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tv   CBS News Roundup  CBS  July 24, 2024 2:42am-3:30am PDT

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same place. and i say it to myself that i can't make this about me. >> reporter: all the news crews are now long gone. river and his grandmother, jamie blake, and the rest of the folks in bartlesville are trying to put what they can back together. >> this was part of the wall in the office building. >> oh, yeah. >> reporter: the tornado did this to their home. powerful enough to blow a family photo with river's grandmother in it 21 miles away to danny lemon's cow pastures. >> there's a bunch of plywood and insulation laying around. i told my wife, i know who these people are. >> reporter: so far this year, there have been more than 1,000 reports of tornadoes in this nation. meteorologists rate these tornadoes on a scale that goes from 0 to 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. the one that hit here was near the top of that scale, winds up to 200 miles an hour. >> yes, this is where we build instruments and we put them onto vehicles so we can go out in the
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field and study storms. >> reporter: harold brooks studies severe storms for the national weather service. >> there are small towns that have been almost destroyed completely by tornadoes that essentially never rebuild bcause it's just hard to recover when there's no infrastructure left. >> that was our meat processing plant over there. it's gone. >> reporter: johnny kelly is the mayor of barnsdall, oklahoma. that tornado in may hit the heart of his community the hardest. two people died. >> there's 83 homes that are gone. i don't know if there's enough adjectives in the vocabulary to describe this deal. >> it seems like there's a short period of time when the eyes of the nation are on your city. but after that, there's still a big need here. >> no one's here, and we're left here to deal with what's left. it's an emotional roller coaster for people. >> a lot of people came in here and cleaned up, but it's not even half finished. >> do you have one wish for the future? >> i hope this all gets cleaned up and we have a new house. >> you want this part to be over like that?
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>> yeah, to like -- the future, so you don't have to think about it anymore. >> you need a time machine. >> yeah. kind of, yeah. >> reporter: it took 120 years to build this community. it will take some time to rebuild. dave malkoff in bartlesville, dave malkoff in bartlesville, oklahoma. i thought i was sleeping ok... but i was waking up so tired. then i tried new zzzquil sleep nasal strips. their four—point lift design opens my nose for maximum air flow. so, i breathe better. and we both sleep better. and stay married. talenti mango sorbetto is made with a hundred percent real fruit. -with alphonso mangoes. -yeah, i know. -oh? -right? -mmm-hmm. talenti. raise the jar. king c. gillette is an award winning lineup men's health best beard trimmer for beginners among men's journal's best beard shampoos and washes and gq's best beard conditioners for soft no-itch, facial hair.
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the olympic games get under way this week in paris, where many of the world's greatest athletes will go for gold. cbs news senior contributor ted koppel introduces us to a woman who won't be among the competitors though she is a champion just the same. >> reporter: florence meiler, known throughout vermont and beyond as flo, is a regular feature on burlington high school's athletic fields. her little red wagon is loaded with some of the gear she'll need to train for an upcoming decathlon. flo, who lacks any support staff, is training to compete in ten events ver two days. that will include the hurdles, the shot put, the discus, the javelin, the 100 meters, the 400 meters, and 1,500 meters. before she can even practice the
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high jump or the long jump or the pole vault, she has to pull back the tarp that protects each of these venues against the weather. she'll put it all back when she's done. as for the actual jumps, let's put things in their proper perspective. did i mention flo's age? >> there, i got it. >> reporter: on this particular morning in may, she is still 89 years old. >> whoo-hoo! >> all right. >> i did it! >> reporter: so keep in mind as you watch flo vault and jump to relatively modest heights -- >> look at the sky because that helps you throw it further. >> reporter: -- that many people her age can use a little help just getting out of an armchair. >> it must require a lot of strength just to leverage.
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>> being brought up on a farm, i was used to lifting up these heavy, heavy hay bales. i got a lot of muscles. >> reporter: flo is an extraordinary athlete. >> what's a good distance for me to be beyond where you're going to land? >> oh, you're safe. >> well, not that safe. >> reporter: with the proper training and coaching 60 or 70 years ago, she might have attained olympic caliber. >> yes! >> wow, i did it! i won all these medals in poland. >> reporter: the window frames and walls of the lakeside home that she and gene, her husband of 64 years, occupy groan under the weight of her accomplishments. >> how many of these medals have you got? >> oh, about 1,500, i think. quite a few. >> do we have to open up a flo meiler memorial hall?
