tv CBS This Morning CBS July 11, 2018 7:00am-9:01am PDT
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>> we are going to leave you with a shot of city hall where a big party will be happening. a big celebration for london breed becoming the san francisco's next mayor. have a great day, everyone! ♪ good morning, to our viewers in the west. it's wednesday, july 11th, 2018. welcome to "cbs this morning." president trump kicks off a nato breakfast meeting by accusing our european allies of not paying their fair share. how this high-stakes summit could threaten america's most important alliance. doctors in thailand are treating the 12 boys and their soccer coach rescued from a cave. we'll talk with major charles hodges of the u.s. air force who shares new details about how a major equipment failure threatened the final rescue. a san francisco woman celebrating her first wedding anniversary in mexico is killed by a stray bullet. we'll take a look at why the
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state department issued a travel advisory for popular destinations in the country. 11 people remarkably survive a plane crash on an alaskan mountainside. see how rescuers found them as dangerous weather approached. plus, dramatic video reportedly shows george clooney flying off his motorbike after crashing on an italian island. but we begin with a look at today's eye opener. your world in 90 seconds. germany is totally controlled by russia. they are getting from 60% to 70% of their energy from russia and a new pipeline. >> the president comes out swinging in brussels. >> president trump launching a tirade against nato allies during what was supposed to be the welcome breakfast. >> because we're not going to put up with it. we can't put up with it and it's inappropriate. rao relief after safe rescue of that soccer team in thailand. >> doctors say they are doing
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well. >> the children were heroes in their own right. >> 11 people rescued after a sea plane crashed in alaska. a coast guard helicopter battled foggy conditions to reach that crash site. >> a massive gas explosion leveling buildings in wisconsin. >> there was this big boom and it knocked me to the ground. >> police are investigations that running back lesean mccoy was behind a brutal attack on his former girlfriend. all that -- >> a man caught on camera. >> holding on to the hood of a car again. >> this is crazy stuff. >> and all that matters -- >> president trump's supreme court nominee once wrote president should be shielded from charges while in office. it's like steph curry picking the ref and the ref ruling warriors number one. >> on "cbs this morning." [ speaking a foreign language ] >> samuel umtiti slips his
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defender and head homes the game's only goal. >> france has launched their first ticket to the world cup final. >> this morning's "eye opener" presented by toyota. let's go places. soccer fever is under way. >> you know it, baby. england versus croatia. my heart and most of my mind are already there. >> then you'll have the finals. the entire world will stop to watch. >> welcome to "cbs this morning." gayle is off so alex wagner is with us. as you wake up in the west, president trump is slamming u.s. allies at a high-profile nato summit. the president arrived at nato headquarters in belgium for meetings this morning after telling its secretary-general that several nato partners are not spending enough on defense. he also called germany captive to russia because of a plan to build a natural gas pipeline between the two countries. this meeting begins
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mr. trump's four-city european trip that will end with his highly anticipated summit with russian president vladimir putin. weijia jiang is traveling with the president. weijia, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, john. president trump set the tone for this summit during that meeting with the secretary-general. typically leaders hash out their conflicts in private but their tense exchange unfolded as the cameras were rolling and now there is no question just how hard the president plans to press nato allies over money. >> we have a very good relationship. >> reporter: moments after posing for a pleasant photo-op, president trump lectured nato's secretary-general jens stoltenberg accusing other nato members of not paying their fair share of defense spending. >> many countries owe us a tremendous amount of money for many years back where they're delinquent as far as i'm concerned because the united states has had to pay for them. >> reporter: the united states does pay a higher perjury of its
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gdp toward defense than any other nato member. about twice as much as france and roughly three times more than germany. in 2014 nato countries set a goal to contribute 2% by 2024. but the president interprettied that as a formal commitment. >> i think it's a very bad thing for nato. >> reporter: president trump also singled out germany for supporting gas deals with moscow since one of nato's main objectives is to stop russian aggression. >> how can you be together when a country is getting its energy from the person you want protection against or from the group that you want protection against? >> we kupdz stand when we stand together also in dealing with russia we are stronger. i think what we have seen -- >> no, you're just making russia rumpe richer. >> reporter: secretary stoltenberg acknowledged some agree with the president's point but said it shouldn't divide the alliance. >> we have always been able to
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unite around our ideas to protect and defend each other because we understand we're stronger together than apart. >> reporter: later today president trump will meet with french mpresident emmanuel macrn and german chancellor angela merkel who responded saying she expects controversial discussions during this summit. u.s. allies are also wary of the president's warm embrace of vladimir putin especially since their one-on-one summit in helsinki is just days away. alex. >> weijia jiang in brussels, thanks, weijia. this morning china threatens to retaliate against a new round of tariffs. u.s. officials announced plans to impose 10% tariffs on another $200 billion of chinese goods. they include steel and aluminum product, food like apples and fish and consumer goods like beauty products. the announcement came less than one week after both imposed matching 25% tariffs on $34
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billion of imports. >> a thai health official says the 12 boys and their coach rescued from a cave are in good condition this morning and he's praising the way they looked after themselves. officials released this first video of the group this morning recovering in a hospital and wearing surgical masks. they say the boys show no signs of stress after the 18-day ordeal. and newly released video shows the thai naech s.e.a.l.s pulling those boys through the cave then carrying them out on stretchers. anna werner is outside the hospital in chiang rai where the boys are being treated. anna, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. so, the boys admitted most of them were given antibiotics, doctors say, because they had high white blood cell counts a couple of them have lung infections and think they've lost about four pounds apiece but overall doing remarkably well considering what they went through. newly released video from inside the cave shows how the remarkable rescue unfolded.
