it turns out. thank you very much. more than a quarter million students are affected by an unprecedent strike by public school teachers in west virginia. how they're using many teenagers are posting online videos of themselves vapg even though they're not old enough to buy e-cigarette joss ahead, the new potential concerns on the impact of cigarettes on teens' health. >> you're watching "cbs this morning." i want the most out of my health and life. so i trust nature made vitamins. because they were the first to be verified by usp for quality and purity standards. and because i recommend them as a pharmacist. nature made, the #1 pharmacist recommended vitamin and supplement brand. brushing only reaches listvirtually 100%.. helping to prevent gum disease and bad breath. never settle for 25%. always go for 100. bring out the bold™ ♪ ♪ when we're free to move, anything is possible. [ phone rings ] how's the college visit? does it make the short list? yeah, i'm afraid so. it's okay. this is what we've been planning for. knowing what's important to you is why 7 million investors work with edward jones. when did you see the sign? when i needed to jumpstart sales. build attendance for an event. help people find their way. fastsigns designed new directional signage. and got them back on track. get started at fastsigns.com. and got them back on track. here's the story of green mountain coffee roasters sumatra reserve. let's go to sumatra. the coffee here is amazing. because the volcanic soil is amazing. so we give farmers like win more plants. to grow more delicious coffee. which helps provide for win's family. all, for a smoother tasting cup of coffee. green mountain coffee roasters. another anti-wrinkle cream in no hurry to make anything happen. neutrogena® rapid wrinkle repair works in just one week. with the fastest retinol formula to visibly reduce wrinkles. neutrogena®. enamouttooth surface.urhite, the thing that's really important to dentists is to make sure that that enamel stays strong and resilient for a lifetime the more that we can strengthen and re-harden that tooth surface, the whiter their patients' teeth are going to be. dentists are going to really want to recommend pronamel strong and bright. it helps to strengthen and re-harden the enamel. it also has stain lifting action. it's going to give their patients the protection that they need and the whiter teeth that they want. ♪ >> live from the cbs broadcast center in philadelphia. this is cbs-3 "eyewitness news ". >> good morning, i'm rahel solomon. police in norristown montgomery county trying to figure out what led to shooting early this morning, investigators say the gunfire broke out at around 12:30 a.m. west oak street and chain street. "eyewitness news" was cents there as officer arrived and on the scene tell us they'll have more information later today. meantime if you know anything about the violence contact police. we send it over to katie with a check on today's forecast, hopefully an improvement from this weekend? >> the next couple every days are looking very pleasant, high pressure the main theme. but we do still have cloud cover, fog earlier, no longer major problem but you do still have the higher clouds that are posing some making for some gray skies this morning, but with time those too will thin out. we ends up to 56 degrees today with more and more sunshine,, tomorrow look like a gem, 58 degrees and the sun. mild wednesday but may be shower late in the day toward evening specially and more rain to wrap up yet another week. meisha? >> good to know, katie, thank you. still looking pretty busy out, there we can expect that on a monday morning around 730. accident here just cleared. actually yes it, did just clear completely out of your way, eastbound, little slow in the area reminder for septa, new city and suburban spring schedules, check the schedules on line, route 15 trolley also shuttle busing. >> 7:55 is our next update. up next, the impact of vaping on young adults, i'm rahel solomon, good morning. beijing is ready to welcome the 2022 olympics after a stunning closing ceremony in pyeongchang. the olympic president passed the flag to beijing yesterday. the torch went out soon after silgnyfying the end of the 2018 games. norway led the count with 39 total medals. that beat the u.s.'s record in the 2007 vancouver medals. united states finished in fourth place with 23 medals including nine gold and congratulations to team usa for a valiant effort. >> valiant is the word. the big story, the big takeaway is the men's curling team. they got a gold medal. that was a big deal. big deal. fourth place was hard, but i'll take any gold medal we can get. >> that's right. welcome back to "cbs this morning." here are three things you should know this morning. plans for mexico's president to visit the white house have been derailed again. it would have been enrique pena nieto's first visit since the president took office but both agreed now is not the right time. it was shelved last week after a testy phone call between the men over president trump's demand for a border wall. testy is never good. >> no. graham's body will lie in repose at the library named for him in charlotte, north carolina, named for him late tomorrow and then on wednesday and thursday he'll lie in honor at the u.s. capitol rotunda. e died at the age of 99.ay and the white house said president trump will attend the funeral. and former f memr titled "becoming" goes on sail november 13th. mrs. obamabookas been a deeply experience. her memoir is already on20 on a. she a more than $30 until for their joint book november and already a bestseller it's must-read peopl west virginia schools are closed for after a statewide walk jacque of the teachers. and benefits. the national education associate says west viarthe 48th lowest p country. they receive a salary of just over $45,000. that's nearly the national average. don dahler is at the statepitoi teachers will protest for a fifth day. morning. >> reporter: good morning. this walkout is expected to impact more thanmiion students. almost 20,000 teachers from all across the s in the very first statewide teacher history. >> our teachers or our public employees are getting pay per year every year, and people are fed up and fired up about it. >> reporter: teachers in west virginia are