tv CBS This Morning CBS July 11, 2014 7:00am-9:01am PDT
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lovely having you here, brian. >> it has. >> thank you. [ laughter ] >> have a nice friday. good morning to our viewers in the west. it's friday, july 11th 2014. welcome to "cbs this morning." new dramatic attacks this morning in israel after the u.s. offers to broker a cease-fire. >> a big chill that will impact millions. could take the heat out of summer. >> plus the pink mustaches that have taxi drivers seeing red. >> but we begin this morning with a look at today's eye opener, your world in 90 seconds. >> we heard more rockets coming in. we had to rush to shelter. no sign really of any cease-fire. >> israel's stand at the brink of war. >> a rocket fired by hamas militants has hit a petrol
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station. >> calling up some 30,000 reservists. >> hamas has warned it will target israel's main airfield. >> firefighters in washington state are facing difficult conditions. >> in virginia beach, a powerful storm caused extensive damage and injured at least ten people. >> the man who went on a murderous rampage outside houston will be in court this morning. >> meanwhile a wounded teen who alerted police is being hailed as a hail. >> american airlines flight diverted last night. reports say one passenger saw another making threatening messages on his cell phone. >> you hear some of them. sue him, impeach him. really? >> the gloves are off between president obama and john boehner. >> we now know that boehner's lawsuit against the president will focus on the affordable care act. >> he's been president for 5 1/2 years. when is he going to take responsibility for something? >> an american among seven people hurt in the running of the bulls.
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many slipping falling on the ground. >> tiny fish falling from the sky in utah. wildlife officials actually dropped hatchings to repopulate the lake. >> where does he go? >> miami. >> the hot cop of san francisco is a viral hit. >> the question you're all wondering, is he single? >> i'm single. >> and all that matters -- >> before leaving texas yesterday, president obama stopped at a famous barbecue in austin. >> i feel a little bad. >> on "cbs this morning." >> i think i made a mistake. >> what? >> retiring. what the hell am i going to do? >> you're going to be spending a lot of time. >> this morning's eye opener is presented by toyota. let's go places. welcome to "cbs this
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morning." charlie rose is off, so jeff glor is here. >> good to be here. lots happening overnight. >> we begin in israel. the violence is starting to spread, and this morning the u.s. is offering to help them work out a cease-fire. president obama called israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu and expressed concern about further escalation. >> israeli tanks are lining up along the border. rocket fire from gaza reported this morning. we're also hearing of the first rocket attacks from lebanon. holly williams is in gaza city with a palestinian death toll rising. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. there are threats being made by both sides here this morning as israel considers a ground invasion palestinian militants are warning they intend to target israel's international airport with rocket attacks. gaza is being pummelled by israeli air strikes. this morning they searched for
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survivors of one strike as more missiles forced them to scramble for cover. dozens of palestinian civilians have been killed. many of them children. in gaza, there's an impotent anger. the israeli military says it's trying to put a stop to this rocket fire into southern israel. this morning they hit this gas station, injuring three people one severely. but so far, no israelis have been killed thanks in part to the country's advanced missile defense system which shot down more rockets over tel aviv this morning. israel says it's targeting those responsible for the attacks. this strike yesterday killed three militants with pinpoint accuracy. but israel also targets the homes of palestinian militants, which it calls command centers.
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an air strike on this house killed a family of eight. the israeli military said they gave a warning via telephone and the family evacuated but then returned too early, just as the strike hit. their neighbor told us a very different version of events. >> because it is not given a lot of time to leave the home. >> reporter: they weren't given enough time to get out? >> two or three minutes. >> reporter: several rockets were also fired into israel this morning from southern lebanon, which could mean that militants there have decided to enter the fray as this conflict worsens. norah? >> holly, thank you. three billionaires including some political rooifs are using "the new york times" this morning to call for common sense immigration reform. conservative mega donor, warren buffett, and bill gates say u.s. immigration policy quote, borders on insanity. chip reid is on capitol hill
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where democrats and republicans are still far apart on this issue. chip, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. and good morning to our viewers in the west where the immigration crisis continues. here in washington a top republican is blaming president obama. >> good morning, everyone. >> reporter: speaker of the house john boehner used his weekly press conference on thursday to lash out at president obama. >> this is a problem of the president's own making. he's been president for 5 1/2 years. when is he going to take responsibility for something? >> reporter: in texas, the president defended his response to the crisis and chastised house republicans for failing to act on immigration reform. >> they won't even take a vote on the bill. they don't have enough energy or organization or i don't know what to just even vote no on the bill. and then they're mad at me for trying to do some things to make
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the immigration system work better. >> reporter: the president asked congress for $3.7 billion to fund dozens of new immigration judges, more detention facilities, and care and feeding of the children. but even sympathetic republicans took issue with the president's tactics. >> i want to pass immigration reform, but i want to stop this narrative that if we'd pass some law, we wouldn't have this problem. >> reporter: secretary of homeland security jay johnson told the senate committee the money is urgently needed. >> not doing anything frankly s not an option because it will require us to simply run out of money. >> reporter: republican critics said president obama's proposal amounted to a blank check and more details were needed before it could win bipartisan support. >> the president's job to lay out a specific plan for what we should do about it and it's our job then to say, no, we don't like that. this is not a complete plan to me. >> reporter: secretary johnson said one keyboarder control agency will completely run out of money in mid-august.
