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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  September 5, 2016 7:00am-9:01am PDT

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day at the ballpark. >> did you wear pick? >> i did. good morning to our viewers in the west. it's monday, september 5th, 2016, and welcome to "cbs this morning." hermine threatens to become a hurricane yet again. the storm is bringing powerful rip currents to the northeastern coast. what it's like on a cruise ship being rocked by rough waters. president obama fails to reach an agreement on syria with vladimir putin at the g20 summit. north korea tests ballistic missiles. dr. david agus explains why ingredients in some soaps and body washes my do more harm than good. we begin this morning with a look at today's eye opener. your world in 90 seconds.
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>> still concerned about hermine right along the coast. >> we didn't think it would be this bad. >> going to the beach, high rip current risk. >> hermine lingers off the atlantic coast. >> rough seas and strong wind. >> a royal caribbean cruise ship is caught in rough seas thanks to hermine. >> it got pretty wicked. >> no deal. talks between the u.s. and russia have concluded without an agreement on military cooperation in syria. >> given the gaps of trust that exist, that's a tough negotiation. >> the west strongly condemning north korea after pyongyang fires three ballistic missiles into japan's air defense zones. >> you're going to see hillary clinton very, very axelable between now and november 8th. >> raising millions of dollars, but has been accused of ignoring the press. >> she doesn't evolve, she doesn't talk to anybody. >> mother teresa is now saint
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teresa. pope francis presiding over the cannonizatio canonization. >> earthquake rattled nerves in north dakota. >> this was shaking violently. >> all that -- >> two kayakers and a jet skier rescued a baby wallaby. >> drivers get -- >> now we have cole custer and nemechek. >> and all that matters. >> just saw mr. trump here, i asked how did it go, he said great. what did he take away from today? >> oh, my luggage. >> okay, looks like dr. carson is going to try to find his l lugga luggage. >> on "cbs this morning." >> touchdown wins it for the long horns. swoopes for the win -- texas is back, folks! >> one game doesn't make a season, but we're going to enjoy this one. >> presented by toyota. let's go places.
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>> welcome to "cbs this morning," i'm josh elliot with vladimir duthiers and dana jacobson. charlie rose, norah o'donnell, and gayle king are all off. dangerous surf and flooding as millions celebrate the labor day holiday along the northeast coast. the cyclone is creating dangerous rip currents and storm surges, tropical storm warnings stretch from delaware, all the way to massachusetts. >> the storm is already blamed for at least two deaths. it hammered several southern states on the way up the coast with strong winds and flooding. jericka dunkin' can is in seasi heights, new jersey. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. seaside heights is painfully familiar with how powerful the storms can be, think back to superstorm sandy. right now it's very windy, but tidal surges later today could bring flooding.
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along the jersey shore overnight, hermine whipped up strong waves. at sea, the choppy waters rocked this royal caribbean cruise ship headed from new jersey to bermuda. >> when you see the crew on a cruise ship starting to get dizzy and sick, you know it's gotten pretty bad. >> derrick was one of around 6,000 people onboard the ship during the storm. >> it got pretty wicked, somewhere around maybe 1:00 a.m. the whole body started rocking, people started getting sick, they started distributing vomit bags around. it's been a pretty interesting adventure ever since. >> reporter: the deadly storm made landfall last friday and the category 1 hurricane has already hammered coastal areas, stretching from florida to virginia, knocking out power for hundreds of thousands and causing widespread damage. it's now targeting the eastern seaboard, from maryland to
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massachusetts. >> while there's no way i'd want to be out here after today. the next couple days, you don't want to be anywhere near this place. >> reporter: governor chris christie says hermine won't come close to having the same destructive power as superstorm sandy in 2012. still, he's urging people not to take any chances. >> rip currents are going to get fairly aggressive. we don't want to see people have injuries or loss of life because of going into the ocean in dangerous conditions. >> reporter: now, hermine could regain strength later today, but the worst of it here is over as that storm continues to push offshore. >> jericka duncan, thank you. chief weather caster lonnie quinn is tracking the storm's movements and joins us here this morning, good morning. >> good morning to you, good morning to you, everybody. tracking the movements, not much movement. moving at a snail's pace. what you see right here, satellite imagery, looking at the cloud top. i want to show you the 5:00 a.m. numbers from the national
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hurricane center and there they are. lots to talk about here. first of all, well out to see. 300 miles south of the eastern tip of long island is where you'll find the center of circulation. pretty strong, 74 mile per hour winds would be a cat 1 hurricane strength, so where's it go from here? moving to the north is key, because it had been moving northeast the entire time, and now 11 out of 12 models say this is going to turn to the northwest, maybe more to the west, consequently, the national hurricane center put this cone together. they do include the wobble back towards shore, never actually making landfall anywhere, only exception would be cape cod and noef scotkoe nova scotia. sunshine for a lot of the folks, but plenty of beaches will be closed. back to you, josh. >> thank you for that, lonnie. meanwhile, president obama is leaving the g20 economic summit with no peace deal in syria and under the cloud of north korea's latest missile
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test. overnight the north fired three missiles that landed in the waters near japan being seen as a provocation aimed at president obama. at the summit in china, the president met with vladimir putin to try to keep syrian peace talks on track. margaret brennan is in hung jo with what is holding up the deal. margaret? >> reporter: good morning. in a 90-minute meeting with vladimir putin, president obama tried to salvage a cease-fire deal in syria, but he's walking away empty handed. president obama had hoped to broker a groundbreaking deal with vladimir putin to coordinate air strikes against isis and al qaeda-linked terrorists in syria, but at the last minute russia pulled back. the proposed deal would have stopped their ally, dictator bashar al assad from bombing civilians and u.s.-backed rebels while allowing aid into cities like aleppo.
