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tv   CBS News Roundup  CBS  June 10, 2024 3:30am-4:31am PDT

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♪ hello and thanks for watching. i'm matt pieper in new york. and here are some of the stories we're tracking on "cbs news
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roundup." israel's daring hostage rescue mission in gaza a morale boost in israel and a blow to hamas. what we're learning about that operation and the civilians caught in the middle. in a new cbs news poll president biden and former president donald trump are neck and neck in november's likely rematch. and the u.s. is getting more tornadoes than ever before. tornado alley is no longer the only place in the danger zone. in a major blow to israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu, a key member of his war cabinet is resigning. opposition leader benny gantz, a former general and political centrist, is accusing netanyahu of mismanaging the war against hamas and putting his own political ambitions above the needs of the country. gantz's resignation follows a daring and deadly israeli commando mission to rescue four hostages held by hamas militants inside gaza. and now the u.s. is calling on the u.n. security council to vote on america's proposal for an immediate cease-fire and release of the remaining hostages. cbs's chris livesay has new
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details on that risky rescue operation and the civilians in the crossfire. >> reporter: israeli commandos storm the residential buildings in gaza where hamas was hiding those four hostages. a deafening hail of gunfire. but on the other side their first steps of freedom in 245 days as they were ushered on a beach and aboard a ch-53 sea stallion helicopter. [ cheers ] once home almog meir was swarmed by friends at the hospital. his uncle relieved. >> it was a big party for him. all he wants is a cigarette and friends. >> reporter: but in a cruel twist that party was interrupted. in the same hours israeli forces made their daring rescue meir's father, long suffering from an illness, died, never to see his son again or to even know he
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would soon be saved. a day of smoldering rubble and horror in gaza. "we were sitting in our living room when suddenly we heard strikes targeting our neighborhood," says this resident. "we went outside and saw dead people." apartment buildings now flattened where hamas had embedded the hostages among palestinian families. the israeli military says about 100 were killed or wounded including hamas combatants and civilians, a distinction not drawn by the hamas-run ministry of health, who say the dead and injured number nearly 1,000. like this 4-year-old boy hit in the head with shrapnel, severely brain damaged and fighting for his life. "i thought he was dead," cries his father. "i had already dug his grave." chris livesay, cbs news, tel aviv. president biden returned to
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the u.s. on sunday from his five-day visit to france, but he won't be here for long. on wednesday he heads to italy for a g7 meeting with america's al allies. as cbs's skyler henry reports, bide lenn also be dealing with his main political challenger here at home. >> reporter: without naming his predecessor, president biden jabbed at former president donald trump during a wreath-laying ceremony at a world war i cemetery in france. >> i think it is a measure of a country's support for democratic values that they honor those who've risked their lives and lost their lives. the idea that i'd come to normandy and not make this short break here to pay tribute. and it's the same story. think about it. america showed up. >> reporter: the former president skipped that same cemetery during a trip to france in 2018 and reportedly afterwards called those who were buried there, quote, losers and suckers. in las vegas trump said that never happened. >> for me to say suckers and
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losers? about people that died in world war i? in front of military people? it's not a possibility you could say a thing like that. >> reporter: sunday was trump's first official campaign rally during a west coast swing where he saw thunderous crowds since being found guilty in the so-called hush money trial in new york. cbs news confirms he's scheduled to meet via zoom with his probation officer on monday from his mar-a-lago home. likely voters say that guilty verdict pales in comparison to other issues like the economy, inflation and the border. new cbs news polling out sunday shows the like ly rematch betwen biden and trump neck and neck with the former president ahead by 1% nationally and president biden ahead by 1% in the battleground states. as for president biden, he will also make a trip out west for a star-studded event in los angeles next saturday, but not before that g7 trip to italy. skyler henry, cbs news, the
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white house. more than 500 tornadoes have been spotted in the u.s. since april. and there's new evidence tornado alley may be expanding beyond the midwest. cbs's dave malkoff shows us what's happening. >> reporter: april 2nd, 2024, an ef1 tornado sliced the roof off a funeral home in sunbright, tennessee. noah and lexi hamby were next door outside. >> we was probably about right here is when it -- when it hit us. >> reporter: he was carrying their 4-year-old. she had their baby in her arms. >> i mean, it literally swooped me up off my feet with the baby in my hands. he had me by the hood of my jacket and was like choking me. >> yeah, if she wasn't wearing the hoodie she'd have been gone. >> reporter: they were trying to find a basement to take cover. in a part of the country that's not used to tornadoes. the most likely place in the world for a tornado is right here in tornado alley. in fact, look at the 1950s. you can see a clear line right through the center of the country. but if you fast-forward to the