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so he urged congress to move quickly. jeff? >> chip, thank you very much. meanwhile, speaker boehner is moving ahead this morning with a lawsuit against president obama. nancy is on capitol hill. nancy, good morning to you. >> reporter: good morning. here's the reds lugs. it's just two pages. it gives the house authority to sue the president of the united states for actions that are, quote, inconsistent with his duties under the constitution of the united states. and for the past couple of weeks, we've known the house speaker wanted to file this lawsuit against the president, we just didn't know exactly why. well, now we do. the suit has to do with the president's executive order back in 2013 postponing the mandate in the affordable care act that requires large employers to provide health insurance to their employees. speaker boehner says the president didn't have the authority to issue that postponement on his own and that only congress can change the law. so now the house is going to have to vote on whether to move
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forward with this lawsuit. something that's very unusual. we have seen members or groups of members try to sue a president before but not the entire house or senate. and at a speech in texas, the president wrote off the whole thing as a political stunt. take a listen. >> you're going to sue me for doing my job? i mean think about that. use taxpayer money to sue me for doing my job. while you don't do your job. >> reporter: these kinds of lawsuits haven't been successful in the past, but that's why republicans chose to sue over the affordable care act instead of some of the other issues they were considering. they think they have the strongest legal standing here especially after the administration's defeat in the related hobby lobby suit in front of the supreme court last week. norah? >> all right, nancy. thank you. and cleanup is under way in virginia beach this morning after more severe weather. a funnel cloud was spotted west of that city thursday near the
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ocean front. high winds and heavy rain damaged several homes. at least ten people were hurt. get ready for next week. millions will face extreme heat in the west and a big chill in the midwest and east. our meteorologist is tracking the wild weather swings. >> good morning. a big dip in the jet stream will create very chilly july conditions next week across portions of the east, while in the west a ridge of high pressure builds and will create very warm conditions. a heat wave beginning this weekend in the pacific northwest. that will continue into early next week. and fire danger will be a big factor in northern california and portions of oregon. it's going to soar to about 101 in las vegas today. not far behind that in portland oregon, of all places up to 94. 87 degrees in seattle today. there's an excessive heat watch around the puget sound. then we have those red flag warnings across portions of oregon and california for high fire danger today. norah, jeff? >> megan, thank you.
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those dangerous fire conditions you mentioned are creates new challenges for firefighters in washington state. the largest fire exploded in size racing across 28 square miles in just two days. fire officials fear it could double in size. dozens of people have been ordered to evacuate their homes. more than 200 buildings are threatened. the fire is 0% contained. and for the second time in two days u.s. officials are blaming china this morning for a cyber security attack. this time and alleged hacker is under arrest. bob orr is in washington where the suspect targeted major american defense contractors. >> good morning. this is another high-profile case of alleged economic espionage. a chinese national is being held in canada on u.s. charges that he unlawfully accessed computer systems of u.s.-based aviation manufacturers. the suspect was arrested two weeks ago near north carolina, british columbia. officials say he likely will be
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extradited to los angeles. su, who lives in canada operates a chinese aviation company called lode-tech. the u.s. justice department alleges su working with two uncharged coconspirators in china, stole a large quantity of information from defense contractors about dozens of u.s. military projects. some of what was stolen was then offered for sale to competitors in china, but we don't know if any of the stolen information was actually sold there. among other things su now is accused of ripping off computer files concerning boeing c-17 military aircraft and also documents relating to the f-22 and f-35 fighters. u.s. prosecutors say this alleged scheme played out over a four-year period between 2009 and 2013. now su has been charged with one count of conspiracy to gain access to protected computers with the intent to defraud. his arrest comes, by the way, as the obama administration's promising a crackdown on cyber theft. that's a problem that costs u.s.
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companies tens of billions of dollars a year. >> indeed. bob, thank you. and this morning, a diplomatic rift between the u.s. and germany. usually two allies as the foreign minister says his country wants a more honest relationship. the german government took the step to order out the top cia official in berlin to leave the country on thursday. that follows two new cases of alleged american espionage there. one german is under arrest and another is being investigated for spying for the united states. the trouble started last year when nsa leaker edward snowden revealed the agency eavesdropped on chancellor angela merkel's phone calls. this morning, kerry is in afghanistan trying to mediate that presidential election. kerry met with hamid karzai. he also met with the two men competing to replace him. the preliminary results are being contested. kerry is trying to prevent a
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power grab. he wants the vote audited. the lone survivor of a deadly chuting spree in a houston subherb is expected to make a full recovery. 15-year-old cassidy was shot in the head wends. six others were killed. we see how the girl's heroic actions saved many other lives. >> reporter: 15-year-old cassidy stay is being hailed a hero. when ronald haskell allegedly forced his way into her home and shot and killed six members of her family she played dead then called 911 to warn authorities of his next target. >> we were contacted by one of the victims, notifying us the location she believed he may go from there. >> reporter: police were able to beat him to the home of other family members cornering him in this cul-de-sac. he eventually turned himself into police. on thursday friends of the stay family mourned their loss. >> my mother always said when you're at a loss for words and what to do say a prayer.
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>> reporter: investigators say haskell gathered the kids ages 4 to 13, waited for their parents to come home then tied them up. in court, a prosecutor described what happened next. >> he then shot all seven of them, execution-style in the back of the head. >> reporter: he is now charged with multiple counts of capital murder. >> you see it happen all around in other parts of the world. you don't see it happen here. >> reporter: cassidy is now recovering in the hospital after a bullet grazed her skull. thursday her grandparent in california spoke with her over the phone. >> i told her how sorry i was for everything that happened but was so grateful she was still here with us. she said my mom and dad are in a better place now. the mother of a georgia toddler who died in a hot, suv has a criminal defense attorney this morning. she is not being called a suspect, though. police say she displayed little emotion when she learned of her son's death last month.
