tv CBS This Morning CBS March 10, 2017 7:00am-9:01am PST
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trump is right, which is why i like to look presented by toyota, let's go places. >> welcome to "cbs this morning." >> john tully came up to me and said i used to hit tennis balls with charlie when i was 14. he sang me the charlie rose theme song. he sang it with gusto and asked me the question everybody has been asking all of us. >> when is he coming back. we are happy to report to you today, drum roll please, he'll be back at this table starting monday sitting in that chair. he underwent open heart surgery on february 9th to replace his aortic valve. everything went great. he's been resting up the last few weeks. he wrote this note, do you remember this, he said i look
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forward to seeing you in march. true to his word he will be back here on monday. that's so exciting. >> by all accounts, looks better than ever. >> that is so true. >> he looks like a ralph lauren ad or looks like he stepped off a tennis court. you've seen him, too, norah. >> had lunch with him. he's been wanting to come back. we said take your time, take your time. charlie is back. anthony, it's been so great to have you here. >> i love both you guys. this has been a real privilege keeping charlie's seat safe. i love my pillow and look forward to getting reaquainted. >> norah is right, you've done such great work, a seekleamless transition. >> i feel like we've all bonded. >> let's get to the news. it is president trump's 50th day in the white house, he's getting good news on jobs. the labor department just announced employers added 235,000 jobs in february. the first full month of the trump administration. the unemployment rate fell to
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4.7%. the president and his top aides are mounting a full-court press to get conservatives to support their obamacare replacement plan. vice president mike pence will meet later today with groups that oppose abortion. cbs news has confirmed that pence will tell them the white house is committed to stripping all federal funds from planned parenthood. major garrett is at the white house with more. major, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. president trump and his team are pushing the republican health care bill aggressively. they see the dissent, how could you miss it? they're also encouraged by solid republican votes in those two key house committees you just mentioned. in that context, pence today will also discuss preventing federal funding of abortiontion either through medicaid and the tax credits and the underlying republican health care bill. >> we have experts with us and great bankers with us rv president trump said nothing in public about the fate of the health care bill on which most of his legislative agenda
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hinges. just after this meeting with community bankers mr. trump went to twitter where no questions are asked, no skepticism exists. despite what you hear in the press, health care is copying along great. we are talking to many groups and it will end in a beautiful picture. >> still a stinking pile of garbage. >> will you yield? >> no, i will not. >> reporter: even a presidential tweet can't calm a combustible congressional debate. >> i'm embarrassed for you and for your side and your party. >> reporter: after a 27-hour marathon, part of the bill emerged from the energy and commerce committee through a party line vote. and in a similar marathon, the ways and means committee advanced other parts of the bill. the two will be combined and voted on by the full house in the coming weeks. >> this is the closest we will ever get to repealing and replacing obamacare. >> reporter: house speaker paul ryan warned gop dissenters about
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the peril. at least eight republican senators have expressed reservations with the bill. >> conservatives hate their bill. i promise you obamacare light, dead on arrival. they might as well start over. >> reporter: vice president mike pence down played the division. >> we're on the same page about what we need to go. how you get there is often time complicated based on the arcane rules of the institution. >> reporter: the president invited here last night to the white house ten republican vote counters known as whips for pizza, beer and bowling. now, these republicans are lukewarm on the bill. the president needs them to be aggressive backers because eventually they're going to be the ones collecting the dissenting votes to try to move them from no to yes. gayle? >> thank you, major. pizza, beer and bowling makes everything better. that's what i've always heard. president trump's epa administrator who sued the agency repeatedly in his former job has touched off a fierce new argument over climate change. in an interview yesterday scott
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pruitt questioned the role that humans play in global warming. that statement continue dibts his testimony to congress. nasa confirmed in january 2016 was the warmest year on record, the third record setting year in a row driven largely by increased carbon dioxide. chip reid is outside epa headquarters in washington. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. in 2013 an intergovernmental panel of 2,000 scientists said it was, quote, extremely likely that humans are dominant cause of global warming. that same sentiment expressed on the epa's own website. the new leader of that agency doesn't seem to agree. >> i think measuring with precision human activity on the climate is something very challenging to do, and there's tremendous disagreement about the degree of impact. >> reporter: epa administrator scott pruitt yesterday questioned the impact of carbon dioxide'! >> no. i would not agree that it's a primary contributor to the
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global warming we see. >> reporter: this is not the first time the man tasked with protecting the environment has questioned global warming. in an op ed last year pruitt said the debate over climate change is far from settled, claiming scientists are still questioning its connection to the actions of mankind. >> i do not believe climate change is a hoax. >> reporter: during his confirmation hearing in january, prutd reassured lawmakers he recognizes the human impact on the environment. >> let me say to you science tells us that the climate is changing and human activity in some manner impacts that change. >> reporter: at that time the administrator gave the impression he disagreed with president trump who has called global warming a hoax. >> so obama is talking about all of this with the global warming. a lot of it is a hoax. it's a hoax. >> he should not be serving as head of the ep a and should resign immediately. >> reporter: the sierra club shows comments are not fit for the job. >> scott pruitt and the epa are
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required by law to fight climate change and to regulate carbon dioxide as a way of doing so. >> reporter: president trump has not made the environment a major issue so far. but he campaigned on a promise to roll back some major regulations of the obama administration that limit the amount of co2 that can be emitted from cars and power ants. >> thank you very much, chip. house and senate leaders brought fbi director james comey to capitol hill yesterday for private national security briefings. comey planned to tell them that president trump's allegation that former president obama ordered campaign wiretapping is false. the director asked the justice department to publicly denounce the claim, but it never did. the founder of wikileaks is offering tech companies exclusive access to more information on cia hacking tools. during an online news conference, julian assange accused the agency of failing to protect cyber espionage secrets.