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teams of workers can be seen uniting together to get the boys out. some of those boys shown covered in blankets on a stretcher as the teams moved them through the cave to safety. as the final ambulances left a thai cave tuesday people lined the streets cheering. at last the nearly three-week mission to get 12 trapped boys and their soccer coach out of a flooded cave was complete. the ordeal began more than two weeks ago when the 12 boys and their soccer coach became trapped 2.5 miles inside a complex cave system by fast-moving floodwaters. as oxygen levels in the cave dropped and a new round of monsoon rains threatened to raise floodwaters divers rushed in to rescue the boys. they were taken out in three groups over 72 hours. cbs news learned the boys and the coach were rescued just in time. hours after the last boy was pulled out, the main water pump in the caves malfunctioned
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sending water rushing in. the last member of the rescue team to leave the cave was australian dr. richard harris. his boss says he found out shortly afterwards that his father had died. he had stayed in the cave to look after the boys' health. officials say the boys are doing well in part because they stayed hydrated by drinking water dripping from the cave's ceiling. they are now all being monitored for disease and infections. thai health officials say the boys are doing well mentally. perhaps because they stayed together, the official said, adding we need to admire the coach who took care of them as well. officials said the boys were given anti-anxiety medication during the rescue to keep them calm. they're expected to remain here through the weekend and it may come as no surprise to you to hear that this story may be turned into a movie, producers are already on the ground here in thailand, norah, scouting. >> anna werner in thailand,
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thank you. major charles hodges is the u.s. mission commander for the 353rd special operations unit for the air force. he was part of the rescue operation. he joins us now from chiang rai, thailand. major hodges, good morning and thank you for all that you have done in this effort. can you describe the final moment when the boys left the cave? >> yeah, the final moment the boys left the cave, obviously there's a big sigh of relief, everybody knew that big home run had been hit, but at the same time there's still cautious optimism only because we still had four thai navy s.e.a.l.s that were still back there that we were waiting on and knew the mission wasn't over yet when the last boy came out. >> i understand and even that was a very precarious situation that you got those boys out and those final navy s.e.a.l.s just in the nick of time. what was happening? >> well, three of the seals -- there's four back there, three made their way into chamber three and about the same time we got the word that the pumps that had been running nonstop shut
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off for an unknown reason and the water levels back in chamber 3 started rising which would have cut off our access back to chambers 2, 1 and then out of the cave and that's an abort criteria so when that water level started rising everybody started grabbing their kit and they were ready to get out. thankfully that last seal popped up at the last moment and everyone was able to get out of chamber 3 safely and make their way out and mission complete. >> major, this was part of an extraordinary multinational effort. can you explain the camaraderie, the cooperation between teams working on this rescue operation? >> it took every single one of us putting our heads together, pushing aside any sort of political or cultural differences and just doing our best to find a solution to this. so, what i take away from this is just how much can be accomplished with teamwork because it was pretty impressive. >> well said. >> all those entities working together. >> i know you were right there
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at the cave's entrance. what did the boys look like when they emerged? what did this he say if anything. >> understand to get them out we had to put them on positive pressure full face masks and so we couldn't see their faces, they were in these flexible litters, we call skedcos that wrap around them so they're unable to move. there were multiple rescue personnel that were carrying them out so i don't want to give you a nonanswer but there's no way you could tell the emotions of the kids but i know they were absolutely happy to be out of that cave system. >> major, i'm sure there's some parents among those working on the rescue operation. can you describe to us the emotional tenor of the work outside the cave? >> so, there's obviously heightened emotional tensions the whole entire time we were there. thankfully the thai culture is such an optimistic culture that it helped to balance out those emotional lows. the emotional tenor outside the
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cave was one of volunteerism. there's so many people that came to help whether that was with giving -- setting up food vending stations or little tiny coffee shops or socks for the people who had super muddy feet all provided for free and the environment was just one of everybody coming together to make this a success. >> major, had you ever been trained for anything like this and if not, how do you come up with a plan when you're faced with something that's so particular? >> we're not trained to do cave dive rescue missions. so, at the end of the day you have to rely on the training that you're given and how we approach problems, methodically and logically and try to push away any emotion and look at it from that lens of what are the circumstances and what do we absolutely need to do to make this a success. >> all right, major charles hodges, the boys were lucky to have you there and we're
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grateful to have you here this morning. thank you. >> thank you, sir. >> oh, my gosh. can you imagine those details. if there is going to be a movie. >> oh, i'm going to see it. i'll buy two sets of tickets. the world was holding its breath. >> yes. >> you know, what a miraculous >> to learn it was nearly scuttled at the end, turned very perilous because of the equipment failure. >> teamwork amazes me. they all got together and did this complicated thing and pulled it off despite nose last last-minute. >> humanity. i love this story. >> it's amazing. here's another amazing rescue, the coast guard raced bad weather to rescue all 11 injured survivors from a plane crash in a remote and rugged part of alaska. the sightseeing plane had taken off from prince of wales island near the gulf of alaska. it was headed to ketchikan but went down about 40 miles southwest of its destination. cran van cleves shows us the
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dramatic story. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. it really was a race to get to the people. the weather was deteriorating and visibility dropped to a quarter of a mile when the chopper spotted the downed plane. moments after the tuesday morning crash, the pilot used his cell phone to call 911. he reported that he and his ten passengers all survived but many were hurt and needed help. the single engine plane crashed in rocky terrain and took hours for the two coast guard rescue helicopters to find them, all 11 people had to be hoisted off the mountain into a chopper and rushed to a staging area away from the worsening weather. the injuries are said to be minor. something a spokesman for the alaska state trooper says it's tremendous no one was killed. the company owns about a dozen aircraft. it uses largely for sightseeing tours out of ketchikan and purchased another tour operator after a deadly 2015 crash in the
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same type of plane. the company says it is cooperating with the ntsb investigation but intends to resume flying today. alex. >> dramatic story. thank you, chris. a federal judge says the government needs to quickly comply with a court order to reunite young immigrant children with their parents. only 38 of 102 children under the age of 5 were reunified. 3,000 children remain in custody. everyone is supposed to be reunited with their parents by july 26th. mireya villarreal is there where many remain in limbo. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. here in el paso along the border three fathers have been reunited with their children late last night but still a lot of families that are separated. right now the government says the holdup has to do with waiting on dna test results, also criminal background checks and claim there are several parents who are choosing not to
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be reunited with their children. often tuesday, this man saw his 3-year-old son for the first time in three months. separated at the border, the two were reunited yesterday following a court ordered deadline. >> the judge has made it clear he does not intend to be hands off. >> reporter: a hearing the judge told the government they need to streamline the process of family reunification. late in the day ben garcia got a call he was waiting for all day. do you believe that they dropped them off this late at night to meet that deadline that they promised the federal court? >> oh, i'm sure. i'm sure. i do believe that this was an effort to comply with the court order of july 10th. >> i'm saying this very simply. we have laws. we have borders. >> reporter: president trump responded to questions about his administration's inability to meet the deadline. >> well, i have a solution. tell people not to come to our country illegally.