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sadly, the city came under siege as the deal fell apart. >> we have had some productive conversations about what a real cessation of a hostilities would look like, but given the gaps of trust that exist, that's a tough negotiation. >> reporter: any alliance with russia would be extraordinary, given their brutal behavior inside syria, but putin's military mite has made him indispensable. the white house is reluctant to use force and has no diplomatic back-up plan. the mideast crisis overshadowed president obama's main mission here at the g20, to bridge tensions with china, whose aggressive military expansion in asia is rattling nerves. north korea test fired three ballistic missiles into the sea of japan. while the white house strongly condemned the missile test and called it a reckless threat to boats and planes in the area,
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behind closed doors pr presiden obama also pressured xi jinping. margaret brennan in china, thanks. hillary clinton and donald trump go to cleveland today for labor day events to kick off the fall campaign. the latest poll shows clinton leading by eight points in pennsylvania and four points in north carolina, but the survey of all 13 battleground states finds trump just two points behind and 46% of voters say clinton's explanations of her private e-mail servers are getting less believable. nancy cordes is north of new york city where clinton is getting a new set of wings today. nancy, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, we're taking off shortly, actually. clinton tends to keep her press pack at arm's length, but that's going to be a little harder to do starting today, because they'll be riding along on her new campaign plane. you can see the slogan there,
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stronger together on the tail, the campaign logo, the "h" that stands for hillary. if she does take questions today, a lot will be about the fbi's investigation into clinton's server, notes that were released on friday. >> she said it's a mistake and she's learned from it. >> reporter: clinton's running mate repeated the line of defense after fbi notes showed that a clinton computer specialist deleeted a trove of her e-mails last year after a congressional committee ordered they be preserved. also revealed clinton told agents she couldn't recall getting any briefing or training on how to handle classified information as secretary of state. when presented with a confidential e-mail with the marking "c" next to the top of a paragraph she speculated it was marked in alphabetical order. kaine has this explanation. >> we look at so much material. unless it is specifically pulled
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out and identified, it is difficult to know sometimes whether a statement or paragraph is classified or not. >> reporter: in a tweet, trump went after clinton. lying hillary clinton told the fbi she did not know the "c" markings on documents stood for classified. how would this be happening? the fbi also determined clinton used up to 13 different devices to access her e-mail, including eight blackberries during her tenure, but agents could not examine them because her lawyers were unable to locate any of these devices. donald trump's running mate mike pence. >> it's just more evidence that hillary clinton is the most dishonest candidate for president of the united states since richard nixon. >> reporter: notes indicated she wasn't the only secretary of state weary of e-mails becoming public record. a 2009 e-mail colin powell told clinton, be very careful, i got around at all by not saying much and not using systems that captured the data. that exchange contradicts what
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powell told "people" magazine last month when he says he only sent clinton a memo a year into her tenure. as to that trump attack and that tweet where he said it shows clinton clearly doesn't understand "c" means classified, he's got his facts wrong, too, because the fbi director said that "c" stood for confidential, not classified. >> thank you, enjoy the new ride. donald trump supporters and opponents are still asking questions about the immigration policy he tried to clear up last week. our battleground tracker shows 47% of voters believe trump's immigration plans are the same as they've been all along. 37% think trump is changing and getting easier towards illegal immigrants. major garrett is in cleveland where trump will appear in a few hours. good morning, major. >> reporter: good morning. donald trump for the most part has accomplished what he sought out to do by labor day, made the race competitive. hillary clinton, of course, still leads, but trump has cut
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her post-convention advantage by more than half in the recent cbs news battleground survey. even so, trump still faces charges of a muddled immigration policy and those charges are coming from republicans. >> donald trump has made it very clear that a priority of our administration will be removing criminal aliens. >> donald trump is going to get rid of early on the 2 to 3 million criminals that are here illegally in this country. >> reporter: donald trump's advisers have the talking points down on criminal undocumented immigrants, just not the specifics. >> if they are criminals, they are going immediately, and we don't know what that number is. we hear anything from 1 to 2 million. >> reporter: nearly 700,000 immigrants in the country have illegally committed felonies or serious misdemeanors. as for the immigrants with no other criminal records, trump's plan? >> donald trump wants to take a deep breath and look where we are in the country then and find out if you can find a humane way to deal with those who remain. >> reporter: jeff flake, who
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skipped trump's immigration speech, calls it a muddle. >> pivots, then pivots right back, so it's kind of a 360-degree pivot at times. >> reporter: hillary clinton's campaign says immigrant families can see straight through her opponent's cynical ploys and that trump's message is clear, everyone must go. a recent cbs news poll shows more than 60% of voters believe both trump and clinton only talk about issues concerning minorities to gain support. as part of his effort to reach african-american voters, trump traveled to detroit over the weekend. >> for centuries the african-american church has been the conscience of our country. >> reporter: as rudy giuliani defended trump's outreach to minorities. >> for years people say republicans don't reach out to the african-american community. well, he reached out to the african-american community. >> reporter: trump has climbed back into this race, but it's hillary clinton who is expanding
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the electoral mass, spending real money in the state of arizona, a place democrats haven't won since bill clinton did in 1996 and before that, josh, we have to go back to 1948. >> major, thank you for that. meanwhile, mark, the chief national correspondent for "new york times" good enough to join us now from washington. mark, good morning to you. we now know 13 different devices perhaps used by hillary clinton, the secretary of state. none recovered. some perhaps destroyed by a hammer. a laptop with archived information gone missing. a candidate who said she may have been confused early and often about the whole thing. optically, how bad is this for the campaign? >> well, i think the whole thing is a big optical problem. it's a muddle. muddle seems to be the word of the day. i think people have not really bought her explanations from the beginning here. i think unless you have video of hillary clinton taking a sledge hammer to her 13 devices, it's probably not that big of a deal, but it still does add to the
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level of distrust that's dogged her from the very beginning, so i think in so much as these stories keep coming, they are going to be a problem for her. >> mark, you mentioned the distrust. that's what we're seeing in new polling out that a majority think it's becoming harder to believe her explanations, that she's running for office for her own good, not to actually help the american people. it is sort of two-fold, can she get elected with numbers like that? what's it mean for her if she does? >> you can certainly get elected with numbers like that, largely because her opponent's numbers are worse. whoever wins in november is going to face a very challenging landscape, not only politically, but because they are going to come in very, very damaged, because if you see the numbers now, i don't think they'll improve much between now and november. so, obviously, this has been a tough campaign, i think the next couple of months will be just as tough, if not worse, and it's going to be a very, very, you know, sort of dicey thing to watch. look, neither of them, i think, are going to be surprised by
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this, but we'll see how it goes from here. >> mark, let's talk about donald trump's visit to a black church in detroit over the weekend. he said then we need a civil rights agenda for our time. is he really making a pitch for black americans and other minorities where he's gotten historically bad numbers or is there another strategy here? >> i think the fact he's there is significant and i think he will get credit for just sort of showing up in the black community and a black church, which is not something you traditionally see republican nominees for president doing at this stage of the game. that itself, i think, could be the the very least an olive branch to the african-american community, especially at a time where the enthusiasm that community has for hillary clinton at this point is very much, you know, it's an open question. we have a story today in "the new york times" about, you know, there is some lack of enthusiasm for hillary clinton, certainly, compared to the first african-american president president obama. so i think at the very least it's an opening for him he's seizing. >> you say that he will get
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credit for it, but did he accomplish anything in that in going to that church? >> probably not significantly. i think, obviously, this is not going to be, you know, a big part of his winning coalition if he were to prevail in november, but again, if you're going to think purely in terms of optics and showing up, you know, this is something for him to, you know, at least point to and say that i'm trying to reach out to new constituencies. he's said he's going to keep going back, so we'll see. for now, i don't think it will hurt him in any way. >> mark, thanks as always. mother teresa is now officially a saint. pope francis made the declaration yesterday in front of more than 100,000 people. he described the revered nun as a defender of the poor, sick, and abandoned. they watched on big screens, others gathered around her tomb. two miracles were attributed to mother teresa so she could reach
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sainthood. ahead, how a man first linked to the mysterious disappearance of 11-year-old jacob weatherling helped police solve the case. first, it is 7:19 and time to check,, kpix studios in san francisco. good morning, everybody, all on this labor day. it's going to be warmer today than what it was yesterday. we have the clouds breaking up at the coast. this is a view from the estuary towards the skyline of san francisco. it's a cool start to your day, 47 santa rosa, but it's now 60 san jose. later today, 60s at the coast, mid and high 80s away from the bay, warmer than yesterday but not as warm as tuesday or wednesday.