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>> probably. >> yeah? >> reporter: it's hard to believe flo's senior track and field career only began 30 years ago. >> i was playing tennis with my husband. >> yeah. >> it was the vermont senior games and barbara jordan, my best friend, said, flo, we're desperate for track people. i would like you to come and try the long jump. you know, i'm saying, barb, are you kidding me? i'm 60 years old. she said, oh, yeah, you'd be good at it. >> reporter: which brings us to a blistering hot weekend at the end of june in charlottesville, virginia, the site of the usa masters combined events championship, which includes the women's decathlon. it's 99 degrees in the shade. the actual temperature of the track, almost 142 degrees. 13 women are competing across all different age categories.
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a few weeks ago, flo celebrated her 90th birthday. flo's competition in the 90 to 94 category? nobody. >> i'm really pushing for the ladies decathlon, i'll tell you. if i can do this at 90, we have a lot of other ladies who can do it in their 20s. >> damn right. >> right? >> reporter: what flo is referring to is the fact that there is no decathlon for women at the olympic games. the winner of the men's decathlon is widely considered the greatest athlete in the world. women, they have to make do with a seven-event alternative called the heptathlon. >> there's no women's decathlon at the world championships olympic games, and that's a problem. >> reporter: lauren koontz, herself a decathlete, is also part of a growing movement to overcome the one hurdle that keeps women from competing in
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the decathlon in international competition. >> historic sexism. there was a belief really early on in track and field that women were not able to do a lot of the events. and all of that individually has been proven wrong. one of the big ones is women are too weak to pole vault. they don't have the upper body strength. women have been pole vaulting in the olympics since 2000. the one event women are still not allowed to do is the decathlon. >> reporter: world athletics is the governing body that could change that. >> the answer we tend to get is current heptathletes like the heptathlon, and we don't want to get rid of that. it's basically a one or the other, and the response we always give is, well, the young women, the younger generation, they're the ones that want to do a decathlon and like phase it like set a date. set it 2028 or 2032 and say, this is when we're trans transitioning.
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everybody has enough time to make adjustments. >> when did you do your first decathlon? >> two years ago when i was 13. >> reporter: 15-year-old sophie said she took out the decathlon because her father and brother were doing it. >> you go from one event to another. it's physically hard on your body because you're doing a lot. it's also mentally, like if i do bad in one event, it's hard to pick yourself back up and go to the next. >> which event do you worry about the most? do you worry at all? >> the 1,500. >> the 1,500. i don't blame you. >> i wouldn't worry about it if it wasn't hot. >> reporter: on this second day of the decathlon before the 1,500, flo has done the hurdles, the discus, the javelin. >> there you go! >> reporter: and the pole vault. >> go, flo! >> reporter: 90-year-old flo in slo-mo. [ cheers and applause ]
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>> another official and i measured it with a steel tape to verify it was 113. we'll put that in writing, photographs, send it to the appropriate officials, and they will verify it. >> the bottom line is what? >> my understanding is flo is the world record holder for a 90-year-old pole vaulter. she's having a good day. >> on your marks. >> reporter: what is so demoralizing about the decathlon, especially on a day like this when it feels like way above 100 degrees, is that final event, the 1,500 meters. four times around the track, a shade under a mile. flo only has to complete the race. there's no one in her age group even competing. she can walk it, and for the first three laps, she does. >> go, go, go, flo!