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>> reporter: yesterday we spoke with jocelyn who asked we not use her last name. last month she was reunited with her 15-year-old son james after nearly nine months of separation. do you believe that the government is telling the truth when they say they can reunify these families. "i have hope," she said but not a lot of time to reunify. jocelyn and james have decided to stay here in el paso. they're at a local shelter while they continue to work on their immigration case. the judge is holding the federal government's feet to the fire and will hold regular hearings to make sure these reunifications continue to happen and is having his next status hearing coming up this friday. >> all right, mireya, thank you. a gas line explosion triggered a massive fire near madison, wisconsin, witnesses say they heard and felt a violent boom last night in sun prairie. video shows plumes of smoke billowing. it prompted evacuations.
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we learned this morning that one firefighter was killed. a second firefighter and a police officer were hurt. authorities say the explosion was caused by a contractor who hit a natural gas main. the ex-girlfriend of nfl star lesean mccoy is assaulted in her home. ahead, why police are investigating whether mccoy was behind the violent
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after the collision. >> you're watching "cbs this morning." >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. ♪ easy... ♪ [engine accelerating] ♪ get outta the way! ♪ they've gone wild! ♪ saddle up! ♪ toyota. let's go places. i can do more to lower my a1c. and i can do it with what's already within me. because my body can still make its own insulin. and once-weekly trulicity activates my body to release it. trulicity is not insulin. it comes in a once-weekly, truly easy-to-use pen.
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giant walks back. and a father who was in and out of this morning, as the new mayor of san francisco. a ceremony is scheduled to start at eleven a-m, at san o's city hall. good morning, it's 7:26. i'm michelle griego. london breed is set to be sworn in this morning as the new mayor of san francisco. a ceremony starts at 11 a.m. at san francisco city hall. firefighters are getting close to containing a 100-acre grass fire in south san jose. the curie fire began at santa teresa county park yesterday afternoon. there are no reports of injuries or any damage to buildings. there were some precautionary evacuations. a former apple employee has been charged in federal court with stealing trade secrets from the cupertino- based tech giant. the charges allege the hardware engineer planned to
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good morning. 7:27. your wednesday morning commute definitely busy. we are tracking slowdowns on southbound 680 as you make your way south of 580 heading down towards 84. you will start to be tapping those brakes. we are also tracking a crash right near andrade. it's no longer blocking lanes but certainly keeping your ride slow. about 20 minutes from 580 down towards 84. 880 at highway 84, traffic moving well in both directions. let's check in with neda. our kpix 5 roof cam showing clouds and a bird. seagulls like to hang out, outside our windows. gloomy out there. look at the sunshine over san jose. that's where it's not gloomy. things will warm up there. 61 already in san jose. 50s and 60s in the area going to the 90s.
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some good news. all 12 of those thai boys and their soccer coach has been saved from the cave. >> it's a great story that gives everyone hope and reminds us of the importance for permission slips to field trips of flooded caves. >> i know, there were signs everywhere that said don't enter the cave. >> they were. >> but the more we learn about this case, a lot of them suffered adversity.