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all right. so so if plain old soap and water, is that the best way to wash? >> ahead, we will ask dr. david agus on on the fda's ban on anti-bacterial ingredients and the soap used by millions of americans is actually safe. the news is back in the meantime here on "cbs this morning." i use what's already inside me to reach my goals. so i liked when my doctor told me i may reach my blood sugar and a1c goals by activating what's within me...
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an american world cup winner faces a health crisis weeks before giving birth. ahead how her nba husband is putting family first. >> and tomorrow is oprah's winning author. >> i can't wait to reveal my selectionion on "cbs this morning." that is tomorrow. it is a memoir with so much heart that is
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attempted kidn >> good morning, it's 7:26. i'm michelle griegoo. this convicted sex offender approached women on the sidewalk and tried to drag him into his car. in each case, the victimming were able to get free. across the bay area, some need to watch out for rip currents. one man was pulled from the beach and remain in critical condition. coming up on cbs this morning, the fda cracks down on antibacterial soap. what you should watch out for. stay with us. traffic and weather in just a moment. don't miss the biggest sale of the year. right now save 50% on the labor day limited edition bed,
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good morning, happy labor day. the time is 78:00. let's look at your golden gate bridge. keep in mind. both parking lots will be closed from 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. if you're heading into san francisco. this is a huge, popular destination on the holiday. let's head to your bay bridge toll plaza looking clear. it will take you 15 minutes. and san mateo bridge from heyward into the peninsula look good, 880 to 401, 15 minutes. it looks pretty. >> discovery bay, 89 degrees. take the boat over to union point marina. that's it right there. otherwise, this is a look towards ocean beach and the coast is clearing, a little bit of condensation on the camera lens, temperature-wise, 47 cool degree in santa rosa. it's 54 in san francisco, warmer today than yesterday
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from the 60s, 70s, to 89 degrees. what consumers should
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watch out for.s should time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. former stanford swimmer brock turner who is back home in ohio after being released from jail for sexual assault. turner was spotted outside of his parents' home yesterday. you see him there. he had left a california jail on friday after serving three months of a six-month sentence for sexually assaulting a woman last year. turner must register as a sex offender. "the seattle times" reports a top soccer star's solidarity with 49ers quarterback colin kaepernick. megan rapinoe kneeled before her game last night in chicago and
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confirmed it was because of kaepernick's stand. she says i know what it means to look at a flag and not have it protect all of your liberty. ubwe told out friday, samsu will replace 2 million galaxy note 7. >> the omaha world parents report on a little boy killed by an alligator in june remembering their child. saturday would have been his third birthday. >> happy birthday, you are in our hearts today and every other day, lane. you will always be mommy's loving sweet baby boy. >> just heart breaking. melissa and matt graves honored their son lane. hundreds gathered at a nebraska football field for a memorial and to release balloons in his
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memory. the minneapolis star tribune reports on the grim discovery of a kidnapped boy's remains. 11-year-old jacob wetterling was abducted in 1989. danny heinrich helped investigators find jacob. the 53-year-old was a person of interest in the boy's kidnapping and in jail on child porno the years but never arrested in the disappearance of 11-year-old jacob wetterling. this is the field where investigators found jacob wetterling's remains. people in paynesville,
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minnesota, have driven past the spot for nearly 27 years. >> just a closure to something to say, okay, we got the culprit. >> my name is jacob wetterling. >> reporter: jacob was last seen on the night the october 22nd, 1989. according to court documents, a mass gunman approached gunman. his brother and a friend as they rode their bikes home from a convenience store. jacob was abducted and the two other boys were let go. >> he grabbed jacob and told me to run as fast as i could into the woods or else he would shoot. >> reporter: tire marks were shown from danny heinrich's car were consistent with those at the crime scene. fbi agents questioned heinrich and searched his home after jacob's disappear ns but never charged him. a break came in 2015 with gerald asked investigators to relook at his own kidnapping and assault case from the same year in nearby cold springs. investigators searched
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heinrich's home again and discovered child pornography. law enforcement sources say last week heinrich told the fbi where wetterling's remains were located as part of a agree agreement. >> what was your response when you heard that? >> i happened to be in the car with my 12-year-old boy. i couldn't help but feel emotional. happy and sad at the same time. >> you just want to find him. >> reporter: throughout the investigation, jacob's parents raised awareness for missing children. in 1994, patty wetterling helped pass a national law requiring child sex offenders to register. a statement from that
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minnesota's innocence was snatched away. >> such a heart breaking story. jamie on the ground for us, thank you very much. public health experts are plau applauding a new fda ban on anti-bacterial soaps. the fda says they could do more harm than good. companies have one year to remove the chemicals or take the product off the store shelves. our dr. david agus is in los angeles. good to see you. good morning. >> reporter: good morning to you. >> so what are these commonly used ingredients in these soaps and why is the fda taking this action now? >> so the two most common but 17 others. 9 total ingredients that were removed that represent about 40 of the soaps out there. the bottom line whenever a soap says anti-bacterial or a claim it's one of them. the reason they are doing it