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>> reporter: and then when she comes around that last turn, other women decathletes line up behind flo in sort of an honor guard. >> go, go, go, flo! >> reporter: and in a final burst of energy, florence meiler runs the last 100 meters of the women's decathlon. [ bell ringing ] >> one, two, three, go decathlon! >> reporter: there will not be a women's decathlon when the paris olympics get under way in a few days. >> in the women's 90 to 94-year-old age group. >> reporter: -- but four years from now -- >> florence meiler. >> reporter: -- 2028 in los angeles, who knows? tina zimmerman: five years ago, i reconnected with my estranged father, and that's just something i never ever thought could happen. but when he became a believer, he just had this insatiable
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sunday, facing off against serbia. as part of team usa's final preps, they played an exhibition game in london against south sudan. as cbs's leah mishkin reports, the new african team gave the americans a run for their money. >> reporter: south sudan, the world's youngest country, has faced wars and unprecedented flooding, a hunger crisis so severe cbs news reported girls as young as 14 were being sold into marriage by starving families. there have been kidnappings and appalling levels of sexual violence according to the u.s. state department, who adds more than 4 million people have fled their homes. >> when we play basketball, south sudan completely stops. all the violence, everybody's tuning into what these young leaders are doing. >> reporter: these young leaders have beat the odds and are about to make their olympic debut. >> even in our country, we don't still to this day, we don't have a single indoor court. so like that speaks volumes for
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us to be the best team in africa right now. >> whenever we put on that jersey, we know we're not just playing for ourselves. there's a whole nation, a country behind us that, you know, seeing us as a beacon of hope. >> reporter: the coach, former nba player royal ivey, says the team has also given the country some healing. >> it was one of the greatest feelings i had through basketball to take this country that's only been independent for so long to the olympics. >> reporter: the captain of the olympic team says they didn't know how they would measure up to other countries. so far, not bad. in an exhibition game, the south sudanese basketball team nearly beat usa's team of nba superstars, losing by just one point. lebron james said they played extremely good basketball. leah mishkin, cbs news, london. and that's today's "cbs news roundup." for some of you, the news continues. for others, tune in to "cbs mornings" and follow us anytime at cbsnews.com. reporting from the cbs news broadcast center in new york city, i'm shanelle kaul.
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hello and thanks so much for staying up with us. i'm shanelle kaul in new york, and here are the headlines on "cbs news roundup." presidential candidate kamala harris comes out swinging, attacking donald trump in her first campaign rally. the trump campaign is shifting its strategy following president joe biden's decision to withdraw from the race. and we'll have new details about the sheriff's deputy accused of killing sonja massey. as the likely democratic presidential nominee, vice president kamala harris hit the campaign trail tuesday in the battleground state of wisconsin. cbs's skyler henry has more from the white house. >> ours is a fight for the future. >> reporter: vice president kamala harris kicked off her presidential campaign with a rally in milwaukee. >> do we believe in the promise
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of america, and are we ready to fight for it? >> reporter: the vice president told the crowd she's earned the support of enough delegates to secure the democratic nomination ahead of next month's convention in chicago. >> i will spend the coming weeks continuing to unite our party so that we are ready to win in november. >> reporter: harris also won the endorsements of senate majority leader chuck schumer and house minority leader hakeem jeffries. >> kamala harris and her candidacy has excited and energized the house democratic caucus, the democratic party, and the nation. >> reporter: former speaker nancy pelosi endorsed harris monday, the day after president biden announced he's stepping out of the race and is backing her for the white house run against former president donald trump. >> donald trump wants to take our country backward. >> reporter: in a phone interview with the media, the former president said he's willing to debate harris now