demanding state lawmaker educators. >> we're united. we're all standing strong.peonn. we are here, and we're going to stay. we need the coffee. >> reporter: the statewide walkout began thursday, one day that would give teachers their first raise in four 4% increas the next three years but teachers argue it is notno and won't offset rising health care costs. >> we're looking at interest $1 to $412 that's car payment with car in sight. >> that's food off o>> rorter: says it will not back down until met. >> we have to see a real stronge right direction and take care of our heth we can see our checks go up, not have them go down. >> reporter: w first statewide teacher walkout, a majority of west t onintrike to protest low pay. the 11-day strike ended wit inct programs in schools. >> we can't keep our colleagues go out of state because they can make a living . we want to be with our students, and our students deserve that education. >> reporter: more than 277,000o for a third day, but parents are >>s ing their support. difficult for everyone, but i believe this is all for the right reason.ake education our top priority. we need to in children and encourage people to stay here and then maybe we can be a wealthier state. >> reporter: this work stoppage virginia law. the state's attorney general says while the teachers' cries for higher salaries, he's local law enforcement enforce the rule of law. the teachers union wyers are ready to handle any challenge. norah. >> all right, don. thank you.what. they are bringing attention to how little they're teachers to much. history. j we ask them to deal with authority with students. th there's a bigger message beingl are too young to buy e-cigarettes have tried vaping. >> everyone does like everyone. every time i go into the bathroom there's someone doing what users inhale and the calls ad we invite you to subscribe to our cbs find them all on itunes and apple's podcast apps. you're watching "cbs this morning." to severe little things can be a big deal. otezla is not an injection or a cream. it's a pill that treats psoriasis differently. with otezla, 75% clearer skin is achievable eded redness, thickness, and scaliness of plaques. has no requirement for routine lab monitoring. don't use if you're allergic to otezla. otezla may cause severe diarrhea, nausea, or vomiting. tell your doctor if 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teak-containing devices carry known health risks to developing teenage brains and some kids are already using them. >> a lot of kids like vaping and we do too. >> it's something you can find teens posting about all over social media. vaping, inhaling the vapors from e-cigarette products. high school sophomore student is one of them. >> when's the first time you tried vaping. >> when i was in sixth grade. >> why did you try it? >> because my friend was doing it. >> reporter: dozens of statistics find millions of teens have tried it. nearly 35% of students had used the e-cigarettes. >> everyone. like everyone. every time i go into the bathroom there's someone doing it. >> reporter: now researchers at universities california school of medicine are concerns about the vaping impact. some teens who likely would not have smoked regular cigarettes are using e-cigarettes. it also found that teens who do vape are six times more likely than those that never vaped to later begin smoking. scientist jessica barrington-trimis. >> reporter: the vaping industry disputes the study saying there's no peer-reviewed science that establishes a causal relationship between vaping use and smoking initiation by minors. >> do you worry about what's in it? >> honestly no. >> why not? >> i don't think about it. it's just advertised as being healthier than smoking cigarettes. >> reporter: some research does seem to support the idea that e-cigarettes are less harmful than regular cigarettes, but a new study from the nyu school of medicine finds that e-cigarettes can cause cancer in mice and the author writes i seg writs may contribute to lung and bladder cancer as well as heart disease in humans. e-cigarette manufacturers say their products are not aim at children but vince willmore is skeptical. >> there are over 7,000 flavors of e-cigarettes on the market including flavors like gummy bear, kohn ccotton candy. those are flavors particularly driven toward kids. >> it's now the number one cigarette. one pod contains as much anything teak as a cigarette. >> it's slick, looks like a thumb drive and you can hide it and it gives a very strong hint of nicotine. so this is about an ideal tobacco product to get teens hooked. >> do you think the companies know that. >> well, if they didn't know it when they introduced the product on the market they should know it by now. >> reporter: kristopaitis says even uses them. >> you can get it at school? >> you can put it on your snap story who's got a juul and you can buy it so fast. >> reporter: in a statement juul said we condemn the use of the product by minors. we're fully dramatically ending the use of it by minors. but some kids clearly aren't listening. on social media the has posted themselves juuling. >> we i'd like to see the fda exercise its authority. >> they're working aggressively. last year they delayed regulations that would have forced some eeg cigarette makers to force some products off the market, gayle. >> all right, anna. i appreciate kyle's candor on this topic, you know, pulling back the curtain a little bit. but if i was a parent of kids this age i would be very wary when everybody says everyone's doing it. >> i'm familiar with kids of this age. i was talking with someone. they vape while their teacher's back is turned and try to get away with it because it dissipates in the air. >> norah, you're not there. >> by the time your kids are old enough, the technology will be even more frightening. coming up next a look at this morning's other headlines including why president trump's former personal pilot could soon be at the controls of the faa. plus samsung unveils its latest smartphone. ahead, will the >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by astrazeneca. visit us at astrazeneca.com. it can be hard to breathe. whe, it can be hard to get air out, which can make it hard to get air in. so i talked to my doctor. she said... symbicort could help you