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wikileaks has released thousands of documents allegedly showing how the cia can hack cell phones, smart tvs and computer systems. >> wikileaks discovered the material as a result of it being passed around, a number of different members of the u.s. intelligence community, out of control in an unauthorized fashion. >> congressional critics blasted the document dump. >> our methods, technology, capabilities. it's an act of treason. >> i know it's concerning to people, the tools that we have. but cyber war is real. >> the fbi is working with the cia to determine how the information got out. south korea is in political turmoil after a court overnight upheld the impeachment of its president over a bribery scandal. park geun hye is the first democratically elected president to be removed. the decision triggered massive violent protests, more than 28,000 u.s. troops are stationed
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in south korea. park's removal could bring major changes to the strategically important region as north korea advances its nuclear and ballistic missile programs. adrianna diaz in shanghai shows us what's at stake. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. a president election in south korea will be held within 60 days. it took over 90 days for the constitutional court to reach its decision, but the political upheaval could impact the region for years to come. demonstrators loyal to oustedment park geun hye rallied outside. police battled with the crowd upset over the court's decision. the region remains tense as north korea's provocations intensify. on monday the north test launched four missiles towards japan in violation of multiple u.n. sanctions. those launches follow a new harder-to-detect missile fired
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last month. the u.s. is bolsters defenses in the region, adding a missile defense system known as t.h.a.d. which began arriving in south korea monday night. if the opposition party takes power in the south, the government will likely change course, halting the deployment of t.h.a.d. the party has also signaled it wants to engage in north in talks, a shift away from the u.s. and japan's hard line policy that would align the south closer with china. >> at the moment south korea and the u.s. and japan are all on the same page in terms of punishing north korea. >> reporter: the state department said overnight the u.s. will uphold its obligations in the region, quote, especially with respect to defending against the threat from north korea. but the trump administration is still vague on what its policy is. >> the president has tweeted it's not going to happen when it comes to intercontinental ballistic missiles. but there's been no detail about how they would stop north korea.
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>> reporter: the trump administration says all options are on the table including military action. secretary of state rex tillerson will be in the region next week, but any officials he meets in seoul could be out of office within a matter of weeks. so any decisions made could be obsolete. norah? >> adrianna diaz reporting from shanghai this morning. thank you. it is noteworthy, too, as the secretary of state heads to the region, he's not taking reporters with him on his plane at this very important time. the nude photo scandal that's rocking the marine corps is far bigger than previously known. the defense department is investigating multiple online sites, men from all branches shared intimate photos of women including fellow service members. jan crawford is at the pentagon. >> reporter: the defense department is investigating a website called anon ib where users can post messages anonymously. paul broke the story for "business insider." >> an image sharing board where
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male military members from all branches were sharing nude photos, sharing instagram accounts in order to cyber talk and generally harassing female service members across the military. >> reporter: some posts showed photos of clothed women but asked for something called wins. they would said ft. bragg, anybody have any wins? that means nude photos. >> reporter: the scandal was uncovered over the weekend when a photo sharing facebook page called marines united came to light. that site showed a photo of erica buttner with a question with anyone with exclusive images of her to post them. >> as a rape survivor, i can tell you this exact behavior leads to the normalization of sexual harassment and even sexual violence. >> reporter: after the marines united page was taken down, marines united 2.0 appeared. officials say they've now received reports of at least half a dozen other sites, top enlisted man in the marines,
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sergeant major ronald green has told congress that marines united is just the tip of the spear. >> it's not just affected the marine corps. this is the navy, air force, army as well. it's nothing different from stalking. all it is is stalking with a computer. >> reporter: a spokeswoman for the marines told "cbs this morning," quote, we fully expect that the discovery of marines united will motivate marines to come forward to notify their chain of command of pages like it. things may seem to get worse before they get better. the army, navy and air force say they also are investigating. gayle. >> sure hope so. thank you very much. an indiana grandfather is pleading with the public to help find the person who murdered his teenager granddaughter and her best friend. the two disappeared while hiking last month. done daler is outside the town of delphi near the trail where the girls were last seen alive.
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don, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the girls' bodies were found not far from this trail on valentine's day. for the first time, a family member is speaking out, asking the public to take a closer look at those still photos of the suspect as investigators pour over thousands of tips. >> this horrible crime has torn a hole in our families that will never heal. >> reporter: more than 13 weeks after the two girls were murdered, libby's grandfather put their family's anguish into words. >> too many ways to count how our lives will be impacted. >> reporter: he described the girls as best friends who loved playing softball. they went for a hike together on february 13th and disappeared. at some point during the hike, the girls found themselves on this abandoned train trestle. libby took a picture of abby, but also captured video of the man suspected of killing them as well as this disturbing audio.
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searchers found their bodies a day later not far from the trestle. since investigators released the audio recording and still images from the video, they've received over 11,000 tips. what they don't have yet is a suspect in custody. the sheriff heads the investigation. sheriff, is this case cold? >> absolutely not. >> seems like it's been going on a long time without the speck. >> the biggest part of it is the thousands of tips that still roll in. >> reporter: 25 state, local and federal agencies are involved in the search that has expanded nationwide with 6,000 wanted billboards and tips coming in from as far away as los angeles. >> i don't know exactly what happened out there that day. neither one of them left each other's side. both those girls are here rows in my book. >> reporter: donations to a reward fund for any information leading to an arrest exceeded $224,000. norah?