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2010s, tornadoes don't necessarily stay in their alley anymore. dr. timothy coleman wrote a study released in april after researching tornado locations dating back to the '50s. >> the tornado alley now in the united states in terms of the maximum area for tornadoes is an area from the southeastern u.s., parts of mississippi and alabama up into tennessee, kentucky and even parts of southern indiana and illinois. >> reporter: meteorologists have not settled on a definitive reason for this change. but the shift can be dangerous. >> a lot of that increase in the east has been at night and into the winter when people don't expect tornadoes and may not be as ready for them. >> we really about lost our lives. >> reporter: as the hambys tried to get to a safe place they found their neighbor kevin daniels just in time. >> and he grabbed hard and then i grabbed him. they both had i ababy in their arms. i drug everybody out of here. >> that's where me and my
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daughter was. >> reporter: learning what so many in tornado alley were taught, that seconds count. >> two seconds slower, me and her would be gone. absolutely. >> reporter: dave malkoff, cbs news, in sunbright, tennessee. french president emmanuel macron shocked his nation sunday. he is dissolving the national assembly and calling for a snap election. the reason, he says, is because his party suffered a heavy defeat in elections for the european parliament. well, don't go away. there's plenty more just ahead on "cbs news roundup" after this break. wanna know a secret? more than just my armpits stink. facts. that's why i use secret whole body deodorant for clinically proven odor protection everywhere. so i smell great all day,
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♪ pepto bismol. ♪ pick your pepto. . this is "cbs news roundup." i'm matt pieper in new york. thanks for staying with us. organized shoplifting has become a major problem across the country. and 88% of retailers say
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shoplifters have become more aggressive over the last year. stores like t.j. maxx and mar marshall's are testing new anti-theft measures. that includes arming some of their workers with body cameras. cbs's manuel bojorquez takes a look at other security measures that could show up at a mall near you. >> reporter: they are bold and brazen. smashing and grabbing their way through stores. hoping to stand in their way, dr. reed hayes, a criminologist. >> our mission is to safeguard vulnerable people and places. >> reporter: he's one of the lead researchers at the loss prevention research council housed here at the university of florida. big name retailers from walmart to target, 7-eleven to ikea, are part of the collaboration. >> early detection is better. right? cancer, viruses, whatever it might be. same thing in crime. if we know that an individual is contemplating and is now initiating their criminal act, the earlier we know that, maybe the possibility of earlier interventions. >> reporter: the technology ranges from using ai and
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surveillance systems to detect unusual behavior. virtual reality to study shopper and employee behavior. to physical changes at the store level. >> this is the engagement lab, which includes the parking lot lab area. >> okay. so this is like we're in the park lot out here. >> that's right. >> and then we go in here. >> reporter: and into a mockup of a store. liquor is one high value target. >> what does the bag do? >> the bag makes it more difficult. if you cut this or tear it, try and remove it, this thing is going to scream like you wouldn't believe. >> reporter: many of the designs are meant to slow down the process of getting an item, such as having to enter a phone number to receive an access code or this vending machine-like contraption. >> see, it's maddeningly slow, which is what you want. >> reporter: it eliminates the ability to grab large quantities at once. >> your law-abiding customer's going to be annoyed. >> they're going to be annoyed. >> but that's just the world we -- >> at least they can buy it. >> reporter: it's hard to know the exact cost of shoplifting.
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the national retail federation says u.s. retailers lost nearly $95 billion in 2021 to a variety of factors. a recent report by the council on criminal justice found new york and los angeles had the largest increases in reported shoplifting among 24 cities, while st. petersburg, florida and st. paul, minnesota had the largest decreases. one big driver overall, says hayes, the internet. >> a higher percentage of what we're seeing is to convert stolen goods to cash. there are a lot of selling sites, legitimate and not so legitimate, that make it easy to convert stolen goods to cash. >> reporter: so hayes and his team keep working to make getting those stolen goods even harder. manuel bojorquez, gainesville, florida. the biden administration announced new federal standards for automakers, tightening mileage rules for gas-powered cars, pickups and suvs. it's all part of a push to get more electric vehicles on the road. but a new aaa survey finds 63% of consumers are unlikely to buy an ev for their next car.