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we're glad they're safe. trump's nominee for the supreme court judge, brett kavanaugh, is meeting with more senators on capitol hill. republicans have is a narrow 59-41 majority and it's made even slimmer with the absence of senator john mccain due to battling brain cancer. democrats say abortion rights could be in jeopardy. they have obtained surveillance of a crash. two people were killed and more than 100 injured after the passenger train crashed into a parked freight train in february. ntsb investigators are pressing railroad officials on safety protocols in the wake of multiple deadly crashes. and pfizer is temporarily rolling back its july 1st price hike after president trump called out the pharmaceutical giant. pfizer increased the cost of more than 40 drugs last week. the company has not yet given an
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exact date when prices will be returned to their previous levels. it says it wants to give the president an opportunity to work on his blueprint to strengthen the health care system and provide more access for patients. mr. trump praised pfizer's decision on twitter this morning, saying he hopes other companies follow its lead. allegations that buffalo bills star sean mckoy was involved in a violent attack on his girlfriend. a photo yesterday shows her apparent injuries. mark is outside her home where the alleged assault took place. mark, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. sean mckoy's ex-girlfriend lives in this abandoned home and he's been trying to evict her for more than a year. now there's question whether the break-in was violent, involving
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a pistol and a weapon. police say the attack around 3:00 a.m. tuesday was not random. >> the female who was assaulted, hit in the head, locked in a bathroom. >> reporter: hours later, photos of alicia cordon's bloody face was on line. she is the ex-girlfriend of running back sean mckoy. police said a male assailant that entered the home where she was sleeping demanded specific jewelry mckoy had given her. while she didn't accuse mccoy of ordering the attack, she wou would often suggest that it could happen. sdp >> there is an implication that sean mccoy is involved in the attack or didn't show much
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interest after the attack. >> reporter: mccoy has been trying to kick her out of the house for the past year, saying she was living rent free for the past five months even though they were no longer in a relationship. mccoy is the first nb ark brnfl be accused of domestic violence in the buffalo bills. >> the league needs to demonstrate that it takes this seriously. >> reporter: cordon says it's possible the home security streamed the attack. mccoy who is on his way back today says these allegations are totally baseless and offensive. george clooney's crash in italy. surveillance footage shows a blue vehicle veer into oncoming traffic yesterday. one scooter barely avoids the
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car before the scooter clooney was apparently riding crashes into it. clooney flew through the air and hit the ground. clooney was traveling to a tv series he was shooting on the island of sar didinia. the actor is recovering at home and will be fine. george, we're glad you'll be well, but please, no more scooters and no more motorcycles. >> that's dangerous stuff. he's lucky to be alive and lucky to be okay. >> we're glad he is. >> the minute you're on the way to work and the next minute something happens. a woman who was celebrating her anniversary in mexico was shot and killed to death. if you're on the go, subscribe to our "cbs this morning" podcast. it's available on our podcast app or wherever you like to watch your podcast.
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police in mexico are investigating the murder of an american tourist hit by a stray bullet in mexico city. ay morning with her husband and two friends when she was shot. >> good morning. police say two men on a motorcycle were aiming for a bar bouncer who was hit and survive. they're shocked that one of tatiana's favorite countries to visit became the very place where she lost her life. >> want even to remember tatiana for her smile, liveliness, optimism, and adventurous
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tatiana mirutenko's sister and father said she was in mexico city to celebrate her first year anniversary. >> a year ago at this time we were selecting flowers for her wedding, and yesterday we were there selecting flowers for our funeral. >> the couple was traveling with other friends to sample mexico city's best restaurants. mirutenko was shot in a restaurant in an upscale restaurant over the weekend. they were aiming for a bouncer inside the restaurant but hit mirror tuutenko as she was leav. she had told her family how safe she felt there. 2017 was the nation's deadliest year on record with more than 25,000 murders. earlier this year the u.s. state department issued a travel ban to five mexican states, the same warning issued to war-torn countries like syria, afghanistan and somalia.
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popular tourist destinations, ixtapa and acapulco, are in those do not travel zones. the government also warns tourists to exercise increased caution when visiting cancun, k cozumel, la playa. person with everything i do. i don't know what i'll do without her. >> mirutenko's funeral will be held in chicago where she grew up. police are reviewing video. this may have been a little so-called off the resort but it was a safe area and a lot of people were there. she nor her husband expected something like this to happen. >> her husband is okay.
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>> he's okay. >> at least physically. up next, a look at this mornings other headlines including how ten firefighters >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by verzenio. but i'm relentless too. mbc doesn't take a day off, and neither will i. and i treat my mbc with new everyday verzenio- the only one of its kind that can be taken every day.
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in a document last month facebook acknowledged that mail.ru gave a russian company access to data for facebook users. that followed a change by facebook in 2014 when it said it would prevent ax from getting information on facebook. facebook says it's investigating and that it has not found any indication of misuse. democratic senator mark warner expressed concern that current mail.ru executives have ties to president vladimir putin. the "new york times" says the nfl players association filed a grievance over the national anthem policy. players can now be punished for kneeling for the national anthem and players can be fined. they are allowed to stay in the locker room during the anthem.
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they said that's inconsistent with the bargaining agreement and infringes on players' rights. the nfl did not comment. affiliate wncn reports that 10 volunteer firefighters are accused of multiple arsons. they make their first court appearance this morning. police say the firefighters intentionally set fire to abandoned homes and wooded areas over a two-year period in robeson county south of fayetteville. officials said hundreds of thousands of dollars were wasted responding to the fires. an investigation by tennessee health officials found e. coli in well water. it caused about 500 people to get sick at a zip line attraction. the state contacted multiple people who visited the zip line company in gatlinburg between june and july. they believe well water distributed in jugs is to blame.
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advanced tests will show if it is contagious. fda approves freeze-dried blood supply for troops. the freeze-dried plasma does not need to go through tests, making it readily available. serena williams at wimbledon won the first set but lost the last two. she is seeking her next world title. congratulations to her. >> she makes motherhood something else entirely. i'm still waiting to lose my baby weight. making us all look bad is what's happening. >> she's amazing.
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a reveal of ancient rome in history. >> the ancient city of pompeii was buried in volcanic ash years ago. its mystery has made it popular with tourists. now archeologists are looking to unearth and understand more of it. it will show you what tourists have yet to see, coming up on "cbs this morning." and global affairs expert ian bremmer is in studio 57, there he is, looking at president trump's tough words for u.s. allies at the nato summit. over the last 24 hours, you finished preparing him for college. in 24 hours, you'll send him off thinking you've done everything for his well-being. but meningitis b progresses quickly and can be fatal,
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sometimes within 24 hours. while meningitis b is uncommon, about 1 in 10 infected will die. like millions of others, your teen may not be vaccinated against meningitis b. meningitis b strikes quickly. be quick to talk to your teen's doctor about a meningitis b vaccine. tand, our adulte children are here. so, we save by using tide. which means we use less. three generations of clothes cleaned in one wash. those are moms. anybody seen my pants?