breathe better, starting within 5 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with their father. in the first year fathers who felt the child resembled them spend 2 1/2 days more. babies who spent time with their dad had a 10% to 25% higher health score. what does it mean? >> it means natural selection to prevent narcissists. >> i think it's a good thing to look for your dad. nra members loose some corporate discounts after the florida school shooting. we have two reporters in our toyota green room. we'll be talking with them after the break. and which have more vitamins and less saturated fat? only eggland's best. better taste, better nutrition, better eggs. you wouldn't accept from any one else. why accept it from your allergy pills? flonase relieves your worst symptoms including nasal congestion, which most pills don't. flonase helps block 6 key inflammatory substances. most pills only block one. flonase. ♪ get ready for the wild life with one a day men's. a complete multivitamin with key nutrients, plus b vitamins for heart health. your one a day is showing. 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(announcer) victoza® is not for people with type 1 diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis. do not take victoza® if you have a personal or family history of medullary thyroid cancer, multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if you are allergic to victoza® or any of its ingredients. stop taking victoza® and get medical help right away if you get a lump or swelling in your neck or symptoms of a serious allergic reaction such as rash, swelling, difficulty breathing, or swallowing. serious side effects may happen, including pancreatitis. so stop taking victoza® and call your doctor right away if you have severe pain in your stomach area. tell your doctor your medical history. gallbladder problems have happened in some people. tell your doctor right away if you get symptoms. taking victoza® with a sulfonylurea or insulin may cause low blood sugar. common side effects are nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, decreased appetite, indigestion, and constipation. side effects can lead to dehydration, which may cause kidney problems. change the course of your treatment. ask your doctor about victoza®. >> this is cbs-3 "eyewitness news." >> good morning, everyone, i am aim jim donovan, classes resume this morning in the park lands school district in lehigh county. the district forced to close its schools last friday when huge fire wept through the district school bus garage. sixteen brand new buses were destroyed and dozen others were damaged, officials estimate the damage at more than $2 million. >> let's sends it over to katie for a look at the forecast. >> good morning to you, jim. we do still have pretty decent cloud deck out there, any fog issues we've had earlier in the morning, have now since cleared, but still the gray skies to start the day. you can tell it is a little damp, still some puddles from the rain, but we will gradually clear out finally for couple every days stretch, tomorrow looks like nice day, 58 in the sunshine, starts off with sunshine but sign of the next storm to come bridges in the bill being of the rain thursday and friday, still no snow in the forecast. >> good, let's keep it that way if we can, looking outside looking looking all right, were looking at accident here paper mill road. the accident was on the off ramp that has cleared, and take a look at the volumes, looking real nice there. burlington new jersey another accident here traveling way less than posted speeds, route 130 northbound and quick peak look at the distance, schuylkill at the boulevard both directions, jim, over to you. >> next update is at 8:25, coming up, experts examine the new samsung smart phone. and whether consumers will buy in. i'm jim i like these yogurt bites. (phone buzzing) and i like these yogurt bites... ah... ooh! apparently, i like them more than i like my phone. where...ah, oh! hello? ah, i missed it. it was my mother-in-law. i'll call her back. don't tell her i told you that. you'll like them both but love our price. award-winning little journey baby essentials from aldi. simply smarter shopping. it is monday, february 26th, 2018. welcome back to "cbs this morning." some big named companies and benefits for nra members after the latest school massacre. ahead, why corporations are more likely to step in ahead of lawmakers on some political issues. plus the new phone with an emoji that acts just like you. is that a good thing? we'll show you exactly how it works. but first here's today's "eye opener" at 8:00. a powerful storm system pounded the deep south with strong wind and rain and is to blame for at least four deaths in the area. >> reporter: this area is completely covered in water. we're expecting more rain, which could mean more flooding. >> the tornado rolled through and takes off the second story of this home with a clean cut, almost like somebody had a knife and sliced it off and then tosses it about nine yards. >> sources tell our miami station that its coral springs police officers responded to the shooting, they say they found multiple broward county sheriff's deputies waiting outside the school. rick scott, florida's republican governor has been working on school safety. he and the president don't always agree on future gun control. >> north korea angry about u.s. sanctions said it won't talk to the u.s. for 100 or even 200 years. well that hyperbole now seems to be history. >> thomas with a putt for four and victory. >> time to tee up the honda classic with justin thomas taking the tournament with 8 under par. here comes his dad mike. i'm john dickerson with norah o'donnell and gayle king. midwest are experiencing in the flooding after a weekend of deadly storms and win and rain. the massive storm is blamed for at least four deaths across the u.s. the ohio river crested in cincinnati. it had more than 60 feet yesterday, well above flood stage. >> the same river spilled over its banks in downtown louisville. the governor has declared a statewide emergency. they left behind damaged cars, blown out windows, downed trees, and miles of debris. dozens of florida lawmakers say the broward county sheriff should be suspended in the wake of the shooting at marjory stoneman