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it's been shown they may affect the endocrine in mice. at the same time, there hasn't been shown to be any benefit. so potential risk, i emphasize the word potential, and no benefits so the fda took a stand. >> and so, doctor, one of the leading trade groups here has pushed back, perhaps not unexpectedly, again the claim. the american cleaning institute released a statement that said in part, i quote. anti-bacterial soaps are critical to public health because of the importance hand hygiene plays in the prevention of infection. you mentioned risks with no benefits but what benefits are believed to be present in these soaps? >> washing your hands in soap and water is fantastic and shown to work. several years ago the fda said it's a warning shot. show us the data for us to allow these to be on the market and there really hasn't been any data that there is a public benefit or an benefit to an
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individual on using them. so without that benefit, they are pushed off the market the next year. >> you saw several years. is there a reason to be concerned if you've been using these soaps you might have some of these impacts? >> no. nobody knows of any direct human health issue with using these soaps. there are potential ones. no benefit of potential ones we take a step back so nobody should panic. now when you go shopping and a claim anti-bacterial, don't buy that one. >> what about hand sanitizers and wipes? the other products in this area? >> that's a great question. as of right now. the fda saying we are looking at data to see if there is benefit to them. again, a warning there but there is no yet study to show that there wasn't benefit there. and there isn't a harm yet. so the fda is going to look at them and we will hear more the next year with regard to the hand sanitizers. >> procter and gamble and johnson & johnson phased out
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these ingredients before this rule. what should i and other consumers look for when you're shopping and you want something to clean your hands? what should you be looking at when you look at the label? >> look for soap. soap and water look. we have been using that a long time. yeah. everybody in these marketing claims try to sell it. soap, soap, soap. >> perfect. and simple! >> davr. david agus, thank you. >> thank you. ahead why nba player jrue holiday is stepping aside from nba to take care of his wife. if you're heading out the door, don't miss us. you can download our all-absence app.
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quilted northern works their bathroom experience. but these birds see all and forget nothing. except this one, who has an outlet for a face.
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♪ a heart breaking, but hopeful, new chapter in one of the sports world most
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captivating love stories. lauren holiday the soccer star with two olympic medals has been diagnosed with a benign brain tumor but waiting until to have it removed after her baby is born. her husband, nba star jrue holiday says he will take a leave to take care of his wife. >> reporter: lauren holiday retired from professional soccer last summer in the height of her career in part to start a family with her husband junirue. she experienced bad headaches and mri revealed a brain tumor on the ride of her brain. as a two-time gold medalist and world cup champion lauren holiday dominated on the soccer field. >> good look for holiday. >> reporter: her husband jrue a star point star for the pelicans shines on the basketball court. now the two are taking on their
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biggest battle yet as lauren has a brain tumor discovered as she is about to deliver their first child. jrue holiday called the diagnosis devastating. we are still and very excited obviously, but our focus shifted from having this magnificent blessing to make sure everything is going to be okay with lauren and the child. sunday, the pelicans basketball team announced that jrue is taking an indefinite leave of absence to care for his family. head coach alvin gentry said in a statement the most important thing for jrue to do right now is be with his wife and his family. lauren with the kansas city club. >> if anybody to get through this is lauren. she is strong and has a strong faith. >> reporter: lauren and drew first met as students at ucla where they returned last year to host a charity youth clinic. >> jrue and i are both
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passionate in giving back and just being involved in the community. >> reporter: three years ago, the couple exchanged vows. >> starting a family with her is the best thing. >> reporter: jrue says lauren has her good days and her bad days. some are better than others. she is, obviously, a fighter. the toughest woman i know. that's the reason why i married her. jrue holiday told the newspaper the ride of lauren's face feels numb because the tumor is pressing on a nerve. their baby is healthy and if possible they hope to induce the birth early, perhaps this month to help treat lauren. this reminds you you got to be grateful for every second you have on this earth because you never know. >> we talk so much about winning in sports and it's great to see the pelicans say put that aside. he is the second best player on that team. >> to see these two, they have shared themselves through social media through the course of their careers.
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this is a love story and this is a wonderful thing and our thoughts are certainly with them both. >> all of us here are cheering them on. >> demarco, thank you so much. video captures one of nature's most impressive wonders. ahead, the stunning light show from the kpix studios in san francisco, good morning on this labor day. plan for a warmer day than what we experienced sunday. this is towards the transamerica pyramid and look at the blue sky. we have a little check of the coast, sunshine in pacifica, 52 there 47 santa rosa, from the 60s to the 70s to the 80s today, outside 88. warmer tuesday. announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by discover it card. the card that treats you like you treat you. wait. you're real?
