tv CBS This Morning CBS July 12, 2013 7:00am-9:01am PDT
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this morning" is coming up next. have a great weekend, everybody. good morning to our viewers in the west. it is friday july 12th, 2013. welcome to "cbs this morning." nsa leaker snowden comes out of hiding at the moscow airport. in the zimmerman trial, police get ready for what comes next. and it doesn't behave like any other mosquito. what we can do about the aggressive insect invading dozens states. we begin with a look at today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >> i want to show you what the evidence has shown my client beyond a reasonable doubt.
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>> closing arguments in the trial of george zimmerman. >> the six woman jury will hear from the defense this morning. >> the judge agreed the jury can consider a lesser charge manslaughter. >> prosecution had its chance yesterday to convince the jurors once and for all zimmerman is guilty. >> the man is guilty second degree murder. >> edward snowden emerging from the shadows after weeks in hiding. meeting with human rights groups in the moscow airport. >> the fed announced it's keeping the stimulus plan in place. >> wall street moves into record territory. new all-time highs yesterday. >> the mystery of the boston strangler could finally be put to receipt to rest. >> investigates have found new dna evidence. >> it's taken 49 years for police to legitimately say they got their man. >> the pilots are now the focus of the probe into the crash of asiana flight -- >> say the wreckage should be gone by tomorrow.
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>> you're a machine, you're a machine. how do you stop this? oh i'm sorry. >> a 5-year-old girl in new jersey seeing her mother choking on a chip jumps into action. >> chloe actually thought calling 911 would reach her dad. >> open the front door we'll be right there. >> love you, bye. >> and all that matters -- >> if we don't pull back from the brink, majority leader is going to be remembered as the worst leader of the senate ever. >> on "cbs this morning." >> the detroit lion yous quarterback matthew stafford signed a new contract worth $76 million. they're paying him $10 million to pay quarterback and $66 million to live in detroit. >> this morning's "eye opener" is presented by choice hotels. welcome to "cbs this morning."
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charlie rose is off so anthony mason is with us. good morning. glad you're here. as you're waking up in the west you're seeing edward snowden for the first time since he leaked details of the nsa surveillance program. in the past hour snowden has come out of hiding. >> he's been holed up in the moscow airport for nearly three weeks. he's meeting with human rights groups. elizabeth palmer is in london. >> reporter: in an e-mail overnight, edward snowed be had invited representatives from various human rights organizations including human rights watch and amnesty international to meet him in the moscow airport. here's a picture from inside that closed meeting which started as you mentioned just about an hour ago. snowden along with sara harrison from wikileaks. this is the first we've seen of him in over a month, since the 9th of june. as soon as the meeting was made public journalists crowded off to the airport, obviously, where the human rights workers had been taken into the transit area, the area where snowden has been for the past three weeks. he's accusing the u.s.
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government of an unlawful campaign to deny his right to asigh looma asylum in a third country. he said, i want the u.s. to succeed. one of the russian news agencies is reporting that snowden has asked for political asylum in russia. we know that three latin american countries had offered to take him but the problem was all along getting to one of them without being intercepted by the u.s. authorities. >> elizabeth palmer thanks. our senior correspondent john miller is a senior fbi assistant director john good morning. how can these human rights groups help him? >> he needs something. he needs one of these countries to offer him asylum. right now, you know there's three that have talked about it. he also doesn't have a valid u.s. passport. so to get from here to there, he needs people to broker a deal where one of these countries will send him a refugee passport or some other document that will get him out of that transit area in moscow.
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>> does he have to seek asylum in russia first? what does putin say about whether or not he could get that? >> if you're the united states and you have a rogue intelligence officer on the loose, you don't really want him seeking asylum in russia. you don't want him going to one of these third countries either. so it's going to be very interesting how they work that out. >> as many as five countries has offered him asylum. why hasn't he acted yet? >> i think what they're looking at, what are those countries, has anybody given him documentation to get there and is that a long-term deal? wherever he go the u.s. is going to apply enormous pressure there to cough him up. >> this has been an international man haunt, cat and mouse game. whether he's been getting on a flight to havana now we learned he's been at that airport. it's the first time we've seen him. do you think it shows he's desperate? >> i think it shows he's under pressure. i think the idea that he's used the wikileaks people and their
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infrastructure, that he's now reached out to these other human rights groups shows he's not getting the desired effect from the people he's been working with. >> okay, all right. john miller thank you. it is interesting to see him for the first time in three weeks. he's probably getting tired of being inside that airport. >> i've been in that airport. you don't want to stay there three weeks. nice place to visit, wouldn't want to live there. the jury in the george zimmerman could get the case in just hours. the defense is making its closing arguments this morning. >> prosecutors say zimmerman tracked unarped teenager trayvon martin before shooting him. mark stanford is in florida. >> reporter: defense attorney is throwing punchings in his closing argument. yesterday, his client had to take him. prosecutors blasted george zimmerman as a wanna be cop and vigilante. >> do you believe that there's an innocent man sitting over there right now? >> reporter: in his closing
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argument prosecutor de la rionda called zimmerman a murderer. >> a teenager is dead. he is dead through no fault of his own. he is dead because another man made assumptions. he is dead not just because the man made those assumptionassumptions, because he acted upon those assumptions. >> zimmerman shook his head several types s times as the prosecution called him a liar. >> why is he able to yell if the defendant claim, the victim -- how's he going to talk? or is he lying about that? >> reporter: he questioned zimmerman's claim that martin pinned his arms while straddling
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him. >> he's saying that armpits -- how does he get the gun out? >> reporter: judge deborah nelson ruled they may also consider a lesser charge of manslaughter. prosecutors pushed her to allow a third charge third degree murder. >> obviously, the information alleges that the defendant shot and killed the victim that the victim was under the age of 18. >> reporter: they allege martin was a minor so when zimmerman killed him he committed child abuse. defense attorney don west went ballistic. >> just when i thought this case couldn't get any more bizarre, the state is seeking third degree murder based on child abuse. this is outrageous. it's outrageous the state would seek to do this at this time in this case. >> judge, this was a trick -- >> reporter: judge nelson refused to allow that charge. but right now, mark o'mara is making his closing argument. he knows he has to convince jurors his client is not guilty not only of a murder charge but
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of a manslaughter charge. the defense again is self-defense. >> mark strassmann thank you. cbs analyst jack ford is with us. the jury's about to get this case. we know the judge is going to allow them to consider this manslaughter charge. how big of a setback to you think that is for zimmerman? >> well, it could be a problem for the defense but it also recognizes that the prosecution realizes they've got a bit of a problem with their case. we've said all along that proving second degree murder here that george zimmerman intentionally killed trayvon martin based upon ill will or hatred was not impossible but it was going to be a difficult chore for the prosecution. here they've stepped in and said to the judge, give us a lesser included offense of manslaughter. not that you intended to kill anybody but recklessly through reckless conduct on your part somebody died. often you see the defense asking