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nothing cleans better. put those on dad! it's got to be tide. i was in the military for 18 years.rian, but, i smoked and i got heart disease. my tip is; it's hard to serve your country when you're to weak to put on your uniform. (announcer) you can quit. for free help, call 1-800-quit-now. hi there.me! so, what do you look for in a vehicle? sleek designs. performance. dependability is top on my list.
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well then, here's some vehicles that deliver on that. woah! wow. oh jeez! that's our truck! it's our truck! and they're our cars! that's my chevy! chevy's the only brand to earn j.d. power dependability awards across cars, trucks and suvs three years in a row. awesome. i'm proud. it's like a dynasty. it's impressive. my secret visitors. hallucinations and delusions. the unknown parts of living with parkinson's. what plots they unfold, but only in my mind. over 50% of people with parkinson's will experience hallucinations or delusions during the course of their disease. if your loved one is experiencing these symptoms, talk to your parkinson's specialist. there are treatment options that can help. my visitors should be the ones i want to see.
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my visitors should be the ones ( ♪ ) pixar pier has arrived! prepare to be awed. prepare to be moved. prepare to make a mad dash... ( ♪ ) ...because with the incredicoaster, pixar pal-a-round, and a bunch of your favorite pixar characters, it's going to be pretty incredible. pixar pier is now open! only at disney california adventure park. arizona is cleaning up after the third massive dust storm this morning. strong winds from a thunderstorm created an intense rolling dust cloud yesterday. >> wow. >> the weather phenomenon cut visibility and delayed flights as it swept across the phoenix area. >> beautiful to see but i'm sure
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disruptive. ahead rescuers describe the moment their search the pedicab driv kevin manning-- who was struck by a hit and run driver in san francisco two weeks ago... has died from his injuries. the arch for the driver good morning, it's 7:56. i'm kenny choi. the pedicab driver kevin manning struck and hit by a hit-and-run driver two weeks ago died. the search for the driver is ongoing. the man accused of killing an unarmed security guard in san francisco last monday has pleaded not guilty to murder. 24-year-old cardel coleman is being held without bail. >> and firefighters are making progress against the county fire in napa and yolo counties. it is now 86% contained. the wildfire has charred through more than 90,000 acres. we'll have traffic and weather in just a moment.
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southbound 880, if you are heading through san jose, we had an earlier crash. that was just past coleman. you can see traffic is still pretty sluggish. speeds are in the yellow from 237 to 280 in the southbound direction. 18 minutes. across the richmond/san rafael, not too bad. 22 minutes into san francisco from the maze. the seagull loves to hang outside our studios. here's the view from our camera right on the roof. you can see the clouds over the bay bridge, and that bird at the bottom of your screen. san jose sunnier where it's going to heat up. the south bay the east bay getting ready for the heat again today. here's the seven-day forecast. slam is just $5.99!
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>> a couple of them have lung infections and they say on average they have lost about four pounds apiece, but overall, they're doing remarkably well considering what they went through. >> they got the boys out and just in the nick of time. >> when the water level started rising, that last s.e.a.l. popped up at that moment. visibility had dropped only about a quarter mile when the rescue chopper spotted the downed plane. the government says the -- several parents who are choosing not to be reunited. >> i am so happy to report that all 12 thai boys and their coach have been rescued. it's a historic moment, it's actually the most americans have ever cared about any soccer team ever.
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>> i'm still on cloud nine after that rescue. >> they ware winners of the word cup of the heart. >> and looking at how close and perilous it was the last minute. >> you couldn't write a hollywood script. president trump is challenging america's allies at the nato summit that started this morning. he told nato's secretary general, that u.s. allies spent more on defense. and he claimed that oil and gas imports leave it totally controlled by russia. >> why are countries in nato, namely germany having a large percentage of their energy needs paid to russia and taken care of by russia. we have to talk about the billions and billions of dollars
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that's being paid to the country that we're supposed to be protecting you against. germany as far as i am concerned is captive to russia because it's getting so much of its energy from russia. so we're supposed to protect germany while they're getting their energy from russia. explain that. and it can't be explained. >> president trump said he discussed the pipeline with german chancellor angela merkel. she said she grew up in germany when it was under soviet control and now germany makes it's own decisions. this year, the u.s. plans to spend 3.5% of gdp on defense, other than all of its partners. most nato countries are increasing spending, but only four others are likely to hit that 2% guideline this year, 23 members will spend less than the
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benchmark and includes german. >> ian bremer is global affairs contributor for cbs news, president trump went after germany for almost five minutes. a lot of sharp words are being exchanged at this summit. is the nato alliance in jeopardy. >> what trump has done is said if you don't pay more, i'm going to make it really uncomfortable for you. he hasn't said what he's going to actually do if they continue to under pay, and germans are not going to come close to the 2% commitment by 2024. they're good on their climate commitments, but for some reason not on defense. the fact that merkel and trump really can't stand each other, and that this is really the part of the trans-atlantic partnership that's really rubbing together. so far no direct impact on nato itself. >> but those without an
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understanding of history, can you explain why america shoulders most of the burden? >> well, sure, the fact that the united states is the world's largest defense expenditure in the world. when the soviet union collapsed, the europeans no longer faced those direct threats, the americans still had bases not just in europe but all over the world. >> it was in our interest. >> when trump talks about spending 3.5% of our gdp on defense, he's talking about our global commitments. he's also talking about the fact that if you spend 20 years in the military as an enlisted man, you get a pension for life. a big percentage of our spending is on pensions. there are lots of reasons that our defense spending is high, trump has his own reasons they want to increase our defense spending, but generation does not.