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as our ben tracy explains, more consumers are giving the green light to hybrids. at this ford f-150 plant in dearborn, michigan -- >> every 53 seconds we have a truck come off this assembly line. >> reporter: production manager courtney reeve says one out of every seven trucks being made on the day we visited was a hybrid. >> a year ago it was one out of ten. >> one out of ten. >> yes. >> so a 30% increase. >> correct. the consumer is really demanding these products. >> reporter: hybrids run on both battery power and gasoline. sales surged 53% in 2023 to a record high. hybrids now make up 9% of new car sales compared to about 7% for electric vehicles. >> featuring hybrid max powertrain. >> reporter: they're popular with consumers who want to save on fuel costs but may be reluctant to buy an ev because of price or concerns about charging infrastructure. >> there's really no compromise for a hybrid customer. >> reporter: andrew frick is
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president of ford blue. the company just set a new record for monthly hybrid sales and plans to quadruple production in the next five years. >> we think having a balanced approach of gas, hybrid and electric vehicles is the right way to go. >> is it fair to say you're basically going to make whatever car people are willing to buy? >> we want to cater to our customers. >> jump on the back. >> reporter: the biden administration's regulations are pushing automakers to rapidly electrify their vehicles because in the u.s. transportation is the top source of planet-warming emissions. over its lifetime an ev produces 50% less co2 than a gas-powered vehicle. a hybrid cuts it by 25%. >> ev sales are still growing. they're just growing much slower than they had been a year ago or two years ago. >> reporter: eric tingwall with "motor trend" thinks for mainstream buyers hybrids may be the bridge to the electric future. >> the near-term future is hybrid, plug-in hybrid, electric
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>> freddie lee williams jr., cum laude. >> reporter: back in 2019 freddie williams jr. had a lot on his mind at his college graduation. >> that's when, you know, it started really kicking in like hey, this is how much you owe. you're going to have to start paying this back. >> reporter: growing up on the south side of chicago, he dreamed of going to morehouse, the historically black college in atlanta that counts martin luther king jr. among its distinguished alumni. >> once i got accepted and saw that hey, the money is being offered but didn't have an idea of what i was really getting myself into. >> reporter: and then at commencement. >> we're going to put a little fuel in your bus. >> reporter: freddie williams got the surprise of a lifetime. >> my family is making a grant to eliminate their student loans. >> reporter: when billionaire businessman robert f. smith pledged to pay the student loans for the entire class, clearing some $34 million in student and parent debt.
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>> it was crazy. >> how big was your debt? >> in total it was around 125k. >> wow. that is a huge weight to be lifted. >> tremendous. >> reporter: total student loan debt in the u.s. is now nearly $1.8 trillion. and experts say many young people are delaying buying homes and starting families because of it. but the morehouse class of 2019 is something of an experiment. ♪ what could lives look like when students graduate debt-free? >> i think only now as we get five years out people realize the implication of what having no loans is. like you can buy a house right after graduation, which people we've interviewed, they did. >> we do need -- >> reporter: filmmakers joshua reed and amani rashad soche are also part of the class of 2019. >> take one.
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>> reporter: they're making a documentary about how their classmates are faring thanks to that generous gift. >> someone started a non-profit to get black and brown students into tech. someone became a family man. >> reporter: last year the supreme court struck down president biden's ambitious $430 billion student debt relief plan. >> the supreme court blocked me from relieving student debt. but they didn't stop me. >> reporter: since then the administration has expanded existing programs to cancel $167 billion in debt, with most relief going to people working in the public sector and for non-profits. >> they're sort of doing these piecemeal fixes, but they're not doing anything to stop the underlying problem. >> reporter: josh mitchell is the author of "the debt trap." he says congress created the federal student loan program to expand college access, but by allowing students and their parents to borrow virtually any
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amount to study virtually anything the government has enabled colleges to raise tuition without consequence. >> there's a cycle of students take out loans, schools raise their tuition, students take out more loans. that's essentially what's happened over the past 40 years. that's why tuition, up until recent years, has grown at sometimes triple the rate of inflation. >> reporter: more than half of all college students now graduate with student loan debt. with the average owing nearly $30,000. >> the u.s. economy is the world's biggest, most dynamic, in large part because of higher education. but you also have a lot of students who are not in default on their loans but are devoting more and more of their paychecks to pay off debt. that's money they could have been using to save for retirement or buy a house or to even start a business. for the average student there is a payoff for going to college. but i think that the problem is they're overpaying. >> we're in the business of human capital.