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>> john, thank you very much. >> i like any time they can show that picture because somebody knows that guy. they know those pants, that hat, that shift. it's heartbreaking that someone isn't coming forward. >> agreed. weather also a big story. millions of people in the path of a late winter 12340e storm. a look at heavy snow falling right here in manhattan. up to five inches could pile up around new york city. windchill below zero in some areas in the upper midwest. severe windstorms lifted this 4-year-old in the air near cleveland on wednesday. she held on to her front door with one hand and gribd a phone with the other as wind whipped her around. her mother says she wasn't hurt. she got the ride of a lifetime. >> the girl knows how to hold on. >> strong arms. critic of russian president vladimir putin is the victim of alleged poisons twice. ahead in a "60 minutes" preview, the opposition,,,,
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hospital this morning.. after a gunman fire on i-80 in richmond good morning? >> it's 7:26. i'm michelle griego. a couple is recovering in the hospital this morning after a gunman opened fire on i-80 in richmond near the san pablo avenue exit. police believe they were targeted three suspects are in custody. in santa clara county, an officer is on paid leave after he shot and killed a man. investigators say the suspect's mother called police because her son was acting erratically. the man is in his 20s. no police officers were hurt. stay with us, traffic and weather in just a moment. ,,,,,,
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happy friday! it is 7:27. let's take a look at your morning commute. starting with our slowest traffic of the morning along the altamont pass, now this is recovering, it was coming "friday light" up until this new accident. westbound 580 before north flynn road, it was a motorcycle versus a car crash out there blocking the right lane causing major delays at just 11 miles an hour. so if you are heading that way, you know what to do. ive yourself extra time to get through there. and if you are heading to the san mateo bridge, take a look at this. westbound 92 before the toll plaza, that two-car crash out there has been removed off the road but look at that the damage is done. 8 miles per hour from 880 to the toll plaza. i'll send it to you. >> roqui, i want you to take a look at something carefully here am if you look at our live weather camera featuring ocean beach from the cliff house, you can see somebody wading in the water there. we have low tide this morning just after 3:30 in the morning on our way to high tide at 9:0. hey, temperatures across the board for the beaches inland in the 50s. check out our extended forecast. mid-60s today to mid-70s. same with the filtered sunshine
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at a capitol hill press conference speaker paul ryan, ever the showman, dazzled the doubters with a powerpoint presentation. he was either defending trumpcare or selling a time-share. paul ryan explained just where obamacare went wrong. >> the whole idea of obamacare is the people in the blue side pay for the people on the red side. the people who are healthy pay for the people who are sick. >> you just described how insurance works. that's literally the definition of insurance. >> i tell you, colbert is on a roll. number one in late night and just rocking it. >> leave it to stephen colbert to sort it all out. nicely done, mr. colbert. welcome back to "cbs this morning." that was house speaker paul ryan
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getting a lot of attention for ditches his podium for a powerpoint presentation on republican health care. he's going to new lengths to defend a proposal. some people call him professor ry ryan. >> i've known him since we were in our 20s together on capitol hill. he's always been a policy wonk, that's what he does, explaining difficult legislation. >> he's very good at it. some other big headlines, "the washington post" says the nfl is accused of abuse ing prescription pain killers according to a federal lawsuit filed by 1,800 former football players. it alleges in 2012 the average team prescribed an average of six to seven pain pills or injections a week per player. the lawsuit claims players suffered long-term organ and joint damage as a result of the improper drug distribution practices. in response to the article, the nfl told cbs news the
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allegations are, quote, meritless. u.s. infrastructure gets a d plus according to a report card issues every four years by the american society of civil engineers. groups said it would cost more than $4 trillion over the next ten years to bring roads, bridges, public schools and ports up to a safe level. that is $2 trillion more than allotted. "usa today" reports michael flynn's consulting firm did work that may have helped benefit the government of turkey. flynn was fired last month as national security adviser. according to disclosure forms filed on tuesday, he received $530,000 last fall for his work for a company owned by a turkish businessman with ties to turkey's president. vice president mike pence called the revelation an affirmation of the decision to fire michael flynn. the "san francisco chronicle" says macy's just signaled the end of department stores as we know them. the company is testing self service systems in its shoe and
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beauty departments. adopting the plan would make macy's more like t.j. max and nordstrom rack. >> that's tough for a lot of jobs. the "san jose mercury" news notes bottled water outsold soda in the u.s. for the first time. an industry group says the average american downed 39.3 gallons of bottled water. a big change from 2015 when soda had a 2 1/2 gallon edge. i watched this on the evening news with scott pelley, and i looked at my kids and said this is a good thing. >> a really good thing. the right direction. >> very good thing. russia has frequently been in the headlines since president trump's inauguration. this sunday "60 minutes" reports va a russian tv correspondent based in washington, he was a vocal critic of russian
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president vladimir putin. he suddenly fell ill into a coma with organ failure last month. his wife believes it's another attempt to poison him. he spoke with lesley stahl last year after the first poisons nearly killed limb. >> reporter: vladimir was an opposition activist on the front lines, protesting putin's policies, organizing demonstrations and town hall meetings. he knew he was on a dangerous mission. when we met him last year, he told us that one day in may, 2015, he learned just how dangerous. >> i was in a work meeting with my colleagues in moscow when i suddenly started to feel really sick. i went within about 20 minutes of feeling completely normal to feeling like a very sick man. i don't remember anything for the next month. >> you were out for a month. >> i was in a coma for a week and don't remember anything for a month and had basically a cascade of all my major life
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organs failing, the lungs, the heart, the kidneys. >> he was shuttled from hospital to hospital in moscow for two days as doctors frantically tried to figure out what was wrong with him. >> i was at one point connected to eight different artificial life support machines. doctors told my wife it would be 5% chance i'd survive. >> reporter: he beat the odds. when we spoke with him, he had been recovering for a year but still walking with a limp from nerve damage. >> what happened? >> strong toxic, we don't know what it is. as people explained to me, you basically have to know exactly what you're testing for in order to find it. >> they never found the exact compound? >> they never did. >> lesley stahl joins us at the table. i think it's amazing you got an interview with him full face and not in disguise. >> this man is fearless. he was poisoned.
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that interview was done a year ago. he went back right into the jaws of the beast. >> does he have any idea how he got poisoned? >> he doesn't. hifs an activist, traveling all over the place having lunches and coffees. >> how did you get the interview with him? >> i interviewed him a year ago about another russian who died mysteriously. he came to talk about that and how he had been poisoned. we have to say allegedly poisoned because they never found exactly what it was. then, i hate to step on my own story, but when he was repoisoned, unbelievably, a month ago, we said, oh, my gosh, we have this interview that we did, so we went back to redo that. >> where is he right now? >> he is recuperating from alleged poisoning number two in washington. >> what is the heart of why he is an opponent of vladimir putin, why he's become an enemy
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of the state? >> he's been a long-time activist. he's pro democracy, and he's part of that larger group of opponents, many of whom do end up mysteriously dead or in jail or exiled. he's part of that larger group. >> second time of the alleged poisoning, why is it so hard to find out what this poisoning is? >> we came upon something released in one of the wikileaks dumps that the cia had a document that showed the soviets going back to the 1930s had a laboratory to study undetectable compounds and it went on for years and years and years. >> there's a history of russian poisonings. >> exactly. and usually when they do find what the poisons was, it was serendipitous. we have an example in our story you have to watch to see. >> unless you know specifically what you're looking for, you don't know what to test for.