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the medical examiner said the toxicology results on the boy came back negative. meanwhile, the boy's father, who is charged with murder and child cruelty, is out of a job this morning. the home depot confirms it fired justin ross harris who remains in the cobb county jail. a blow to hiv research this morning. a 4-year-old mississippi girl thought to be cured of the virus has relapsed. the girl was born infected. she was immediately put on antiviral drugs. but when she turned 18 months old, her mother stopped treatment. when the child returned to the doctor five months later she showed no sign of hiv and stayed that way for two years. last week, blood tests once again detected hiv. the doctor who treated the little girl since birth called the test results, quote, a punch in the gut. this morning, the only thing we know about lebron james' future is he's headed for brazil for sunday's world cup final. there's still no decision on where the nba's most sought-after free agent will play next year. and that leaves the city of
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cleveland holding its collective breath. dean reynolds is at quicken loans arena, where many anxious fans are hoping for a lebron encore. dean, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. you know when lebron james left cleveland in 2010 to play ball in miami there was a collective feeling here of good riddance. but that's changed now to a kind of wishful excitement because of all the rumors and reports that james may return. as fans wait for lebron james to decide his basketball future a few of his neighbors gathered outside his akron, ohio home thursday underlining his ties to the community and hoping for some good news. >> he left us, and now we just want him back. we miss you, man. we really do. >> reporter: his future has people here talking of the past. >> decision 2.0 could come down at any moment. the last 72 hours here in cleveland, it's been a lot of nostalgia. almost that feeling that lebron james is wearing a white and
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gold jersey all over again. >> reporter: it's a sharp shift from the sense of abandonment many cavs fans felt just four years ago when james joined the miami heat in 2010. the media spectacle titled "the decision" left people here feeling angry and disgusted. but that was then and this is now. and cleveland would like him back. the cedar point amusement park offered to name a roller coaster after the basketball star. and celebrity chef and cleveland native michael symon tweeted at james, promising he could design his own burger if he returns. >> the question is why wait so long? i think part it is that lebron has a flair for the dramatic. >> reporter: bill roden doesn't think the king's return to the clvtd court is in the cards. >> if you're a cleveland fan, you know he's not coming. in your heart of hearts, you'd think he was kra z if he did. >> reporter: so why toy with the emotions of a city he scorned
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not long ago? >> it's about power and money. i'm going to make pat riley fly to las vegas and kiss my two rings and tell me why i should come back to miami. >> reporter: now, james played in cleveland for seven years and never won a championship. he's played four years in miami and been a champion twice. so if you take emotion out of the equation the math seems to work for miami. norah? >> all right dean. we're all on pins and needles. >> no matter what happens at this point, one city is going to be massively disappointed right? >> very disappointed. all right. it's 7:19. ahead we're going to check headlines from around the globe. plus newly restored tapes of richard nixon, a low clouds and fog very thick in spots this morning especially along the coastline. we're seeing some drizzle at the beaches. delays at sfo of over an hour on arriving flights due to low clouds and fog this morning.
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by the afternoon, clouds break up although we are seeing morning monsoonal clouds in the val centrally, sierra nevada and northern california. temperatures today should be in the 70s a few 80s inland. 60s and 70s inside the bay and 60s patchy fog toward the coastline. more sunshine less fog for the weekend. getting hot in the valleys on sunday. >> announcer: this national weather report sponsored by disney's "planes: fire & "planes: fire & rescue," in theaters july 18th. you saw it first on cbs
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news. now congress is demanding answers about wasting hundreds of millions of dollars on new embassies. >> the news is back in the morning on "cbs this morning," so stay tuned now for your local news. erine® healthy whitetm. it not only safely whitens teeth, but also restores enamel. lose the nerves, and get a healthier, whiter smile that you'll love. listerine® healthy whitetm. power to your mouthtm! if you have moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis like me and you're talking to your rheumatologist about a biologic... this is humira. this is humira helping to relieve my pain and protect my joints from further damage. doctors have been prescribing humira for ten years. humira works by targeting and helping to block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to ra symptoms. it's proven to help relieve pain and stop further joint damage in many adults. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers including lymphoma, have happened, as have blood, liver and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions
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your realtime captioner is linda macdonald. good morning, it's 7:26. i'm michelle griego. firefighters rescued two people and revived their pets from an early-morning apartment fire in the ashland area of alameda county. a woman suffered smoke inhalation, a man has severe burns, and oxygen was used to revive pets who were then taken to a local vet hospital. a woman is hospitalized in serious condition after a fight between giants and a's fans yesterday. investigators say the woman was hit in the face and her head hit the sidewalk after trying to break up a fight. and the owner of drakes bay oyster company is planning to shut down by the end of the month. the owner is still negotiating with government officials to stay open longer. but they are preparing to call it quits by july 31. stay with us. traffic and weather in just a moment.
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good morning. at 7:27 traffic is already thinning out at the bay bridge backed up as to the overcrossings in the busiest lanes. the metering lights were turned on at 5:45. on the span things look good heading into san francisco. also traffic lighter than normal in oakland right now. only 15, 16 minutes between 238 and the macarthur maze in the northbound lanes. and 101 traffic still moving at the speed limit. but a lot of fog obviously there across the span of the golden gate bridge and in parts of marin county. with your latest forecast, here's lawrence. >> we're seeing more low clouds and fog around the bay area this morning even heavy drizzle at the coastline. up toward ocean beach we go this morning, clouds hugging the coastline early on today. and some monsoonal clouds swinging through the central valley up into northern california bringing showers and lightning strikes there early on today. this afternoon, we'll start to clear things out some 70s and 80s inland, 60s at the beaches. warmer weather, less fog over the weekend.
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a hotel parking valet in new delhi lost control of this lamborghini. he just missed hitting some people before crashing into another car and then crashing into a concrete railing. the $200,000 car was totalled. >> my guess is that valet's career is totalled too. >> i know. what do you say, sorry? clearly he was excited about driving the car and got a little too happy. >> a little too happy. welcome back. coming up in this half hour congress is asking new questions about a pricey plan to roll out glamorous u.s. embassies. those lawmakers are turning to our reporting to help find some of the truth. critics say the design isn't making americans any safer. plus president richard nixon has you've never known him
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before. newly restoerd white house audiotapes take us inside his private world. the opinions that shaped the 37th commander in chief. that is ahead. and it's time to show you some of this morning's headlines from around the globe. "the new york times" says crumbs bake shop could rise again. as we reported this specialty cup cake maker closed all of its stores on monday. now crumbs is said to be close to securing financing and that could lead to a new owner. happiness. >> let's see. "usa today" says the federal trade commission is suing a.m. gone, the online giant is accused of making it too easy for children to buy things through apps without their parent's permissions. the ftc claims amazon billed parents for millions of dollars in unauthorized purchases on kindle fire tablets and other devices. amazon says it did use proper safeguards. britain's "telegraph" says having a vasectomy can increase