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and human capitaling expensive. so when you think about investing in teaching, research, scholarship, those things are investments we have to make. >> reporter: nicole heard is the president of lafayette college, a private four-year school in easton, pennsylvania. >> we're really known for liberal arts and engineering. >> reporter: she worries that fear of student debt is discouraging the lower and middle-income students who benefit most from attending college. >> if you're so fixed on the price and we're thinking about the sticker shock of the price, we're not thinking about the long-term investment, as individuals, as families and as a country. if somebody goes to college their children will go to college. their grandchildren will go to com. it changes everything. >> reporter: tuition and room and board at lafayette is more than $87,000 a year though in recent years the school has made efforts to offer more grants and fewer loans as part of its financial aid packages. >> so we met their demonstrated need with a $39,531 of grant
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assistance. >> some debt is okay. a little skin in the game is not the end of the world. what we can't have is people have tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands of dollars of student debt. that's not okay. but the non-profit sector in higher education is getting much better about being transparent about what debt is and then making sure students and families make good choices. >> reporter: still, more than 40 million americans have student loan debt, with 3.5 million owing more than $100,000. the average interest on that debt is nearly 7%. the average length of repayment, more than 20 years. it's why filmmaker joshua reed believes the story of the morehouse class of 2019 -- >> the class of 2019! >> reporter: -- needs to be told. >> people are being crushed by the immense weight of this debt. but once it's relieved they can go on to do all sorts of things. >> how often do you think about what you don't have to pay in student loans? >> many every day.
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>> reporter: freddie williams jr. was back on campus last month for the five-year reunion of that lucky class. the 26-year-old software engineer says instead of paying back a mountain of debt he gets to pay the gift forward. >> it was, you know, bigger than just having my debt paid off. because of that gift, i was able to buy a house. and with me buying a house that allowed for my brother to move in while he's finishing his degree. and i know in my soul that i have to continue to give back and pass it forward. >> that was lilia luciano reporting. an this is "cbs news ro
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. finally this half hour, space enthusiasts are mourning the death of apollo 8 astronaut william anders. the 90-year-old was the pilot and only occupant of a plane that crashed off washington state's san juan islands. our lee cowan has this remembrance. >> the engines are on. four, three, two, one, zero.
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>> reporter: it was the crew of apollo 8 that achieved the dream that explorers have had since the beginning of time. >> man is farther away from home than he's ever been before. >> reporter: in 1968 astronauts frank boorman, jim lovel and william anders became the first humans to ever orbit another world. anders broadcast his initial impressions to the whole world. >> well, i said that it looked like dirty beach sand. >> a very whitish gray like dirty beach sand. >> that's how i described it. thus gaining the wrath of poets worldwide. couldn't he have done better? probably. >> reporter: anders made up for his pedestrian description of the moon by taking this photo. >> oh, look at that picture over there. wow, that's pretty. >> reporter: out of the small window of the command module. >> oh, man. >> reporter: it forever changed how we think of ourselves. >> it was ironic that we'd done
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all this work to come and explore the moon and what we really discovered was the earth. >> reporter: earthrise became one of the most reproduced images ever. it moves almost everyone who's seen it. including former vice president al gore. >> it pointed the way toward a new understanding of who we are as human beings. >> reporter: anders was still flying high when we met him back in 2018. >> i'm bill. >> i'm lee. so nice to meet you. >> reporter: sadly, this past friday his vintage single engine plane crashed into the waters near the san juan islands off washington state, with only him aboard. he was 90 years old. now, you could say a lot of things like he died doing what he loved, that if he had to go it would be better this way. but the result is the same. we lost the man who gave us our first heavenly view of our home. it's a perspective we so often forget. thank goodness william anders left us something to remind us
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how big and yet how small we truly are. >> oh, look at that picture over there. wow, is that pretty. >> that was lee cowan reporting. and that is today's "cbs news roundup." for some of you the news continues. for others tune in later for "cbs mornin " and follow us online anytime at cbsnews.com. reporting from the cbs news broadcast center in new york city, i'm matt pieper. ♪ hello and thanks for watching. i'm matt pieper in new york, and here are some of the stories we're tracking on "cbs news roundup."