douglas high school. scott israel touted his amazing leadership and said he will not resign over his department's response to the valentine's day attack. in a letter, 74 state representatives asked florida governor rick scott to remove israel for, quote, incompetent and neglect of duty. the sheriff's deputy resigned last week for not entering the building last week during the rampage. the sheriff's office also faces backlash for mishandling 20 tips related to suspect nikolas cruz. he's asked for video from around 70 videos in the area. they want to learn more about what exactly happen thad day. thousands of students and parents went to stone man douglas high for the first time since the shooting. they're not scheduled to go back to class until wednesday. people marched on the sidewalk and dropped off a memorial. omar villafranca is at the parkland school. he talked to some of the parents and students. >> it's great. very tough to be here. tough experience. tough experience. but it's been an inspiration to me. >> want to walk into the school with my head held high because that's what they would have wanted. >> it kind of feels strange. it's now a place i can't go in. it's like a building you pass by and wonder what i went on inside. >> i'm considering not sending my children back to school unless i know it's a safe environment for my children and the rest of the children. >> i think out of all this something beautiful is coming out of it and the whole community is showing it. >> this school, the kids that are speaking out, you know, they can do a lot. they can change the law. i believe. i believe they can make history here. >> teachers are returning to work today and tomorrow. there is a little ray of light here in parkland thanks to the stoneman douglas club hockey team. just last night they won a state champion title and it's nice to see that. >> it comes at a really good time. i saw an interview with a student. look, two weeks ago i was a busboy cleaning up tables and now today i'm compared to the freedom riders because i'm instituting change. >> it must be so hard to walk the halls there. >> i think so too. more than a dozen corporations including delta, hertz and othering are ends perks and discounts in the wake of a school shooting. companies are increasingly stepping up on social issues when government has been reluctant or gridlocked. mike allen and jim vandehei are with us. let me ask there are sometimes when corporations react to pressure different than the type of pressure on politicians. which is at play with the nra? >> i think there are two things that are hitting a company simultaneously that are really shaping the relationship with the companies and the companies we work for. one is social media. they can put pressure on companies to make big decisions about their products. two, i see this even at axios where the millennial work-force has a different expectation from us as employers. they expect you to take a stand, have opinions, to stand for something bigger than just profit. companies are feeling this. and you saw this with the muslim ban, you saw it with immigration, global warming, and now you're seeing it with guns where companies like blackstone over the weekend, bank of america over the weekend are saying, listen, we're going to take a look at our clients' relationships with gun manufacturers. this never would have happened five or ten years ago. >> when i was coming up, you didn't challenge the boss. you might have thought he or she was wrong but you wouldn't speak out about it, certainly so publicly. >> right. it's hard to be a ceo. this includes me too, lgbt discrimination, this includes immigration. like all of those, it used to be risky for brand or company to talk it, and now they have to. it's funny. it's part of a trump effect. in the past year incentives have changed from pulling back to now you have to speak up. >> that's because purchasers make their decisions every day whether to fly delta or not fly delta. but voters are different. if you want to punish a lawmaker, you have to wait until november and in this case you have a calcified group supporting second amendment rights. they believe in them very strongly and you have a pushback. in terms of consumer products, you don't have the pushback. >> you're right for all the people who want change in the wake of this shootings, it has to be in voting. listen, since the voting, the reason republicans and democrats never challenged the nra, they believed it was political suicide to do so. if millennials turn out or voters and sudden lu you see members of congress loosing the gun issue, into won't just change. it will change like that because lawmakers respond to incentives and the incentive for themcy want to keep my job. if you lose your job because of it, the game changes on a debeat that was otherwise confirmed for 30 years. >> your freedom rider is going to be a vote never 2020 and they're starting to realize there's a big wave coming up and just as their consumer behavior is different, they also are a lot more likely to have their own opinions and mirror their folks or mirror some of the other influencers that millennials have in the past. >> more millennials than baby boomers. >> congress is going to talk about it when they come back to work after a long break. do you expect anything to happen? >> this president more than anyone, he has a super power. he has the ability to get republicans to do things we thought they wouldn't do. we saw it play out on deficits, on how republicans view the fbi. so if he said, listen, we're going to do something, raise the age, toughen background checks, even go after the assault weapon ban if he ever wanted to do it, he could do it. i don't think he will because his cues are dr. -- he muses in public about what he does in private and when he talks in public, he talks about arming teachers. that's the thing that has him most amped up. i don't think anyone thinks that's a solution and certainly not a bipartisan way. >> will he have to use his super power to get his personal pilot to become the head of the faa. >> this is a pilots who flew trump "air force one," john duncan, a great name. if we became president like we appoint our friends to a bunch of jobs, somebody in the axios story saying this is like on "seinfeld" when cramer uses his caddy