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for lesser included interests. edd edd charges. here, the prosecution wants the jury in case they're not convinced of murder two, to be willing to take a look at this. they wanted to say either murder or nothing. so i'm sure they're not at all happy about giving the jurors an opportunity to compromise somewhere in between there. >> jack the prosecutor did not use the phrase racial profiling yesterday. but he did reference martin luther king's "i have a dream" speech. why? >> we've seen a couple of unusual things in this trial, norah. here, the judge initially said toer, i erverybody, i don't want you using the word rashcial. because they're trying to insinuate clearly to the jury that the reason why trayvon mart be was en was stalked here was because he was committing the crime of being a young man black with a hooded sweatshirt in a nice neighborhood. the prosecution without using the term racial has tried to
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suggest to the jury that's exactly why all this happened. we saw the prosecutors, you mentioned, channeling the famous speech by dr. king saying about one of the prosecution witnesses, i have a dream that some day the witness won't be judged by the color of their personality but the content of their testimony. it's an interesting suggestion about a witness but it's certainly once again insinuateing into this case a notion that there was a racial component to this murder. >> jack, ultimately how effective do you think the prosecution was in summing up? >> i think they did what they had to do. you saw -- we've seen role reversals here in some way. the prosecution being emotional. the way sometimes you see the defense when the defense doesn't have an affirmative defense. you saw emotionally charged testimony inside the courtroom. and then the prosecution pointing its finger at george zimmerman and saying to the jury, do you believe this is an
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innocent man here? i think they recognized it is indeed an uphit battle especially for murder two in the courtroom. >> jacked for, thanks jack. why the nation prepares for the verdict, michelle miller is looking at how police are preparing. investigators may be getting closer this morning to learning what caused the crash of asiana flight 214. carter evans is at sfo where firefighters faced a new problem this morning. carter, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. good morning to our viewers in the west. smoke could be seen billowing from the feud lajuselage of the plane as crews removed it. firefighters had it under control quickly. the investigation continues. the ntsb so far says it found no mechanical problems with the plane. crews began removing pieces of flight 214 earlier this morning. yesterday investigators looking into the briefing on the accident.
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they emphasize the plane came in too low and too slow. recordings apparently show the pilots didn't notice until it was too late. >> there's no mention of speed till about 9 seconds before impact when they're at 100 feet. >> reporter: it was a long week for the ntsb. officials at san francisco airport and asiana airlines all went into crisis mode last saturday morning shortly after 11:30. >> there is a woman out here on the street on the runway who is pretty much burned very severely on the head and we don't know what to do. >> reporter: as the plane touched down after a ten-hour flight from korea, the landing gear and tail of the boeing 777 aircraft slammed into a seawall, ripped off and the fuselage spun across the runway. all those on the plane managed to exit before it was engulfed in flames. >> this was not a jet fuel dead fire. so that tells us the fuel tank structure remained intact. >> reporter: the rest of the
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week was filled with press briefings. >> there's no anum lus behavior of the autopilot, the director or the auto throttle based on the fda data reviewed to date. >> reporter: one source of concern was the pilot's inexperience with the aircraft. another was confusion over the automated flight systems on the plane. are you concerned that it's possible some pilots may be becoming dependent on these flight automation systems? >> not only am i concerned but the industry globally is beginning to be more concerned about this. >> reporter: from here the ntsb broadens its investigation beyond flight data to include everything from the airline's corporate culture to its pilot training regiment. >> we're having a better understanding now of what happened. we're beginning to find out a little bit about how it happened. but we still don't know why it happened. >> reporter: investigators stress nothing has been definitively ruled out and there are no firm conclusions. the ntsb will head back to
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washington soon with a mountain of information to sift through, including pieces of the plane and interview transcripts. a final determination on the cause of the crash is not expected for more than a year. norah and anthony. >> thanks. stocks opened higher this morning after another record high thursday. they soared after fed chairman bernanke's comments on jobs and innation. the more gang rates are at a two-year high and gas prices are creeping up. john hillsenrath join us. last month when he made comments sent the markets into a tailspin. he spent a lot of time trying to clarify things and settle them down. seems to work. >> yeah, he's been in a standoff with the markets really for the last month and a half. i think investors are finally coming to grips with what the fed is doing and they're feeling reassured and that's why you see stocks going back to new highs which is good news obviously.
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>> mortgage rates are at a two-year high. do we expect they may dip again? or is this here to stay? >> i think there's good news and bad news on the mortgage front. if you wanted to get -- to refinance your mortgage or take out a new one at these record lows we had a couple months ago, that opportunity might have passed. but there was a spasm in the markets and that seems to have passed so it looks like things are settling down. so it doesn't look like mortgage rates are going to shoot a lot higher. the bad news is you might have missed your opportunity if you wanted to get in at the really, really lows we saw a couple months ago. >> speculation about the next fed chairman, ben bernanke. the speculation has been the leading contender was the vice fed chairman janet yellen. your paper is reporting the former treasury secretary larry summers is a contender.
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>> an interesting horse race going on here for the next leader of the fed and it's a really consequential job. you know, as we've seen in the last few weeks, the leader of this institution could have huge effects on markets and interest rates. and there are two interesting characters who were kind of running at the head of this race. larry summers was very close to barack obama. he worked for him. he's a former treasury secretary. but he's also a very polarizing figure. it looks like his name is really in the mix to run the institution. when bernanke steps down next year. there's a woman who's number two at the fed right now, janet yellen, who a lot of people inside the fed like. she's got a very good resume. she's been there for many years. and she could also get the job. that choice that barack obama makes probably in the next few months could be the most counsel consequential choice in his next
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term. egypt's new prime minister says he wants a cabinet in place by the end of next week but that's doing nothing to calm the tensions. holly williams is in cairo this morning. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, norah and anthony. supporters of egypt's ousted president mohamed morsi and those who oppose him are both promising huge competeing protests in cairo today. morsi supporters most conservative muslims, are furious the man they elected as president was deposed by the army last week. they say it was clearly a military coup. so far, the u.s. has avoided labeling the military intervention a coup. under u.s. law, that would force america to cut off financial aid to egypt. but morsi's supporters are enraged that the u.s. appears to be condemning the military's actions. morsi himself is still in custody. arrest warrants have been issued for many of his political allies. the u.s. has criticized those arrests, saying they'll make it difficult for egypt to move beyond this crisis.