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israel's daring hostage rescue mission in gaza, a morale boost in israel and a blow to hamas. what we're learning about that operation and the civilians caught in the middle. in a new cbs news poll president biden and former president donald trump are neck and neck in november's likely rematch. and the u.s. is getting more tornadoes than ever before. tornado alley is no longer the only place in the danger zone. in a major blow to israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu, a key member of his war cabinet is resigning. opposition leader benny gantz, a former general and political centrist, is accusing netanyahu of mismanaging the war against hamas and putting his own political ambitions above the needs of the country. gantz's resignation follows a daring and deadly israeli commando mission to rescue four hostages held by hamas militants inside gaza. and now the u.s. is calling on the u.n. security council to vote on america's proposal for an immediate cease-fire and release of the remaining hostages. cbs's chris livesay has new details on that risky rescue operation and the civilians in
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the crossfire. >> reporter: israeli commandos storm the residential buildings in gaza where hamas was hiding those four hostages. a deafening hail of gunfire, but on the other side their first steps of freedom in 245 days as they're ushered on a beach and aboard a ch-53 sea stallion helicopter. once home, almog meir was swarmed by friends at the hospital. his uncle relieved. >> it was a big party for him. all he wants is a cigarette and friends. >> reporter: but in a cruel twist that party was interrupted. in the same hours israeli forces made their daring rescue meir's father, long suffering from an illness, died, never to see his
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son again or to even know he would soon be saved. a day of smoldering rubble and horror in gaza. "we were sitting in our living room when suddenly we heard strikes targeting our neighborhood," says this resident. "i went outside and saw dead people." apartment buildings now flattened, where hamas had embedded the hostages among palestinian families. the israeli military says about 100 were killed or wounded including hamas combatants and civilians, a distinction not drawn by the hamas-run ministry of health, who say the dead and injured number nearly 1,000. like this 4-year-old boy hit in the head with shrapnel, severely brain damaged and fighting for his life. "i thought he was dead," cries his father. "i had already dug his grave." chris livesay, cbs news, tel aviv. president biden returned to the u.s. on sunday from his five-day visit to france, but he
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won't be here for long. on wednesday he heads to italy for a g7 meeting with america's allies. as cbs's skyler henry reports, biden will also be dealing with his main political challenger here at home. >> reporter: without naming his predecessor, president biden jabbed at former president donald trump during a wreath-laying ceremony at a world war i cemetery in france. >> i think it is a measure of a country's support for democratic values that they honor those who've risked their lives and lost their lives. the idea that i'd come to normandy and not make this short trip here to pay tribute. and it's the same story. think about it. america showed up. >> reporter: the former president skipped that same cemetery during a trip to france in 2018 and reportedly afterwards called those who were buried there, quote, losers and suckers. in las vegas trump said that never happened. >> for me to say suckers and
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losers about people that died in world war i in front of military people? it's not a possibility you could say a thing like that. >> reporter: sunday was trump's first official campaign rally during a west coast swing where he saw thunderous crowds since being found guilty in the so-called hush money trial in new york. cbs news confirms he's scheduled to meet via zoom with his probation officer on monday from his mar-a-lago home. likely voters say that guilty verdict pales in comparison to other issues like the economy, inflation and the border. new cbs news polling out sunday shows the likely rematch between biden and trump neck and neck, with the former president ahead by 1% nationally and president biden ahead by 1% in the battleground states. as for president biden, he will also make a trip out west for a star-studded event in los angeles next saturday. but not before that g7 trip to italy. skyler henry, cbs news, the white house.