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that president biden is out of the running. >> i want to debate her, and she'll be no different because they have the same policies. >> reporter: president biden says he'll explain more about his historic decision to exit the race when he addresses the nation wednesday night. >> mr. president, what will your message be tomorrow night? >> reporter: biden returned to the white house tuesday afternoon for the first time since his covid infection last week. skyler henry, cbs news, the white house. >> and cbs news will bring you special coverage of president biden's oval office address wednesday at 8:00 p.m. eastern. and with just 105 days until election day, the trump campaign is quickly shifting strategy, now focusing all of its attention on vice president kamala harris. cbs's robert costa has more. >> reporter: donald trump's last public rally was on saturday. but today from mar-a-lago, he had a conference call with reporters and took aim at his
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new target, vice president harris. he called her radical, falsely claimed she wants open borders, and accused her of aggressively attacking president biden's record on race and busing in a debate five years ago. >> there's nobody nastier than her. she played the race card at a level that you rarely see, and she really was very nasty to him. and then he picked her, so i don't get that exactly. >> reporter: republicans are eager to define harris on their terms. vice presidential nominee j.d. vance claimed harris lied about president biden's health and questioned her love of country. >> if you want to lead this country, you should feel grateful for it. you should feel a sense of gratitude. and i never hear that gratitude come through when i listen to kamala harris. >> reporter: vance has long criticized democrats. >> we're effectively run in this country by a bunch of childless cat ladies. >> reporter: and often with
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scorn. >> you look at kamala harris, pete buttigieg, aoc. the entire future of the democrats is controlled by people without children. >> reporter: congressional republicans have already made sharp comments alluding to harris' race. >> a lot of democrats feel they have to stick with her because of her ethnic background. >> reporter: tennessee republican tim bur she has used the term dei, which stands for diversity, equity, and inclusion. >> 100% she was a dei hire. >> reporter: dnc chairman jamie harrison says democrats will push back hard. >> we are going to make sure that the american people understand who is the party of intolerance, who is the party that is anti-diversity in this nation. >> reporter: there was a sign of more attacks to come. a house republican filed articles of impeachment against vice president harris, citing the administration's record on immigration. this follows calls for vice president harris to invoke the 25th amendment to remove president biden from office.
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robert costa, cbs news, washington. the justice department now says it is looking into the deadly police shooting of sonja massey. family members accused police of trying to cover up the killing, and cbs's roxana saberi has new information about the former deputy charged with massey's murder. a warning, though, the video here is disturbing to watch. >> it's one of the worst police shooting videos ever. >> reporter: state records obtained by cbs news show sean grayson, a 30-year-old former private first class in the army, work ford five different law enforcement agencies in just under three years before being hired by the sangamon county sheriff's office last year. cbs news has also learned grayson was charged twice with driving under the influence of alcohol in 2015 and 2016. he pleaded guilty both times. ben crump is an attorney for massey's family. >> why was he even hired by the
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sheriff's department? >> reporter: a dui conviction is not a disqualification from law enforcement in illinois. some of massey's family members accused the sheriff's office of trying to initially cover up what happened. now massey's father is demanding sheriff jack campbell resign. >> i think it's a culture to treat this family this bad. if it were not for that camera footage, they'd have lied their way right out of this. so he needs to resign. >> what took you so long to answer the door? >> reporter: this comes a day after the release of body cam video revealing the moments just before grayson shot massey in te face. >> i rebuke you in the name of jesus. >> huh? >> okay. sorry. >> you only watched a little bit of the video. you had to stop. >> yeah. i can't -- i can't finish it. >> reporter: massey's 17-year-old son malachi, and her mother, donna, say they're still in shock. >> it can't be real.
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i don't know how this could be real. i'm sorry. >> reporter: in an email to cbs news, sheriff campbell said he will not be resigning. grayson has been fired by the sheriff's office. he's being held in jail without bond and has pleaded not guilty to the murder charges. roxana saberi, cbs news, springfield, illinois. visitors witnessed a frightening display at wyoming's yellowstone national park on tuesday. a sudden hypothermal explosion sent dozens of people running for safety. it happened in the area called biscuit basin about two miles from old faithful. there were no injuries. when "cbs news roundup" continues, the head of the secret service resigns after the donald trump assassination attempt. small businesses are the heart of america. but you don't have to go it alone. as the nation's largest nonprofit resource of expert, business mentoring. score has helped millions
