tv CBS This Morning CBS June 6, 2013 7:00am-9:01am PDT
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i can't. >> i love animals but that animal is getting nowhere near my house. captions by: caption colorado comments@captioncolorado.com good morning to our viewers in the west. thursday, june 6, 2013. welcome to "cbs this morning." a secret government program is tracking your phone calls, and what is the national security agency looking for? rescuers pull out a survivor 13 hours after a building collapse in philadelphia. california gets ready to meet china's president and the colorful first lady. the powerball mystery solved. an 84-year-old great grandmother is america's biggest lottery winner. >> first, a look at today's eye opener your world in 90 seconds. feels outstanding to be able to pull somebody alive. >> rescues in the rubble of a
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collapsed philadelphia building. >> a 61-year-old woman survived for 13 hours. >> a building being demolished came crashing down. >> six people confirmed dead in the collapse of the four-story building. london's the guardian newspaper reports that the national security administration is secretly collecting information from verizon calls. >> a top secret court order in late april allowed them to collect the data through july. >> i want some kind of criminal sanctions against anybody who used this information for anything except counterterrorism. first named storm of the season headed to florida's west coast. forecasters think it will hit this afternoon. mystery solved. 84-year-old gloria mackenzie come forward as the winner of the $590 million jackpot. >> she won the lottery?
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that sweet little old lady won the lottery. >> paris jackson hospitalized after a suicide attempt. a minivan crossed four lanes of traffic and slams into a taco bell. and the bruins win 2-1 in double o.t. >> you are putting words into my mouth. stop that. are you putting words in my mouth, stop it. >> all that matters. >> frank lautenberg funeral services held. vice president biden among those who gave eulogies. >> my wife says i'm the most on obnoxious grandfather in the world. no frank was the most obnoxious grandfather in the world. and tiger woods about ready to start a new deal with nike.
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the new slogan? just do it, but do it more discreetly. >> good morning, charlie. >> stories out of washington, new evidence that the obama administration unprecedented security efforts, the national security agency is keeping track of the telephone records of millions of americans. >> are britain's guardian got copies of a secret court order. >> reporter: confirmation from the obama administration that surveillance powers sometimes sweeping and incriminate, carried out by the bush administration are carried out possibly with more vigor by this administration. that guardian story is largely correct. in april there was an order issued by the foreign intelligence surveillance court to seek from a subsidiary of the verizon communications
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corporation, millions of phone logs on a daily basis in a counterterrorism strategy the administration this morning is defending. i want to read a statement about this entire matter. on its face the order reprinted in the article does not allow the government to listen in on anyone's telephone calls. the information acquired doesn't include content of any communications or the name of any subscriber. it relates exclusively to meta data, such as the telephone number or the length of a call. now, what this order also does is track that meta data for phone calls in america, and phone calls going to foreign nations, covered by this order. the administration official tells cbs news that all of this is done in accordance with procedures done at the foreign intelligence affairs court. and it comports with all civil
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liberties, but that doesn't mean this won't start a firestorm. >> why is the government doing this now? >> well just to set some ground rules. this was not a program i was involved in or if it was, i wouldn't be able to talk about it but in principal, why they do things like this. when you run data against data you get more results. meta data is data about data. so if you are watching 1,000 suspected terrorist numbers in pakistan and afghanistan, and you want to mix that against a particular threat three of them in the united states, does a terrorist have a kous nin chicago or that there is a cell in the united states? to collect that data in bulk and run searches against it you can get a lot of information back that can show you whether there is a piece of xhunzcommunication or
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network as major said the key is not content, they are not dealing with names but numbers. >> what about the skepticism that they are not listening to communications. do you think americans believe them? >> anybody at the nsa knows if they are listening in on american citizens without a special order they are going to jail. they are the most conservative agency about that probably of any, sometimes to a fault. >> thank you so much john. death toll risen to six after a building collapse in downtown philadelphia. 14 others hurt. some of them trapped for hours, a collapsed building fell on top of a salvation army thrift store. nicole brewer is at the scene. good morning. >> a tense day on market street. the building behind me came down, search and rescuers went in and searched for survivors. good news came late last night as the 14th survivor was found.
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13 hours after the abandoned building collapse, a 61-year-old woman pulled out, alive. >> feels outstanding to be able & to pull somebody alive. >> reporter: emergency response teams are still unsure of how many people were inside the structure when it gave way and will continue to scour the area. >> we have diligently gone through the area, we are taking our time a little at a time. >> michael nutter spoke at a press conference late wednesday night. >> and they will find them. and they are skilled in their work, but this is dangerous. >> reporter: around 10:30 wednesday morning, the vacant building came down with a roar. debris toppled on an adjacent salvation army store. >> people ran across the street screaming, people in the building we heard them scream. we went over to the building, said can you hear us can you
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hear us? say something. >> reporter: bystanders rushed to help those inside. more than 100 rescue workers arrived to transport the injured to local hospitals. people who were shopping in the think of the store pinned beneath walls and buried beneath rubble. there is concern about how the building is being demolished. no violations filed against the construction company and there were proper working permits. a call placed by cbs news to the construction company went unanswered. what was once a four-story building flattened in all of 30 00 seconds. >> this is a tough day here in the city of philadelphia. but we're a pretty tough city. quite resilient. >> reporter: at this point search and recovery has been su suspended. they did not say why or when
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work will resume. charlie and norah, back to up. first named storm of the atlantic season. tropical storm andrea heading toward south florida. 60 60-mile-an-hour wind. tornado and flood warnings issued. david bernard tracking the storm. where do we expect a lot of trouble? >> a lot of the trouble this morning, right across the state of florida. this will run most of the east coast, and rain will be the biggest factor. in fact. we look at clouds and radar. one strong band and another onshore. tornado warning in effect for most of the state as well. the latest advisory has this as a strong storm. 60 miles per hour. 220 miles southwest. moving north/northeast. tonight, it moves onshore, early tomorrow morning, through southeastern georgia to charleston. and the mid-atlantic coast. tomorrow, this will turn this