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>> there's one case of a russian who died who was connected to this man who they brought a botanist in and found it was caused by a sort of exotic himalayan flower. >> president trump was criticized for remarks he made about vladimir putin during the super bowl interview in which trump said there are a lot of killers, what do you think, our country is so innocent, question mark? then, of course, senator john mccain as well as other senators reacted to that. he referenced this gentleman's situation in response. he's well known in diplomatic circles. >> he was in washington for many years. he was actually a television reporter in washington. yes, he knows many of the senators. when he was poisoned several of them spoke up. john mccain went to the floor of the senate on his behalf. and there's been sort of a little bit of pressure on president trump to speak out,
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and he hasn't. it's mysterious to everybody why president trump has not criticized vladimir putin. it's part of what's going on right now in washington. and in the midst of all these questions comes this second pois poisoning. >> very timely. thank you, leslie. you can see lesley stahl's full interview on "60 minutes" this sunday at 7:00, 6:00 central right here on cbs. a road rage attack stops rush hour traffic on a california freeway. ahead what police say triggered the scary confrontation that led to the beating of an uber driver. later whether the turmoil in seoul could make it harder to contain the nuclear threat from north korea, the former u.s. ambassador to south korea, christopher hill, will be here in studio 57. you're watching "cbs this morning." be here in studio 57. you're watching "cbs this morning." [ ominous music ]
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suspects in a violent highway attack captured on video. a newly released recording shows a pack of riders on dirt bikes and atvs surrounding a car wednesday until it stops. then they appear to beat the driver on a busy san francisco freeway. jamie yuccas is here with how it started. >> it starts on a busy california freeway during rush hour. then a group of bikers appear to aggressively target a driver. one man went to the hospital. now police are searching for any of the suspects. this amateur video captured by another driver in one of the bay area's largest cities shows a group of bikers pulling stunts and driving recklessly down a four-way stretch of highway. the stunts quickly turn to aggression. the video shows the group of riders boxing in the white toyota camry, eventually bringing the car to a stop in the middle of the freeway. >> they exchanged words with th
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driver's vehicles with their motorcycles and fists. the driver got out to confront the motorcyclists, got into a fight and then he was beat up. >> reporter: our san francisco station says the driver of a white sedan is in his 30s and works for a ride sharing company. police say the man suffered non-life-threatening injuries and was taken to an area hospital. >> their usual m.o. is to ride on the dirt bikes, no plates on the vehicles, so tough to identify. >> reporter: it's a reminder of how dangerous these altercations can become. in 2013 video captured a similar case of road rage in new york city after a group of bikers stopped an suv and eventually dragged the man out of his car and beat him. >> we've had problems with motorcyclists, both street bikes and dirt bikes on the freeways. we have incidents where the same thing has happened, never involved with an actual fight where anybody was injured.
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>> california troopers say they don't know what started the altercation and they're trying to determine the identities of the bikers. that's why they're urging anyone with any information about this investigation to contact their department. that's the toughest part. >> i've been on a highway driving when a group of bikers did that sort of thing. it's really scary. you don't know where they're coming from. they swerve in front of you, cut around you. >> you don't want to anything with them. >> easy to be a tough guy when it's 15 against one, easy to be real tough. thank you, jamie. a woman made it her life mission to find a man who kidnapped and assaulted her when she was just 8 years old. the technology that helped investigators crack this case phorrible crime.after that up next a daredevil's record breaking journey across the atlantic on a paddle,,,,
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a south african surfer has broken a world record by becoming the first person to make a solo crossing of the atlantic ocean on a stand-up paddle board. he started off the coast of morocco last december. he traveled more than 4,500 miles over 93 days. the 42-year-old arrived yesterday at the caribbean island. his family and friends were there to cheer him on. his journey raised more than half a million dollars for children's charities. his life philosophy is to inspire others to achieve the impossible. >> that was kind of a tricked out paddle board. >> it didn't have a motor, though. >> no. i'm not taking away anything from what he did but it was a very nice paddle board.
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>> the nintendo will explain his company's strategy of new games. >> guess what, i have news of a charlie rose sighting. >> charlie. charlie, come back! >> the news is back this sunday and so is charlie rose. >> charlie, pucker up. >> i said it was going to be a good morning this morning. just by looking in my eyes. but what they didn't know was that i had dry, itchy eyes. i used artificial tears from the moment i woke up... ...to the moment i went to bed. so i finally decided to show my eyes some love,... ...some eyelove. eyelove means having a chat with your eye doctor about your dry eyes because if you're using artificial tears often and still have symptoms, it could be chronic dry eye. it's all about eyelove, my friends. my eyelove is finding a different angle. my eyelove is season 1, episode 1.
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my eyelove is making a story come alive. eyelove is all the things we love to do with our eyes. but it's also having a chat with your eye doctor about dry eyes that interrupt the things you love. because if your eyes feel dry, itchy, gritty, or you have occasional blurry vision, it could be chronic dry eye. go to myeyelove.com and feel the love. listerine® total care strengthens teeth, after brushing, helps prevent cavities and restores tooth enamel. it's an easy way to give listerine® total care to the total family. listerine® total care. one bottle, six benefits. power to your mouth™. hey team, i know we're tight on time, but i really need a... ...sick day tomorrow. moms don't take sick days. moms take nyquil severe: the... ...nighttime sniffling,sneezing, coughing, aching, fever best... ...sleep with a cold, medicine. ahyou the law? we've had some complaints of... is that a fire?
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there's your payoff, deputy. git! velveeta shells & cheese. there's gold in them thar shells. how to brush his teeth. (woman vo) in march, my husband didn't recognize our grandson. (woman 2 vo) that's when moderate alzheimer's made me a caregiver. (avo) if their alzheimer's is getting worse, ask about once-a-day namzaric. namzaric is approved for moderate to severe alzheimer's disease in patients who are taking donepezil. it may improve cognition and overall function, and may slow the worsening of symptoms for a while. namzaric does not change the underlying disease progression. don't take if allergic to memantine, donepezil, piperidine, or any of the ingredients in namzaric. tell the doctor about any conditions; including heart, lung, bladder, kidney or liver problems, seizures, stomach ulcers,
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or procedures with anesthesia. serious side effects may occur, including muscle problems if given anesthesia; slow heartbeat, fainting, more stomach acid which may lead to ulcers and bleeding; nausea, vomiting, difficulty urinating, seizures, and worsening of lung problems. most common side effects are headache, diarrhea, dizziness, loss of appetite, and bruising. (woman 2 vo) i don't know what tomorrow will bring but i'm doing what i can. (avo) ask about namzaric today.