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♪ this is "cbs news roundup." i'm shanelle kaul in new york. the director of the secret service resigned today one day after admitting the assassination attempt on donald trump was the agency's most significant operational failure in decades. as cbs's scott macfarlane reports, kimberly cheatle drew sharp criticism from both parties. [ sound of gunfire ] >> reporter: ten days after the historic failure in butler, pennsylvania, kimberly cheatle resigned as u.s. secret service director, writing to colleagues, this incident does not define us and that she didn't want to be a distraction. in a statement, president biden said cheatle had shown incredible integrity. >> i take full responsibility for any security lapse. >> reporter: a nearly 30-year veteran of the agency and director since september ta2022
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cheatle frustrated a u.s. house panel, declining to answer questions about what went wrong. >> i lost all confidence in her in that hearing. >> reporter: more revelations today. the pennsylvania state police commissioner revealed two local police snipers were posted with a view of the roof used by the gunman but left their posts to search for him and that a local officer came face to face with the shooter minutes before the gunman pulled the trigger. >> it was minutes. it was a very short period of time. >> but not seconds? >> i would say minutes. >> reporter: despite that encounter and rally goers pointing out thomas crooks on the roof, he was still able to open fire, killing one and wounding three others, including former president donald trump, who posted on social media, the biden/harris administration did not properly protect me. for john abel who was seated steps from trump at the podium, it was warranted. >> i think it was a slap in the face for everybody who was there that their safety was put on the
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line from their lack of competence. >> reporter: and acting director ron rowe will lead the agency in the meantime. the u.s. house has launched a bipartisan task force to investigate the assassination attempt with the secret service's own internal review expected to last two more months. scott macfarlane, cbs news, the capitol. the department of transportation is now investigating how delta airlines is treating its customers affected by the global tech outage that grounded planes around the world. for a fifth straight day, delta canceled hundreds of flights while most other u.s. airlines resumed normal operations. cbs's kris van cleave has more. >> reporter: inside delta's mega hub in atlanta, the airline is still struggling. more than 5,400 flights have been canceled since friday. that's also how long bradley ripple has been trying to get out of there. >> the delays have been one after the other, and then it gets canceled every night. >> reporter: at new york's laguardia airport, tiffany osborn and her 13-year-old
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daughter olivia were stuck since saturday. they're finally headed home to birmingham. >> offer something. offer a snack, a meal, something. but we had -- we had nothing. >> reporter: after more than 3,000 complaints, the department of transportation is hoping its investigation will provide answers and accountability. >> we are concerned about how the outcomes for passengers on delta seem to be so different from what we're seeing across the airline industry. >> reporter: transportation secretary pete buttigieg. >> stories of people in lines, 100 people with one customer service agent serving them at an airport. that's completely unacceptable. >> reporter: and the fallout from the crowdstrike outage isn't limited to air travel. the backlog includes hospitals and courts. the company has more than 29,000 global clients. thousands of medical computers remain offline in california. in ohio, county government offices are also lagging behind. >> we have a couple, so we're
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limping along. >> reporter: d.o.t. some half million flyers have been impacted by the meltdown. delta's president says it could be thursday or friday before things are back to normal. a growing number of lawmakers are sharply critical of the customer service response, particularly around refunds. kris van cleave, cbs news, los angeles. there's a lot more just there's a lot more just ahead on "cbs news roundup." talenti salted caramel truffle layers, with creamy salted caramel gelato. -bradley. -it's cookies. -i can see the cookies, the jar is see-through. -i knew that. -i knew you knew that. talenti. raise the jar. inez, let me ask you, you're using head & shoulders, right? only when i see flakes. then i switch back to my regular shampoo. you should use it every wash, otherwise the flakes will come back. he's right, you know. is that tiny troy? the ingredients in head & shoulders keep the microbes that cause flakes at bay. microbes, really? they're always on your scalp... but good news, there's no itchiness, dryness or flakes down here. i love tiny troy. and his tiny gorgeous hair.