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into an area of low pressure as it moves off east of new york it looks like. there is rainfall potential. and coastal areas could see as much as five inches of rain in some locations. >> david bernard, thanks. top irs officials answer more questions from congress. a "the new york times" poll on the scandal just came out. 68% of the americans say that the irs targeted conservative groups for political reasons. 40% think the irs acted on its own and 44% think the obama administration was involved. nancy cordes on capitol hill. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the hearing got underway a half an hour ago, and yesterday, the irs announced that two employees were being placed on administrative leave and could lose their jobs in connection with overspending at one conference in 2010. the conference cost 4.1$4.1 million
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and took place in anaheim, california. a stone's throw from disney land. some managers snagged upgrades to lavish suites listed at $1500 per more. a catered party in one of those suites could cost two irs employees their jobs. food was allegedly inappropriate provided, free of charge in violation of government ethics standards. the two are frederick schindler, and dana yadaniel todaya based in california. at today's oversight committee hearing, why the irs spent $50,000 to produce videos for the conference. >> make it easy. >> reporter: including this one, showing employees line dancing. >> and this one, featuring ferris fink playing spock in a spoof of "star trek." he reportedly stayed in one of the pricey suites and will face
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lawmakers at the hearing today. >> this is an agency that is out of control. >> reporter: ohio jim jordan one of the employee's top republicans. >> they didn't even keep receipts. if you get audited by the irs and don't keep receipts? you are in trouble. >> the gsa prompted the white house to enter an order, restricting conference and travel budgets. irs travel budget slashed 87%. do you think this is going on anymore at the irs? >> no, no no no no. >> reporter: elijah cummings is the tom democrat. >> i don't want to get involved in the politics particularly on something that is already addressed and miss making new policies that will effectively prevent it from happening again. >> both congressmen say they assume this kind of overspending was going on at just about every agency until the conference rules were changed. they say a climate had been
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created, norah and charlie, where people thought it was okay to spend taxpayer money in this way. >> wow. nancy cordes thank you. army staff sergeant robert bales has pleaded guilty to killing 16 in afghanistan, including 9 children. the murders were premeditated and could not explain his actions and many of his victims as we mentioned, were women and children. his lawyer says bales is sorry. >> he knows he can't take backs what been done but he wants to bring closure as much as possible to this tragedy. >> bales served four tours in afghanistan and you are rack and suffered post-traumatic stress disorder. he will face life in prison instead of a possible death expense in a plea deal. avandia, top diabetes drugs in the world, but then suspended
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after it was shown it could raise the risk of heart attack. the agency may reverse those restrictions. >> dr. jon la pook is here. where are they now revisiting this issue? >> you have to go back to 2007 when a prominent cardiologist showed there was an increased risk of heart attack. two years later, the drug company that makes avandia published its own study showing no increase in risk. but a lot of people including those within the fda, said this was not a well-designed study. next year 2010, the ffrp dda voted to severely limit it's use. they asked glaxo to fund analysis, readjudication by an outside party at duke to look at it again and found no increased risk. >> if, in fact the fda's
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success would convince them that this drug is safe will doctors start prescribing it again? >> i don't think so. people say have you a study flawed, and you are looking at the same flawed data again and getting the same conclusion. there used to be millions in prescription, now about 3,000 people taking the drug. there are other medications that treat diabetes well. i don't think it will come back as a big diabetes drug. >> an interesting story. thank you very much. the winner of a record $590 million powerball jackpot has stepped forward, and she's 84 years old and lives in florida. and manuel bjorquez reports, she is thanking a fellow ticket buyer for good luck. >> reporter: gloria mackenzie didn't say a word as she walk
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out of florida lottery headquarters in tampa motels earlier, claimed the biggest prize in u.s. history. >> the winnings in a one-time lump sum penalty. >> reporter: after taxes, she'll take home more than $270 million. macken sfwlooe mackenzie's only public comment. >> while in line at publix, another lottery player kind enough to let me go ahead of them in line to purchase the winning quick pic ticket. >> mindy crandall claims she was the customer that let a half a billion down the way. >> maybe there was something down the road maybe she needed it more than we did, she was meant to have it. >> reporter: she retired to
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maine with her husband who retired in 2005. at her modest home neighbors were shocked and thrilled. >> she's a sweet little old lady who tries to -- just trying to live is all. and she won the lottery? >> reporter: mackenzie a mother, grandmother and great grandmother plans on splitting the winnings with her son. for "cbs this morning," manuel bjorquez florida. >> mindy crandall let this woman cut in line. very gracious about it. maybe it was meant to be. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. the telegraph says south korea held north korea's offer to hold talks. she want to discuss issues on the complex was shut down. the wall street journal says
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leon panetta accidentally revealed top secret information to the screen write every for "zero dark thirty" in a private 2011 speech he identified the ground commander of that raid. the screen writer was invited as a guest to be in the audience. panetta later assumed everybody in the audience was cleared to hear that speech. "usa today" looks at problems found days before a train derailment in connecticut. an inspection found a rail joint with inadequate support. it was not deemed an immediate problem. the los angeles times says michael jackson's daughter is physically fine. 15-year-old paris jackson, rushed to a hospital early yesterday. paris had tried to commit suicide. paris' attorney says she is getting appropriate medical attention. and "the new york times" looks at the earliest well preserved primate fossil ever found it fits in the palm of
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your hand some 55 million years old. 8 million older than the oldest if you're just getting up we have low clouds and fog around much of the bay area this morning. cloudy skies. the temperatures running in the 50s at this hour but clouds going to break up a little bit earlier. warm day moving well into the 80s inland. 50s for the coast. next couple of days we crank up the heat some spots inland near 100 degrees and everybody cools down and more clouds on monday. ir.