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trying to figure out the cause of a car crash - that injured a police officer. it happened at 5:30 this morning on the 42-hundre it's 7:56. i'm kenny choi. right now in oakland, investigators are trying to determine the cause of a car crash that injured a police officer at 5:30 this morning on the 4200 block of broadway. the police officer's car sustained major damage. in clayton, officials will hold a community meeting tomorrow to address repair progress on this landslide. storms broke up part of morgan territory road. the meeting will address emergency response services and alternate routes. stick around; we'll have traffic and weather in just a moment. ,, ,,,,,,
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flynn road, you know, this crash is still blocking the right lane causing major delays and a five-mile backup so we'll definitely keep an eye on this crash for you and our traffic ahead forecast in an hour, this 5 two-minute drive will be down to 23 minutes so i hope you can just wait it out and wait noor to clear up. moving to contra costa county, westbound 4 the only slowdown there at 20 miles per hour through pittsburg and if you are traveling on westbound 92 that's now cleared up traffic is moving into the peninsula. i'll send it to you. >> thank you, roqui. thanks, roqui. love that realtime data there. good morning, everybody. our live weather camera, this time around from mount vaca, clearly illustrates that we have mostly cloudy skies. that filtered sunshine. but we still have a lot of mild air mass in place. look at the temperatures into the 50s. that's what will greet you out the door. those clouds are associated with a plume of moisture streaming all the way back to the hawaiian islands. with the filtered sunshine today 70s and 60s. high number 77. pollen count is high. ,,,,,,,,
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♪,,,,,,, well, good morning to our viewers in the west. it's friday, march 10th, 2017. welcome back to "cbs this morning." there's more real news ahead, including violent protests after south korea's president is removed from office. in our "issues that matter" series, former u.s. ambassador to south korea looks at the uproar and how it could affect the nuclear standoff with north korea. first here's today's "eye opener" at 8:00. president trump and his team are pushing the republican health care bill aggressively. they see the dissent. how could you miss it? epa administrator touched off a fierce new argument it's questionable that humans play a part in global warming. it could impact the region for years.
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nude photo scandal rocking the marine corps is far bigger than previously known. the defense department is investigating multiple online sights. millions of people are in the path of a late winter snow storm. it follows days of severe wind storms. those gusts lifted this 4-year-old airborne in cleveland. sleeves rolled-up power point. everybody likes the power point. trump has made it known he doesn't want the new health care bill called trump care. for very good reason. the president is a humble man. he doesn't like to put his name on thing. >> trump care, trump care, trump care. doesn't want you to call it trump care. whether you should call it trump care that's one thing about which trump care. ♪ i'm norah o'donnell with gayle king and anthony mason. and we have some more real news
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to report. >> yes. >> it is a great day in america. >> yes, it is. >> because charlie rose is going to return to this table on monday. >> cue the marching band. >> cue the marching band, the celebrations. we're excited to have him back. he is resting after successful surgery to repair an aortic valve. >> it's great new. >> anthony, you've been great to be here. >> it's been great to be here, but it will be great to be in bed. >> we all envy that a little bit. he promised to return in march. charlie is a man of his word. >> if anybody could make a quick comeback, you knew it was charlie. >> yes. >> great to see. the white house is starting a big push to convince conservatives to support the new plan to repeal and replace obamacare. vice president mike pence meets with groups to make it clear they want to defund planned parenthood and abortion funding by medicaid and how to stop insurance tax credits for paying
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for them. pskeptical lawmakers for a bowling night with administration staff last night. another one is scheduled for tuesday. replacing obamacare will be a big topic on face the nation. john dickerson has an exclusive interview with house speaker paul ryan, plus former presidential candidates rand paul and bernie sanders sunday here on cbs. >> another good show for john dickerson. plunging a key u.s. ally into political chaos. violent protests followed the decision to remove park geun-hye following political scandal. it brings new uncertainty to the region in growing aggression from north korea. >> we take a closer look. the north launched missiles monday into the sea of japan.
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pyongyang says it was a drill for striking american military bases in japan. joining us is former u.s. ambassador to south korea, christopher hill, dean at the joseph corbell school and international studies at the university of denver. ambassador hill, good to have you. let's talk about the protests and turmoil in south korea with the removal of the president. how does that impact with what we're trying to deal with in terms of north korea and their ambitions? >> i think the result of this is not so much measured in what's gone on the last few hours. protests are what's go on in south korea. that will be over. the question is, who is going to replace her? the betting is left of center government there, left of center party will probably come in. so left of center in korea means more nationalism, ironically, because that's usually a right-wing phenomena. more nationalism. more kind of accommodating to north korea, a little less willing to follow our lead. so, there are going to be issues
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there as we go forward. but we're going to know in the next 60 days or so. >> we mentioned the launch of the four missiles. north korea is now believed to have enough material for more than 20 nuclear weapons. how concerned should we be about their progress? >> i would put this right up there. you're absolutely right. they have about -- enough pollute o plutonium for 20 weapons. we know they're working on a war head. in terms of these medium-range missiles, we're seeing solid fuel. that means they can stand them up and shoot them off before we can target them. this is a real concern as we move forward. >> a really important detail, solid fuel. while it seems like we're getting in the weeds it means with solid fuel they can quickly launch them, which means it makes them more difficult for the united states to launch a preemptive strike? >> absolutely. they can stand these things up
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in woods somewhere, mobile launch launchers. it's quite different from putting them up, sticking a hose in the side and putting in liquid fuel. >> does the u.s. military have the capability, presence for a preemptive strike? would we do it? >> we certainly have the capability. some 20 million south koreans are in the northern part of south korea and we have state of the art so-called counter battery fire. as soon as one of these artillery tubes appears we can hit it quickly. problem is, you can't usually hit it before it's fired off a weapon, fired off a shell. you're looking at the very zpingt possibility in the event of a war of a lot of civilian casualties. so, people shouldn't talk easily about war in the peninsula. >> even a preemptive strike? >> even a preemptive strike. it's a very small place. it's an option, to be sure. it should not be taken off the table. it may be a bad option whose time has come. >> if he's putting a nuclear war
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head on short range or icbm there's no other choice than a preemptive strike. >> you've got it. if they stand up this missile, even the possibility of a multi-stage missile which could, in theory, reach us, i think we have a very heavy decision to be made and i hope our government is up to it. >> you talk about the importance of u.s. relations with south korea, japan, china. secretary of state rex tillerson is heading to all three this week. what do you think he needs to accomplish? before you do that, he has banned the traveling press, you know. that's a very rare occurrence. how does that sit with you? >> a lot of these foreign polishes are complex. you just mentioned japan, china, south korea. it's not an easy thing. one thing the secretary of state has to do is explain to the public what he's doing. normally, you like to have the press there, because the press does a good job -- >> the fact that he's not including the press, what does that say to you? >> to me, it's pretty much
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unprecedented. maybe it's happened at some times. i would rethink it, if i were he. some of the press corps are really experienced, know the issues. frankly, there has not traditionally been an adversarial relationship. they work very well with secretaries of state, from kissinger to whoever. it is a little unusual. the real question is why. is it because the secretary of state doesn't have enough running room from the white house? is it the fact that he doesn't have his team sort of named and put into place? what are the reasons? or is he just sort of someone who doesn't like to talk to the press? if it's that, i think we have a problem. >> ambassador hill, hope you'll come back to the table. >> yes, we do. >> thank you very much. dramatic break through for a hunt of a man, how a,,,,
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nintendo is hopping to revolutionizing gaming as we know it. >> with the hottest new gaming system. >> this is our brand new game for the nintendo switch, zelda 98 out of 100 credit rating. >> you can take this anywhere? >> take it anywhere. play with anyone. dock it on to your big screen tv and take it with you on the go. >> we'll show you how it works. stay with us. you're watching "cbs this morning." us. you're watching "cbs this morning." ♪ it's a crazy world we're living in ♪ than with tylenol pm.