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more than 500 tornadoes have been spotted in the u.s. since april. and there's new evidence tornado alley may be expanding beyond the midwest. cbs's dave malkoff shows us what's happening. >> reporter: april 2nd, 2024, an ef1 tornado sliced the roof off a funeral home in sunbright, tennessee. noah and lexi hamby were next door outside. >> we was probably about right here when it hit us. >> reporter: he was carrying their 4-year-old. she had their baby in her arms. >> i mean, it literally swooped me up off my feet with the baby in my hands. he had my by the hood of my jacket and was like choking me. >> yeah, if she wasn't wearing the hoodie, she would have been gone. >> reporter: they were trying to find a basement to take cover in a part of the country that's not used to tornadoes. the most likely place in the world for a tornado is right here in tornado alley. in fact, look at the 1950s. you can see a clear line right through the center of the country. but if you fast forward to the 2010s, tornadoes don't
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necessarily stay in their alley anymore. dr. timothy coleman wrote a study released in april after researching tornado locations dating back to the '50s. >> the tornado alley now in the united states in terms of the maximum area for tornadoes is an area from the southeastern u.s., parts of mississippi and alabama up into tennessee, kentucky and even parts of southern indiana and illinois. >> reporter: meteorologists have not settled on a definitive reason for this change, but the shift can be dangerous. >> a lot of that increase in the east has been at night in the winter when people don't expect tornadoes and may not be as ready for them. >> we really about lost our lives. >> reporter: as the hambys tried to get to a safe place, they found their neighbor, kevin daniels, just in time. >> and he grabbed hard and i grabbed him. they both had a baby in their arms. i dragged everybody out of there. >> that's where me and my
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daughter was. >> reporter: learning what so many in tornado alley were taught, that seconds count. >> two seconds slower, me and her would be gone. absolutely. >> reporter: dave malkoff, cbs news, in sunbright, tennessee. french president emmanuel macron shocked his nation sunday. he is dissolving the national assembly and calling for a snap election. the reason, he says, is because his party suffered a heavy defeat in elections for the european parliament. well, don't go away. there's plenty more just ahead on "cbs news roundup" after this break. nothing dims my light like a migraine. with nurtec odt, i found relief. the only migraine medication that helps treat and prevent, all in one. to those with migraine, i see you.
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including your memory. join the neuriva brain health challenge. ♪ this is "cbs news roundup." i'm matt pieper in new york. thanks for staying with us. the u.s. supreme court's term is winding down, with more decisions expected in the coming days. among the pivotal cases, whether presidents have absolute
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immunity for acts they take while in office and whether the abortion drug mifepristone can stay on the market. then there's the concern about the justices' finances and their ties to big money political donors. the justices released their financial filings on friday, and cbs's jan crawford breaks it down. >> reporter: justice clarence thomas amended his disclosure reports to acknowledge he accepted two luxury trips in 2019 from long-time friend and conservative billionaire harlan crow, including a one-night stay at a hotel in bali, indonesia and three nights in an exclusive private club in california. thomas did not report any travel from crow in 2023, suggesting a new disclosure rule or increased scrutiny on the justices may have had an impact. the reports released today also revealed four of the justices earned between nearly $87,000 to almost $900,000 on book deals and royalties, with justice ketanji brown jackson leading the way for the advance on her upcoming memoir. justice brett kavanaugh was next
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with a $340,000 advance for his legal memoir due out next year. jackson also reported beyonce gave her four concert tickets, valued at just under $4,000. and just sonia sotomayor earned nearly $1,900 for voicing a character on a pbs cartoon. >> that was jan crawford reporting. the one justice who did not release his financial documents was samuel alito. he was granted an extension. there is more news ahead on "cbs news roundup."
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when you feel the signs, it's time to try align. it has been more than 15 years since a passenger jet made an unforgettable emergency landing on the hudson river. now a brand new museum dedicated to the miracle on the hudson is open. cbs's nancy chen got a tour from the hero pilot who safely brought the plane down and helped every passenger survive. >> when you stand here today and you look up at this, is it a good feeling? >> oh, absolutely. it's actually bigger than i remembered. i haven't seen it for a while. but yeah, it feels good. >> we are getting word of a u.s. airways plane crash in the hudson river. >> we heard people say that they heard the sound of an engine explosion and that this appeared to be a controlled landing by the pilot.
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>> the fact that it landed relatively flat i think is more than just good luck. >> reporter: a decade and a half after he landed flight 1549 on the hudson river, chesley sullenberger, known to the world as simply captain sully, calls this airbus a-320 an old friend. >> you were sitting right there. >> right there. left front seat. >> reporter: the aircraft now on display in charlotte, north carolina's sullenberger aviation museum. along with other tokens from that january 2009 journey. >> you think about how the day started for you that day when you put that uniform on. >> that day started literally like 10,000 other days. i had never experienced the failure of even a single engine. and at that point in my career i thought it was unlikely it ever would happen to me. i was wrong. >> reporter: they had just taken off from new york's laguardia airport when they hit a flock of canada geese. with no engine power, sullenberger and first officer jeff skiles guided the aircraft onto their only option, the water.