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a 10-year-old patient gets the news that could save her life. >> whoo! >> a judge decides sarah murnaghan should be on the same list as adults for a lung transplant. >> it's age discrimination as the rule was. the judge today saw that and has given us the opportunity to be on equal playing ground sarah, as adults. >> after heavy criticism the tsa dropped the plan to let
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passengers carry small knives. john miller has more. he shows us why this change could be a big mistake. and the susan g. komen foundation has called off several fushld raisers. what's happening to one of the biggest charlts. stay tuned for your local news. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by reese's pieces. perfectly fun. [ female announcer ] what makes you walk a little taller? it begins with your skin. venus & olay -- gently exfoliates with 5 blades.
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ask your doctor if you live in or have been to a region where certain fungal infections are common. tell your doctor if you have had tb, hepatitis b are prone to infections, or have symptoms such as fever fatigue, cough, or sores. you should not start humira if you have any kind of infection. ask your doctor if humira can work for you. this is humira at work. my dad can't fly. he doesn't have heat vision, or even wear a cape. he doesn't battle evil villains. and he can't save the universe. he doesn't have super-human strength... he's just super, because he's my dad here's to the original superman, from sears and shop your way. you call yourself a suds-maker? i need a new recruit! dawn? you won't last. [ female announcer ] a drop of dawn has active suds that stay stronger longer so you can clean
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u-c san fran this is a kpix5 news morning update. >> good morning. it's 7:26. san francisco doctors are keeping a close watch over matthew, the 2-year-old whose recovering from a 12 hour operation to replace his failing liver and kidneys. president obama flies into the bay area for two private fund raisers and spend the night in san jose where he plans a public speech on health care tomorrow morning. the accrediting commission is meeting to discuss the school's financial problems and decide whether to drop their accredit case. stay with us for traffic and weather in just a moment.
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good morning we want to tell you about an accident blocking two lanes. and we're watching developing news with folks waking up with a water main break at jones street, a residential neighborhood. a check of traffic, for more on your forecast. >> drizzle outside this morning. don't be fooled. we have a warmer day ahead as high pressure is going to be building throughout the day and we'll see more sunshine as we head in throughout the afternoon. 50s outside by the afternoon though. 80s in the valley. 60s and 70s around the bay and a lot of 60s. still patchy fog. the next couple of days getting hot inland. 60s, low 70s towards the coast.
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. in 2009 governor christie commented on what he would ask and this is true if frank lautenberg dies. of course they wouldn't. christie said a special election for october 16th. >> what are you up to christie? >> the governor wants to keep winner booker off the ballot. >> that's just an abuse of corrupt power. i miss new jersey so much. >> and it's going to cost $20 million. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour a course correction for the tsa.
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they have given up its plan to allow small knives on its airliner airliners. and america's leading breast cancer charity is cancel some of its best known fund-raisers. we're going to see how they're reacting to a string of recent controversy. but first an update to a story we brought you yesterday. a 10-year-old girl with cystic fibrosis definitely need as lung transplant. a judge's decision gives her a better chance. terrell brown is at children's hospital in philadelphia. terrell, good morning. >> reporter: norah, good morning. sarah murnaghan has been in the hospital for three months. her parents told her recently if shedy not get a lung transplant she would only have weeks to live. that was sarah murnaghan
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yesterday after she found out she could get on an adult lung transplant list. she would have just weeks to live and no time for a pediatric donor. >> we reached out to our friends. >> reporter: last month sarah's parents took action filing suit. >> we didn't realize it would become this. >> reporter: this was congressman pleading with u.s. secretary of health and human services kathleen sebelius at a capitol hill hearing tuesday to step in and change the law. >> why wouldn't we do it. >> why do we do so much bull grab around this place and we have a chance to save someone's life and because of some kind of -- >> 40 people in your home state are waiting on a -- sir, there are 40 people in the highest acuity list waiting for a lung
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in pennsylvania. >> reporter: the ruling grants sarah a 10-day exemption. >> i can't be sure how quickly she'll get a lung but she has a high list. we've had six patients who were listed for transplants in the same day get transplants, so it is possible. >> reporter: dr. sonnet said sarah won't be jumping anyone in line. >> what her case, what they may be able to take is take an adult lung and take the bomb or half and put it in the side of her. >> reporter: a set of lungs that could add years to sarah's life. >> do you see yourself as trailblazer? >> no. i see myself as a parent advocating for my child. >> it doesn't necessarily mean that sarah will get that lung
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transplants. 31 of them are sarah's agent or younger. charlie, norah? >> thank you. now to a change in plans for the transportation safety administration. in march the tsa announced that it would let airline passengers bring small knives onto planes. after barrage of criticism, the agency is cracking down. john miller is back. he's a former fbi assistant director again. tell me what the ration wall was in the first place for annoying knives back? was it criticism or did they acknowledge they made a mistake. >> >> it's a complicate process. i think by backing off, they're putting passengers more at risk. let's take a look at what they were going to allow that they're not now. these were knives and we've got graphic, that were less than 2.36 inches long the thing you
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find on the edge of a corkscrew, not with a locking blade. the kind you might use to cut off the thread of your suit but you wouldn't bring to a knife fight. they've allowed the same knives to go through their security. 5 billion passengers have passed through. there's not been one report of an incident. >> okay. but why allow these knives when the 911 hijackers had knives box cutters. >> okay. because there are knives and there are knives. these f there are still those that would be hoe pribted. even just 2.36 inches long that have a serrated blade, locking blade, the kind you would use in an attack. here's the real reason norah. the tsa aeligibilities get
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points for finding items. they spend so much time and effort looking for this which is a knife in a money clip that doesn't have a locking blade that you wouldn't do well to attack somebody with. and while they're this they're not looking for the item that's actually going to bring down an aircraft? >> such as? >> the explosives such as the tatp that's going to be hidden in an i fad. what they want to do is load for things inside things regardless of what the thing is that don't belove there. if you see a thousand dvd players today and you see one that has a mysterious shadow in the, ray, that's what they're looking for. the tests show when the inspectors are looking for tiny
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knives, when they do that they miss the bombs. >> back to my original question is. that the reason that the tsa was wanting to change the rules in the first place because they wanted to focus on things that were more likely? >> if somebody acts up on a plane, the passengers are going to stop them the crew is going to stop them. i don't care if they have a tiny knife or not. even if it's the pilot, they're going to take them down sofrm they were thanking the front yard is going to have to to the test. sometimes they'll proproject a bomb in a base the alarm will go off saying, congrat lalgs.