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the risk of having prostate cancer. those who have vasectomies had a 10% higher chance of developing the most aggressive form of the disease. cbs san francisco says a woman was knocked out during a fight outside at&t park yesterday afternoon. she was trying to break up a fight between a giants fan and an oakland a's fan. she got punched in the face and hit her head on the pavement. her condition is unclear today. you may remember earlier this week a jury awarded $18 million to a giants fan who was severely beaten outside of dodgers stadium. and business insider looks at a social networking stock that's jumped 25,000% in value in just a few days. but there's a catch. it's unclear if sync technology actually exists. the company lists one employee, large losses, and no assets. sync trades on an unregulated exchange where it's not unusual for stocks of little value to jump in price, but this is
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called extreme. >> sounds like it. an update this morning on a controversial government initiative we first told you about last month. a house committee grilled state department officials thursday citing original reporting from cbs news. the issue, spending hundreds of millions of dollars to replace rundown embassies with better looking buildings without sacrificing security. nancy is with us once again from capitol hill where lawmakers from both parties are openly skeptical of that project. good morning. >> reporter: good morning to you and our viewers in the west. ugly is the word that second today kerry has used in the past to describe u.s. them baa sis and some republicans, frankly, have said the same thing. but they argue that those cookie cutter embassies were easy to build and cheap, and they worry that the new approach could waste money and time. >> the total project cost for london is near $1 billion. >> $1 billion? >> reporter: at a tense hearing, lawmakers question the cost of the striking glass cube being built to house the u.s. embassy in london. >> they could have spent $200
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million less and we could have built two other embassies. >> reporter: the london embassy's sleek design has an emphasis on architecture which the state department embraced dubbing it design excellence. it's a shift from the bush years when u.s. embassies like these in johannesburg and bulgaria were built rapid fire using one standard design. >> i just know that we can build even better buildings, right. what we're doing is what we should be doing. what bureaucrats should be doing. >> reporter: but republicans and democrats said they're still waiting for proof that design excellence will be just as cost effective as the old approach. >> why can't we get the information? there seems to be some reluctance. i don't know why that is. >> in response to a cbs morning news program and a cbs evening news program, state department was able to put out its fact sheet. they did produce those
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documents. but again, no documents produced to the united states congress. >> reporter: a former state department official who was asked two years ago to study embassy security testified that beauty might be coming at the expense of safety. >> the people we talked to were not happy in their role -- with their role in the selection process. and felt very strongly that the pendulum had shifted from security to design. >> that is simply inaccurate. >> reporter: under secretary of state patrick kennedy disputed that finding in a recent interview with "cbs this morning." >> we have reviewed our processes and feel very, very comfortable that our use of the design initiative gets us the security we need and the functionality we need at the best possible price. >> reporter: he argues that over time buildings that are tailored to their environments will age better and require less maintenance, but it's really difficult to test that assertion
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at this point, gayle, because the first building using the design excellence approach is being built in mexico city right now and won't be completed until 2019. >> got it, nancy. thank you. a month of excitement and heartbreak ends this weekend in brazil. sunday's world cup final features argentina taking on germany. organizers expect more than 2 billion people will watch this game. that includes more american fans than ever. we have a look at next step for soccer in this country. elaine, good morning. >> good morning. every four years the question comes up. is this the year that americans fully embrace soccer? well, this year if you look at the numbers, there is evidence that suggests americans will still be passionate about the sport even after the world cup ends. 25 million americans watched this moment. >> oh, it's a great cross. and it is an equalizer?
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>> scoring the tying goal against the united states in the american's second game of the world cup. >> usa! usa! >> fans watched in parks, in bars, and more than a million more tuned in online. making it the most-watched soccer game in u.s. history. >> more and more people are watching. more and more people are excited about it. this happens every four years, but i think this one especially a lot of people are watching. you could see a little bump that actually hangs on this time around. >> this isn't the first time pundits have speculated about the american soccer bug. in the 2010 world cup, landon donovan scored this winning goal against algeria. >> donovan has it! >> and for the first time in modern history, team usa finished at the top of their group. but is this year's world cup tournament comes to a close, america's major league soccer teams are hoping the interest doesn't fade. across the u.s. and canada there are 19 major league soccer teamings. one of the most popular is the
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seattle sounders. it's the home club of team usa captain clint dempsey. he's preparing for a big match against portland this sunday and mls expects more than 67,000 spectators for the game. >> there's a lot of viewers watching those games. it's exciting times. it's about continuing that growth and it's about putting the best product on the field. >> to boost its fan base u.s. soccer has its sights set on a younger demographic. soccer is the second most popular youth sport in america and close to half of mls viewers are under 35. >> they're attracting more crowds in their 20-somethings. these are kids who grew up playing the sport and have loved the sport since they were little kids. now, you know, they can go to games. >> major league soccer is planning to expand in the next few years with new york city getting a second soccer club and new teams coming to orlando and atlanta. in addition, retired soccer star david beckham is working to bring a new team to miami.
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tv networks are also investing in the sport. espn and fox paid over $600 million to televise mls games through 2022. >> all right. i know it remains to be seen but i hope they're right. i felt it was different this time. >> i did too. >> it did feel a little different this time. we need to get better and better players in mls. they're getting more dempseys here now. that continues, i think it'll help soccer. >> i hope so. >> all right. ahead, president richard nixon on women's etiquette. >> well all do it. we all swear. but you show me a girl who swears and i'll show you an awful unattractive person. >> well you know what i would say about that. >> what could you say? >> what a bunch of bs. more from the newly restored nixon white house tapes and his views from society. my mom is going to e-mail me now. >> you're in trouble. >> i'm in trouble.
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proclaimed he was sympathetic to the plight of gay people. >> i am the most tolerant person on that of anybody in this shop. they have a problem. they're born that way. you know that. that's all. i think they are. >> but nixon's tolerance still had its limits. >> boy scout leaders, ymca leaders and others bring them in that direction and teachers. and if you look over the history of the societies, you will find of course, that some of the highly intelligent people oscar wilde, aristotle, et cetera were homosexuals. once a society moves in that direction, the vitality goes out of that society. >> in that same discussion with his chief of staff and national security adviser, nixon also revealed his views on women who cursed. >> a man drunk and a man who swears, people will tolerate and
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say that's a sign of masculinity or something other damn thing. we saw do it. but you show me a girl who swears, and i'll show you an unattractive person. >> the clips were released by "vanity fair." one transcript suggests nixon was worried about kissinger, one of his closest aides, getting too involved in middle east policy because kissinger was jewish. you know, put yourself in his position. good god. you know people were crucified over there. jesus christ. and five million of them popped into bake ovens. what the hell does he feel about all this? kissinger himself had very little sympathy for the plight of jews in the soviet union. i'm jewish myself but who are we to complain about soviet jews. you know it's none of our business how they treat their people. >> the sightseeing i've had is like the hors d'oeuvres of a chinese dinner. i'd like to have more.