as a jury consultant. >> what are you saying here? >> this is the president trump of the united states has put forward his personal pilot to run the faa. we joke about it. it's not a joke. it's a mavis part of the bureaucracy that regulate as what happens in the air. and this goes to the heart of how donald trump does run the business. he's got his son-in-law sitting there making big diseases when he can't clear the background check to get security clearance to have access to the most sensitive information. >> jared kushner. >> and ivanka. intimately involved in unthes of public poll sichl so many days we laugh and laugh. but this isn't normal. it's not normal to have this many family members intertwiend for the obvious listens. there's conflict of interest. there's a reason chief of staff kelly is outraged by this, doesn't want the kids there. it makes it more complicated for those who are there. >> but this is how trump has run his company for decades. >> but is the pilot qualified? >> trump said he liked his plane better than "air force one." >> i remember that. thanks for joining us at the table. samsung reveals its newest smartphones. cnet's dan aykroyd is in the toyota green room. it's oat nasas it massive midtermer with cvs will help patients and increasing access to health care. ahead, the company's ceo will be right here in studio 57 with innovations he says will help the nation's health care system. you're watching "cbs this morning." when my smile is bright, i feel ready to shine. some whitening toothpastes only remove surface stains, colgate optic white high impact white is different. it has hydrogen peroxide, to whiten four shades for a visibly whiter smile. trust your smile to colgate optic white. thyou know what i do instead?eny your cravings. i snack on blue diamond almonds. wasabi & soy sauce?! mmm! don't deny your cravings. eat 'em! all the flavors you crave, in a superfood. blue diamond almonds. crave victoriously. i don't want to lie down. i refuse to lie down. why suffer? stand up to chronic migraine with botox®. botox® is the only treatment for chronic migraine shown to actually prevent 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got one at the table. just before the start of the mobile world in barcelona. the new features include camera technology that lets people take pictures in low light setting, an upgrade to bixby and enhanced audio system. the starting price is just under $720. dan ackerman from our partners at cnet joins us at the table to discuss. that's still pricey. cheaper than the iphone x, which was 999 dollars. >> it is. the entry price for that phone was $999. that scared a lot of people off. samsung looked at this and said we have to pull it back a little bit. it's like 719 $719 or $729 and s9 plus is $839. the upgrade over the previous version is definite improvement to the cameras. they probably use them more than phones. >> what about this personalized emoji technology? >> that was super fun. they have got ar emojis. aisle going to see if i can create one here. i'm going to flip the camera around so it's looking at you. neutralish face. >> neutral face, okay. >> it's doing it. my neutral face? >> there you go. >> that's because she's usually smiling. >> there it is. i can move this around in 3-d. i can change the outfits and the hair style and then i can save that into a whole bunch of animated gifs. >> can you do john so we can see the boy version? >> is this in response to animal emoji? >> the animal emoji turns you into an animal. this turns you into yourself. animoji works good too. >> do we need a woman to do this too? i'll flip it around. here we go. it's look at you. >> how's the battery power? >> the battery in all of these phones is pretty decent. but the big secret, get the larger of the two phones. >> ooh, john. >> you don't have gray hair. >> no. >> your eyeliner isn't that dark. >> today i'm trying something a little lighter. in this case the emoji is punishment for something i seem to have done wrong. >> and will live on forever and we'll be e-mailing it to each ore for years to come. >> does samsung sell more? >> globally they share more, but really it's the two big titans. they're either getting an iphone or samsung. >> do you think people will switch from an iphone with any version of this? >> that's tough. they have complex ecosystems. once you get an apple watch and macbook and ipad or samsung phone and samsung smart watch, they make excellent laptops, it's tough to get them to switch. going from stylus to android, it's tough for people to do that. >> it certainly seems very impressive. it's impressive at least until the fall when we see what apple's going to do. >> thank, you dan. "rolling stone" named rupi rupi kaur" the queen of ins instapoets. you're watching "cbs this morning." ♪ we buy any car ♪ any make, any model, any age, any price ♪ ♪ from 50 bucks to 100 grand ♪ we buy any car ♪ any, any, any, any at webuyanycar.com, the gimmicks stop with our ads. trading in our selling your car is hassle-free with just three easy steps. one, get your free online valuation. two, drive to your local car buying centre. and three, walk out with your check in as little as 30 minutes. so don't wait. get your free online valuation now. ♪ find out how much your car's worth ♪ ♪ at webuyanycar.com very close call. narrow escape for a mom and three kids in houston. their apartment complex caught on fire last night and the firefighters managed to get them all out. one of the neighbors tweeted the balcony collapsed a minute later. it destroyed one building and 16 apartments. no one was hurt despite how bad the individually looks. they don't call them the bravest for nothing. >> they're running in and all running out what he says to those who were worried about their health care choices and privacy. your lou news is next. good morning, everyone, i'm jim donovan, we're learning more about overnight shooting in norristown montgomery county. investigators say two men were shot near west oak and chain streets, just after midnight. the men were found inside after car, one man was dead at the scene, and another victim was pronounced dead at the hospital. police have no meet i have for the shooting so far they've made nor arrests, now we turn to katie for a look at the forecast. >> good morning, today ends