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they were first victims of 911. they before culled wi niefrs but it's changes. >> no nooifrs. >> >> no knives. i've got three of them. i'm going to go knock off 7-eleven. >> just kidding. >> just kidding. sorry, 7-eleven. >> susan g. komen is now canceling charity walking eventing all across the country. one of them is in washington and jan crawford is there at the national mall. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the economy has been down so people don't have as much money to spend. now it's really scaling back one of its signature fund-raising events. for the past decade, the susan
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g. coleman three-day walk has attracted people from across the country. >> 22-year survivor. >> whoo-hoo! >> reporter: all committed to raising money for breast cancer. >> ifky walk 60 miles, i can make it another 60 years. >> but participation has dropped more than a third in the last four years forcing it to cancel the walk next year in half of the 14 cities. since starting in 2003 the three-day 60-mile walk has rads $740 million for breast cancer research. in a statement the organization said economic uncertainty over the past four years played a role making it more difficult for people to donate. but the group also has struggled to move beyond last year's controversy when they announced they would no longer award
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grants to breast cancer screening the planned parenthood, which means aboorkss. she bowed to political pressure from the right. komen was eventually forced to apologize which angered proponents. >> they step odden a land mine they fully didn't anticipate. >> controversy is whether they're rightly deserved or wrongly deserved. always cause a little hesitancy on the part of donors and they may step back and examine, all right, what's going on with this charity. >> reporter: now the foundation is stressing it's another going to make changes to its flagship
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race, the race for the cure. and the chinese have a new diplomatic weapon and she's coming to the u.s. this week. we'll introduce you to china's first lady. that's next on "cbs this morning." if you have moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis, like me, and you're talking to your rheumatologist about trying or adding a biologic. this is humira, adalimumab. this is humira working to help relieve my pain. this is humira helping me through the twists and turns. this is humira helping to protect my joints from further damage. doctors have been prescribing humira for over ten years. humira works by targeting and helping to block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to ra symptoms. for many adults, humira is proven to help relieve pain
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and stop further joint damage. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal events, such as infections, lymphoma or other types of cancer have happened. blood, liver and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions and new or worsening heart failure have occurred. before starting humira , your doctor should test you for tb. ask your doctor if you live in or have been to a region where certain fungal infections are common. tell your doctor if you have had tb, hepatitis b are prone to infections, or have symptoms such as fever fatigue, cough, or sores. you should not start humira if you have any kind of infection. ask your doctor if humira can work for you. this is humira at work. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ [ female announcer ] one day it will hit you. by replacing one sugared beverage a day with a bottle of nestle pure life water
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you offer to share them. a conversation begins. that's pretty smart. i been around. [ male announcer ] 20 piece chicken mcnuggets only $4.99 just one of the awesome tastes available only on mcdonald's new extra value menu. the simple joy of being extra smart. this morning in california president obama begins two days of talks with china's new president. it's the first since he became the leader in march but the california spotlight may be on his wife. as seth doane reports she's a new kind of first lady for china. >> reporter: before he was china's president, his wife was china's star. from the u.n. now china's first lady was first a famous folk singer with a 30-year career.
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in 2011 she performed at the great mall of the people home to china's legislature. her song so stuck with a student they inspired a serenade. ♪ >> reporter: and you remember listening to it as a kid? >> yeah. i think most of us from our generation remember that. >> reporter: at this peking university human relations class madame peng. >> the first lady is so important and gets into the heart of the general public. >> reporter: fan pages can be found on line and this diva turned diplomat grabs almost as much attention as her husband on official trips. on a recent foreign mission to moscow, the coat she wore and the bag that she carried sent internet users abusezz. the items popped up for sale
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with websites touting the same style as the first lady. the now 50-year-old singer was once a soldier. she joined the china's people's liberation army and rose up the ranks as major general. this photo allegedly shows the future first lady serenading troops in tiananmen square after the bloody crackdown in 1989. the picture manycture many chinese had hoped to see with their first lady next to americans. that will not happen this week as mrs. obama will stay in washington, d.c. leaving madame peng solo. for "cbs this morning," seth doane, beijing. >> this could be a very historic meeting. >> yes. and some are saying too bad she can't make it. she's very popular in china. she
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we're going to break up the clouds. it's going to be a warmer day outside. numbers running mainly in the 50s. by the afternoon get ready for warmer temperatures. highs in the 80s inland. 60s and 70s around the bay. next cup of days going to get hot in spots in the valley. some of those temperatures near 100 degrees friday and saturday. more clouds on sunday. sterday. entertainment tonight's nancy o'dell has spoken with paris jackson's mom and the jackson family. we'll talk to nancy. that's ahead on "cbs this morning."
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we went out and asked people a simple question: how old is the oldest person you've known? we gave people a sticker and had them show us. we learned a lot of us have known someone who's lived well into their 90s. and that's a great thing. but even though we're living longer, one thing that hasn't changed much is the official retirement age. ♪ ♪ the question is how do you make sure you have the money you need to enjoy all of these years. ♪ ♪ it starts with little things. tiny changes in the brain. little things anyone can do. it steals your memories. your independence. ensures support a breakthrough. and sooner than you'd like. sooner than you'd think. you die from alzheimer's disease. we cure alzheimer's disease.
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every little click, call or donation adds up to something big. you know costco has these rock bottom prices but they pay really good wages. how do they make money and why are they so successful? that's ahead on "cbs this morning." capella university understands businesses are trying to come back from rough economic times.
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the good morning everyone. it's 7:56. i'm michele. the white house supports the government's tracking of cell phone calls. millions of verizon customers -- it does not include the actual conversations or text. president barack obama is in the bay area casting in. he'll spend the night in san jose and give a speech on his health care plan tomorrow morning. stay with us. traffic and weather in just a moment.