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this cold case. >> reporter: for most of her life, jennifer shuitt has lived with the searing memory she was 8 years old, snatched from her own bed. >> next thing i remember is waking up in the arms of a man i didn't know. he was running with me, carrying me down the sidewalk. >> reporter: the man drove her to a dead end road, not far from her home in dickinson, texas. >> he held a knife to my throat and said, am i scaring you, little girl? am i scaring you? he choked me as hard as he could. i blacked out for a while. i woke up to him dragging me by my ankles. and he drops my legs. i realized i couldn't scream and i couldn't figure out why. i had just enough strength to throw my right hand on top of my neck and that's when i felt this gaping wound. >> reporter: her throat had been
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cut and she was sexually assaulted. >> i was just left to die in a field. >> reporter: the next day, children playing in that field found jennifer. she was air lifted to the hospital and rushed into surgery. >> she was the bravest little girl i had ever met. >> reporter: sharon mcbride was jerch jennifer's nurse. unable to speak, she began scribbling notes to help police find her attacker. >> i remember writing down there were beer cans in the car and brand of cigarettes he had, everything that i thought would help in finding him. >> reporter: she wrote, he said his name was dennis. jennifer worked with a forensic artist and they created this sketch. but despite her painstaking efforts, the case grew cold, years passed, but jennifer's determination never wavered. >> every day growing up i was on a hunt, looking for a suspect.
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>> reporter: 18 years after the attack, detective jim cromey and richard renyson teamed up to work on the case. they sent clothing for dna testing hoping new technology would make a difference. it did. >> my phone rings. it's the dna lab. we got a hit. >> reporter: the dna matched a convicted kidnapper named dennichlt s earl bradford, dennis, just as jennifer had written. >> it was monumental. >> reporter: when they found dennis earl bradford's driver's license photo, it was another perfect match. >> it was the most surreal moment of my life. >> oh, my. >> it's amazing she can talk so articulately about it. just to think of the terror and the horror she went through and all these years later. >> 27 years. >> normally time works against you in a case like this,
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michelle. >> time is an enemy. memories fade, evidence is lost. it actually worked for them because there were those advances in dna technology. here is the other rub. he attacked someone else. he kidnapped someone else. he went to jail for someone else. >> that's why he was -- >> that's why he was in the files and that's why they got the hit. >> how is she today? i'm marvelled at this woman. >> she is just fine. she has two beautiful children, very happily married. >> good. >> it's hard to imagine living with this for 27 years. >> i think so, too. >> she has managed to work through it. every day of her life since this happened, she imagined getting her day in court, looking that man in the eye. >> she's finally getting it. >> dennis earl bradford and telling him, you did this to me. it was wrong. >> and i got you. >> and i got you. the question is, did she get justice? you'll have to tune in to see. >> that's called a tease. >> very good tease. >> what an amazing story.
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>> amazing story. thank you, jennifer shuitt. thank you, michelle miller. >> thank you. >> it's called "live to tell: afraid of the dark" tomorrow on 48 hours that airs 10:00, 9:00 central here on cbs. american college basketball gets some international buzz. >> dayton basketball is rooted here in the midwest. but now it's reaching fans in the far east. i'm dana jacobson. coming up on "cbs this morning," we'll introduce you to two student sportscasters who are calling basketball like you've never heard. >> it's a great story. and up next, an unexpected disruption during a live tv interview. two toddlers steal the moment. you're watchi ining "cbs this morning." "cbs this morning."
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do. pardon me. my apologies. my apologies. south korea policy choices by northbound have be-- north kore been -- >> dad looks irritated but he's going to be cracking up about this very soon. >> the little one comes back and grabs the door. that's hilarious. >> look, the baby got in there, too. >> listen to the baby scream. >> i want to be on tv. oh, my god. >> that's the best.
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>> nintendo said its the republican plan to repeal and replace obamacare is happening today in oakland. it's being led by alameda county supervisor w he rally starts at good morning. a rally against the republican alone to repeal and replace obamacare is happening today in oakland. it's led by alameda county supervisor wilma chan and doctors. the rally starts at new outside children's hospital. berkeley police are hoping you can help them identify 30 people who vandalized uc- berkeley last month on the night former breitbart news editor milo yiannopoulos was set to speak at an event hosted by the becker college republicans. stay with us, traffic and weather in just a moment. ,,,,,,,,,,,,
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good morning. it's 8:27. when you thought it might be okay to get on the altamont pass it's not. i'll tell you what's going on here. westbound 580 before north flynn road it was a motorcycle versus a car crash blocking a lane now it's off the road. but the damage is done. you have about a five-mile backup all the way to mountain house parkway. so give yourself extra time to get through there. 30 minutes between the altamont pass and 680. moving over to contra costa county, things looking good over here on westbound 4, moving at 40 miles per hour. then down to the peninsula commute. this is bad earlier due to an earlier crash. now things have recovered and from hayward to foster city, traffic is moving smoothly.