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>> and the president who famously thawed relations with communist china found the chinese baffling. you never can predict how the chinese are, he told kissinger, because they're chinese, not because they're come knewmunistscommunists. the the tapes have given a us enormous insight into the day-to-day life of the nixon oval office. but the great irony is that he saw that taping system as a way to help him write the history of his presidency. and the tapes have made history for sure but hardly the way that nixon intended. norah? >> fascinating indeed. bill plante also fabulous part of history. let's see that two-shot of you, bill, from 46 years ago. i think you look even more handsome today. >> i know. bill, we were looking at you saying, what a handsome guy. what did you think? >> i thought, oh, my god, who low clouds and fog very thick in spots this morning especially along the coastline. we're seeing some drizzle at the beaches.
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delays at sfo of over an hour on arriving flights due to low clouds and fog this morning. by the afternoon, clouds break up although we are seeing morning monsoonal clouds in the val centrally, sierra nevada and northern california. temperatures today should be in the 70s a few 80s inland. 60s and 70s inside the bay and 60s patchy fog toward the coastline. more sunshine less fog for the weekend. getting hot in the valleys on sunday. ahead, the new ride sharing company taking on uber. regular taxis and the critics. that's ahead on "cbs this morning." to find out about someone... and their bum. what number are you? i'm number 2. ♪ ♪ what's that? how do you wipe your bum? uh, very carefully. what...uhh... with my hand? and toilet paper! [ laughs ] ahhh, you bring those with you. did you really bring that? yeah. great t.p. and these are amazing wipes.
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your realtime captioner is linda macdonald. serious injuries this morning.. after being knocked unconscious ht between giants good morning, it's 7:56. i'm michelle griego. a woman is in the hospital with serious injuries this morning after being knocked unconscious during a fight between giants and a's fans outside at&t park yesterday. the fight started with some trash talking after the giants lost to the a's. a suspect is in police custody. firefighters rescued two people and their pets from an early-morning apartment fire near san leandro. years the firefighters had to use their oxygen masks on the animals. both animals had severe smoke inhalation. a woman had smoke inhalation and a man severe burns. stay with us. traffic and weather in just a moment.
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good morning. unfortunately, traffic is slowed down to a crawl right now across the san mateo bridge. westbound 92, there's an accident -- if you look closely, you can see the flashing lights. it's westbound 92 about a mile just past the toll plaza. lanes are blocked. we are seeing big delays especially heading out to foster city. eastbound looks okay. bay bridge much better alternative, only backed up to the end of the parking lot. with the forecast, here's lawrence. clouds extensive this morning going to try to break them up throughout the afternoon probably becoming mostly sunny inside the bay along the coastline touch and go there. the monsoonal moisture sweeping up across the sierra nevada in northern california right now. actually couple of lightning strikes earlier on today. temperatures this afternoon still some 70s and 80s inland. 60s and 70s inside the bay and 60s along the coast. i think high pressure over the weekend making it hot in the valleys, 90s by sunday. well away from the coast.
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♪ good morning to our viewers in the west. it's july 11th 2014. first, here is a look at today's "eye-opener at 8:00.." >> there are threats being made by both sides here this morning assish considers a ground invasion. >> the immigration crisis continues. here in washington a top republican is blaming president obama. the fire conditions creating new challenges for firefighters in washington state. dozens of people have been ordered to evacuate their homes now. >> if you take emotion out of the equation, the math seems to
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work for miami. >> they argue the cookie cutter embassies were easy to build and cheap and they worry the new approach will cost money and time. >> every four years the questions come up is this the year americans fully embrace soccer. >> whoa his career could be totaled, too. >> and many today will find this offensive -- >> you show me a girl who swears -- >> what a bunch of bs. my mom will e-mail now. >> netflix got twice as many nominations as 2014 and some are nominations from last year that just finished buffering. i am gayle king with norah
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o'donnell and jeff glor and charlie rose a off. and both sides are making new threats this morning. israel is hitting hamas targets with air strikes. >> the missile defense system is blocking most of the rockets before they land in populated areas. hamas is threatening to target israel's main international airport and israel is moving tanks to the border raising fears of an all-out invasion. there are signs of compromise on president obama's request for another $3.7 billion, but the white house plans to deportation it's not
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sitting well. >> we have a situation where i have to disagree with with this administration administration. these kids need to have hhs protect them and care for them and give them every meaningful right to apply for asylum. >> republicans say they need help from the president to form an immigration policy that works. meanwhile the president mocked gop leaders thursday in austin, texas, saying he is doing his jobs and the republicans are not doing theirs but the president heard talkback from the audience on the immigration issue. >> they don't have enough energy or organization or i don't know what to just even vote no on the bill. and then they are mad at me for trying to do some things to make the immigration system work better, so it doesn't make sense. so i am sorry, what are you yelling about now?
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sit down, guys. i am almost done come on. i will talk to you afterwards, i promise. i will bring you back. i am wrapping things up here. i understand. >> it's interesting, the president spoke briefly to the hecklers after the speech. you have the secret service escort them out, and he has taken time to speak to them afterwards and then the president headed to a well-known barbecue joint and he apologized for cutting in line and then he offered to pay for the two people he paid ahead of and he said i will pay for you, and they ordered three pounds of beef and two pounds of ribs and a half pound of sausage, and he said, hold on how many people are you feeding, and he went to his aide and said does this work and he used his credit card to pay the bill. >> all of a sudden i am more hungry than i thought i was when
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somebody else was paying for it. >> if you are paying i am ordering more. >> a driver with uber the car service app is being investigated for kidnapping. he raced all the way to virginia. it may have been an attempt to dodge a local taxi inspector. the car narrowly missed hitting other cars and he eventually let the passengers go and he tweeted was just kidnapped by a uber driver in d.c. and held against my will and involved in a high speed chase across state lines with police. #crazy. >> that's the tweet of the week right. companies like uber and zipcar are getting people from
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here to there, but lyft has $300,000 in financing and a very colorful approach. >> to start, look no further to the front. lyft drivers attach a pink mustache on the grill. john zimmer is the company's foe co-founder. >> what is with the mustache? >> it's about having a good time. >> it looks a little ridiculous. >> it gets people to talk about it and kicks things off on a fun note. >> there you go. >> the fun includes a recommended fist bump with your diver, and ideally sitting in the front seat and not the back. >> get to where you need to go and meet a new friend. >> it may sound strange, but zimmer says he is going to transform transportation as we know it. >> the car used to be a symbol
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of freedom in america, and i think now it's an extreme burden to own and operate a car and that comes in the form of parking and traffic and in the form of expenses and maintenance and insurance, and so when you can provide a service that eliminates all those things it's a exciting proposition. >> he said nearly 80 seats in all the cars in the country are empty. uber does the same thing, but lyft is friendlier. passengers and drivers are encouraged to chat. a donation is suggested and the driver keeps 80%. >> uber has a huge head start you on. >> they have a head start. >> just a head start? >> yeah. >> they have a head start and more funding, too much to catch up with? >> not at all.