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all 155 people on board remarkably made it out alive. >> it's been 15 years now. do you still think of it often? >> yeah, i get almost daily reminders, good ones, when people recognize me and thank us for what we achieved that day. >> has your perception of what happened that day changed as you reflect? >> yes, it has. substantially. you know, early on i had said in interviews that i thought we were doing our jobs. but i think now with the passage of time it's apparent that we all did our jobs exceedingly well that day, better than probably could have been expected under those circumstances. >> reporter: deemed the miracle on the hudson, it was celebrated around the world as a sign of hope. >> you got any ideas? >> actually, no. >> reporter: hollywood came knocking too. sullenberger's actions inspired clint eastwood's "sully," starring tom hanks. letters from all seven continents also poured in. many now on display at the
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museum. carefully collected by sullenberger's wife, laurie. >> you read these letters out loud to your children. to your kids as a family. why did you read those letters out loud? >> we were really reading them to sully, for him to understand -- >> i hadn't seen any of them at that point. >> and so we were trying to give him a sense of how the world was receiving the accident. i think it was still haunting him, the whole accident itself. and so that was the other part of reading the letters. he needed to work his way through all of that. and the letters were a really helpful way to do that. >> reporter: for sullenberger the miracle also represented 208 seconds of agony and the unbearable hours-long wait for confirmation that everyone survived. you've also talked about dealing with mental health struggles immediately after the incident. does this museum and donating some of these artifacts provide some sense of closure in that? >> oh, absolutely it does. we all on the airplane and our
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families experienced a very stressful event that could have been catastrophic. but with time i've finally achieved the kind of insight i needed to put my mind at rest. and that was that we had done the best we could. that was our solace then. it remains our solace now. >> reporter: a year after the flight sullenberger retired from u.s. airways. but he continues to champion aircraft safety today. something the sullenberger aviation museum highlights. along with a rich history of flight itself and a peek at its future. with an emphasis on introducing children to stem education. >> to flight 1549, hear hear. >> hear hear! >> reporter: on hand for its opening, passengers from charlotte-bound flight 1549. >> that's me right there. and that's mike. >> reporter: many remain in touch with one another. and sullenberger. >> these are my shoes that i took off before i jumped into
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the hudson. >> reporter: that includes barry leonard, whose personal items including the yankees hat he was wearing that day are now on display. >> why did you want to donate your belongings? >> because i want people that visit here to really get a human aspect on what this is all about. so you see these things that were in my closet for 15 years, and then to actually see them here, which i didn't expect them to, is just overwhelming and very emotional. >> yeah. why is that? >> because we all know that we could have not made it. yeah. >> reporter: their reunion a reminder of the extraordinary experience these 155 people went through together. >> what do you hope that future generations take away from this space? >> that we each have obligations to each other as citizens because it's when we work together we solve big problems.
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when we share common values, common purpose, and a common humanity. >> reporter: a miracle extending far beyond the hudson. nancy chen, charlotte, north carolina. we all need fiber for our digestive health, but less than 10% of us get enough each day. good thing metamucil gummies are an easy way to get prebiotic, plant-based fiber. with the same amount of fiber as 2 cups of broccoli. metamucil gummies the easy way to get your daily fiber. “the darkness of bipolar depression made me feel like i was losing interest in the things i love. then i found a chance to let in the lyte.” discover caplyta. unlike some medicines that only treat bipolar i, caplyta is proven to deliver significant symptom
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relief from both bipolar i & ii depression. and in clinical trials, movement disorders and weight gain were not common. caplyta can cause serious side effects. call your doctor about sudden mood changes, behaviors, or suicidal thoughts right away. anti-depressants may increase these risks in young adults. elderly dementia patients have increased risk of death or stroke. caplyta is not approved for dementia-related psychosis. report fever, confusion, or stiff muscles, which may be life threatening, or uncontrolled muscle movements which may be permanent. common side effects include sleepiness, dizziness, nausea, and dry mouth. these aren't all the side effects. in the darkness of bipolar i & ii depression, caplyta can help you let in the lyte. ask your doctor about caplyta. find savings and support at caplyta.com. what's the worst part of the locker room? shareef: axe. axe. brandon: i like that. shareef: reminds me of like a designer store. brandon: this smells like a candle. shareef: is this a joke? you chose axe! brandon: i knew i had good taste! shareef: i thought that was a designer brand.