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>> holly williams thank you. big news out of washington. cbs news has confirmed this morning that homeland security chief janet napolitano is resigning. she's leaving to take over as head of the university of california system. napolitano has held the cabinet post throughout brmz obamapresident obama's time in office. headlines from around the globe. "the wall street journal" says the government posted its biggest june budget surplus on record. the windfall comes from big dividend payments from mortgage giants fannie mae and freddie mac. >> the hart further current says the families victims of school shootings could each receive $281,000. more than $11 million has been donated but 95% of that money would be paid out. at a public hearing last night, some complained about how the money is being distributed. the new york"new york times" says hillary clinton is making big
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money for speeches. commanding $200,000 for an appearance. for that money, she'll even we are looking at some low clouds and fog along the coastline. some of that stretching inside the bay today. but as high pressure builds in overhead, we are going to see a lot of sunshine away from the coast. but out at the beaches, it's going to stay cooler. warmer elsewhere though for the weekend. temperatures today 80s in the valleys, 60s and 70s inside the bay and a couple of 60s at the coast. should be a nice weekend. no major changes right through the middle of next week. >> announcer: this national weather report sponsored by choice hotels the official hotel of summer. book direct at choicehotels.com.
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it's a case that has haunted authorities for decades. now police say they have their man. terrell brown is at the home of the boston strangler's last victim. >> reporter: anthony and norah, 19-year-old mary sullivan was murdered in this parent building and now 50 years later the police thing they may know who did it. why was the admitted mastermind of 9/11 allowed to make candy and design a vacuum cleaner from his prison cell? may have helped the cia.
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>> the news is back on "cbs this morning." stay tuned for your local news. bp supports nearly 250,000 jobs here. through all of our energy operations, we invest more in the u.s. than any other place in the world. in fact, we've invested over $55 billion here in the last five years - making bp america's largest energy investor. our commitment has never been stronger. our daughter is all kate. same grin, same walk. and the same beautiful hair. nice 'n easy. in one step get expert highlights and lowlights. for color they may just think you were born with. i'm a lucky guy. with nice 'n easy, get the most natural shade of you.
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bundles. rethink possible. oaklan ce are back at work this morning, looking for signs good morning, everyone. 7:26 on a friday. i'm frank mallicoat. get you updated on some bay area headlines now. oakland police back at work this morning looking for signs of missing 21-month-old daphne webb. they are searching an area where she and her father frequented in the past. the child will be charged with -- with child endangerment this afternoon. one of the passengers asiana flight 214 was run over by a emergency vehicle confirmed by chief greg suhr. the wreckage will be moved from the tarmac and stored for
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good morning. on this friday morning, no big hot spots out there. it's a nice drive to work. if you are traveling westbound 580 one of the slower spots right now drive time about 22 minutes between the altamont pass and 680. let's go to the east bay. here's a live look at the nimitz. no delay as you pass the oakland coliseum. and over at the bay bridge, very light getting into san francisco. here's lawrence. >> a lot of clouds early on today in most spots. but hey, we are going to see a lot of sunshine toward the afternoon. breaking things up already into san jose. we are going to see a lot of warm temperatures by the afternoon in many spots away from the beaches. 50s now cool at the coast. plan on low 60s and cloudy skies there. 60s and 70s around the bay. and some 80s in the valleys.
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a rough day at the running of the bulls in spain brought the first gorings. three men were hit in pamplona. among them a 20-year-old american who had to be hospitalized. none of the injuries is considered serious. >> it's not a good idea. welcome back to "cbs this morn morning." the admitted master mind of the september 11th terror attacks designed a vacuum cleaner behind bars. he also made candy. who better than john miller to explain why khalid shaikh mohammed was given such unusual freedom. >> and air pollution in china was so bad it may have helped cause 1 million deaths in a single year. an american is among those who
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say they can't take it anymore. 11 unmarried women in and around boston were strangled to death. the crimes the so-called boston strangler terrorized the area and captivated the nation. his words have always been suspect until now. terrell brown is in boston with the break in this case. terrell, good morning. >> reporter: norah, good morning. 19-year-old mary sullivan just moved into the apartment building behind me just days before she was murdered. there is also dna evidence found here. that evidence may solve her murder five decades later. between june 1962 and january 1964, 11 women ranging in age from 19 to 85 were found brutally murdered in their homes, many of them sexually assaulted. later that year 33-year-old albert de salvo already in prison for robbery and sexual assault confessed to the
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murders. famed criminal attorney f. lee bailey represented de salvo. >> he wasn't polpolished well educated, but he was street smart. >> reporter: there was no emd evidence linking him to the killings except his confession. he recanted it. for many de salvo was guilty. >> in most people's eyes albert desal de salvo has been known as the boston strangler. kws s questions have lingered. >> reporter: one piece of - physical evidence remains. in 1964 police found semen on a blanket where mary sullivan's body lay. dna evidence was undreamt of in the 1960s. but even then investigators believed that the killer had left biological evidence at the crime scene. >> reporter: that foresight led investigators to preserve the blanket. dna testing wasn't sophisticated enough to draw results till last
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year when two of only six remaining samples were analyzed. >> they can do more with less of a sample and the sensitivity and techniques used today are much different than they were ten years ago. >> reporter: police secretly followed de salvo's nephew and grabbed a water bottle he'd thrown away. from that a dna match was made for the first time. confirming albert de salvo as sullivan's killer with 99% certainty. news that mary sullivan's family had waited decades to hear. >> i've lived with mary's memory every day. my whole life. it's amazing to me today to understand that people really did care about what happened to my aunt. >> reporter: investigators will dig up the body of de salvo today to be 100% sure he is the killer of mary sullivan. new and strange details are
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coming to light about callkhalid shaikh mohammed. we are learning unusual ways the admitted 9 edted 9/11 mastermind spent his time in prison. john miller is back with us. served in the office of national intelligence. good morning. the most unusual story first. they let him design a vacuum cleaner? >> well, he had certainly time on his hands and nowhere to go. so as a guy who went to college in the united states with a degree in mechanical engineering, he was interested in this project. they also wanted to see, well if we gave him the schematics and things to design the new vacuum cleaner, very carefully looking over his shoulder to say what is it he's really design. they also wanted to see was it a vacuum cleaner. >> was this therapy in some way? >> it was to keep him occupied. he had been kept under some difficult conditions and questioned in what they called the enhanced interrogation
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program. >> water boarded repeatedly. >> this was a way to kind of keep him on balance. >> they say we didn't want him to go nuts so they allowed him to make this vacuum cleaner. what's this about making candy? what are they calling them? >> so this is -- during a briefing i attended once in the intelligence community, a colleague of mine described during the time he was with ksm that khalid shaikh mohammed had developed his own candy while in custody. he could cull together different things from his meals. bread crumbs from the bread. little chocolate from the dessert. and he had made what he called ks m&ms. he offered these and made custom made candies to his captors and said, you know, this is for you. i asked, how were they? he said actually none of us ate them because we were a little worried about the origins the creamy filling which he called ksm flavoring. >> this is one of the most
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bizarre stories i think weem seen in a while. while there's strange details for the families of those who are affected on 9/11 what about khalid shaikh mohammed? this is one of the masterminds of 9/11. he's still around still -- >> he's in guantanamo. he's in the process of this military commission. but remember he was slated for trial. in u.s. federal court here in new york city. and there was a cutup between new york city and the department of justice over how much it would cost for the security. had that trial gone forward, it is likely he would have been convicted since he admitted to these crimes. this military process is turning at the speed of molasses. >> taking forever. john miller thanks. two new studies out this week show more evidence of the darker from air pollution. it's being linked to lung cancer and heart failure. in china, relentless smog is causing some foreigners to leave. seth doan is in bay jigeijing.