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cont worker. >> good morning. it's 7:56. i'm kenny choi. it's labor day, a celebration of the associated and economic contribution of the american worker. most schools, government offices and banks are closed for the holiday. police looking for a convicted sex offender suspected of approaching women on sidewalk and trying to force them into his car. the attack were on monday in the city's willow glen area and thursday near communication hill. the suspect is identified as david lee russell, a transient. and in the next half hour of cbs this morning, a new trend aimed at making it easier to stay away from the sun's harmful rays. traffic and weather in just a moment. ,,,,,,
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good morning. the time is 7:57. let's look at traffic on labor
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day. eastbound 80 at san pablo dam road, a three-car crash there and not many delays here. we'll keep you update on when that will be cleared and also an updated mass transit around the bay area, 8:00 a.m. is when the b.a.r.t. starts, ace is closed, and san francisco parking is enforced, although it's a holiday, so pay your meters. here's a look at golden gate into san francisco. vista center and welcome parking lots are closed 11:00 p.m. to 5:00 a.m. but beautiful outside. it is. we have nothing but blue skies. this is the golden gate bridge and can tell we have some clouds lined up next to the seashore but even ocean beach clearing out. transamerica pyramid with nothing but blue skies. we're now 51 degrees and redwood city, 51 after dropping to 47. 60s through the high 80s today and looks like we have a modest
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warming trend starting today. ,,,,,,,,
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and good morning to our viewers in the west. it is monday, september 5th, 2016. welcome back to "cbs this morning." more real news ahead on this labor day, including the presidential race kicking into high gear. we look at the week with nancy pelosi. first, today's eye opener at 8:00. right now, it is very windy, but tidal serges later today could bring flooding. >> we have tropical storm warnings from the delaware coast, to cape cod. keep in mind, sunshine for a lot of these folks, but plenty of beaches will be closed. >> president obama tried to salvage a cease-fire deal in syria, but he's walking away empty handed. >> typically the tone of our
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meetings are candid, blunt, businesslike. and this one was no different. >> clinton tends to keep her press pack at arm's length. that's going to be a little harder to do starting today, because they will be riding along on her new campaign plane. >> people have not really bought her explanations. i think unless you have video of hillary clinton taking a sledge hammer to her 13 devices, it's probably not that big of a deal. >> this should be over the phils dugout and out of play. that's one heck of a catch right there. that is an "a" for effort. that was a very nice grab. show it. >> i'm josh elliot with vladimir duthiers and dana jacobson. charlie, gayle, and norah are off today. hurricane hermine threatens
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several states now with dangerous flooding. the storm is moving out to the atlantic, but areas along the coast are feeling its effects. storm warnings from delaware to massachusetts, the cyclone is creating dangerous rip currents and storm surges. along the jersey shore overnight, hermine whipped up strong waves. take a look at that. the rough water also rocked a royal caribbean cruise ship on it way from new jersey to bermuda. everyone was okay and the ship continued its journey. president obama is on his way to laos. the president wanted to broker a groundbreaking deal with russia, ending the air attacks on sifl yans, allowing aid to reach besieged and starving cities like aleppo, but russia backed off at the last minute. when he was forced to exit the belly of air force one, some observers described it as a chinese snub. margaret brennan looks at the increasingly tense relationship now between washington and
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beijing. margaret, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. china is tightly controlling this g20 summit and they place lots of restriction on the news media, and ironically, that has made even small disagreements between the u.s. and china more public. every head of state visiting china for the g20 summit was greeted with pomp and circumstance. the moment their plane doors opened, but president obama's arrival did not go smoothly. as he stepped off air force one, the red carpeted stairs were missing, forcing president obama to use an alternate exit typically reserved for war zones. on the tarmac, a chinese minder tried to block u.s. press access, screaming at a white house aide, this is our country, this is our airport. then he yelled at national security adviser susan rice and tried to prevent her from entering the president's motorcade. the secret service had to
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intervene. rice told a reporter they did things that weren't anticipated. it was a sharp contrast to chinese president xi jinping's visit to washington last september, when vice president joe biden greeted him at the plane door. >> i wouldn't overcrank the significant of it. >> reporter: president obama do downplayed the incident, saying his entourage can be overwhelming for host nations. >> the seams are showing more than usual in terms of some of the negotiations and jostling that takes place. >> if they want to deliver a message to the president, that's not the way they would do it. >> reporter: former principle adviser jeffrey bader said the chinese were not trying to embarrass the president. >> i think it was just very aggressive security people on both sides who push their luck a bit too far. >> reporter: but there is plenty of very real tension behind closed doors. president obama says he's concerned by growing anti-american sentiment here.
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china's aggressive military expansion and its unfair trade practices. all of that, vllad, has complicated his plans to refocus america's economic and military mite towards asia. >> margaret brennan on the ground for us in china, thanks. meanwhile, hillary clinton and donald trump start the fall campaign today with events in cleveland. trump continued reaching out to african-american voters on saturday in detroit. the latest cbs news poll shows more than 60% of voters say both candidates talk about issues surrounding minorities to gain support. she led trump by an average of more than seven points, now she leads by an average of 3.9%. >> only 7% of voters we spoke to in battleground states think hillary clinton's answers on e-mail servers are getting more believable. the fbi released notes from its interview with clinton on friday. according to the notes, she told agents she could not recall getting any briefing or training
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on how to handle classified information as secretary of state and wrote clinton stated she did not know what the "c" meant at the beginning of paragraphs and referenced it was marking in l alphabetical order. >> lawmakers return to washington tomorrow to tackle stalemates and partisan fights that were put on hold, if only for the summer. nancy pelosi good enough to join us here in studio 57. good morning to you. congre congresswoman, let's start with that letter, c, again, hillary clinton told the fbi she didn't know it stood for confidential. how concerned, then, should voters be that a former senator, a former secretary of state, didn't know what that "c" stood for? >> well, i think they shouldn't be that concerned. i think the secretary of state deals with a large number of issues, 30,000 e-mails we're talking about a few that may have been marked confidential,
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classified, secret, and highly sensitive is where it becomes more problematic, but the fact is, whatever it was that hillary clinton dealt with in that manner had no threat to our security. and i think that too much is being made of this. hillary clinton is as talented and as informed and as knowledgeable a leader as we have seen in our country. i think much too much is being made of this, and i say that as the top democrat on the intelligence committee for years, for years. this is really much to do about something, but too much. >> but she is, nevertheless, somebody that a majority of the electorate simply has said they do not trust. when she says on 39 separate occasions to the fbi she cannot recall receiving any training with regard to monitoring and using her e-mails for
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confidential information, how believable is that? >> we're talking about at least 30,000 e-mails. you're talking about 1,000 of that, but you know what, this is a distraction from what we really should be talking about. congress is going into session tomorrow. we have so much unfinished business. in february the president asked congress for resources to fight a national health -- public health emergency, zika, not one cent has been appropriated by congress. hopefully, in this session of congress and this february, congress will honor its responsibility to the american people. open yo opiods, we pass bills about it but don't allocate any resources to it. flint, michigan, for a long time the children there have been suffering. we have not yet met the challenge to our conscience on that, and the issue of gun
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safety, something that had the votes if they would give us a vote. there's so much unfinished business that directly affects the lives of the american people. that's what we have to get on with. >> you mention zika and the funding in that the last time it was the senate democrats that blocked it. what needs to happen to have a bipartisan agreement on zika funding? >> wasn't the senate democrat that is blocked it, it was the insistence on the part of the republicans that zika, which is a sexually transmitted infection, whatever you want to call it, can be, yes, is and that they are saying whatever we do, we can't have any resources that go for contraception. it's ridiculous. first of all. second of all, the republicans were putting forth much less than the president asked for. so the fact is, is that for ideological reasons, whether it's antibirth control,
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anticontraception, antifetal finish research, anything that has to do with reproduction, they have decided you cannot, you cannot use any resources for family planning or contraception. >> but it feels like this is where people get frustrated with government, that we need funding to go towards zika, how do you get a compromise then between the two parties? >> we've also been able to compromise any number of times and so we're saying, come up with what you have. whatever it is, come up with something. but don't say go use ebola funds. no, we need the ebola funds for ebola. we've taken the ebola funds, that's the only way we have been able to do any research for all the preechbs and the rest is taking money from something else. but you have a situation -- this takes you to the difference between the democrats and republicans. republicans are there for the wealthiest people, trickledown economics.