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what we are build something an entirely different experience. >> lyft already signed up 500 drivers in new york. >> you will get to know me and we will talk. >> sandra wallace is one of them, and she is a brooklyn native and a traveling poet who is aiming to drive 80 hours a week. >> you realize you have a pink mustache on your vehicle? >> yes it's a conversation and you can't beat it oh, it's lyft. >> the launch has not come without protests. the new york city taxi and limousine commission refused a lyft certification. but zimmer is going anywhere. >> we are going to face challenges along the way. >> you can imagine a future where you can step out of your
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house and request a lyft and pick up somebody else who is going to the same office as you and you get there for a few bucks. basically we are rebuilding public transportation by the people for the people with a system that is needed today. >> you are trying to make every lane a carpool lane? >> absolutely. >> how long does that take? >> it will take a few years, but it's happening very quickly. >> today lyft is coming to new york's outer boroughs. >> my husband is the worst because he goes i am not driving with a pink mustache on the car, and that's not happening. >> they are not required to put the mustache on but it's just a suggestion. >> i think it's clever and catchy. i am only balking at sometimes you want to get in the car and ride. >> and good for passengers right now. it's a huge price war, and uber
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is slashing prices and lyft is giving free rides for two weeks. >> well we could save gas and be more energy efficient but the drivers are not checked out in the way they are for uber or more reliable car companies. >> lyft says the screening process is more vigorous than the taxi commission. >> that's what they say. >> that's what they say. >> i just discovered uber and i think it's grand. and i like lyft. a so-called cop is enjoying the internet fame this morning. somebody took this photo of the 36-year-old police officer while on duty. it quickly spread on facebook and a page dedicated to this very good-looking law man has more than 23,000 likes, and he has been on the force for six years and he says the attention is getting a little crazy but he is just going to roll with it. there are also things on twitter about officer, i need help i
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need help and you remember the good-looking criminal and the good-looking cop and now there is a little competition between the two. >> i think that cop has nothing on jeff glor. >> needs a pink mustache. >> there you go. ahead on cbs this morning, j-crew goes extra, extra, extra small. we are going to look at the marketing idea behind >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" at 8:00 sponsored
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curious crowd in a crowd in manila. guess what they're watching? the drone. and the people's choice for first prize, an amazing view of a waterfall. that's j. crew is selling clothing in triple zero. we'll find out why this is a smart business move. that's next on "cbs this morning." >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. so when we packed up our rav4, i brought this. ♪ turns out my family likes dancing too. the rav4
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this is all your water weight. first you bloat and then you drop calories like that. it burned up all your cautious and your body is running on water and then once the water's gone it's all muscle. >> do you know swedish? >> yeah. everyone knows this. >> do you have this in the next size up? >> sorry. we only carry 1, 3, and 5. you can try series. >> lindsay lohan back in the day. >> we like to think size doesn't matter. when it comes to clothing, the little tag sewn inside is pretty important. now j. crew is offering its customers a very teeny tiny
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choice. the retailer recently came out with -- size -- listen to this triple zero for women. we're joined at the table. good to see you, maura. >> good to see you. >> in this country the average size is 14. i can see every woman going, really, j. crew? really? >> j. crew has been the brand at the forefront of creating all sizes. the size created is for the 23-inch waist. they did it for the asian market. they opened up two stars. they say our sizes tend to run larger. asian customers are smaller. they were meeting the demands of consumers. just to give you how small 23 inches is. i took it. my head -- i have a big head. my head is 22 inches so this isn't vanity sizing. this isn't trying to make women look good. this is accommodating a customer
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base system. j. crew is making a good business decision to do so despite the backlash. >> and they're getting hammered. >> they're getting hammered. they're getting what's called in the retail industry vanityizing, making women feel good about themselves. it's completely deflating when you walk in and the size you thought you were is not the size that you are, and that's not good for retail experience. we all know what that's like. this is not the case. they're creating sizes for a new market and we don't necessarily -- we don't necessarily criticize companies when they go up sizes, when they create a petite market. this is the same for j. crew. >> you point out they say it's nothing do with vanity. they did it to handle customer sizing coming from the hong kong asian market. what about concerns from critics that this creates additional
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burdens for young women in america who are already given unrealistic standards for sizes? >> i don't think creating new sizes is going to create unrealistic sizes. we all know we're concerned about young girls especially. >> triple zero? >> what happened to double zero? >> double zhao is no longer small enough. >> j. crew would be in a bad position if they changed their entire sizing chart. they had to accommodate a new customer base valid customer base. they're doing it. sure, the size is a little jarring, triple zero. but they had to create a new size. we applauded them when they created plus sizes and petite sizes. they're not saying -- >> they're saying relax in the united states. >> and actually a lot of the women in the u.s. said great, now i don't have to shop in the kidses department. >> thank you so much. ahead, keeping up with great
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white sharks. the researcher behind a your realtime captioner is linda macdonald. good morning, it's 8:25. time for some news headlines. firefighters rescued two people and revived their pets from their early-morning apartment fire in the ashland area of alameda county. they used oxygen to revive both animals who were then taken to a local vet hospital. a suspect has been taken into police custody after a fight between giants and a's fans left a woman hospitalized yesterday. investigators say the woman was hit in the face and her head hit the sidewalk after trying to break the fight up. and the owner of drakes bay oyster company is planning to shut down by the end of the month. the owner is still negotiating with government officials to stay open longer but is preparing to close by july 31. stay with us. traffic and weather in just a moment.