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a cricket team scored a victory against its arch-rival pakistan in the latest round of the cricket world cup played for the first time ever in a stadium just outside new york city. cricket is the second most popular sport in the world after soccer, but the game is still largely unknown in the u.s. cbs's shanelle kaul sat down with players and fans who believe cricket could take off here in the states just like soccer did 30 years ago. >> reporter: on a field in bowie, maryland -- >> go! >> reporter: -- these kids are playing a game unknown to most americans. cricket. >> yeah! >> when i first started playing my mom was like, girl, what are you doing? >> reporter: 13-year-old jordan hinkle walker had never even heard of the game until three years ago, when coach sham chotoo brought cricket to her classroom.
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>> i called up the principal and said hey, i would like to come to the school and do a cricket demo. >> what was the reaction? >> it was crazy. and you see their whole faces would light up. >> reporter: chotoo grew up playing in trinidad and has made it his mission to share the sport in america since moving here 30 years ago. >> back then it was mainly the immigrant population were playing cricket. it was a fun way to get together. >> reporter: then when he had children chotoo wanted to share this piece of his culture with them. >> and i said well, why don't i start a cricket program here? >> reporter: that program became the first elementary school cricket league in the country. now over a decade later -- >> we have 86 teams. more than 1,000 kids playing cricket. >> reporter: the sport is exploding from coast to coast. u.s. cricket says more than 400 leagues have opened in america with over 200,000 players and counting. >> it's truly a watershed moment for cricket in this country. >> reporter: cricket reporter
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smit patel says the pro game is growing too. last year major league cricket debuted in the u.s., and cricket will be featured at the 2028 olympic games in los angeles. >> it's the second most played sport in the world. >> reporter: this week for the first time the united states is co-hosting and competing in the international cricket council's men's t-20 world cup. now with the world watching these little cricketers can dream bigger than ever before. >> nice job. nice job, guys. >> reporter: shanelle kaul, cbs news, bowie, maryland. >> the "cbs news roundup" will be right back.
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double dutching. it took off in america during the 1940s and '50s. it was mostly played by black girls using clotheslines or braided rope.
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they would jump to songs and chants in the street with their friends. although long thought of as a children's game, double dutch is now tying together older generations. our jericka duncan laced up her sneakers and took to the streets to give it a try. >> reporter: mastering the fast-paced footwork between two ropes. ♪ comes naturally for these women. who've been captivating crowds through double dutch. ♪ rockin' robin ♪ and what might be even more impressive -- everyone you see is at least 40 years old. >> we have over 10,000 active members. we're in germany, israel, canada. >> reporter: 53-year-old pamela robinson of chicago started the 40-plus double dutch club in 2016. >> the 40-plus double dutch club. >> reporter: interest and membership grew after they appeared on a local television station in 2019. >> so yeah, we went from 30 local chicagoland women to over
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1,000 women in two days. >> reporter: the only cost, a $25 t-shirt that proudly displays your name and age. >> get it, miss shirley. >> reporter: shirley wilfred is 88. it's a movement on a mission, to promote friendship, fitness, fun and fellowship. the group has grown beyond the ropes with a podcast. >> we do all of the things that we did when we were growing up. >> reporter: and a documentary featuring members like 46-year-old shelly edwards. >> i almost can't see me doing anything else. >> come on, come on, come on, come on! >> reporter: and now that i'm officially over 40, i was allowed to try. and try. until i finally got it. [ cheers ] these women 40 and over are bonded by an old pastime. brought back to the future and made new again.
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[ cheers ] >> all right, all right, all right! >> that was jericka duncan reporting and jumping. and that's today's "cbs news roundup." for some of you the news continues. for others tune in later for "cbs mornings" and follow us online anytime at cbsnews.com. reporting from the cbs news broadcast center in new york city, i'm matt pieper. it's monday, june 10th, 2024. this is "cbs news mornings." israel's daring rescue mission. new details about the raid, how it unfolded, the fire fights, and the hostages' emotional reunions with their families. catastrophic landslide. a critical mountain highway collapses nearf

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