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when schroeder is an -- personal financial gain for making the german government more dependent, the german people more dependent on russian energy. it's kind of like we asked today about trump. >> family meetings can be uncomfortable, usually you have these uncomfortable conversations of these -- surely the president was teeing up this question of gas to sock them in the nose. why is that? >> he wants to make merkel uncomfortable. he doesn't like any of these multilateral meetings. he feels liwants a one-on-one m where he's stronger and he wants to link security to economics, just like the chinese do, like they'll give you money if you
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play ball with them on a security perspective. it's the same thing that trump is doing, to the chinese if you want me to work with you on trade, you better help us with north korea. it's linkage and it's really not been the american approach, it's been the beijing approach. some of the young thai soccer players had previously overcome major obstacles even before getting trapped in that cave. ahead we have got new details on their lives and how they actually
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12 boys and their coach rescued from a cave in thailand are recovering from their incredible ordeal this morning. new video released from thai navy s.e.a.l.s showing rescuers pulling them out on stretchers. earlier we heard from charles hodger who was stationed outside the command center. >> the thai military has called this an impossible position. were there any other moments where you thought this might not come off at all? >> absolutely, we had that thought the whole entire time, we also understood that we did not have the option to not attempt this. once it was confirmed that the
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proof of life that the 12 soccer players and their coach were back in chamber 9, we knew we had to effect some sort of a rescue. so even though the odds seemed impossible, what i have always been taught is take risks and be bowled to solve the situation. and we did. >> we're learning about some of the boys--served as a translator when two british divers first arrived and a crossed. i keep saying this is my favorite story about some of these boys, we're learning more details. abdul, he speaks five languages, he's from myanmar bermuda m, be.
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>> rescuers say instinct led them to a baby buried a live in the montana forest. how they nearly stumbled over the infant who had been outside for almost nine hours. for almost nine hours. year watching "cbs this morning." not cool. freezing away fat cells with coolsculpting? now that's cool! coolsculpting safely freezes and removes fat cells with little or no downtime. and no surgery. results and patient experience may vary. some common side effects include temporary numbness, discomfort,and swelling. ask your doctor if coolsculpting is right for you and visit coolsculpting.com today for your chance to win a free treatment.
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missoula county sheriff prepared themselves for an almost unthinkable discovery. now they believe divine intervention helped bring a happy ending to a bad situation. >> we heard the slight whimper of a baby and immediately just started running. >> reporter: deputy jessup and officer foals followed up on sunday morning. i remember ross almost stepping on like this little pile of sticks. >> reporter: the little boy was buried in that pile. >> my father instinct s kicked in, i picked him up, scooped him up, we swallowed him in a down coat, i gave him kisses on the forehead and i couldn't thank the lord jesus enough, i was just so happy.
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>> francis carlton crowley was charged with child endangerment. he told investigators saturday he left the boy behind because the child was heavy. >> i think if this baby was left out in the cold for much longer, it probably would have been sus septemberab septemberab septemberab septemb susceptible to infection. >> the baby's a pretty tough individual, i'll you that. >> it was almost like he was waiting for us to find him. >> reporter: the child is in the care of child and family services now. it's not clear what crowley's relationship to the child, but what is clear is that babies are much tougher than we give them credit for. and the father there with the mustache, his fatherly instincts
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♪ ♪ this is a new tom petty and the heartbreakers song and never before seen footage of him and his band. you're watching it for the first time here on "cbs this morning." the song is called "keep a little soul." and it is the first tom petty music to be released since his death last october. anthony mason is here with how the new song and video footage were discovered. anthony, good morning. >> good morning. tom petty kept an extensive archive and this year when his family began pulling tapes from storage, they found a trove of
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unreleased recordings, among them some vintage gems like "keep a little soul." ♪ ♪ >> petty recorded the song in 1982. during the sessions for the "long after dark" album. it didn't make the cut then but the family felt the words resonate today. ♪ i know you're trying hard ♪ there's a sadness in your eyes ♪ for ever, like a king ♪ >> keep a little soul will be on a new 60-track box set. an american treasure to be released in september. a career spanning retrospective, designed to highlight petty's
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skills as a song writer. >> he talked in a 2009 interview for "cbs sunday morning". >> do you know when you've written a good song? >> no. the b's are the dangerous things -- >> because they could look like a's. >> and when do they finally reveal themselves? >> in the recording. you get a little -- if a b. is sitting next to an a., it just can't pull it off. >> the american treasure project was commissioned business hi wife dana and daughter. the criteria were songs that we all felt said something about dad. it is such a strange thing to lose someone like him. he was much cooler than people could imagine.
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and i think a lot of people thought he was pretty cool. >> they sure did. >> like me among them. when did they put this collection together? >> this happened -- the family said it took them a while to face the music about tom's death obviously. and they began putting this together after the grammy's this year and calls up recordings and some they had to bake in an oven because they were in a tape and transferred and they listened to 5000 released songs and about a dozen on this album and they said there is more in there. they've just started this process. but they wanted to put something out that was intimate and in their words between the hits. there are live recordings here, there are alternate takes of classic songs and there are, as i said, about a dozen unreleased songs. >> this is a great jam. >> where has this been. anthony, great to see you. every day around 1,000 americans suv cardiac arrest not
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in the hospital. our dr. jon la pook is in the green room showing how hands on by bystanders could save many near morgan hill is 95-percent contained this morning. it broke out yesterday afternoon... d burned good morning, it's 8:25. i'm michelle griego. a grass fire near morgan hill is 95% contained. it broke out yesterday afternoon and killed four horses and burned more than 50 acres. police think these seven men are responsible for the graffiti in san francisco. the district attorney's office filed 52 felony indictments against them. the xo music festival planned for antioch this weekend is in question. more than 100 acts are slated to perform. but many are pulled out citing alleged financial disagreements. stay with us; a look at traffic and weather in just a moment.