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♪ an endangered reptile on the brink of extinction is poised for a comeback. 60 critically endangered siamese crocodiles recently hatched over the last month in the mountains of cambodia. cbs's leah mishkin has more on the conservation work that brought about this big win for wildlife. >> reporter: at a national park in cambodia, conservationists are making their way to a specific site. five nests of critically endangered siamese crocodles were found here in may. >> this is the biggest recorded breeding event for this species this century. >> reporter: the cambodian director of the conservation group fauna and flora says the hatchlings were left in the wild, letting nature take the lead with the mothers protecting their babies. conservationists are staying close by, keeping guard, even covering the nest with leaves to camouflage them from predators. 60 eggs successfully hatched in june. data shows there are only about
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1,000 siamese crocodiles in the world. >> the siamese crocodile was considered to be extinct in the wild only a couple of decades ago. >> reporter: he says these hatchlings are significant for the recovery of the species. leah mishkin, cbs news, london. and now to humans worldwide also finding it more difficult to survive as temperatures rise and climates change, increasing the number of floods and wildfires. a new survey finds this new reality is impacting the mental health of americans. cbs's michael george has more. >> reporter: it's been a summer filled with extreme heat, storms, and wildfires, all events that have been increasing in recent years. jordanance bury says climate change is on her mind. >> it is stressful because it's like what is this going to look like in 10 years, in 20 years? if i want to have kids one day, like what are they going to go through? >> reporter: more than half of adults say climate change is impacting their mental health,
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up from 48% in 2022 according to the american psychiatric association. >> individuals are worried about climate change, and that's what we think most about in terms of how it affects mental health. but it also affects it in a number of other ways. we know that there are direct impacts of heat on the brain. we see that the rate of suicides and violent crimes go up during heat waves. >> reporter: dr. joshua wart sell is chair of the apa's committee on climate change and mental health. >> then there are the trauma effects of natural disasters from climate change and our distress about what we're seeing in the world around us. >> reporter: the survey also shows more than half of americans are anxious about the way the government is dealing with the climate change issue. >> they can definitely speak to a mental health provider. if they're feeling particularly distressed, if this is affecting their thoughts of wanting to live or their more immediate well-being, they should certainly seek out emergency mental health care. >> reporter: robert rosso says the recent heat waves are taking
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a toll. >> it stresses me out because it almost feels like the embodiment of the whole climate change think. it's here. >> reporter: younger people, black, and hispanic people are more likely to cite the effects of climate change on their mental health. michael george, cbs news, new york. i'm jonathan lawson, here to tell you about life insurance through the colonial penn program. if you're age 50 to 85 and looking to buy life insurance on a fixed budget, remember the three p's. what are the three p's? the three p's of life insurance on a fixed budget are price, price, and price. a price you can afford, a price that can't increase, and a price that fits your budget. i'm 54. what's my price? you can get coverage for $9.95 a month. i'm 65 and take medications. what's my price? also $9.95 a month. i just turned 80. what's my price? $9.95 a month for you too.
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if you're age 50 to 85, call now about the #1 most popular whole life insurance plan available through the colonial penn program. options start at $9.95 a month. no medical exam, no health questions. your acceptance is guaranteed. and this plan has a guaranteed lifetime rate-lock, so your rate can never go up for any reason. so call now for free information, and you'll also get this free beneficiary planner. and it's yours free just for calling, so call now for free information. most americans are enjoying a break from extreme heat this week, but in these dog days of summer, still enjoying a dip in
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the pool. but spending time in chlorinated water can impact your skin and hair. cbs's danya bacchus has more on how to prevent those issues. >> reporter: swimming is a way to cool off on these hot days. but spending all that time in the water can affect your hair and skin. as an avid swimmer, barbara notices a difference. >> my hair, of course it turned very blonde over the years of not wearing a cap and just in the chlorine all the time. >> reporter: that's because the chlorine that disinfects a pool and keeps the water looking crystal clear can also be very drying. >> it dries out your hair. it dries out your skin. it strips away your natural oils, which, again, is drying and also irritating to the body. >> reporter: cleveland clinic dermatologist dr. jennifer lucas says that can lead to a skin rash known as irritant contact dermatitis. >> mainly skin that looks red, flaky, irritated, sore. and really the way to combat that is again to give yourself back that moisture. put on a product that gives you back the oils that have been
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stripped from you. if it's really irritating, you can also use in hide row cortisone cream. >> reporter: there are some things you can do to prevent the effects, like get your hair and skin wet before you get in the pool. >> so that it doesn't absorb the pool water but instead absorb that more fresh water, can also help minimize that irritation and dryness. >> reporter: be sure to rinse off as soon as you get out of the pool as well to get the chemicals off the body. barbara does what she can to protect her skin and hair. >> putting that care into yourself is extremely important. >> rporter: dr. lucas says don't forget your sunscreen, which protects from the sun's harmful rays and also keeps skin moisturized and acts as a barrier against the chemicals in the pool. "cbs news roundup" will be right back.
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