up being a pretty decent day, starting off with loud of clouds, but those will continue to thin as the morning and afternoon wear on. and, even though it does look little gray out there right now i promise this is a day of transition to much brighter conditions. our temperatures are still mild. mid to upper 40's in most locations, say for the poconos little chillier, even there up above average. as the day progresses we get you up to 56 degrees, skies continue to slowly clear, tuesday is a gem, high hits 58 in the sunshine, and by wednesday we hit 60 degrees, and can't rule out scattered shower touring evening, but new system comes in, bridges in more rain, by the weekends, finally looks like we will get a weekends that features nothing but sunshine, meisha. >> nothing but sunshine, awesome. katie, thank you. still looking outside, very, very busy here, take a look at the volume. both directions on the schuylkill, taillights moving in the eastbound direction at the boulevard, but doesn't matter which way you go, you are bumper to bumper very slow there, accident here montgomeryville, closed at taylor road. have to use an alternate, route 309 bethlehem pike your best bet, then another accident burlington new jersey still traveling 25-ish, route 130 northbound at moth avenue. give yourselves extra time. >> next update 8: five, ahead on bs this morning, the 25 year old poet with two books on the new york times best seller list. i'm jim donovan, make it a great d in your noise cancelling trheadphones?ry maybe not. maybe you could trust you won't be next to a loud eater. 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(silence) ♪ the roasted core wrap.belly fat. 3, 2, 1... not cool. freezing away fat cells with coolsculpting? now that's cool! coolsculpting safely freezes and removes fat cells with little or no downtime. and no surgery. results and patient experience may vary. some rare side effects include temporary numbness, discomfort and swelling. ask your doctor if coolsculpting is right for you and visit coolsculpting.com today... for your chance to win a free treatment. from this video it's hard to say who's doing the watching, the people or the whale. a very friendly whale off the coast of california decided to get up close and personal with a whale-watching tour. the whale watchers got a thrill. the people watcher got his head rubbed. >> that's nice. welcome back to "cbs this morning." time to show you some of this morning's headlines. monica lewinsky talks about emerging from the gaslight ahead of me too. lewinsky said their relationship with a, quote, gross abuse of power. she writes about her experience saying, by and large, i have been alone, so very alone, abandoned by the key figure in the crisis who knew me well and intimately. i don't believe i would have felt so isolated had it happened today. she praised the brave women speaking up about sexual inequality in light of the me too movement. florida officials arrested a pediatrician for using a partial vaccine doses. about 500 patients of this doctor may have been affected. it is possible the vaccines were also unsterilized. her license to practice medicine has been suspended. the orlando doctor is also suspected of medicaid fraud. the democratic party snubbed senator dianne feinstein. over two-thirds voted not endorse her. many say she's not doing enough for immigrants and is out of touch with california. and "time" says the simpsons predicted the winner of curling eight years ago. remember the episode "boy meets curl?" marriage and homer took it up in the olick picks. it's not the first time. in an episode 18 years ago it said donald trump would become president. what does that mean? that cartoon becomes reality. >> those writers are very forward thinking. >> so funny. great show. new government data shows nearly 29 million americans do not have health insurance. 22 million of those who do have medical insurance use aetna. it's the third largest provider in the country, but that number could soar if regulators and share holders approve cvs health's $69 billion deal. those could soon become one-stop shops for preventive care, treatment, and filling prescriptions. mark better lrtolino is ceo of . the question is how does it change the way i get health care? >> i think in the headlight care industry we've got things backward. we sell health insurance first. i use the analogy of a detroit boy buying an automobile. you don't go to gmc to buy a car. they finance cars. we go to a dealership to talk about our ambitions for transportation, what is it we want and then we go finance it later on. but in health care we finance everything first, we get a warranty card thatcies if you're broken, show up at a doctor's office and we'll fix you. that's got a system upside down. >> we're also required by law to buy car insurance, not health insurance. >> right. >> practically speaking is that going to bring down the cost of prescription drugs? >> definitely. so here's how we think about it. people don't define their health as a disease. they define their health as barrier to living the life they want to lead. i'm a spinal cord injury survivor, i don't describe myself that. i have my on pathieu. it gets in the way of leading the life i want to. >> what gets in the way of your health living the way you want to lead and if we go person by person, we can solve that problem. >> what about prescription drug costs? >> prescription drug costs are just a part, 15% to 20% of the equation, we need to look at the whole cost of care, the whole total therapy. what is the best solution. when sa valdy came out for hepatitis c, we solved that problem by saying, sure, we're going to pay for it because the other costs are so catastrophic it was better to get people treat and cured. >> the issue with this merger is people are only going to have two choices between two cars. prices might go down a little bit at first and then you can't go anywhere else. what's the argument? what's the rebuttal there? >> why would people only have two two choices. >> you're offering them what your choices are. it's totally up to you. they can't make choices based on price. you're the only person in town. >> we can't force people in to cvs. >> if it's the only drugstore in town. >> there are plenty. walgreens and independent pharmacists and a whole