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tax breaks to the wealthy, and now you're going to balance the budget by not allocating resources to what we need. that's what the election is about. it's about how we invest in the american people. i always say to them, show me your values, show me your budget. if your budget is one that sends tax cuts to the wealthiest, it will trickle down, versus investment in the future of our education, our infrastructure, and our good health of the american people. that's a debate that we have to have with the american people. and we should be focusing on these campaigns on issues that affect people in their lives. >> leader pelosi, let me ask you, let's go back to hillary clinton and her e-mail, because that is something a lot of people are talking about right now. the fbi reports said the specialists used a program called bleach bit to delete an unknown number of e-mails after the house committee investigated the benghazi attack asked her to
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produce the relevant e-mails. a lot of people are saying this is going to the perception in some cases hillary clinton plays by her own rules and is above the law in her own mind. >> i don't subscribe to that, but i do agree with you that some people have that perception. but what we have to do is labor day is here, it's time for the campaign to begin. what does this mean for the future of our country? we have a choice between two candidates. there's nothing that donald trump has said, whether it's about immigrants or migrants, muslims or mexicans to use his words, that republicans in congress don't say all the time. so we have to simplify what is the choice that the american people will have. not to get bogged down in some technicalties about whom -- about e-mails that have not had an impact on our national security. we're big on security. security for our country that is
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smart and strong and tough, security for our economy that's about the middle class and not the wealthiest people. and a democracy. >> thank you, i don't mean to interrupt you, we're out of time. 63 days until that general election. >> great campaign and the american people have to be the winners. >> thank you. a new musical is generating oscar buzz even before it hits theaters. plus, recent news stories could become blockbusters.
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consumers have a growing consumers have a growing appetite for edible sunscreen. edible, i said. are they effective? ahead we talk to a top dermatologist about whether sun protection from the inside out really works. you're watching cbs this morning. from the inside out really works. you're watching "cbs this morning." don't stare at me. see me. see me. see me to know that psoriasis is just something that i have.
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♪ labor day is the unofficial end of summer but that doesn't mean you should pack away the sunblock. doctors say you need year-round protection. 15% of men and 30% of women rarely use sunscreen. now the hot trend is edible sunscreen and it should keep you save from the harmful rays from
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inside out. dr. jeannine downie is here to tell us how it works. how on earth does this work? >> a product call heliocare. it's anti-inflammatory and photo protect. it helps to decrease your dna damage and interacts with your cells. >> it's not the same as me putting on spf on my skin? >> no. it's not. it extend the length of the sunscreen by spf 4. >> that is nothing, right? >> you need a 30 or above every day, rain or shine. january through december. regardless of your ethnicity. >> the company will say this is not meant to replace the regular use of sunscreen. >> no. >> but we know that these supplements do not require fda approval. >> right. >> the red flag just shot up for me here. >> heliocare has been in a bunch of different papers and it's one that has some benefits. others are drinkable sunscreens
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and we are not so sure what their benefits are. >> doctor, if you drink something, wouldn't you excrete it out? >> yes. some pill forms can interact with your dna so they have actual -- >> how does it work? >> it actually interacts with your tissue and so you're not getting the level of damage and inflammation that you would otherwise get with some forms that actually do have true clinical science krinbehind the >> >> science is good. >> i am too. >> bottom line, are sunscreen regime should be was? >> every single day apply it 20 minutes before you leave the house so it sinks in and up here in new york reapply every two hours and in the florida and caribbeans, every one hour. that is 30 and above every day on every exposed area of your body. skin cancer is real.
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4.2 million cases last year alone. >> we didn't get to talk about the kfc. >> it is finger licking good! >> no, it's not. >> don't eat it! navy midshipmen swap uniforms and what they did to pull him from the stands to star as a quarterback. you're watching "cbs this morning." we could brag about what's in new light & fit yogurt. but we'd rather talk about what's not in it. like no artificial colors or preservative ingredients. and with 70 calories... maybe we're kind of bragging?
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new light & fit. if you're using this toothpaste, you're probably expecting to get visibly whiter teeth, but it only removes surface stains, and clinical tests show that it only provides about a half-shade of whitening. colgate optic white high impact white is different. it contains hydrogen peroxide, a professionally recommended whitening ingredient. it goes beyond surface stains to deeply whiten. it whitens four shades, and that is a visible difference in whitening. colgate optic white high impact white toothpaste. sorry ma'am. no burning here. ugh. heartburn. try new alka-seltzer heartburn relief gummies. they don't taste chalky and work fast. mmmm. incredible. can i try? she doesn't have heartburn. new alka seltzer heartburn relief gummies. enjoy the relief.
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,,,, ,, ♪ american progress nearly wiped out the american bison.