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>> reporter: managing pollution is just a part of life. many of us have these masks we'll wear when it's particularly bad. we're often constantly monitoring our smart phones for air quality readings. but these new studies have reignited the debate here over the human cost of china's development. this is the sound at the house hold this week. they packed up their beijing home. >> i've had 13 fantastic years. i've learned a lot about the this market. very good experience. made some good money. and don't really want to leave, i really don't, but i feel like we really have to. >> reporter: ethan, a wine importer originally from chicago, is moving his family to florida to escape the beijing air. when did you start realizing the pollution was becoming an issue for you? >> i think you get dulled by it really. i think this year in january, there was a stretch of 14 15 days that were really bad. around noon time it was dark as
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night. it was kind of the tipping point for us. >> reporter: there have been 67 days this year when the pollution reached levelses where chinese state media warned people to stay indoors. in the past even the u.s. epbase tweeted that pollution levels were crazy bad. >> your child look, at you and says, why can't beijing fix the air? it's hard to explain to a 7-year-old. >> your kids ask you this? >> of course. >> what do you say? >> chibna has issues with the air. they have pollution and so forth. >> reporter: for decades, free coal for heating was provided to chinese living in the north. although the handouts were discontinued after 1980 coal continues to be a primary source of energy today. and the damage to health is only now being realized. just this week a study reported the half billion people living in northern china during the 1990s will live on average 5 1/2 years less than those in the south because they breathed
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dirtier air. another analysis this week noted that breathing low levels of air pollution other a long period of time could raise the risk of lung disease. and even that short term exposure raises the risk of hospitalization or death from heart failure. >> it's great being here. plus my wife always says you only have one life so you might as well enjoy it as much as you can. >> reporter: ethan and his wife look forward to not having to wear masks while bicycling. their new rental house will have a pool but it's the blue sky they're looking forward to most. >> the last few years, it's been a hot topic. everyone wants to come here and do business and work. positions are taking longer to fill out in. people are a little weary to come. >> reporter: there are no hard numbers to quantify exactly how many americans are leaving china because the pollution but we do have anecdoteal evidence.
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we've spoken with head hunters who say it's more difficult to fill those jobs particularly with families with young children. the government is targeting heavily polluting industries demanding they reduce emissions by 30% in the next five years. anthony, norah. >> that's really interesting. i mean it's as if the life expectancy cost wasn't enough now there's a business cost associated. >> there's a business cost. 30% is pretty steep to do in five years. >> that's huge. the u.s. is being invaded by asian tiger mosquitoes. unlike other mosquitoes they can sink their teeth into you day or night. surprising ways to stop them including toothpaste. that's next. on "cbs this morning."
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there's a growing risk in this country from an aggressive kind of mosquito but there are also more ways to protect yourself this summer. dr. david agus is a cbs news contributor. good morning. >> good morning, norah. >> i have heard this new mosquito as being described as an asian mosquito with a blood lust for humans dogs. >> it's growing. it's in 20 states now. this is different from other mosquitos who classically bite from dusk to dawn. this bites all day and night. this one clamps on. this one stays on you, hard to get off. and it doesn't like most insect repel
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repel repellants. mosquitos are an amazing channel. they put this in and the other sucks up until it's full. it can carry disease. west nile is really common in the united states. the left are less common but mosquitos are a vector for disease. >> supposedly mosquitos like darker clothes. what can you do? >> the simplest is you take a shower. they smell the human smell. they smell the car /*bon dioxide we need. if you shower less, you get bitten more. if you wear perfumes or creams they'll come in and bite you. they recognize you. the way repellants work they
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overwhelm the receptors so they can't find you. you want to wear long clothing so they can't bite you. wear clothing that doesn't stand out. you don't want to make movements all over the place because those are the ones that are going to get bitten. then there's a genetic component. you inherit something that mosquitos like you. that we can't control. >> when does tooth paste come in. >> put something on that's alkaline. toothpaste, baking soda a compound called afterbite. then that will go away. it's an immune reaction against the saliva of the mosquito. you start scratching it and itching it it's going to cause an infection overtime. >> thank you for the news about the asian tiger mosquito at breakfast. we're going to wear our diet and our lotions. we are looking at some low clouds and fog along the coastline.
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some of that stretching inside the bay today. but as high pressure builds in overhead, we are going to see a lot of sunshine away from the coast. but out at the beaches, it's going to stay cooler. warmer elsewhere though for the weekend. temperatures today 80s in the valleys, 60s and 70s inside the bay and a couple of 60s at the coast. should be a nice weekend. no major changes right through the middle of next week. see why san diego's mayor is fighting for his job. you're watching "cbs this morning.." >> announcer: "cbs this morning" is sponsored by digestive advantage. every day we're working to be an even better company - and to keep our commitments. and we've made a big commitment to america. bp supports nearly 250,000 jobs here.
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[ male announcer ] oh, dan, checking out of the doubletree isn't the end. your next trip is calling you. saying, "dan, schedule a 5 o'clock meeting at a hilton garden inn." or "dan"... hey, dad. ..."explore your family tree at a homewood suites." [ family ] hi, dan. or "put your feet in the sand at a waldorf astoria." never stop vacationing, dan. book during the great getaway for great rates at our ten top hotel brands. travel is calling you to hiltongreatgetaways.com. what if we took all this produce from walmart and secretly served it up in the heart of peach country. it's a fresh-over. we want you to eat some peaches and tell us what you think. they're really juicy. it must have just come from the farm. this right here is ideal for me. walmart works directly with growers to get you the best quality produce they've ever had. what would you do if i told you all this produce is from walmart? wow! is it really?
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(laughter) find fresh peaches and all your quality produce. backed by our 100% money back guarantee. walmart. medical debt is the leading cause of bankruptcy in this country, but now strangers are reaching out to get help online. crowd funding. that's ahead on "cbs this morning." in the nation, sometimes bad things happen. but add brand new belongings from nationwide insurance and we won't just give you the partial value of items that are stolen or destroyed... ...we'll replace them with brand-new versions. so you won't feel robbed. again. just another way we put members first. because we don't have shareholders. join the nation. ♪ nationwide is on your side ♪ chili's lunch break combos start at just 6 bucks. so ditch the brown bag for something better. like our bacon ranch quesadillas
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mike's bike gets him to kate's house. his shirt looks great. and his blanket gets him a date. but his blanket also gives 24 meals. his shirt gives 20 meals. and his bike gives three hundred and twenty. so now sarah gets lunch. a family gets dinner. and lots of people smile. mike did a great thing. and the people he feeds will too. thanks mike. enjoy the bike.