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[ both ] we're foodies. [ both laughing ] but our plants were starving. [ man ] we love to eat. we just didn't know that our plants did, too. then we started using miracle-gro liquafeed every two weeks. now our plants get the food they need while we water. dinner's ready. come and get it. no one goes hungry in this house. so they're bigger, healthier, and more beautiful. guaranteed. with miracle-gro anyone can have a green thumb. and a second helping. [ both laughing ] when you feed your plants... everyone grows with miracle-gro.
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good morning. let's start off with a live look. there's been a collapsed debris in lanes. westbound. we're hearing of delays as far back as the 880 interchange. it looks like a flat section of the bridge okay now. police activity 16th street mission's. there's ten minute delays in all direction. that's traffic. here's lauren. >> plenty of fog to start out this morning. we'll see a lot of sunshine for the afternoon. you can see clouds a little bit broken. dip inside the bay, it's damp there. temperatures now in the 50s. as we head towards the afternoon hours these numbers are going to sore today. much up into the inland. next couple of days getting hot
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♪ good morning, gayle, good morning, charlie. good morning, everybody. it's 8:00 a.m. in the west. welcome back to "cbs this morning." the white house says it's critical to monitor millions of your phone calls it's also illegal thanks to a secret court order. michael jackson's daughter is back in the hospital after a suicide attempt. nancy o'dell is telling us what the family is saying. kneel patrick harris and julius erving will be right here in studio 57. first, here's a look at "eye opener" at 8:00. >> surveillance powers offered 9/11 carried out by the bush administration are now being carried out with more vigor by
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this station. >> the national security agency is keeping track of phone records of millions of american. sflp do you mink americans believe we're just rubbing data against data? >> it better not be. nerve at the msa knows that they're not listening without rules. the 14th survivor was found. >> a lot of the trouble this morning is right across the state of florida. this is going to run most of the east coast. >> this is simply unacceptable and absolutely unnecessary. >> this morning's hearing focuses on wasteful spend big the irs. >> the judge's ruling doesn't necessarily mean that sarah will get that lung transplant but it does help her chances. >> after a record two weeks, the winner of powerball jackpot. >> the 84-year-old would have come forward sooner but the last two weeks she's been driving
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hope from the store they bought the ticket in. [ laughter ] ♪ i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. the issue of your privacy is front and center this morning. the white house is defending a sweeping program that secretly collects telephone records from millions of americans. a court order allows the national security agency to track millions of verizon customers. >> the rule wag reportedly was issued in april the program runs through july 19th and it gives the agency access to the phone numbers of both parties and the location data. the nsa is not allowed to record the contents of any conversations. >> late last night, rescuers in philadelphia pulled a 14th survivor from rubble after a building collapsed. the 61-year-old woman was critically hurt. she was pulled out 14 hours later after a building fell next door. six people have been killed.
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neighbors who watch them working say they feared something like this would happen. stocks are up this morning after yesterday's dive. the dow jones industrials fell 217 points. it is the first time since may 6th the dow has closed below 15,000. isn't is it indicative of the economy or just wall street. mellody hobson joins us right now. >> good morning. >> good morning. it's not one thing. it's a bunch of small things. it's vesting, vest evers have been so jittery and nervous every time sets them off. they're worried about the jobs numbers which comes out tomorrow. there's signs of manufacturing contributing contracting since the first time since november. but the big one is what the federal reserve is going to do with the bond-buying program that's been basically in place since 2008 and has been put in place to keep interest rates low
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and spur the economy. there's a lot of nervousness about that. >> mellody, with mortgage rates low, how does that factor into the economy? >> mortgage rates are extremely low. at 4%, $150,000 has a monthly mortgage payment of about $600. that's still incredibly affordable. and i think we'll still see a lot of improvement in housing prices because housing is still very affordable because of those rates. >> do you think the selloff yesterday say sign of things to come? >> i actually don't. i think we have to put in context where we've been. from the market bottom the market is up nearly 100% since this last november the dow is up 2500 points. we've had a huge move. it is not surprising that we see some bumps along the road.
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and i think we will continue to see them during the summer, especial lehr asly if we try to figure out what the fed is going to do. but i believe, bottom line the trajectory will continue to be upward. >> mellody hobson we thank you. michael jackson's daughter paris remains hospitalized this morning. her family says that she's doing fine. but yesterday, according to her mother, she tried to kill herself. paramedics were called to the jackson family home. >> on 20 motrin and cut her arms with a kitchen knife. >> the day before paris posted on twitter "i wonder why tears are so salty." she's a potential with the innocence a wrongful dearth trial against a promoter of her father's last tour. in entertainment tonight, nancy o'dell has known the jackson family for years. nancy joins us this morning. nancy, how does the jackson family explain what's happening to paris. >> well it's difficult for anybody to explain. debbie rowe the biological
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mother is the one that told us that she attempted suicide. when we asked debbie what you were talking about, we asked her was there any through that she was troubled to this extent. debbie hesitated and said she's had a lot going on lately. you can imagine with everything going on with the jacksons that she does indeed have a lot going. a source to the family told us she was very upset about not being allowed to go to a marilyn manson concert taking place in l.a. tonight. of course everybody said that wouldn't have been what drove her to do this to this extreme. katherine jackson also released a statement toys being a sensitive 15-year-old is difficult no matter who you are. it is especially difficult when you lose the person closest to you. paris is physically fine and is getting appropriate medical attention. >> we also spoke with latoya who said they appreciate the
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outpours and love they're asking for privacy. of course, because this is the jackson family, it's going to hard for them to get any kind of privacy. >> nancy i know prince jackson, paris' brother is a special correspondent to "e.t." have you talked to him, how's he doing? >> we reached out to him. i'm sure he's dealing with it too. i can tell you this, when he's on the set of "entertainment tonight" a lot of people speculate can the children lead any normal lives. i will say, he's one of the most level-headed kids you'd that you can to. he recently had a guest appearance on 902 10. he want to be a director he's just so focused. with all the craziness going on he's very level-headed so i'm sure he's there trying to help
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with his sister at this time. >> nancy o'dell thank you. the late senator frank lautenberg received a rare honor on capitol hill. his casket will lie in repose in the senate chamber. at his funeral yesterday, mourners remembered lautenberg for his three decades in congress. vice president joe biden served alongside him for decades. >> if there's a 26 of redundant, i'm it. by the way i'm representing the pope. my wife says i'm the most obnoxious grandfather in the world. no, wrong. frank was the most. i said frank, you're a powerful guy. but i'm human. and, frank, you'll not get another judge in new jersey. frank, look, i think you'll win again if you run. i think even christie will vote for you. [ laughter ] >> lautenberg will be buried tomorrow at arlington national
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cemetery. he was the senate's last world war ii veteran. the night's remarks there, i think more than 40 senators came to his funeral. >> it's nice how joe biden did a lovely tribute and made you laugh during the ceremony. >> celebration of life. >> that's right. the right lighting can help you look your best that even applies to the mona lisa.louvre in paris installed a new lighting system. 34 l.e.d. lights adjust to bring out the painting's natural colors. those colors have faded over time. >> i still can't figure out her enigmatic smile. >> and what is she thinking? >> i'm thinking about the lighting. anybody who works in front of the
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the best of broadway will be the best of broadway will be honored this sunday at the tony awards. the host is neil patrick harris. he's hosting almost everything these days. we'll does him about that and why he loves the idea of turning 40 in a couple weeks. plus all that mattered in 1933, the new air in outdoor entertainment, can you guess what that is? the answer is next on "cbs this morning." we'll be right back. ♪ "cbs this morning." we'll be right back.