host. >> you would welcome amazon getting into the business to compete with you. >> i think the more competition, the better. it keeps the system honest. >> so they've just got no case at all in terms of these fears that there would be too much consolidation. >> it doesn't make sense for cvs to turn off all of they're other customers when they receiver over 220 million people today. >> explain that, how they can work together better. >> in today's environment, 60% of our life expectancy, which has gone down two years in a row is associated with where we live. 30% is our genetic code. now our zip koeds matters more than our genetic code and how long we live. and the less we get into the community and we begin to provide services in the community that deal with issues like social isolation, food, water, accessibility, access, if we can do more of that in the community and near people's homes, then we're going to win because we're going to keep people healthy around the issue that prevents them from living the life they want to live. >> does that mean cvs gives aetna the storefront essentially to do that? >> the storefront begins in place. what we want to do is provide as many services as we can to meet social determine nanlts versus waiting for people to show up in the health care system broken and fix them. >> and the benefit is i come in to check in on my cold and i'm picking up products from cvs. >> no. it's the whole idea that if we keep people health area, there's lower costs in the system and when cvs is the insurer, that's an advantage for them because they're getting full premium. i get the premium dollar. therefore i can reduce costs. we found this with medicare advantage. the more we keep them away from the health care system, the better off they bertolini, it w interesting to see these changes. >> a 25-year-old poet has topped the bestseller's list twice. >> our journey has prepared us for this. bring your hammers and fists. we have glass ceiling to shatter. >> ahead, a oo6z z12fz y2oo6y y12fy poet and best selling author rupi kaur inspires people around the world with her powerful words. kaur first rose to fame on instagram in 2015 as the young and controversial voice to feminism. now she shares her poetry on social media with millions of followers. at 24 years old she's topped "the new york times" bestseller list twice. her first book "milk and honey" sold more than 3 million copes and was translated into three different languages. her latest book "the sun and the flowers" has sold more than 1 million books. we met to discuss her world tour and successful career. >> there are mountains beneath our feet that cannot be retained. >> reporter: rupi kaur does not only recite her poetry. she performs it. >> bring you hands and fists, we have a glass creeling to shatter. >> reporter: which helps explain the rock star reception she typically receives. >> you've been global phenomenon for like two years. >> yeah. >> reporter: with crowds like this one in india and over 2.3 million followers on instagram, rolling stone named kaur the queen of the instapoet. >> what is an instapoet? >> i feel like there's a group of many, many writers and people who are using instagram as a platform to share their poetry, and this group of people has -- they've been dubbed instapoets, and they've, i think, brought poetry into the mainstream. >> before landing in the mainstream, kaur first gained notoriety after a controversial post on instagram. this image of her posting with bloodstained sheets and pants was taken down. >> people were getting angry and reporting it. >> reporter: in what began as a college art product became. >> it was my form of protest. >> if you had to kind of describe where women are right now in the midst of the me too movement, what do you think? >> i think it's so incredible to see. i saw things i thought would never change change and so that's really exciting. i'm really proud and i want to honor sort of the women that came before me. from now on i'll say things like you are resilient and you are extraordinary. not because i don't think you're pretty but because i realize that you are so much more than that. >> writing is very cathartic and i use it as a tool to kind of take myself from a place of victim to survivor because i don't want to be the victim. i'm not a victim. >> kaur was just 5 years old when her parents moved her and her three siblings from india to canada. >> in your new book, "the sun and her flowers" there's a poem called "broken english" and you talk about sort of being ashamed as a child of your immigrant parents. >> mm-hmm, mm-hmm. >> i think about the way my father pulled the family out of poverty without knowing what a vowel was and my mother raised four children without being able to construct a perfect sentence in english. >> do you view that differently now? >> oh, my gosh, so different. growing up, it was like mom and dad. my soul purpose in life is to be exactly like everybody else, i don't want to stand out. and so i put myself in their shoes and i was like, wow, i don't think i could have done it. my dad being a refugee, my mom and i being immigrants. i couldn't do it. let alone raise four kids. and that's when i wrote "broken english." wow, your life is art, it's not an embarrassment, and you do belong here. >> reporter: she honors her native language by using owner lowercase letters. her punctuation is an occasional period. >> some have criticized your poetry as being simple or simplistic. >> yeah. >> and to that you say? >> it is simple and it is simplistic and it's very purposeful from my end. i want readers to open up this book and start the poem and from the beginning to end i want the reading experience to be simple. but when they finish the poem i want their stomach to turn and then i want them to sit with that emotion and really work on that. women of color, our backs tell stories that no books have the spine to carry. >> do you see a lot of women like yourself, and i mean south asian women, women of indian descent in art, entertainment, on spines of books? >> i see it happening more and more. i will say when i was growing up there were actually very few and i didn't know any of them because i didn't have access to them and they weren't, you know, front and center in my face sort of thing, although they were