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the fuselage of the passenger plane... that crashed at the san francisco airport last weekend... good morning, it's 7:56. i'm michelle griego. the fuselage of the passenger plane that crashed at the san francisco airport last weekend is no longer on the tarmac. it was moved overnight and will be stored for further examination. meanwhile, san francisco's police chief confirmed this morning one of the two teens who died was run over by an emergency vehicle. janet napolitano told her staff today she is resigning to take a position with the university of california. the "los angeles times" reports that position is president of the uc system. napolitano has california roots, graduating from santa clara university in 1979. >> stay with us, traffic and weather in just a moment.
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good morning. we have some slowdowns now in the east bay. coming up northbound 880 there was a crash approaching 23rd. it is now gone off to the right- hand shoulder. but with such a good commute now turned worse. it's backed up into san leandro and beyond the oakland coliseum. hopefully it will improve now that all lanes just reopened. let's go to the map and show you the drive time. it's up to about 35 minutes on northbound 280 to the maze. the bay bridge a breeze. no delay getting into san francisco. that's traffic. here's lawrence. >> speaking of breezes, we have that onshore breeze bringing low clouds and fog in along the coastline and the bay. it is a gray start to the day in many spots. going to break up toward the afternoon. a very nice typical summer pattern. temperatures in the 50s now but in the afternoon we are expecting 80s inland. we'll see a lot of 60s and 70s around the bay. and low 60s clouds continuing out toward the coastline. looks like the next couple of days, we are going to see some of warmer weather at least inland keeping you cool at the coastline. just some minor changes for the next five to seven days.
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♪ ♪ so crazy right now ♪ ♪ most incredibly ♪ good morning to you. it's 8:00 in the west. welcome back to "cbs this morning." the defense attorneys make their closing arguments at the george zimmerman murder trial. and police are getting ready for a possible protest after the verdict. the eyes of the world are turned to a london hospital today as we anticipate the birth of royalty. and a teenage guitarist is playing the blues with legends. we'll introduce you to the musician who's being called a prodigy. but first, here's a look at "today's eye opener at 8." >> edward snowden had invited representatives from various human rights organizations to meet him in the moscow airport. >> we are seeing snowden for the first time since he leaked details of the nsa surveillance program. >> he needs one of these
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countries to offer him asylum. and right now, you know rs there's three that have talked about it but he also doesn't have a valid u.s. passport. homeland security chief janet napolitano is resigning. she's leaving that take over as head of the university of california california california's system. mark o'mara is making his closing argument and he has to convince jurors that hi client is not guilty of murder and manslaughter. smoke could be seen billowing from the fusion lauj of the plane early this morning. firefighters had it under control relatively quickly. meanwhile, the nstb says it found no mechanical problems with the plane. investors are finally kind of coming to grips with what the fed is doing and feeling reassured. that's iwhy you see stocks going back to new highs. mohamed morsi and those who oppose him are promising competing protests here in cairo today. the u.s. birth rate at an all-time low. so low the maury povich show may have to cut back to just a half
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an hour. >> today's "eye opener at 8" is presented by choice hotels. i'm norah o'donnell with gayle king and anthony mason. attorneys are making their closing arguments today in the george zimmerman trial. the jury is expected to begin deliberations later today. >> the community, when the verdict comes in is expecting violence. michelle miller from sanford, florida. >> reporter: good morning. this began as a little-known case in a small florida town. the combination of race and perception of police bias fueled a national demand for justice. >> justice for trayvon. justice for trayvon. >> reporter: in the weeks after trayvon martin was killed protesters around the country took to the streets, calling for an arrest. >> our son is your son.
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i want you guys to stand up for justice and stand up for what's right. >> reporter: george zimmerman admitted shooting the teen but claimed self-defense. with more than six weeks later after mass protests that police took zimmerman into with us today and charged him with second-degree murder. as the high-profile trial wraps up more than a year later, florida law enforcement officials are making a public appeal of their own. >> raise your voice. >> and not your hands. >> reporter: in broward county martin's hometown, the sheriff released this video discouraging unrest. community and religious leaders are urging calm regardless of the trial's outcome. >> we have to communicate, that responding violently is not the best response. let's not desecrate this young's man. let's do something positive out of this. >> reporter: the new police chief, cecil smith, says his force is ready when the verdict is read. >> i'm chief smith of the police department. >> we're going out and talking
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in the community, getting out, knocking on doors, trying to find out what their issues and concerns are and what the temperature is with regards to this trial. >> reporter: he doesn't expect rioting or even protesting. still he is partnering with other law enforcement agencies to add more patrols in the coming days. >> if in thean event happens somewhere in the city we'll have the appropriate response for it. >> reporter: we should point out that while there were widespread protests last year, there were no reports of any violence. the jury is expected to get this case this afternoon. norah? anthony? gayle? nsa leaker edward snowden has wrapped up a meeting in the last hour with human rights groups at the moscow airport. this is the first time we've seen snowden since he revealed top-secret documents in june. he's been staying at a transit zone in the airport for nearly three weeks. it was a mob scene there this morning. a member of human rights watch says snowden will ask russia for temporary asylum but eventually
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he wants to go to a latin american country. a spokesman for the kremlin says he's unaware of a formal request from snowden who's charged with espyionage espionage. homeland security chief janet napolitano announced this morning she is resigning, leaving to become the next president of the university of california. the first woman to lead that system. our john miller reports that napolitano told president obama after the election she had planned to stay on but the offer was simply too good to refuse. overnight a crane was brought in to remove the fuselage of the jet that crashed in san francisco. and we're learning smoke was still coming from the wreckage early this morning. firefighters put out those hotspots. investigators have found in evidence of mechanical problems with asiana flight 214. ntsb chairman deborah hersman says it's too early to conclude why the plane was flying too slow. the mayor of san diego is rejecting calls to step down amid allegations of sexual
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harassment. on thursday bob filner admits he failed to respect women in the past but he did not speak directly to the accusations. >> i begin today by apologizing to you. i have diminished the office to which you elected me. and i have reached into my heart and soul and realized i must and will change my behavior. i am also humbled to admit that i need help. i have begun to work with professionals to make changes in my behavior and approach. >> the democrat spent ten terms in congress before becoming mayor less than a year ago. malala yusefsai turns 16 today. in her first public speech since being shot in the head last october, she called for free, guaranteed education for all children. the u.n. has declared malala day. >> brothers and sisters, do remember one thing.
