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2023

Новости за 26.02.2023

Journalist Belva Davis, a trailblazer who "kicked open the door"

CBSNews.com 

In 1967, at a time when there were almost no Black reporters on television, Belva Davis began working at KPIX in San Francisco; she is believed to be the first Black female TV reporter in the western United States. "60 Minutes" correspondent Bill Whitaker (who, like many journalists, walked in her footsteps) looks back at her career, and how making a dream a reality became her legacy.

Writer-director Sarah Polley on "Women Talking"

CBSNews.com 

The former child actress-turned-director has received her second Oscar nomination for “Women Talking,” about sexually-abused women in a cloistered religious community deciding their future. She talks with correspondent Anthony Mason about why she doesn’t regret walking away from stardom in front of the camera.

"Everything Everywhere All at Once" star Ke Huy Quan

CBSNews.com 

Ke Huy Quan didn't expect a Hollywood career when he was picked as a child to star as Short Round in “Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom.” But success, having peaked early, was short-lived. Now, after decades working behind the camera, Quan returned to the screen in the acclaimed "Everything Everywhere All at Once." He talks with correspondent Tracy Smith about what it means to have won the role for which he's received an Oscar nomination.

Web extra: Young people and gun violence

CBSNews.com 

Dr. Johnny Rice, from Coppin State University in Baltimore, is participating in a multi-city research project, funded by the Thurgood Marshall College Fund and the National Collaborative on Gun Violence Research, that interviews young men about the prevalence of guns in their communities. In this web exclusive, he spoke with “Sunday Morning” senior contributor Ted Koppel about some of his preliminary findings, including factors that lead to gun possession and gun violence, and what might modify behavior.

Will Utah's Great Salt Lake disappear?

CBSNews.com 

Utah's Great Salt Lake has been in decline, owing to climate change, drought, and over-use of water resources, and is now one-third the size it was in the 1980s. A new scientific report out this month warns that, without dramatic and immediate cuts in water consumption, the lake could vanish in just five years. Correspondent Lee Cowan talks with Sen. Mitt Romney, who co-sponsored a bill studying the lake's problems, and with experts who say aggressive action is needed.



Animals' medical superpowers

CBSNews.com 

There are examples from across the animal kingdom of medical marvels – animals whose behaviors and diet may point to ways in which humans might reduce heart disease, or ward off dementia. Correspondent Jonathan Vigliotti talks with Dr. David Agus, author of "The Book of Animal Secrets," and Dr. Joshua Schiffman, who is exploring how an elephant's genetics may offer clues to fighting off cancerous cells.

The Brighton Ax Murder

CBSNews.com 

A young mother is killed in her bed, her toddler unharmed. Unsolved for 40 years, how the unusual crime scene helped close the case. "48 Hours" correspondent Erin Moriarty reports.

Nature: Swans in New York

CBSNews.com 

We leave you this Sunday morning with migrating tundra swans in western New York state. Videographer: Carl Mrozek.

Opening doors, to acts of kindness

CBSNews.com 

After being abandoned by his mother and suffering abuse in the foster system, Malachi Coleman and his sister were adopted by a loving family, but so much damage had been done, Malachi found it difficult to be kind to others, until the simple act of holding a door open sparked a passion for selflessness. Correspondent Steve Hartman reports.

Passage: In memoriam

CBSNews.com 

"Sunday Morning" remembers some of the notable figures who left us this week, including comedian and actor Richard Belzer.

Studying Nature's secrets, and animals' medical superpowers

CBSNews.com 

There are examples from across the animal kingdom of medical marvels – animals whose genetics, behaviors or diets may point to ways in which humans might reduce heart disease, cancer or dementia. Can we learn from them?

Steering young men away from a life with guns

CBSNews.com 

In Baltimore, where gun violence claims the lives of hundreds each year, the youth workers behind a program called Roca are teaching alternative ways to handling the stresses of life in a "kill-or-be-killed" environment.





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