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Новости за 02.04.2021

Rikki Klieman in the Toyota Green Room

CBSNews.com 

In this week’s edition of “Sounds of the Toyota Green Room,” CBS News legal analyst Rikki Klieman chats with "CBS This Morning" co-host Gayle King about the Boston bombing trial. King also talks with Tradesy CEO Tracy DiNunzio and Aetna CEO Mark T. Bertolini.

Huge pillow fight spans across the globe

CBSNews.com 

There was an international pillow fight over the weekend. More than a hundred cities around the world took part. CBSN's Vladimir Duthiers and Meg Oliver report on video from the event.

L.A. Dodgers set payroll record

CBSNews.com 

It's opening day for 28 MLB teams across the country. Meanwhile, the L.A. Dodgers set a payroll record, hitting $270 million. CBSN's Meg Oliver and Vladimir Duthiers report.

James Franco and Jonah Hill talk new film "True Story"

CBSNews.com 

"True Story" follows the real-life story of convicted killer Christian Longo and writer Michael Finkel. CBS This Morning co-host Gayle King interviewed the two stars of the film and joins CBSN with more on their conversation.



Actress Candice Bergen says "no more" to plastic surgery

CBSNews.com 

Actress Candice Bergen, known for her role as "Murphy Brown," told People Magazine she is no longer getting plastic surgery. CBSN's Meg Oliver and Vladimir Duthiers report on some of the other candid comments she made to the magazine.

The world's smallest computer

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In the 1960s mainframe computers took up whole rooms, but now one computer can fit on the edge of a nickel. The faculty and students at the University of Michigan created the Michigan Micro Mote and have some big plans for it too.

California governor defends sparing farmers from drought rules

CBSNews.com 

With California's historic drought, the governor is not backing down from his mandatory water cutbacks. But as Ben Tracy reports, the state's $46 billion farming industry, which uses roughly 80 percent of California's usable water supply, is getting a pass -- for now.

"True Story": Jonah Hill and Franco on new movie, friendship and careers

CBSNews.com 

In 2002, police in Mexico arrested an Oregon man for the murder of his wife and three kids. The fugitive's real name was Christian Longo, but after his capture, he claimed to be New York Times writer Michael Finkel. The two are the inspiration for Jonah Hill and James Franco's new movie, "True Story," which opens next week. Gayle King reports.

How Google is reinventing the workplace

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The tech giant receives more than two million applications a year, but only thousands make the cut. Your odds are better getting into Harvard, Princeton or Yale. Laszlo Bock, Google’s senior vice president of "people operations," also known as human resources, joins "CBS This Morning" to discuss his new book, "Work Rules!: Insights from Inside Google That Will Transform How You Live and Lead."

Why Indians say Americans are doing yoga wrong

CBSNews.com 

India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi is on a campaign to revitalize yoga in the land where it was born, and that starts with his soldiers who take yoga to improve mind and body control. Major Garrett reports on how some Americans say Indian yoga simply would not translate in the U.S.

Pesticide blamed for sickening family on vacation

CBSNews.com 

A family's dream trip to the Caribbean left them fighting a mystery illness. The father is reportedly paralyzed and his two teenage sons are in comas. Did a resort unintentionally poison its own guests with dangerous chemicals meant to kill pests? Jericka Duncan reports on the crippling effects of exposure to the toxic gas.

Boston bombing trial jury set to deliberate on Tsarnaev's fate

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Lawyers will deliver closing arguments Monday in the trial of Boston Marathon bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev. For 16 days, jurors heard graphic and emotional testimony. CBS News legal analyst Rikki Klieman joins "CBS This Morning" to discuss the case.

Review of Rolling Stone's U.Va. rape story finds "journalistic failure"

CBSNews.com 

Rolling Stone retracted its controversial story depicting a brutal gang rape at a University of Virginia fraternity. The blistering report released Sunday night by the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism called it "a story of journalistic failure that was avoidable." Julianna Goldman reports.

Obama defends Iran nuke deal slammed by Israeli prime minister

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Ambiguity in the nuclear deal with Iran has critics questioning just how much the U.S. gave up to reach that agreement. Among the discrepancies between the American and Iranian versions of the framework is how quickly sanctions would be lifted. Nancy Cordes reports.

Warning over breast milk bought online

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Researchers say that one in ten samples of breast milk bought online has added cow's milk, which could be dangerous. Also, a doctor has developed a new model to predict Ebola in patients. Eboni Williams reports on the day's top health stories.

One Direction wraps tour without Zayn Malik

CBSNews.com 

One Direction played the last show of its international tour in Dubai, where fans were disappointed over Zayn Malik's departure from the band. Also, "Laverne and Shirley" co-star Cindy Williams is releasing an autobiography. Don Champion reports on the day's top entertainment stories.





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