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malala day is not my day. today is the day of every woman, every boy and every girl who have raised their voice for their rights. >> a taliban gunman tried to assassinate her after calling to educate girls in her native pakistan. ma maullala returned after her medical treatment in britain. the royal baby watch is reaching a fever pitch. no place on earth is getting more attention than one street. that's become a media waiting room, if you will. charlie d'agata is outside st. mary's hospital in london. charlie, good morning to you. >> reporter: good morning to you, gayle. yes, the tension and excitement has been building here outside the hospital. we're all awaiting the arrival of kate. now, over the past 24 hours or so we've seen the press corps
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double in size. they've been marking out their territory, staking their claim to try to get a position where they can catch a glimpse of kate when she arrives. in the unlikely event she arrives at the front entrance here. police have been searching the area around the hospital checking out trash cans this morning, even street lamps, looking for anything suspicious. and of course a group of board journalists and photographers who have proved irresistible for companies trying to cash in on the baby craze. this morning we saw, quite frankly, creepy adult babies advertising a local bedding shop. the palace says officially we won't know that kate has gone into labor until she is safely inside the hospital. i took a walk around the hospital earlier today. there are several entrances to choose from. it is possible to get her in here unnoticed. and if there is a way, you can bet that the palace has found it. >> so charlie -- >> reporter: anthony, gayle and norah. >> thank you for that original
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reporting. do you have your pink tie with you? i notice you're wearing your blue one today. >> reporter: i have my blue one on, but my pink tie is in my bag at the ready. at the ready. ready to go. >> yes, all the bases covered. and you know i'm obsessed with what the name could possibly be. yesterday i said it's not going to be rahim. >> i don't know. i think rahim is moving up the list. >> nope. and it's also not going to be chantere. i have a friend named that. it's not going to be hers either. >> do you have any others? >> i have lots. tomorrow is her actual due date. >> oh, it is? >> tomorrow is her actual due date. we will see what happens.
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since the nsa leaks started, americans have grown more concerned about their online privacy. we'll show you how to search the web without being tracked. that's ahead. and "all that mattered" in 1979. the era that went out with a bang. do you remember what that was? the answer's coming up next on "cbs this morning." wept out with a bang. do you remember t this morning's "eye opener at 88" "8" is sponsored by choice hotels, the official hotel of summer. sponsored by choice hotel. book ahead at choicehotel.com.
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all that "all that mattered" 34 "all ma matterthat mattered" 34 years ago today, the day disco died in between two white sox games, a disco demolition was planned. tickets were only 98 cents if you brought a record to be destroyed. but after a local deejay blew up a dumpster full of discs, it turned into a real riot. a mob of more than 70,000 chanted "disco sucks!" fans charged the field, digging up home plate, climbing the foul poles and burning the banner. wow!
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they had had it with disco. >> they had had it with disco. what did you look like in the '70s? >> why are you asking? >> i don't know. i'm told we've got a picture of you from the '70s. were you there? >> that looks pretty weird. that squeezed that in tight. i used to go to studio 54 a fair bet in the 1970s, i have to confess. there they cut my head off. that's my brother you're looking at. that's me on the right, unfortunately. >> i wanted to see the shot of you in the john travolta suit. >> i had one. >> i know you did. >> we'll be right back. this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by viva the towel that's tough when wet. grab a roll and break the rules on tough messes. and break the roles on tough messes. ♪ ♪ that is tough when wet. [ peggy ] grab viva and break the rules on all your tough messes. the new guy is loaded with protein! i'll believe it when i--- [ both ] oooooh... [ female announcer ] as you get older protein is an important
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indy films to garage bands but what about crowd funding for health care? dean reynolds sat down with a woman who's counting on it. >> that feels really numb today. >> reporter: this 28-year-old is in the fight of her life. >> you've never done that before. >> i know. it's awesome. >> it is awesome. >> it's the little things. >> reporter: she was diagnosed in february with an aggressive form of inflammatory breast cancer. she started kimmo on valentine's day and underwent a double mass techmy six weeks later. dr. alexandra lau is her surgeon. >> this is very hard to accept the diagnosis, let alone face this very difficult treatment. as a freelance fraver living in new york city amelia had no health insurance to ward off what quickly became a mountain
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of medical bills so a group of her friends got together and did something very loving very modern, and it turned out very effective. it's called crowd funds. a booming niche of the u.s. economy that has raised startup money for small businesses inventions independent films, scholarships, and much more. in this case for project amelia. >> you must be astonished by the total raised so far, right? >> it's a lot of money. >> close to $50,000 and counting money that almost match as what she owes. it was raised through a website called giveforward.com. >> you believe that people want to help people and it's obviously the case in amelia's case that there's just so many people out there rooting for her. >> reporter: giveforward starting in 2008 as a fund-raising tool for all sorts of things but quickly narrowed
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"i" focus to medical expenses. and why not. the national bureau of economic research found that half of american adults say they would not be able to easily come up with just $2,000 in case of a medical emergency. >> we realized what a huge problem it was and we shifted our focus only on medical. >> reporter: like similar sites giveforward makes money from small fees connected to the donations. >> this travels so much faster than it ever could before because of facebook, twitter, social media. >> reporter: it's not just friends and families donates but long lost acquaintances and even total strangers. >> i think i was humbled by how many people reached out to me who didn't even know me. there are no words to describe that feeling. >> amelia is getting treatment in milwaukee so she can be close
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to her medial family and she was able to get medicaid to help coverup coming expenses. >> she so far has had one surgery but she will require additional surgeries. >> her doctor says reducing her financial burden has affected her recovery. >> it shows a huge amount of supplying support for her. >> what does it say to you about the human spirit? >> totally indestructible. it's totally here in full force. it gives me hope. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning," dean reynolds, milwaukee. >> see, once again it affirms your belief in humanity. i always thought that people want to help others and do the right thing. >> and i love that everyone has given so much to help amelia. >> kick start is great. they're very effective. very cool. coming up if the nsa can
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matier is breaking news... on the asiana flight 214 crash. san francisco police chief greg suhr it's 8:25. i'm michelle griego with your news headlines. kpix 5's phil matier is breaking news on the asiana flight 214 crash. san francisco police chief greg suhr told matier one of the teens killed was run over by an emergency vehicle. >> we know for sure she was at least run over one time. but at the time, she was under foam so nobody could have seen her. and the question is whether or not she was still alive at the time. so the coroner in san mateo county will be determining that. >> as for the wreckage, much of it has been moved from runway 28-left. that runway is expected to reopen sunday. jury deliberations begin monday for two men accused of raping a 16 yearly girl at
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richmond high school. it happened back in 2009. separate juries will consider the fates of jose montano and marcelles peter. stay with us, traffic and weather coming right up. ocean breeze... ...e. coli still around. ai ners like febreze air effects... aren't approved to kill the germs that cause the odors. lysol disinfectant spray does more. we call it healthing... because it kills 99.9% of germs that cause odors at the source. and now you can use it to freshen the air too. lysol... a fresh smelling home... ...and a healthy one.