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we c-h-p says several stolen cars were involved in >> good morning. it's 8:25. i'm michelle griego. several stolen cars were involved in an accident on 880 and fremont. the suspect reportedly took the cars from a dealership and later crashed into two other cars on the highway. one suspect was arrested. an ex-convict is back behind bars accused of shooting two officer in a fresno county jail. police said he walked into the that silty and asked to see someone and started firing at two officers flame in critical condition. next on "cbs this morning." labor day weekend marks the end of summer and new fall movie season. they'll discuss the must-see movies to watch. stay with us. traffic and weather in just a moment. ,,,,,,,,,,,,
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good morning. happy labor day. it's 8:27. eastbound 80 at san pablo dam road and a three-car crash not causing delays and a couple of arrows but nothing too bad. 15 to 20 minutes. the plaza is looking good into the city but a different story. here's a look at the golden
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gate bridge and closed from 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. this is a popular destination for tourists and 880 to 101 westbound, 15 minutes across into the peninsula on your san mateo bridge. roberta, happy labor day. >> happy labor day. hi, everyone. look at this. the coast is clear and we have ocean beach clearing out and temperatures 50 to 56 and 60s and low 70s pretty common around the rim of the bay and peninsula. san jose, three degrees off your average mark and 83 santa rosa. livermore today, mid-80s, 89 in discovery bay, low 90s tomorrow and the warmest day this work week will be on wednesday. ,,,,,,,,,,
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find the strike zone. >> who cares? >> that is as far as it goes for me. >> that was an aerial flip. >> it was magic is what it was. remarkable. >> she is the human emoji, truly. welcome back to "cbs this morning." in this half hour, coming up some of the biggest movies this fall are based on real-life stories. erik davis is in our toyota
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green room with what to watch and how hollywood is answering your questions about diversity on the big screen. plus, bison in this country were nearly wiped out. so how did they make a comeback? ahead, mark strassmann takes us to yellowstone national park to look at a remarkable conservation story. >> glad to have them all. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. "the washington post" reports on the largest living primate moved to the critically endangered list. the eastern gorilla has suffered 70% loss of population the past 20 years and one step away from extinction. illegal huntizing mostly to blame. >> "the new york times" says president obama and first lady might cash in on lucrative book deals after leaving the white house. one predicts the president could earn $20 million for a two or three-book contract. but others say he will no longer
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earn more than 12 million. so not a big deal. mrs. obama could receive $10 billion for her memoir. >> it is good to be president. >> dale earnhardt jr. saying he does not belong in a race car today and out for the rest of the season. he made the announcement yesterday. he suffered from concussion-like symptoms apparently after a crash in june. ed he does daily exercises to improve his vision and balance and hopes to return to driving next year. the capital of maryland explains why a naval academy freshman went from a grandstand seat at a football game to starring on the film. malcolm perry, the fourth string quarterback. summoned into the end of the game against visiting fordham due to various injuries and rules violations. he would rush for 30 yards and his midshipmen won 52-16. >> you're not a fan of "rudy"? come on, josh! >> the telegraph of britain
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reports on a new formula that could ease a global chocolate crisis. wild mangoes could be used to make a substitute for cocoa butter that more than doubled between 2005 and 2015 due to decease and crop failure. >> some ticket sales were flat despite big budget offerings. the low budget fright flick don't breathe pulled in more than 2.5 million in north america and followed by suicide squad with 10 million on its fifth weekend in theaters and pete's dragon third at 6.5 million. >> hollywood has very high hopes for the fall season which promises on to be filled with action drama, musicals and some "harry potter" magic. >> don't panic but absolutely nothing to worry about! >> the "fantastic beast" is one of the most anticipated movies of the season. over the next few months, top
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oscar hopefuls will also hit the theaters. erik davis is the managering editor of fandango. welcome back to the table. >> thanks for having me. >> one theme is the real-life movies we are going to see. "sully" directed by clint eastwood and "deep water horizon." >> tom hanks is starring at captain sully sullenberger who successfully landed a plane on the hudson river and saved all 155 members on board. the director does a good job re-creating the hudson landing and if you're neurotic about flying, you will get a view. it's excellent in that way and reveal things we didn't really know about this story going in so what i really liked about it. snowden this is directed by oliver stone. this delves deeper into snowden's personal life and covers his military and his girlfriend and everything leading up to why he decided to
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leak top secret documents. that one is also good. my favorite of the three is "deep water horizon." it tackles the big oil spill that happened off the coast of louisiana a few years back. this was directed by peter burke who also did "lone survivor" with mark wahlberg. i like that film. >> diversity was a big issue, especially at the oscars. the "magnificent seven" is trying to tackle that. >> i'm kind of bummed. i like the remake with lee marvin. >> this is a bit of a rematch of that. >> kid out there who have no idea the remake, what? >> it's still about the seven guys who were brought in to rescue this town from this ruthless leader, this ruthless gang leader. you know what i like about the seven? great cast. denzel washington and others. we have a black man and a
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mexican man and a native-american man. >> does diversity mean come oscar time we will not be talking about a lack of diversity in the nominations? >> hollywood listened. i think moving forward we will see more but definitely a lot of diversity running throughout the films this fall. also in september we have a film that is based on a real life story about a little girl from uganda. i'm really looking forward to that. she is a fantastic actress and did voice work and motion caption work in "jungle book." and glad to have her back. >> i said lee marvin. i meant james coburn. >> they have the same look! >> i'm getting old!
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>> the 9 and 8-year-olds, the trailers before the movies we take them to seeing onn ogger s and will that be felt? >> i feel we are feeling the effects of "frozen." a big film is coming out and this one, like "frozen" is driven by its music. lin manuel miranda did some of this work. a girl goes to a trip to an island played by a guy that is duane "rock" johnson. >> sing? >> i got a sample size of two. >> what about "fantastic beast"? i mean, that is going to be huge for all of the "harry potter" fans out there. an incredible book and it's going to be incredible movie.
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>> a split between men and women were asked and "harry potter" prequel takes place in 1920s in new york and stars redmayne. >> how close is this going to be to the book? >> this is a popular book and reminds me of one that comes out the same time and based on addicti addictive mysteries. she looks out a train and sees something that forever changes her life. i don't want to spoil the book. i think if you read the book, then you're going to like it. >> like my mom, go read the book and then see the movie. erik, thank you so much, erik davis. >> thank you. ahead, a herd of hope in america's beautiful backyard.
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>> i'm mark strassmann at yellowstone national park. it's one of the most remarkable wildlife conservation success stories ever. the resurgence of bison. you'll hear what is so remarkable about their comeback coming up on "cbs this morning." first, it's time to check your local weather. ,,
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♪ the national park service is celebrating hits 100th birthday all year. so happy birthday again. one of its many protected animals, the bison, was recently designated by congress as america's first official mammal but not lopping ago, the iconic symbol of the american frontier nearly disappeared altogether from the landscape. mark strassmann went to yellowstone national park to see the remarkable comeback story of one truly wild herd. >> reporter: few places make you feel in this world like yellowstone. its timelessness spreads to the horizon. here is where the bear and the antelope play, but the bison dominates. you're looking at what may be the last free ranging pure bred herd of wild bison in america. >> look at the belly of bison.
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it's probably as close to what you can get what this part of the country looked like in the early 1700s and early 1800s and it's a treasure. >> reporter: dna wenk is the superintendent at yellowstone national park. bison roam its 2.2 million acres, an area nearly as big as rhode island and delaware combined. but little about scale impresses america's largest land animal. a mature bison bull stands six feet tall and can weigh more than a ton. >> that is formidable. not being fullbacks like to approach that line. >> reporter: so imposing, yet, they almost disappeared. how dire did it get? >> in yellowstone national park there were less than 25 animals. it is one of the greatest wildlife conservation stories in the history of the united states. >> reporter: here is where this conservation comeback is so remarkable. in the 1800s, as many as 60 million bison were hunted nearly into extinction.