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designed to give you the soundest sleep of your life: a sleep number store near you. sleep number. comfort individualized. visit sleepnumber.com to find one of our over 400 sleep number stores nationwide. ]o all that mattered "all that mattered" 08 years ago today, the first drive-in movie theater opened here camden, new jersey. tickets cost 25 cents. the industry boomed after world were ii as more americans bought cars. by 1958, there were 4,000 drive-ins across the country. they were especially popular with teenage couples as shown in
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"grease." today there are fewer than 400 but they're having something as revival. >> i hope they come back. i remember going with my family. i hear they're good for dates. >> yes, they are. >> shall we walk down memory lane? >> you want stories? >> yes i would. yes. i love your stories, charlie rose. i hope they come back. i hope they do. what do you think, norah? >> i never went to a drive-in movie theater. yeah. so i haven't had those experiences. >> you messed something. >> if they come back you can go and take the kids and the husband, too. costco sold more than $320 million worth of toilet paper last year. we all need that. but it barely made a profit on those sales. we'll take you inside costco and find out how it does make a lot of money with those rock-bottom prices. you're watching "cbs this morning." we'll be right back.
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did you know there aren't many places where you can get a lunch for 1$1.50 these days? that's just another reason to go to costco. we're joined at the table. josh, let's talk about costco what makes it so successful other than free samples all around the store. i swear, you can make a meal i know. >> you can make a couple. >> i know. >> people holding little trays. count me among the costco shoppers. >> i heard that. >> yes indeed. >> the success of the place is really interesting. on the one hand it really is the cheapest company in america. it doesn't have stores in the warehouse. it doesn't have shelves.
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it has what's called the steel. the executive offices are pathetic. there's no boardroom tables. >> and long lines. >> series of a bunch of tables. there's no publicity. at the same time it's remarkably generous to its employees. to its customers, cheap is all that matters. to its employees, it pays well. 88% get health care 5% turnover. >> what's the hourly rate. >> they're 2 x $1 on average which in retail is just unbelievable and the theory behind it is if we can keep our employees happy and keep them here, customer service and a lack of turnover is going to make us much more profitable. >> they say that they try and limit price overcost of 15% or less. you say they make a lot of their money from the subscription for the individuals that's more for business. >> yeah. about 88% is from the subscription prices. they try to make it about 14%
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overhead on any of their items. whether it's the 600 ounces of cranberry juice or 700 rolls of toilet paper, they keep it slow. you can use a lot of intellectual energy trying to set a price. >> they seem to be recession peru. they still surged during the recession, did they not? >> that's right. what they also did was they said that their to their employees they were not going to do layoffs or redux. they approved a $3.50 raise. they wanted to keep the people there. there's so much competition that if you lose a customer they have so many place goms not just to sam's club or walmart but to the internet. so one nasty exchange all the way in the back of the story with a surly customer representative, you can loose that person. >> there's something to be said about treating your employees
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well. i do believe they work harder for you and they're more loyal to you. a lot of companies don't do that. a lot of companies don't pay their employees well. >> i think you make the point that costco and other companies that have this employee focused, you know benefits and treat them well, have done better through the recession. >> they absolutely have. again, it's about turnover keeping your talent. maintaining a level of presentation that's important. >> quickly can the costco formula go international? >> they have to go international. for growth, they're looking at japan and tie backaiwantaiwan. they have product issues with different people and places but they're really quite optimistic about it. >> thank you. he was a one-man high light reel on the basketball court. dr. j. is in studio 57.
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michelle griego. another felony charge for former santa clara county it's 8:25. time for news headlines. another felony charge for santa clara county supervisor. the d.a.'s office is charging him with impersonating former san jose city council candidate magdalen that coraskco. his dna was found on a stamp on a fraudulent mailer. it claimed to be from her campaign but showed her photo next to an image of the flag of communist north vietnam. president obama returns to the silicon valley today. air force one will fly into moffitt field this evening. he will attend fundraisers. he will stay overnight in
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extra delays from nevada to san rafael. westbound 80 blocking one lane. slug gibb from her cue -- sluggish from her cue lease. heavy traffic leaving milpitas closer to the lawrence expressway. >> that is one of my favorite roads in the entire bay area. folks around the bay area, low clouds and fog surging on shore. damp to the cost line with drizzle. even inside the bay the clouds will likely break up in most spots. 50s right now. this afternoon 60s and 70s. inside the bay and 80s in the valley. the next couple of days will heat things up. it will get hot on friday and saturday. some temperatures near triple digits in the valley. 60s and 70s toward the coast.