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now just getting word of a new one approaching the 980 interchange southbound moves well toward hayward. let's go to the bay bridge where it is a very easy commute "friday light" here. metering lights are on but obviously no delays getting into san francisco. and over to the san mateo bridge now about a 14-minute drive time out of hayward heading towards the peninsula. that is traffic. for your latest forecast, gray start. here's lawrence. >> very gray. i think it's going to stay that way at the beaches today. a lot of sunshine in the valleys, looking good from our mount vaca cam. you can see some of the low clouds in the distance. the temperatures mainly in the 50s right now. as we head toward the afternoon low clouds going to peel back towards the beaches and kind of hang out at the coast keeping you in the low 60s there. but inside the bay you will find more sunshine, breezy and 60s and 70s. 80s in the valleys. how about the weekend? we should warm up inland back in the low 90s there. 60s toward the coastline staying very gray at the beach.
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♪ welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, he's only 14. but he's been playing the blues guitar for more than a decade. anthony brings us the story of a prodigy who's being groomed by the masters. >> sigmund freud was an expert and there are new questions and answers about his own affairs. that story is ahead. first, time to show you this ed lines from around the globe. "the new york times" says senators want an investigation into how some workers are paid. democrats are calling on federal regulators to look at the use of atm-style cards instead of
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paychecks. the cards come with big fees. "the chicago tribune" looks at a makeover of historic wrigley field. the billboards are one step closer to going up over the outfield. the final decision rests with the chicago city council. the los angeles times says sam mendez will direct the next james bond movie. he directed last years "skyfall" which was a huge hit. "bond 24" is slated to hit the theaters in 2014. and daniel craig is coming back as 007. the big question is who is going to be the bond girl? >> and whether adele will do the music again. the nsa surveillance scandal is reig nating the debate over the collection on the internet. gabriel weinberg is here with
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dan ackerman, and they join us at the table. good morning. gabriel, who should be the bond girl? what have you found on duck duck go? >> so i love the title. it reminds me of duck duck goose, of when we were a kid. i assume that's what you were going. >> that's right. my wife loved the name. that hardly ever happens. >> was there something that google wasn't doing that you said i could do better? >> yeah i started the site five years ago. you can switch to it and get great results and privacy. we focus on the search experience that everyone would prefer, less spam and less ads and real privacy. by real privacy, you're actually anonymous. >> when you started the site that was not a primary concern. >> that's right. i saw people going to wikipedia, yelp, and i thought people just want answers. why can't you get the answers, and put them above the results. that's what we have focussed on.
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>> what have you seen since the disclosures from snowden and nsa and the sharing of information? >> we always knew that people didn't want to be tracked. people didn't know what to do about it. so we saw -- now that this story came out, friends and colleagues said you can get great results and great privacy. >> can i ask you, because google provides a free search engine and they have to make money. how do you make money? >> this is a myth. google makes the money based on the key word you type in. you type in car, you get a car ad. all that can happen without tracking. so if tracking happens on the other side. you know how ads follow you around the internet? you search something, it appears that's where the tracking comes in. to monetize sites like youtube. >> dan, what are the websites, like google and yahoo! the search engines what do they do with this information other than -- >> they create the big ecosystems and your relationship with google may have little to do with the actual search
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engine. you may be using youtube or g mail or google chat. they track you across the different services to create a dossier on you. with the ads and provide you the services and build you up as a customer they use for themselves, maybe for third parties. what these guys are doing is concentrating on just the search, not doing any of the other stuff which is why they can say we don't need you to create an identity on our site so we can store that information. >> how are you able to do this? you're talking to somebody who's technically challenged. so very slowly. >> sure. >> i have been told that once you do something on the internet it's stored there no matter what you do. >> when you go anywhere on the internet, your computer is sending this information about itself over the internet. and usually that information is saved. that's why you can't get rid of it. what we do is not store it at all. so if someone says to us okay i want, you know your searches we literally don't have anything to type back to you because we never stored it. >> at the same time, you say that using a search engine like
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yours doesn't necessarily settle all of the person's privacy concerns, right? >> that's right. we encourage people to do some other things in addition to us. what we do is make your searches anonymous. we try to do some other things like make the site visits encrypted so you can go to wikipedia in a secure manner. but when you go to any other site you're subject to their policies. >> what else do we do? >> you're on the local computer stuff is stored there and going through the isp, then you go to the search engine. that's what these guys control. then you go to the final website after that. so there are a lot of steps. these guys respect going to track you on their search engine and they'll give you some encryption help in getting off there. but there are a lot of places that everything you're typing in could be stored. >> like if i were on my employer's computer and using duck duck go, there would still be a record? >> especially on the employer's
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how did you learn about this mistress? >> well, it's very interesting. it's fascinated historians for years. she lived with them for 42 years. absolutely, he would have never had an affair he was as revolutionary in his thinking and in his personal life he was very conservative. >> and yet -- >> and yet, in 2006 a rogue german sociologist decided to follow the freud hotel.e trail. he went to a hotel in switzerland and it was the grand hotel. he found the old hotel register where he had registered them as dr. freud and frau in one double room with one bed. and that was the smoking gun. even the main historian came around. >> i'm thinking that's what we
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call tangible evidence. >> yeah. >> the fact that he was a cheater cheater pumpkin eater is enough. but to do it i think with-- i think with your sister-in-law takes it another level. everyone says the wife is the the last to know, but how can she not know? she was living in the same house and it's the sister. >> that's the mystery. we actually don't know either. we are assuming that there was some kind of communication between the two of them that there has to be. >> but in the book, guys -- but in the book you guys have a stack of letters that martha, the wife went to the sister on her dying bed and said you might want to keep these letters. >> correct. >> that were from freud that he had saved all of the years. >> but those letters are missing now. >> she lived with the family for 40 years. there was a lot of opportunity there. >> yeah. well, the house -- freud was very adamant that nobody should
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come down to his study downstairs. so the wife and family were never allowed in the study. and he calls this woman his closest confidant. and the woman thought his work was pornography. >> how does it complicate freud's psychology and what we know about him and sexuality? >> well it's very funny. if you look at what he said famously during that period through the prism of the affair such as guilt. you don't have to have it unless you choose to. guilt, this is something that society imposes on you or marriage and passion -- >> i think you're talking crazy now. >> -- cannot coexist. >> he believed that marriage and passion cannot coexist. >> yet for a guy clued in on other's sexual issues and problems, he had them himself especially when you look at the way he felt about women. >> he didn't believe in birth control. and he has famously said that he
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didn't understand what women want. so i think if you look at his analysis with limitations and his record, it was obvious that he had a few gaps. >> diplomatic way. >> thank you so much for being with us. "freud's mistress" is on sale now. if you think of the blues, buddy guy comes to mind. coming up, meet the one who is good enough to play with him. ♪
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so how old do you need to be to play the blues? one of the greatest blues men believes he's found a budding master in a teenage boy. ♪ 76-year-old buddy guy is a blues legend and a guitar masters who seger solos commands a stage but often at his concerts he'll call up a young music who isn't even in high school yet. >> why did you decide to take quinn under your wing here? >> have you heard him play yet? >> quinn sullivan is 14 but already he can trade licks with the best of them. you started playing guitar at -- >> 3 years old. >> 3 years old. >> yeah. >> that's when his parents gave
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him his first guitar. they supplying pored his passion. he's never read music. he's picked it up all by ear. >> how did you teach yourself guitar sf. >> i always listened to music and it was in my head. i don't know. it just kind of happened. >> by age 6 his skills earned him an invitation to appear on the ellen degeneres show. a year later when quinn appeared through massachusetts to play at the theater, quinn's dad took him to the show. >> i think i was more nervous to meet him than play with him. meeting him in person is like insanely cool. >> that night guy called quinn on stage to play.