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good morning. the morning commute is under way and we are seeing accidents around the bay area. first this one on the san mateo bridge still there. we first reported it about a half hour ago. westbound 92 a mile past the toll plaza motorcycle crash now just one lane is blocked. obviously we are seeing a lot of slowing all along the flat section and behind the pay gates. if you are traveling in hayward, southbound 880 by "a" street an accident there blocking lanes. you can see the delays from
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beyond 238. ambulance rolling to the scene and another tweet now from "kcbs traffic," this one in redwood city lanes are blocked and traffic is backing past woodside. the accident northbound 101 just south of whipple clearing to the right lane. that's your latest "kcbs traffic." with the forecast, here's lawrence. a lot of low clouds and fog more extensive around the bay area this morning. even some heavy drizzle along the coastline, delays at sfo of over an hour on arriving flights. out there now starting to break up over the bay. looks like we'll see more sunshine into the afternoon. very interesting though a lot of that monsoonal moisture sweeping across the sierra nevada even the central valley sparking lightning strikes early on this morning. temperatures today will be comfortable in the afternoon, lots of 70s inside the bay, about 79 in san jose, 72 in oakland, 67 degrees in san francisco. 70s and 80s for the valleys and 60s with patchy fog along the coast. for the weekend, though, high pressure strengthens, that will warm the temperatures up away from the coast. maybe some 90s showing up in the valleys by sunday.
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♪ welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour nearly two years ago we brought you a historic moment in the ocean. you remember this great white shark tagged. and the man, mr. brave, chris fischer fischer, he is in our green room and he will show us how a shark attack last weekend is the beginning beginning. and then michelle miller saddles up for a taste of cow girl life ahead. it's time to show you headlines from around the globe. last year's government shutdown
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may have cause add baby boom and federal workers were sent home for two weeks and guess what this could go on for a while thanks to the harsh winter. and then the g guardian say one drink a day can reduce the risk of heart disease. >> what about three drinks? >> no. >> a shirley temple is always good. the mail online withdrew a story said that his mother-in-law opposed the wedding on religious grounds, and george clooney said, quote,
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i thank the male for its aology. not that i would ever accept it. as we head into the weekend, beach safety may be on your mind after saturday's shark attack in southern california. a long distance swimmer survived a bite from a great white. and this was the first great white to be caught and spot tagged and it's the work of osearch who created ways to study the behavior of the species, and chris fischer is here this morning. >> thank you for having me. >> when this attack happened you tweeted out there was misheadlines. >> there were human activities happening in the same area it should not the be. it doesn't past the common sense
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test to be swimming and surfing where sharks are, and a baby white shark is fighting for its life and it gets tangled up with a swimmer. this is really not something that is normal. we see juvenile white shark nurseries around the world in australia and south africa and we don't see any human shark interaction in the areas. >> the swimmers were ticked off at the fisherman because they said they agitated the sharks and the sharks normally would not bother you, is that true? >> if you know people are fishing you don't need to be swimming through that area and if you know people are swimming through an area you don't need to be fishing in that area, and human decisions collided and affectsed the shark. we have had success with regulations in the '90s, and got some of the nets out in the '90s, and now 20 years later we are starting to see success, and
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a lot more juvenile sharks in southern california and it's a white shark nursery. >> is it safe for me to be at the beaches? >> a white shark nursery is a safe place to be and they don't typically interact with humans and they head offshore and don't return. >> it's the baby sharks that would be dangerous to humans? >> no they are not dangerous, but it's the mature sharks and they are off the coast. >> you don't seem to be scared of them, why? >> things will come into balance. they are the lion of the system and keep it in balance and it's important to see them recover. >> more sharks on the east coast as well? >> similar thing happening on the east coast maybe a little further behind a decade behind. we got a lot of gear types out of southern florida and the east
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coast back in the early '90s which led them to more success in the nursery of the white sharks, and in florida, there are smaller white sharks and as they go to mature that's what we are seeing now off of cape cod. >> you tagged mary lee and katherine. what are you looking for? what are you trying to discover from them? >> it's exciting. right now mary lee which we tagged off of cape cod has been tracked for almost two years. this will be the first full two-year female atlantic shark in migration history, and within her track shows the breathing site. she has an area where she has been jest ating. if she does that by august or september, she will confirm that that is the north atlantic breeding site. >> so many things are
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fascinating. 15,000 miles she travelled and, and she is 40 to 50 years old, and she is jestating. >> recent steady coming out of massachusetts let us know that these white sharks are not sexually mature until they are in the 20s, and live well over 70. >> she had babies before? >> many times. every other year she should have babies between two and 20. >> are you going to go and hookup with her again and to see her have these babies? >> our tracking device would not allow us to get right on her like that, and we look at the rhythm of her migration. 18 months after we tagged her, she should be giving birth. >> you have ever actually seen how they mate? >> nobody has ever seen that. the first thing we identify is when and where they are breeding which will give us an opportunity to film and document that. >> nobody has seen how they do
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it? are you curious? >> we are all curious. >> fascinating. so great to have you back. keep us posted. >> always good to see you. monday on "cbs this morning" a. different crew out on the ocean, ten years of the deadliest catch. we will find out why he is letting a teenager on board for dangerous work. that's monday. ahead, rubbing spurs with the women of the west. >> i am michelle miller in montana getting my inner cow girl on. >> i will introduce you to the wild, wild west the ladies in the sport coming up on "cbs this morning."
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july is the busst the year for rodeos across the country and this weekend alone, 19 major events feature women as competitors. michelle miller travelled west to try and capture the spirit of the american cow girl. good morning. >> good morning. women first started competing in rodeos in 1983 and then there
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was the death that prompted promoters to curtail women's participation. now women have their own rodeo association, but being a cowgirl is more than competing in games it's an entire way of life. ♪ in almost every epic tale of the wild west men have been center stage and women almost invisible. >> all of the photographers i have ever seen have been on men, and that's only 50% of it and where did they think the men came from? it was not the immaculate conception. >> women were a strong force on the ranch and in the range, from annie oakley to supreme court justice, sandra day o'connor. and they still are today. >> there you go.