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good morning. 8:27. we are getting reports of a grass fire. this is in the east bay right near 242, and you can see the smoke in the camera shot near 680. so anyone heading there, fire crews are aware of this and are heading there. you may see some smoke and slowdowns if you are traveling through the concord-pleasant hill area. we will take a look at your ride as you make your way along highway 4, delays
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approaching the port chicago highway and 224 and your ride is slow especially southbound heading towards highway 24. speeds are in the red. live look right near north main street. we are still tracking slowdowns for drivers heading along 580. this is right near high street in the yellow, 20-minute ride from 238 on up to highway 24. hat's a check of your traffic; over to you. good morning, everybody. so a lot of you have sunshine inland. but around san francisco, the coast is gray this morning. we have fog out there but finally getting a chance to see some of san francisco from the transamerica pyramid camera. it's been socked n here's the socked. you can see cloud cover across the north bay. visibility impacted by the coast. that's where you may see drizzle. hot through the next seven days.
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♪ ♪ ♪ welcome back to cbs this morning. right now it's time to show you some of this morning's headlines. "the washington post" reports some major colleges have stopped requiring an essay test. last week princeton and stanford university said they're ending the essay requirement. dar darthmouth, harvard and yale are
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also ending the retirement. the kansas city star says a lamborghini burst into flames after a minivan ran into a gas pump. nobody was hurt but the lamborghini was destroyed. police reportedly said it was an accident and the driver of the minivan will not be charge d. forbes says soccer superstar christian renaldo is taking a wage cut to leave the team. he will be playing for the italian club. it's believed that renaldo's new salary would be $64 million a year. he will make up for it in endorsements of $37 million.
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rolling stone says when it comes to the billboard chart, drake is bigger than all of rock 'n roll. ♪ >> drake's song is number one on the hot billboard 1 hu00 this w, he has a record 10 songs on the list, there are only about a dozen rock 'n roll songs on the chart. all 25 tracks from the rapper's scorpion album have been released. that breaks the previous record of five top ten hits by the beetles in 1974. and the "boston globe" reports on a study that says people do not think well during extreme heat. students without air conditioning performed worse on a series of cognitive tests. i'm not entirely surprised by
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that. health experts are trying to raise awareness about a life saving technique at everyone's fingertips. each year 350,000 people -- no mouth to mouth breathing needed could triple a person's chance of survival in the critical minutes before help arrives. here's how simple this technique can be. good morning, so you've brought a friend here with you? >> right. >> what's his name and show us how it's done. >> irving, i needed a name and you caught me by surprise here. this is for teens and adults. and of course we encourage people to have cpr courses, but it's much simpler than people realize. first, how do you know that someone needs an intervention cpr? there's three cs, check to see
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if they're responsive, and check to see if their breathing is normal. next is call 911, because once you start cpr you don't want to stop. the third is compress the chest, chest compressions. i'll do a little demo here, my friends at the red cross -- are you okay, are you okay? not responsive, not normal breathing. so you start. you put your hand in the middle of their chest, you sbeintertwi your fingers. then you stop come prepresscomp you have probably heard there's a song that goes to about this
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beat. st stayin' alive, stayin' alive. >> what do those chest compressions do? >> the heart sends blood up to the carrotid artery. you're beating for the heart, you're compressing it, and you're shooting that blood up to the brain. >> why is the mouth to mouth no longer a requirement. if you' >> if you're not breathing, if there's some other problem, you do want to have the full ability to do breathing and compressions. but it turns out that the average bystander, if somebody has cardiac arrest, about 3
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350,000 times a year. and there's the ick factor nobody wants to put their mouth on somebody else's mouth. >> this is so important, people are afraid they're going to somehow hurt somebody. and i got to tell you, you can only help in this situation. i had a situation a couple of years ago, where somebody had gone down, they had cardiac arrest, and people were standing around, even though somebody knew how to do it, they get frozen. i have been in that position with the families. even if the person god for bids ends up dying, they feel at least the person had a chance and they tried. >> to learn more about cpr, go to our website, cbsthismorning.com. archaeologists are making new discoveries. it's just the latest discovery
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to spotlight one of the most popular archeological sites in the world. last year more than 3 million tourists visited pompeii, which is preserved under a mountain of volcanic ash. >> reporter: this is the forum, the main market place of pompeii, and behind me in the distance, you can see mt. v vesuvius. when that volcano erupted, the town became a time capsule. but today there is new life here. this is the sound of tools, not tourists that filled this part of pompeii. where the most ambitious excavation project in a generation is taking place. has the world seen any of this yet? >> no. >> reporter: each new discovery, including the house of dolphins,
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pompeii's second life. >> this moment, is new life for pompeii, with new inhabitants, inhabitants that work as archaeologists. >> reporter: the team of over 50 are focusing efforts on this resort town that has remained bury until a year ago. this is one of the archaeologists. >> this is a political post? >> yes. >> reporter: from 2,000 years ago. >> exactly. >> reporter: on the excavated streets they're uncovering -- remarkable for its still vibrant paint. >> you don't find this anywhere else? >> no. >> one-third of pompeii is still covered. they continue digging out the tons of pumis that covered this
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county in places from about 10 to 20 feet high, sealing it off for nearly 1,500 years. >> here you can get a sense for how this was all buried? >> yes. this is the material that covered pompeii for three meters. >> reporter: in may, osana's team found what gained international attention, initially thought to be an unlucky man killed by a giant rock as he fled vesuviu s's e n erupti eruption. in the place where we expected the head and it was not there. >> so they kept digging, they eventually found the skull in a tunnel that had been open during a previous excavation, and it turned out the manage had been asphyxiated.