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this is the video of their first performance together. >> he was amazing. i don't know where he got it from. that's a natural, someone who can play like that. to me it was unbelievable? after he hit those licks and matched me lick for lick i said, well you know somebody else needs to know about you besides me. so began an enduring musical relationship. >> when you guys play together, what happened? >> i looked at him and said don't hold nothing. >> it's look like a cool thing. >> this year they went to eric clapton's crossroads festival at madison square gardens. >> i got to meet eric clapton and keith richards. >> he only just graduated middle school in new bedford last
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month. quinn was the featured performer at the ceremony. >> not many 14-year-olds are playing the blues. and quinn sullivan buddy guy who himself learned from the great muddy waters. ♪ >> he's a legacy. he's kind of keeping your work going for you. >> yes, he is. ♪ >> at what point did you think you were good? >> i don't think any popular musician things he's good. you think, i can do that better. you don't think, i'm really good. you can't do that. >> you can say it. >> well he can. no, i think, you know you always try to get better, you know, is my motto.
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>> quinn is on tour with his buddy and his new album "getting there" is on sale now. >> you met him. >> i was hanging out with buddy guy and we were doing a story and i happened to meet quinn because he was there. not only is he good but he's a really nice kid. he was there with his dad. he's so polite. he told me hee feels the music through his whole body. i've never seen anything like that. >> his parents have done a great job of keeping him grounded. letting him do enough. his dad travels with him pretty much everywhere. >> it's so incredible to see him playing at 7 with buddy guy. he's 14 now. so how many performances have they had together? >> he goes on tour with him when he can in certain situations. he's not on tour always. the parents are trying to keep him grounded and making sure he gets his education. >> i loved working with you this
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week. >> it was fun. >> and charlie comes back next week. >> and i'm on vacation. >> that does it for us. charlie will be back on monday. anthony, thank you. let's look back at the week that was and take look at things you might not have seen. >> when it was brought back to the site four years ago it became kind of a cornerstone for the 9/11 museum. >> the piece of equipment called the glide slope indicator. victims across the bay area. >> we've just been involved in a plane crash and there are still a bunch of people who still need help. >> we're hearing how frightening it must have been for the passengers. >> they're saying maybe we don't have enough for a murder but maybe the self-defense claims should apply not only to the -- >> tsarnaev's trial will start in late september. the department of justice will decide whether to seek the death penalty. >> the first public appearance.
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>> this could be a make-or-break -- >> are you saying it's not perfect, we shouldn't pass it at all? >> it's not that it's not perfect. it's deeply flawed. >> if you really want to get noticed. walk around with a cowboy hat. >> can you change where the fat is located on your body. >> you can, really the focus should be on overall weight loss. you can eat less and exercise more. >> anthony? >> thanks. >> wundagurl. >> he said i'm about to change your life what do you think that meant? >> i have no idea. >> you're not doing the double course. >> i sinned i resigned i held myself accountable. >> i try to be an advocate and change things the way i can. don lives it every day. >> what does it say about the experience? >> totally indestructible.
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it's here in full force. it gives me hope. >> soul train line. soul train line. come on. >> the last game when you were up 40-0 you thought to yourself i'm about to win wimbledon. that must have been scary. >> it was. >> come on, samantha. ♪ >> i'm ready. >> who are these people. >> come on nigel. before this is over we'll all be talking in an english accent. >> i'm from brooklyn. >> i got a big kick out of your dad. ♪ >> come on suzie. >> why is george dumping women. he's only loyal to the potbelly pig and i'm getting worried. >> a black whitewater
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a family farm. she has been around corn her entire life so she's probably been around corn longer than i have. [ jeannie stonebarger ] i shop at safeway quite a bit. i walk around the produce department a few times, just to see that box. i'm like...yes! really, really proud. to know that they're buying locally is important. [ female announcer ] safeway works with hundreds of local farmers because local means fresher. ♪ ♪
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>> your realtime captioner: linda marie macdonald it's 8:55. i'm michelle griego with your news headlines. kpix 5's phil matier is breaking news on the asiana flight 214 crash. san francisco police chief greg suhr told matier one of the teens killed was run over by an emergency vehicle. >> we know for sure she was at least run over one time. but at the time, she was under foam. so nobody could have seen her. and the question is whether or not she was still alive at the time. so the coroner in san mateo county will be determining that. >> as for the wreckage, much of it has been moved from runway 28-left. it will be stored here in the bay area. but some parts will be taken to washington, d.c. for further analysis.
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the search continues for missing 21-month-old daphne webb of oakland. police searched an area along the waterfront where the girl's father was known to have taken her in the past. webb went missing wednesday. and now here's lawrence with the forecast. >> clouds on this friday, a little sunshine in some of the valleys already. toward the afternoon, clouds will breakaway and it's going to be a very nice day on this friday. high pressure going to start to build in over the weekend. it's going to warm up in the valleys. cool at the coastline with low clouds and fog. today probably only in the low 60s there. we'll see some 60s and some 70s a little breezy inside the bay some 80s in the valleys. the next couple of days warming things up maybe back into the 90s in the warmest spots inland. 60s out toward the coast. your "timesaver traffic" is coming up next.
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good morning. let's start off in the south bay. there is an accident blocking a middle lane. coming up the guadalupe parkway, northbound 87 approaching curtner avenue. also seeing a little slow conditions right now up northbound 85, as well. for silicon valley commuters, this is milpitas. 880 and 237, it's a bill sluggish there leaving milpitas -- a built sluggish there leaving milpitas. 880 a problem this morning because of earlier fender- benders, still heavy there past the oakland coliseum. we'll end with a bright note. here's a live look at the bay bridge toll plaza. everything looks great this morning coming into san francisco. have a great weekend.
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wayne: one more time. you've got the big deal of the day. who wants to make a deal? jonathan: a trip to fiji. - oh my god. amazing. jonathan: it's time for “let's make a deal.” now here's tv's big dealer wayne brady. wayne: welcome to “let's make a deal”! i'm excited today. this is our special grammy episode. oh, yes, the grammys. music's pinnacle. you can watch the grammy awards live this sunday night right here on cbs. so if we're going to do a grammy show, we have to do music deals, don't we? who wants to make a deal? i'm going to go with the queen right here.
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