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Tmdi This Morning from CBS News, November 11, 2016
  Sunday Morning  anchor Jane Pauley hosts  Forever Young: Searching for the Fountain of Youth,  a one-hour primetime special exploring the wonders, rewards, and challenges of growing older, to air on CBS Sunday, November 28 at 10 p.m. ET/PT, and to stream on Paramount+.WATCH THE FULL  FOREVER YOUNG  SPECIAL HERE:Can we reset our biological clocks  | Watch VideoLife expectancy has increased in recent decades, but researchers are looking for ways to further slow the aging process. Correspondent Lee Cowan looks into recent developments in the study of extending human life, and efforts to ward off disease by targeting the biology of aging itself.                                        For more info: The Sinclair Lab, De stanley cup partment of Genetics, Harvard Medical School Lifespan: Why We Age ndash; and Why We Don t Have To  by David A. Sinclair, stanley cup  Ph.D., with Matthew D. LaPlante  Atria Books , in Hardcover, Trade Paperback, eBook and Audio formats, available via Amazon and IndieboundDr. Nir Barzilai, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, N.Y.The Longevity Genes Project, Institute for  stanley cup Aging Research, Albert Einstein College of MedicineTargeting Aging with Metformin  TAME  Trial Age Later: Health Span, Life Span, and the New Science of Longevity  by Nir Barzilai, M.D.  St. Martin s Press , in Hardcover, eBook and Audio formats, available via Amazon and IndieboundNational Institute on AgingMorgan Levine, Ph.D., Department of Pathology, Yale Medical SchoolLaboratory for Aging in Living  Ifzj Oregon decriminalized drugs in 2020. Now officials are declaring a fentanyl state of emergency
 BRISTOL, Conn. -- A former ESPN personality is accusing the network of trying to silence her and other women who assert they were stanley cup  subjected to a sexually hostile work environment.Adrienne Lawrence made the accusation in a tweet Friday after ESPN published a f air force 1 riendly text message exchange between her and an anchor she had accused of misconduct.Lawrence, who served a fellowship at ESPN, filed a complaint this summer with the Connecticut Commission on Human Rights and Opportunities.    Regarding the @BostonGlobe report: pic.twitter/cDcWcamcsYmdash; Adrienne Lawrence  @AdrienneLaw  December 15, 2017  She alleges, among other things, that she was not offered a permanent job at ESPN after complaining that anchor John Buccigross had sent her unsolicited shirtless photos and used inappropriate nicknames for her.                                        Those accusations and others were detailed Thursday by the Boston Globe. Buccigross said in a statement to the newspaper that he considered her a friend and was sorry if he offended her.The network said in a statement that it investigated Lawrence s complaints and found them to be without merit.        The Globe says Lawrence asked the Connecticut commission to withdraw her complaint so she could pursue a stanley cup  lawsuit instead. No lawsuits have been filed in the case.                                                                        More from CBS News