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d.c. j. welcome back to "cbs this morning." wouldn't you like to be in our green room this half hour? take a look. julius erving. there you go. neil patrick harris on the other side and ride in the middle christine quinn. they will all be at the table during the next half hour. michael jordan always said he always wanted to blake like dr. jay. we're looking forward to that. and christine quinn wants to be the first woman to be mayor of new york city. there's a lot coming up here on "cbs this morning." right now it's time to show you this morning's headlines from around the world.
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britain's "telegraph" says veterans have gathered to remember normandy day. they stormed the beaching in normandy to begin the liberation of europe from nazis. more than 9,000 were killed. but the march across europe to defeat hitler had begun, germany surrendered 11 months later. the blaun sun looks at the latest trip to the white house. president obama congratulated the super bowl champs yesterday and had fun with the retired star ray lewis. >> i suspect these guys are wondering what kind of introduction is that? no smoke machine, no fire cannons. obama didn't even tear up chunks of turf and rub them on his suit. >> man that's rough. > which reminds me -- that
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reminds me by the way, please don't do that on the south lawn. >> he has a good sense of humor. that's nice. >> he loves sport shoes yeah he really does. our milwaukee station wdat says a racine couple got a big surprise after adopting their dog bubbles. they told us that the first owner left him a $5,000 inheritance. they plan to use the money to pay for bubble's expenses and perhaps extra grooming. so he comes with an extra gift. >> that's a sweet surprise. dr. j. is in the house. he's widely regarded as a basketball player of his era. as you know michael jordan said he modeled his game after dr. j. on monday night air as new documentary. it's simply called "the doctor."
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>> from umass to the park. it had long been a tall tale more than anything else and now in philadelphia he's about to prove that the hype is real. where'd this guy come from? my god. there was nobody like him. julius was like that bird coming in swooping in. dunking on people. >> we're pleased to have julius erving in. welcome. >> thank you. good to be here. what did you have that enaving you to fly? >> some of that was deception. i always thought with the big hand, to have the ability to move the ball around and once you get elevated if you moved it to the left moved it to the
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right. it seemed like you had it. >> gailt said when is the guy coming down? i never saw anything like that. >> what goes up must come down. >> i never knew you were such a fantastic basketball player. until i saw it, thought, wow. the funny thing when billy crystal said finally a great jewish basketball player. >> he's a fellow long islander. >> urn tillntil i saw the documentary, julius wrrk they had people in the trees and on rooftops watching you play and your nickname, at one point they wanted to call you the claw. you didn't like that. they wanted to call you black moses. >> right? >> so it was doctor because -- >> because i already had the
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name. i was 21. i was going to play on that stage before my first pro season. i said don't call me anything. call me the doctor because my best in high school called me doctor and i had given him the name professor. we graduated high school together went to college together and shared those nicknames. >> why did he call you the doctor? >> he said i had more moves than carter had liver pills an he was called professor because hee liked to argue and he also had to have his way. >> we're going into the nba finals. >> yes, we are. >> how do you see it? >> wow. i see it as blood and guts. it's going to be a tough series. i'm a little partial to san antonio.
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miami is as good as it is. four mvps, a couple of championships. >> do you see yourself in this game? >> there's a piece. when you have tablet. row see that. if it's with the coach's blessing it's fine. without it it's controversy. >> was the greatest joy for you flying over the basket and seeing someone who was tough and going right over him and dunk the ball? >> charlie, the bigger they are the harder they fall. i love dunking on big guys. who wants to dunk on little guys. >> there's a guy, i know he's famous. he said all i could do is hold
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my head down and let him go over me, i had no choice. who was that? >> michael cooper. the two nemesis that i had in my early years, joe caldwell pogo joe, played with the carolina cougars, arizona guy. i actually saw him last month out in arizona. i could still fill his hand penetrateing my ribs. and my teammate. they said he's the guy who defends you best so maybe we'll make you his teammate. >> your son said you were still creating your legacy. what do you want that to be when you look at your life and how much influence you had on so many people? >> well important for me was never to be ego-driven managing
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your brand is the big thing now who i trust and who i love and care about me. i asked them to make my life easy. >> michael is an owner. any aspirations to own? >> no. that's not a move -- you know i've had opportunities say in the last ten years and went through the drill, went through the process with a couple of different franchises. i'm really glad that it didn't materialize. you know i just don't want to be a physician of writing a check at the end of the year you know subsidize the losses. that's the best about it for many many franchises. >> julius it was really great to take a look at your life. it was really poignant. you talk about the death of your son and your brother and how they affected you and the moves
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of your continuing success. >> thank you. i appreciate that. we talked about, gayle, keep the carrot out in front of you. the best things are always ahead of you. >> and i like carrots. thank you. neil patrick harris, he's a doctor too. a doctor of a different type. doctor jay of awards. he's got a big birthday coming
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will it be better than the irs line dancing? >> here's hoping. >> will it be better than that? are you bruised? >> yeah. yesterday is a pretty physical day. the bee con theater, a movie house uptown because a cirque du soleil show. now we're back at radio city. ite's giant space and we're trying to honor the giant space with an opening number that's pretty epic. a lot of people a lot of fragmented rehearsals which causes physical duress. >> what else can we expect? >> well you know the tonys, i think, as a show is one of the best around because's got 12 13, 14 performance bus they're not ones that are happening one time. they're performances by shoes happening eight times a week. they're desperate for millions to see them do it. >> and you're an executive
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producer this time. you want to be actively involved. >> i just wanted the credit. >> no, no no. >> you're awesome? >> no. i didn't want to have to walk into it -- i wanted to have a little more creative control and the group we're doing it with, white cherriyy yentertainment has done it for your 14 years so they're expert. it is massive. you have to have each show with each cast with their own sets owen sound design, everything. it has to be on deck and within commercial break, does the entire thing like pippen with acrobats and as soon as they're off, awards are being presented. it's just massive factory in the back. >> you've become kind of the it guy when it comes to hosting with the tonys and all the other
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award shows. >> i understand you haven't beaten angela lance bury. >> it's been my dream to beat -- >> did i saleset that up for you? >> angela lance bury unbelievable. she was my mom's hero growing up. i got to be an an episode of kwtd murder she wrote." i have no desire the dethrone her. >> let's talk about birthdays. some people get freaked out. turning 40 oh my god, turning 30, turning 50. you feel none of that. >> i don't. but that's the anti-depressants.