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>> women like rancher, barbara van cleve who has been photographing the cowgirl way of life since she was 11 years old. >> you shoot everything on top of a horse. >> it's so short that it helps to get a little elevation. >> she recently joined a group of women on the good old-fashioned cattle drive. >> i thought i had her. >> it was all part of cowgirl you, a weekend long event for women. a museum dedicated to celebrating the spirit of women in the west. >> we have had women interested in history and the biggest draw is those folks that want to know about the honorees. this is the best teaching you will get is right here. >> he is not going to move. >> guest come to meet honorees like the five-time champion
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bronc rider. she rode bulls and horses from age 12 until she retired at 63 along the way collecting an impressive record of injuries. >> how many broken bones do you have? >> would you rather ask how many i don't have? that would be a lot better. i have one rib that has never been broke and i never broke either leg. other than that, i think that would pretty well cover it. >> you won a championship with a broken back? >> yeah, i did, in '87, but i didn't know it was broke, i was just being a wimp. >> it's a critical skill for any rancher bringing cattle to the market. >> when i started to cut i wanted to be the best and if you wanted to be the best you compete with the best and the
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best all happened to be men because there were no women in it. >> you were not striving to break through the glass ceiling, and women's lib was not a big deal, or i didn't know about it because i always thought you liberated yourself. >> she was the first to win the national cutting championship. >> you can gain anybody's respect if you are good. >> a critical tool for women in the old west was a gun. it was a way to protect herself, her herd and most important, her family. >> pull! pull! >> i felt like i was getting my little annie oakley on here. >> you were very enthusiastic about the "pull" part. >> pull! >> yeah that's how it's done. >> to be a cowgirl, you keep trying and don't give up.
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it's hard to make a living ranching, and the hours are long and the work is hard but it's the greatest place in the world to raise a family. can you be a cowgirl. >> i can. >> i think maybe they ought to make you an honorary member. >> the real members of the cowgirl hall of fame through over 200 extraordinary women honored since 1975. did you notice there was one thing missing? >> what? >> i did not have a hat. now i do. i am finished. >> michelle at one point you said to the horse, get on up here. did the horse understand your command? i never heard that before get on up here. i like the cow girl that said if you work hard and are good you can win everybody's respect. and that's true in all things. >> love me cowgirls.
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well that does it for us. thank you, jeff for joining us this week. >> thank you for having me guys. >> we had a nice time. charlie rose will return on monday. be sure to tune in to "cbs evening news with scott pelley," and as we leave youing let's take a look at the week that was. the law requires that the children be processed before they return back to their country. >> it's unlikely the children will be able to stay. >> this has become a bit political headache. >> this is a problem of the president's own making. >> severe weather from the midwest to new england. >> looked out the window. trees falling everywhere. warning sirens have gone off several times here in southern israel. >> more than seven palestinians have been killed in this week's. >> officers believe the shooting stems from a domestic dispute
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between him and his estranged wife. >> the georgia father who left his son in a hot suv remains behind bars. now there are questions about what his wife may have known. >> i've got some good bud here 20 bucks, you want it yeah. >> the first and so far the only recreational marijuana shop in all of seattle can sell to anyone 21 years and older. >> it's time to free the weed. >> the murder trial of oscar pistorius is inching toward a close. >> we've come to the end of the defense case. >> it was a mad dash that didn't go quite as planned. >> i got that on video. >> the fans here in cleveland are hoping he returns to the cavaliers if only to undo the damage. >> heading for the open door. >> the waitresses at the shooter's grill have an unusual sense of fashion accessorizing. what are you packing? >> endless appetizers. >> did they lay out all those
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appetizers for you guys? >> this is my breakfast. >> would you rather have been gored by a bull or bitten by a shark. >> a little licking this morning. >> we do that on break. >> it had a popcorn flavor. >> i thought it tasted like chicken. >> blow into the mouthpiece. >> i never knew that's what it was before. >> do you ever have a bad hair day or do i just look like grab today? >> yeah. >> and all that matters. >> you want someone to tech you on the shoulder. >> i love it when she said someone to touch me on the shoulder. >> that's not everywhere she wanted to be touched but that's another story. >> hello. >> goaaaaaal. >> that sounds sort of like a goat. >> utter humiliation. >> one of the most obscene sports results i've ever seen. >> maxi rodriguez sends
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your realtime captioner is linda macdonald. serious injuries this morning.. good morning, everyone. it's 8:55. i'm michelle griego. a woman is in the hospital with serious injuries this morning after being knocked unconscious during a fight between giants and a's fans outside at&t park yesterday. the fight started with some trash talking right after the giants lost to the a's. a suspect is in police custody. firefighters rescued two people and their pets from an early-morning apartment fire near san leandro. you can see the firefighters having to use their oxygen mask on the dog. both animals suffered from severe smoke inhalation. a woman also suffered smoke inhalation. and a man severe burns. now with the forecast, here's lawrence. the weekend looking good, too. out the door, a lot of clouds still lingering this morning. we are seeing some delays at sfo of over an hour on arriving flights due to low clouds and
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fog. looking back towards san francisco, the clouds trying to break up a little bit. more sunshine on the way into the afternoon. some of the monsoonal clouds continue to sweep across the sierra nevada and northern california. even a couple of lightning strikes early on this morning in the central valley. temperatures around the bay area this afternoon, under mostly sunny skies, about 79 in san jose. 72 and breezy this afternoon, 83 in livermore and 67 degrees in san francisco. 60s along the coastline with patchy fog. high pressure strengthens over the weekend, some of the temperatures hot inland to 90s in the valleys by sunday and monday. we are going to check out your "kcbs traffic" when we come back. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ [ barks ] whoo! mmm! ♪ ♪ ♪ oh, yeah ♪ [ whistling ] [ male announcer
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in lafayette a couple of problems now. very quiet for so lodge and now we have this accident westbound 24. it's approaching the pleasant hill road exit. obviously some slight delays trying to get out of walnut creek and redwood city they did clear the scene of that earlier crash. northbound 101 though is still pretty heavy from at least woodside. and san mateo bridge a motorcycle crash had been blocking the slow lane of westbound 92. about a mile past the toll plaza, that accident is also gone. looks like traffic is stacked up from hesperian across the pay gates.
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wayne: let's go! you've got $20,000! (screaming) i've got a monkey, i've got a monkey! jonathan mangum, fitness professional. - you're wayne brady! wayne: yes. - who wants to make a 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 wayne thanks for tuning in. let's make a deal. four people. four traders on the aisle. one, two, three, four. you guys stay where you are. everybody else have a seat. that's how we're going to do it. four traders on the aisle. we're going to start. tiffany, vision, kelly stand up. william, stay right there. i'm going to start with you. tiffany, nice to meet you, sweetheart. - nice to meet you. wayne: come over here so the camera can see you. all right, spoon. now, okay, all right. now, where are you from? - i'm from
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