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where the skull was was sloppiness of previous generations. today's process is much slower and more methodical. even sifting through what had been discarded in previous excavations. >> you're still learning as you're going along? >> of course. this is really an experimentation and there's no manual that can tell you how to approach such a complex problem. >> they're using hammers that record wave velocity to detect how the ancient walls are holding up now that they're exposed to the environment. and they demonstrated the laser scanners and drones they use to record what they find and where they find it. so it can be passed down to future generations of archaeologists. the timeline is not certain but it's believed that the newly opened area of pompeii will not
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be open to tourists until sometime next year, and it will take time for archaeologists to understand what's bury here. >> beautiful to see all of that. >> fascinating story. >> and there's so many more discoveries still to be made. >> a third of it, i guess, is still covered. >> one other thing as you've been teaching us about this new type of cpr, where should we go for more information? >> there's a 30-second video, hands only.nyc. dr. holly anderson is featured in it and it takes 30 seconds to go over the same thing. linkedin's app describes how job applicants
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stops texting because he saw what you look like and then he doesn't answer. >> the characters on the tv series "scream queens" are not the only ones dealing with ghosting. employers are, too, as some workers suddenly stop responding. they report people are ghosting at work and it's driving companies at crazy. candidates agree to job interviews and then fail to show up, never saying more. some accept jobs only to not appear for the first day of work. we've teemed up with the professional work sight. linkedin editor in chief dan roth appearing at the table. thank you for appearing at the appointed time. so is this flakiness, rudeness, or an incredibly tight job market? >> it's more the latter. the job market is so hot right now. you've got more job openings than candidates, which is the
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first time the labor department has seen this. it's a buyers' market. if you're candidate, you can choose where you want go when it's easier to just not show up. you don't feel like going to a job interview, just don't go. >> we'll deal with the rudeness piece. hold on. is there a certain area of the labor market where this is happening and not othering? >> it's happening across the board whether you're an accountant or food service worker, people are saying it's happening to them. it's happening more where there's a harder market. it's more likely you'll find people ghosting you. >> who is doing it? is it young folks? >> it's everyone. you would think it's just millennials. >> people who ghost. >> the truth is it's everyone. it's yezyer to stop showing up or reach out and say, thank you for reaching out, i don't want the job anymore.
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nr job seekers, they've been treated so rudely for so long it's retribution. >> it's a terrible professional move to not show up, is it not? >> they say they'll never forget the people who have ghosted them. we have databases of candidates, but if you ghost me, that will be on my head forever and i'll take that from job to job. >> has that ever happened with you? >> it did. we had a job opening where we were looking if the perfect person. sbemt months looking for the perfect candidates. we finally found the right guy. we were all excited about it including him i thought, we offered him the job and never heard back. called him, texting, emailed, never heard back. i didn't know he took a new job until he updated his profile. >> linkedin profile. >> exactly. >> talk about a response. >> did you respond?
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>> i said thanks for ghosting me. >> if someone's going to bail, that e're going to bail, but you want to waste the pressure because it's a waste of time for the companies. >> what is done is it changes recruiters. they have to make constant phone calls. they'll call hours before reminding people don't forget to come in today, we're looking forward to seeing you and if they don't show up, you start getting worried. you're like a farmt. did this person get hurt or are you ghosting me. >> people rehn if you ghost them. dan rocket, thank you for that terrifying update. you can hear more on "cbs this morning" on our podcast available on your apple's podcast app or wherever you like to download your podcast. you're watching "cbs this morning."
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this morning, as the new mayor of san francisco. a ceremony is scheduled to start about two hours from now, at san good morning, it's 8:55. i'm michelle griego. london breed is set to be sworn in this morning as the new mayor of san francisco. a ceremony is scheduled to start about 2 hours from now at san francisco city hall. 100-acre grass fire in south san jose is now 90% contained. the curie fire began on the edge of santa teresa county park yesterday afternoon. there are no reports of injuries or any damage to buildings. there were some evacuations. a former apple employee has been charged in federal court with stealing trade secrets from the cupertino- based tech giant. the charges allege the
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hardware engineer planned to take some secrets with him when he took a job with another company. stay with us; weather and traffic in just a moment. ♪ ♪ legendary jockey víctor espinoza is insatiable when it comes to competing. ♪ ♪ so is his horse. ♪ ♪ when it comes to snacking. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ that's why he uses the chase mobile app, to pay practically anyone, at any bank. life, lived victor's way.
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chase. make more of what's yours. we are tracking an earlier fire that still has one lane shut down along northbound 242. this is just north of 680. so you can see those delays. we have some yellow sensors popping up on our screen here and speeds reduced just below the limit. it looks like traffic is still able to get through, though,
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in both directions. you may still see some flashing lights if you are heading through the concord area. heading southbound 680, just south of 580 you will start tapping the brakes, 15 minutes down towards 84. we're tracking a new accident northbound 680 just before highway 84 there. vallecitos. you will see one lane remains blocked and we are tracking some slow speeds. 36 minutes to 84. neda has the forecast. it's foggy especially if you are near san francisco and the north bay. check out the clouds. the satellite/radar showing it's starting to burn off a little bit ever so slightly across the east bay. right around the golden gate bridge it may stay for a while but most likely inland will be under sunshine after about 10, 11 a.m. current temperatures:
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