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all right. the metering lights are on at the bay bridge toll plaza, not so much "friday light" yet but the maze to downtown will take you about 20 minutes or so and if you are traveling via mass transit bart is on time. send it to you roberta for some sunshine. >> and for warmer conditions. we have filtered sunshine right now. this is our live weather camera looking towards, oh, yerba buena island. and in the distance you can see mount diablo. temperatures are very mild out the door this morning. 51 to 55 degrees. the winds are calm. all these clouds that you're seeing streaming back all the way to the hawaiian islands. it's that atmospheric river atmospheric river setup but the rain will remain well to the north of the bay area. so with the filtered sunshine today, numbers in the 60s and 70s even a couple of degrees warmer than yesterday. 71 degrees in fremont and san rafael. mid-70s towards the tri-valley. 77 degrees in cloverdale to the north, gilroy to the south, same saturday, mostly sunny on sunday, at 80 degrees. ,,,,,,,,
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♪,,,,,,, i want to ask you a i want to ask you a question. do you remember the stars? >> i used to make a joke every time i would -- >> see, he thinks that's funny right now. look it up. this is where sars came from. >> thanks for bringing it, jack. good to know. it's on my shoulder. >> i'm dead -- not dead serious. i'm serious. >> can i tell you something? >> yeah. >> it looks like it has sars. >> and it's on his body. >> i like how he said that word. on my body. welcome back to "cbs this morning." let's take a quick shot at our green room. why? there he is, president of
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nintendo. he told me that nintendo is fun in a box. that gadget in front of him, this is a big, big deal. he has lots to say about this. hello, mr. president. >> hello, hello. >> hello, hello. good to see. >> you and charlie's coming back on monday, in case you haven't heard. >> he's fun in a box, too. >> i will be in a coma. it's been a pleasure. >> it has been a pleasure. for us, too, anthony. it's time to show you some of this morning's headlines. the washington post reports that for the first time the american heart association is weighing in on the timing of meals and how it can affect your weight. the advisory group says breakfast is still essential. those who regularly eat breakfast are less likely to be overweight. planning meals can curb excessive snacking and intermittent fasting shows promise for weight loss if it reduces overall calorie consumption zblur speaking norah
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o'donnell's language. >> she is nodding through the whole segment. >> if you want to lose weight stop eating at 6:00 pm at night. >> you're spoiling all the fun. >> yes, you are. i get hungry at 7:00 pm. >> precisely. that's when the appetite alarm bell rings. >> but look at her. it's working. wall street journal notes that mountain climbers who want to scale the tallest peak in every state have it easy in florida. britain hi britton hill is 345 feet above sea level. the continent's tallest mountain, the denali, in alaska, is nearly 60 times taller. some of the fake presentations include the mysterious color dress, paul ryan workout photo shoot and how dogs wear pants. one has ryan pitching his parents for the new nichlt nten
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switch console. >> one of the memes? >> yes. >> what a coinky-dink. launch of its newest gaming device, highest sales for any system in nintendo's history. it lets you play in a variety of setsings, on a big screen tv, on the road or at a party. chief operating officer of nintendo of america, reggie, good morning. my 16-year-old was most excited about your visit zl we love to hear that. >> because of this device in front of you. the portability is what's the game changer here. >> every gamer wants to be able to have that big screen experience. now to be able to have that and take the system with you when you go, play in the taxi, uber,
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subway, whatever it is, that's the game changer. >> are you aware, mr. president, of the adventure and quality of the graphics are amazing. do you know what my experience with nintendo is, my son is 29, says my experience is, that's enough! put it away. stop it, stop it! you've got homework to do. but what you guys have done now -- beautiful, i guess, is the word i'm looking for. that's not really a gaming term but i look what you do on the screen and marvel at that. >> nintendo, we have big games, beautiful graphics. we encourage people playing together, especially in the same room. we've got a game called one two switch. party in a box. >> 28 different games. >> you're playing, looking at the person you're playing with, not looking at the screen. that type of interaction is really a hallmark to what it is we've been doing as a company. >> 65% of households have a gaming device in their house. who is your target market with
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this? >> so our target market for this really is consumers age 5 to 95. when i say that -- >> that's a big range. >> huge range. what we're blessed with is we have grandparents playing with parents, playing with kids. with our types of content. we have zelda, fantastic immersive experience, we have mario cart that parents love to play with kids and kids love to play with each other. for us, we pride ourselves object on having a very wide swath of the market. >> big day for mario. >> today is mario day. >> yeah. because? >> march 10th, 1-0. when you look at it, it looks like mario. our friends have taken this and run with it. >> if there's any criticism of this system it's some people wish there were more games. >> that's right. what we've learned about this business is, honestly, it's not how you start. it's how you have that regular
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momentum of new games coming out on a regular basis. yes, we started with a faurly tight slate. we have more games coming. we have mario cart on the 28th of april, a new mario game later this year. there will be great content. as long as we keep releasing that content we'll be able to drive our system forward. >> i've heard from various sources that link, the character, is hot. >> more girls are playing video games and we pride ourselves that we're able to lead that charge. >> i have a 10-year-old, 8-year-old. they're your target audience really. >> we're getting more and more kids to play this. candidly, it's good from an educational standpoint. minecraft, how to code, how to think about creating interactive environments. it's good for kids' brains.
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>> will you leave your number so norah's children can call you? >> absolutely. >> friends and family discount. >> and e-mail. gayle, can you get his e-mail? >> we can do that. thank you so much for coming. you have a great team here today. college basketball team in ohio finds a new international audience. how two engineering students from china a,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
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♪ america's america's college campuses aree iing increasingly diverse. more than 1 million international students are studying here in the united states. 32% of those students come from china. how basketball is becoming more inclusive for chinese students and alumni. a familiar scene. sold-out game at ohio's university of dayton arena. celebrating the spectacle that is college basketball. the band, the cheerleaders, the face-painted fans. but courtside you also find the unexpected. a pair of student sportscasters
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calling the action for fans halfway around the world. >> i think we really want to introduce our basketball to more people. not only in the united states, but back in china. i just feel like really excited. >> they are among the university's first foreign language broadcasters. >> i feel very excited. >> but also nervous. >> yes, really nervous. >> yeah. >> up to 1,000 fans from abroad tune in. this dayton alum listens on his smart phone from beijing. >> i spent five years at dayton. i am still able to watch the game when i'm back in china. >> poised and prepared as they are, they are not broadcast or communications majors. >> also a program in the computer -- >> graduate students studying electrical engineering. >> working with some components
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like lasers. >> they're also a couple. >> we started dating like five years ago. she knows me better than somebody else. >> yeah. i know like what kind of mistakes he will make, like in the homework. so i will tell him, don't do this or something. yeah. >> i like their chemistry. they just have an "it" factor. >> dayton's assistant athletic director recruited them. >> i'm assuming you don't speak mandarin so you had to get somebody in to help you know if they knew what they were talking about. >> absolutely. one of our professors helped with the translation. not just for the knowledge of it, but are they excited at the right points? do they know the terminology of basketball? >> listeners abroad can't see the games. only the audio is streamed and it's not always clear. >> listening to the game, it's hard to -- the signal is not
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stable. >> reporter: still, the program, now in its second season, is considered a success. >> just having that access and connectivity through the game of basketball, just such a shared language, you can't beat it. >> dayton's international students arrive as fans of the game. when they aren't filling seats in the arena, they're competing at the campus rec center. >> how did you get interested in basketball? >> since yao ming landed in the nba. >> reporter: played with eight seasons for the houston rockets in 2002, also credited for bringing basketball to a generation of chinese fan. >> yao ming played in america very, very good. and i think maybe i can come to u.s. to broaden my horizon and to practice my english. >> do you think you are very
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good? >> between practicing english and broadcasting in mandarin, they discovered something else in dayton. a shared love for college basketball. >> college basketball game is much more passion than nba game. and sometimes just one game that's everything. >> i love bask ball much, yeah. we will be fans forever. >> and the dayton flyers will be playing later today in the quarter finals of the atlantic 10 conference tournament, the first time that joe and shi call a postseason game and the flyers are expected to be among the 68 games going to the ncaa tournament. that starts next week. they will, yes, be calling the game. really big for them. they weren't able to do it last year. >> i love that they're a couple. >> not a couple, an "it" couple. i can tell him what he's doing wrong in class.