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>> i've been super-duper busy. i have two kids and great fiance and he's amazing. life is really great at 40. it seems weird and pretentious to decide that that age meant something. >> nothing missing for you? >> not really. sleep. i'd like some time vacation time would be fun, but the kids are young enough now that i feel like as i'm working and i don't get to see them a lot, especially this week with all the stuff going on, i hope they don't remember that and use it against me. >> on mother we met her but we don't know her name. >> correct. we know it's an actress and we wanted tour friends to know we weren't just dangling this carrot for asian-american. there she is. there's what the mother look like. all of season nine will be getting her to our protagonist ten. >> i have a feeling we'll be getting you back.
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thank you. >> thank you. >> good luck on sunday night. >> watch. >> i will watch. >> doechbyou can see the 60th annual tony awards with him, neil patrick harris right here on sunday night on cbs. in november she could become the first woman to become the mayor of new york city. we'll ask christine quinn about her political goals and her
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family and her rights as an openly gay woman. good morning. >> thank you, good morning. >> how are the ratings going? >> it's going really well. i had great opportunity. we started collecting petition signatures to talk to voters to hear their needs. they want us do more to make schools better build more affordable housing. they're excited about the future of the city but they want a mayor ready to go tough enough to lead and ready to go forward. >> are you surprised that nancy o is only five or six points below you? >> what i'm really most concerned about is not the folks running but the folks i'm getting to talk to. they're really very concerned that the neshlgt mayor has a real record and a real vision and i'm glad to be that person and have the opportunity to meet with the voters to get the opportunity to move the city forward. >> you talk very movingly about the death of your mom and how
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that affected you. you talked about being gay. you write that you didn't accept being gay until your mid-20s and even today you still have a sense of unease. what does that mean? >> well, you know look. i think for any overusf us that has something that causes un's you need to admit it. otherwise you're denying it. that feeling of ooh, are they going to like me in this room? it's uncomfortable but it can drive you further, make your more prepare and make your very apathetic to everyone. >> now you're going after a job where they have to like you. >> they have to respect you. that's a trap sometimes for politicians and elected officials. you want everybody to like you. that's not what people want in a major. they want a leader and to lead you need to accept that not
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evening is going to like you, but you want them to respect you and respect comes from telling people this is what we're going to have to do even if you don't think it's the right thing for your neighborhood. >> referring to your good the new york times says her personal life is as notable as her vagueness of politics. what would be the three things you would change. >> the book is a personal memoir. it's not a political book. i wanted to talk about who i am personally. would i change? i would add immediately to the work we've done around housing. i would continue that but i would add a commitment to build 40,000 new units from middle class new yorkers because the truth is it's hard to find it but it's also hard if you're working class or middle class and i want to add that. 40,000 new middle-class units over the next ten years.
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it would be the biggest middle class housing in decades. >> what grade would you give the mayor for his three terms? >> i think the mayor has done a terrific job. we don't agree on everything. >> what do you disagree on. >> one of the areas where we disagree is how he's dealt with the homeless population. our homeless population is at an all-time high and there are policies that would hurt homeless people. when i can work with the mayor to get things done, i'm going to. when i can't i'm going to stand up. in that case i took the mayor to court and i won and we protected the knees of homeless new yorkers. any time but particularly right now whb it's so economically hard for christine quinn. >> thank you. >> thank you. >> that does it for us. up next your local news. see you tomorrow on "cbs this morning."
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. this is a kpix 5 news morning update. good morning. it's 8:55. i'm michelle griego with your kpix 5 headlines. a bay area toddler to be on the road to recovery. matthew ouimet underwent double transplant surgery. he has a rare disease which caused his liver and kid anies to fail -- kidneys to fail. doctors will be watching closely to see whether the new organs are functioning well. a civilian will likely get a new name, the sap center at san jose, that's because hpceo wanted to end the naming rights early to cut costs. software giant sap was ready to step in with a deal worth more
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than 8.3 million dollars. the home of the sharks is one of the busiest concert venues until the country. we are starting would have have -- starting off with low clouds and drizzle. we have a warmer day ahead. the clouds are going to break up. temperatures running in the 50s with mostly cloudy skies in the bay, and it looks like by the afternoon, expecting a whole lot of sunshine to heat things up today, moving well into the 80s inland and 60s and 70s and sunny skies. and patchy fog toward the coast. next cupping days, more fog, less sunshine, some temperatures through triple digits on saturday. partly cloudy skies heading through sunday. we're going to check out your time saver traffic, next.
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good morningst it's a rough ride. they cleared the westbound 80 80. and it's still slow into berkeley. 35 minutes carcinas bridge to the mays x. an earlier crash in union city, but we'll leave you on a bright note. here's a live look at the bay bridge toll plaza. traffic is so light, turn the metering lighting off. looks good all the way into san francisco. have a great day.
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jonathan: a diamond ring. wayne: go big or go home. you won a car! this is a very happy man. - i got the big deal! jonathan: it's time for “let's make a deal.” now here's tv's big dealer wayne brady! wayne: hey everybody welcome to “let's make a deal.” i'm your host, wayne brady. you know what we do, we make deals. hopefully, someone will walk out of here with a car, some cash. let's see what happens. three people, let's go. (cheers and applause) super mom, you. right down there, yvonne. yes, go, you. postman. right down there, you. and last but not least... let's see. let's go with you. come with me. one, two, three.
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