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60 million. they were targets in the ugly side of how the west was won. the american bison, the symbol of the great plains, once roamed from nevada to mississippi. but in the 1800s, pioneers pushed west. bison were in the way. tens of millions were killed by cattle ranchers, homesteaders and u.s. troops and sport hunters shot bison from moving trains. as the animals disappeared, so did the native american tribes who, for centuries, had relied on bison for food, clothing, shelter, and tools. >> we don't call them bison. we call them buffalo. >> reporter: because? >> we think of them as bison as a white man term. >> reporter: montana rancher irvin carlson blonelongs to the black feet tribe and represents 60 tribes who believe bison have great spiritual significance.
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>> buffalo were everything to tribes. we survived on them. they took care of us. >> reporter: what was the great buffalo slaughter really all about to you? >> if you got rid of the buffalo, consequently, you get rid of the enemy. >> reporter: by 1883, nearly all bison were gone. congress even sent soldiers to yellowstone to protect the final survivors from porchers. conservists including president teddy roosevelt, intervened to protect and restore the population. roughly 5,000 bison live at yellowstone today. this comeback story, how improbable was it? >> it was really the first effort to restore what could have been an endangered species. >> reporter: rick wollan the park's chief biologist oversees a unique herd. >> you can't see this kind of abundance anywhere else. >> reporter: most of america's roughly 500,000 bison today are managed as domestic livestock
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and many have crossbred with cattle, not yellowstone's herd. >> yellowstone bison truly represent the ecological and drive the species. about as good as it gets. >> reporter: nearby ranchers have killed them thinking they spread a disease harmful to pregnant cattle. inside the park is grazing limits. every year the herd has to be reduced by about 10%. several hundred get sent for processing to tribes which distribute the hides and meat. when you see these guys, make you feel good? >> it does. >> reporter: the current approach seems to satisfy no one, including irvin carlson, who also belongs to the bison management coalition. he says these animals should roam free inside and outside the
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park. or be returned to what he calls indian country. >> they are wildlife. they have belong to the land. they belong to the land. they are part of the land. >> reporter: they are also part of yellowstone's future. >> i think there is a middle ground. we can get more bison on the landscape, we can diminish to eliminate the fear of the spread of the disease and we can honor the cultural significance of bison for the native american community. >> reporter: think of it as a way of making peace with the past for an american icon. for "cbs this morning," mark strassmann, at yellowstone national park. >> phenomenal. >> that is phenomenal. >> they are regal animals. >> it's also very stark when you see in mark's piece that image, that picture from the 19th century of all of those skulls and carcasses of all of those bison and now this. >> and undoing of the damage in the past maybe? >> in yellowstone, you go look
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and don't touch and don't feed. >> meanwhile, if you're a panda fan, don't feed them either. atlanta's zoo gets a double dose of cuteness as a threatened species celebrates a major milestone. you're watching "cbs this morning." ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
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,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, in 1803, a man bought the territory of louisiana for 42 cents an acre. that was the greatest deal ever. until i made this one. now you can get my jumbo breakfast platter for just $2.99. take that history. scrambled eggs, eight mini pancakes, a hash brown, and your choice of bacon or sausage. it's the greatest deal since the louisiana purchase. sort of. the jumbo breakfast platter just $2.99 for a limited time.
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send your baby gift. the giant panda has given birth to twins in the atlanta zoo. the tiny new cubs were born to lulu saturday. they are the first giant pandas to be born in the u.s. this year. and their births coincide with good news about the species. giant pandas in the wild have been upgraded from endangered to vulnerable. visitors to the atlanta zoo could meet the cubs as early as december. >> wiggle, wiggle, wiggle! >> trying to get in there.
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>> that is going to do it for us. us. tune into the,,,, narrator: it wasn't that long ago. years of devastating cutbacks to our schools. 30,000 teachers laid off. class sizes increased. art and music programs cut. we can't ever go back. ryan ruelas: so vote yes on proposition 55. reagan duncan: prop 55 prevents 4 billion in new cuts to our schools. letty muñoz-gonzalez: simply by maintaining the current tax rate on the wealthiest californians. ryan ruelas: no new education cuts, and no new taxes. reagan duncan: vote yes on 55.
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sarah morgan: to help our children thrive.
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involved in an accident along i- 880 in fremont this morning. the ok the several stolen cars were involved in an accident along i- 880 in fremont this morning the suspects reportedly took the cars from a dealership and later crashed into two other cars on the highway. one suspect was arrested. san jose police are looking for a convicted sex offender who approached women on a sidewalk and trying to force them into his cars. the suspect is identified as david lee russell, a transient. across the bay area, as people spend labor day on the beach, coast guard officials are warning, watch out for rip current. one man was pulled from the water yesterday at aquatic beach. he remains in critical condition. here is roberta with the forecast. >> thanks.
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let's go ahead and head to the south bay. this is san jose with blue skies. visibility unlimited at this hour. air temperature at 56 degrees. 56 in clayton. water creek air gentleman, mid- 50s and the coast is clearing in pacifica to rockaway beach. today, warmer than yesterday when wean topped at 78. 84 degrees. 84 is where we should be in the santa clara valley. 79 in san rafael, high 70s in value yo. warmer conditions on tuesday. we'll peak on tuesday, seasonal on tuesday. make it a great holiday, everywhere but here is rocky with a look at traffic up next.
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good morning time now is 8:58. let's take a look at the bay area roads right now. first and foremost, mass transit, all transits are good on bart starting at 8:00 a.m. ace is close and don't forget to pay your peter today at sf. just because it's holiday does not mean that parking is not enforced. no service between glen park and dilly city on bart as well. headed to sfo, make sure that you take the bus bridge but also it will add an additional hour to your travel time there to the airport. carquinez bridge to the maze will take you about 20 minutes here is a look at the toll plaza looking good. take a look at good day for more updates.
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wayne: yes, whoo! - money! wayne: hey! jonathanit's a trip to ! wayne: you got the big deal of the day! - let's 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 price." i'm wayne carey. i mean, "let's make a deal," i'm wayne brady. i got mixed up because this is mash up week. get it? it's mash up week. it's like a mixtape of game show awesomeness. each day this week, we will be playing one "price is right" game on our show and they will be playing one "let's make a deal" game

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