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i love that. >> their parents have met back in china. when i asked if dayton would be part of the wedding somehow they said yes, no doubt about it. >> an extra dimension to the broadcast. >> what are their majors again? >> electrical engineering majors right now and grad students. >> thanks. it will be televised next week on tbs, cbs and trutv. sunday 4:30 central, 2:30 pacific on cbs. next, what mattered this ,,,
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without any evidence is very reckless. >> the president provided no evidence that during the campaign the obama administration had him wiretapped. >> i can deny it. there was no such wiretap activity mounted against the president-elect at the time. >> once again, the president doesn't know what he's talking about. because, first of all, the president can't do that. republican leaders are going to need to get some democratic support for this plan. >> it's called good health care. >> this is a dumpster fire of a bill. >> the stench of ash is overwhelming. >> what would you say to people who say this is just wide open land? >> do you like to eat? this is where your food comes from. >> winds so strong they took down trees three stories high. >> triggered an early start of the new defense missile system. >> victory in mosul may deal a final blow to isis.
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>> skier making his way down a mountain got caught in an avalanche. >> hold on to the selfie sticks. >> hillary clinton on the painting, by the way. apparently presidential port rates are commissioned based on the popular vote. ♪ oh, lord what could the matter be ♪ >> happy international women. >> we weren't supposed to show up today but norah and i are dedicated. >> i am grateful. here is this opportunity. would you like to write a book with derek jeter? and i said, yeah. >> you know, tim, in some of his previous books, have named some of the characters after his children. i don't have children. >> you don't have children yet. >> i knew you were going to bring that up. >> you still have the jacket? >> the jacket is there. it may go into my own private museum one day. >> love this. >> i remember in the fall i saw you at a luncheon and said i'm turning 70 and i feel really
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great about it. >> i did not. >> yes, you did. >> i said i'm embracing it. all right? >> northwestern could make the big dance for the first time in the 78-year history. >> good for you for knowing that. >> we have very good producers that fact check. >> want to trade seats? >> tradition unlike any other. >> where are you? >> i'm in a glass case of emotion. >> welcome to studio 57. >> going back into stand-up comedy. >> that's right. >> that's very thrilling for you? >> i was looking for a way to lower my self esteem and my salary at the same time. >> exactly. >> wikileaks has published thousands of cia documents, detailing the agency's secret hacking capabilities. the leaks describe a project called weeping angel. >> isn't that the name of a rose? >> that's whispering angel. >> so close. you were right there with me.
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shooting on i-80 in richmond.. s shot good morning, it's 8:55. i'm michelle griego. investigators are trying to figure out what led up to a shooting on i-80 in richmond. police say a couple was shot several times while driving in their minivan. they were targeted. plea suspects are in custody. -- three suspects are in custody. 30 people allegedly vandalized uc-berkeley student union last night when former breitbart editor mlio yiannopoulos was scheduled to speak on the campus. and flood victims are asking san jose city leaders why no one could predict all the damage coyote creek could do. this as mayor sam liccardo says residents should have been warned far earlier than they were about the flooding. stay with us; weather and traffic in just a moment. ,,,,,,
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nobody beats the subaru impreza. not toyota. not honda. not ford. the all-new subaru impreza. more than a car, it's a subaru. all right, i have some not so good news and some great news. let's start with the not so good first. it is 8:57. along the altamont pass, you are moving at 17 miles an hour coming out of tracy and this is all due to an earlier motorcycle crash that's removed so give yourself extra time to get through there. 25 minutes between altamont pass and 680. now moving over to the south
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bay, slowdowns on northbound 87 also northbound 101 at the 280/680 split and let's get to the good news. great news i should say. san mateo bridge "friday light" into the peninsula. "friday light" into downtown san francisco. those metering lights are off. now for more great news with roberta. >> what happened there? where did everybody go? no traffic heading into the city? that's amazing! good morning, everybody. 8:58. this is our live weather camera looking out towards yerba buena island. look at mount diablo in the background. can you see it there? about 45 miles away from the embarcadero. filtered sunshine right now and look at this span of our temperatures all in the 50s already 58 degrees in san jose. 57 in livermore. satellite-radar suggests that we have these clouds streaming all the way back to the hawaiian islands. that's what you're looking at now. the cloudiness. it does appear filtered sunshine today but notice the warmer air mass in place. 60s and 70s my outside number 77 today. 80s next week.
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wayne: (imitating chewbacca) you got the car! - holy cow! wayne: you got the big deal! you won, now dance! ooh! cat gray's over there jamming the tunes. vamos a aruba! let's play smash for cash. - go big or go home! jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal." now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady! wayne: hey, america. welcome to "let's make a deal." i'm wayne brady. thanks for tuning in. i need a couple right now. i need a couple to make a deal. are you guys a couple? well, come on then. have a seat, everybody else, have a seat. hey, and you are stephanie? hey, stephanie, nice to meet you. and matthew, pleasure. so you are dj momz. - yes, i am, momz with a z, so i got the swag. (cheers and applause)
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