there. when i was designing "milk and honey" it was so important to see the world kaur on that spine. i didn't want to see my name on it. every sikh woman has their name on that. when she sees that, she'll be able to see she can do it too. >> so you hear what she said. every sikh has that name kaur. the sikh religion pronounces it kaur. she says it remain as great deal that she's inspiring a lot of young women from all different faiths. >> i love that she's 25 and the realization she had about her own mother and father. it's interesting when you get older and you say they're not so bad and they're actually very smart. >> there are a lot of gatekeepers in poetry who want to keep her out and she went around it. >> i like that it's simple, yes, it is, and very important. like her a lot. >> she is enormously popular. >> i get. it today on the "cbs this morning" podcast you can hear our entire conversation with rupi kaur on i own my own company. i had some severe fatigue, some funny rashes. finally, listening to my wife, went to a doctor. and i became diagnosed with hodgkin's lymphoma... that diagnosis was tough. i had to put my trust in somebody. when i first met steve, we recommended chemotheherapy, and then we did high dose therapy and then autologous stem cell transplant. unfortunately, he went on to have progressive disease. i thought that he would be a good candidate for immune therapy. it's an intravenous medicine that can affect the patient's immune system and unleash it against the cancer. with chemotherapy, i felt rough, fatigue, nauseous. and with immune therapy we've had such a positive result. i'm back to working hard. i've honestly never felt this great. i believe the future of immunotherapy at ctca is very bright. the evolution of cancer care is here. appointments available now. right now, comcast business is doubling your internet speed so you can download large files faster and power more employees on more devices all for a new low price. what does that equal? our best internet offer ever. you do the math. because for a limited time, you'll pay the 75 mbps price and get 150 mbps internet. so, double your speed and save today. that's speed on sale up to 1 gig. act now to get on america's largest gig-speed network. call today. this morning we're remembering cbs news veteran and fundraiser. he died in philippines. he wasn't just 59. he started working for cbs in 1983. his many assignments including the uprising the anyone min square and the wars in iraq and afghanistan. cbs 60 minutes bill rowan called him such a delightful man and no one who ever worked harder. >> that's a nice ♪ strummed guitar you can't experience the canadian rockies through a screen. you have to be here, with us. ♪ upbeat music travel through this natural wonder and get a glimpse of amazing, with a glass of wine in one hand, and a camera in the other, aboard rocky mountaineer. canada's rocky mountains await. call your travel agent or rocky mountaineer for special offers now. >> good morning, i'm rahel solomon, one of the biggest acts in sports is is coming to our area this weekend, globetrotters, stopped by our great hall for a demonstration during "eyewitness news" this morning, and swish is a philadelphia native. globetrotters are at the liacouras center this friday, in trenton for shows on saturday and at the wells fargo center for two shows this sunday. >> let's sends it over to katie for a look at today's forecast. >> finally starting to see break-in this pattern, very dreary weather, and rain, and that raw feel through the air. do you still have a lot of clouds out there. and these clouds will certainly be slow to break. but they are going to break. that's the key here. we've got disturbance off to the south, bypassing us entirely through the south, that's where the spots are coming, from meantime your temperatures are head in the mid to upper 40's, region wide , more of west winds flow as the day goes on, but pretty light winds flow, we'll see temperatures start to rebounds pretty nicely in the days ahead all the way up to six come wednesday, tomorrow looks like very nice day. by wednesday evening, there could be a shower around, but i'm thinking that would be very, very scattered in nature , you will want to have your umbrella ready to go tail ends of the week, warm side of up and coming storm system but rainy wet for thursday and friday to usher in the new month. >> soak it up while we've got it, thanks, looking outside right now, we do have another accident, eighth street pulled off to the far right lane and also still have this accident montgomeryville still out there. cow path rolled at tail ores road, use alternate around here, route 309 or bethlehem pike, going to be your best bet and also have another accident on kelly drive, this one near strawberry mansion drive. just heads up on this, give yourselves extra time throughout this area, rahel, back to you. >> thank you, that's " eyewitness news" for now, joining us for "eyewitness news" at noon, i'm rahel solomon, good morning. tempur-pedic delivers. only tempur material precisely conforms to your weight, shape and temperature. and tempur-pedic is the best at minimizing motion transfer from your partner, so you won't be disturbed during the night. you'll wake up, feeling like a champion. ♪ this president's day save up to $600 on select adjustable mattress sets from the brand ranked highest in customer satisfaction with mattresses by j.d. power. find your exclusive retailer at tempurpedic.com >> announcer: a mother and son torn apart by the vegas massacre. >> i dropped to my knees and he's gone. >> john holland, a psychic medium, bring them together. >> announcer: and lucas came to the doctors, desperate for help. after a miracle surgery we have an update. and he lost his fingers to the flu. >> the doctor didn't think i would make it 24 hours. >> announcer: what you need to know in one of the worst flu seasons in decades! that's today! ♪ [ applause ] ♪ >> dr. travis: coming to terms with the shocking and sudden loss of a loved one can be extremely difficult and a burden to bear. when nothing seems to hepatpain, would you seek answers -- help the pain, would you seek answers from the other side? this woman met with a medium. >> today i meet with john, and i

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