tv CBS Overnight News CBS June 8, 2016 3:08am-4:01am EDT
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well some one else running for re-election tonight is the california judge who is being criticized for the sentence he handed down in a sexual assault case at stanford university. the man convicted was a star swimmer. his victim was drunk to the point of passing out. john blackstone is following this. >> 20-year-old brock turner is now in jail serving his six month sentence for sexual assault. a sentence many find so lenient that more than 400,000 people have signed an online petition demanding that the judge aaron persky be removed from the
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bench. key witness in the case against turner was riding his bike with a friend down a dusty trail when they stau turner on top of the victim. >> we called him out. and the guy ran away. my friend peter chased after him. we detained him until the police came essentially. >> she was unconscious? >> she was unconscious. >> in a searing letter that has now been read by millions on line at nonmuss victim thanks two men who saved her. but most words are aimed at turner, a former stanford swimming star you. made me a victim. in newspapers my name was unconscious intoxicated woman. while you are the all american swimmer at a top university. the letter has had a
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particularly powerful impact on campuses across the country. according to a poll last year, one in five college women say they have been sexually assaulted. >> it is difficult to read. but i think there is so much value in that letter that, that everyone should read it. >> samantha scholar at syracuse university was rained twice in her freshman year. she read the letter from the stanford victim over and over. >> there is a lot of different things that resonated with me. first and foremost was the fact that she was directly addressing brock turner. i think that -- that is the definition of what bravery looks >> reporter: the man who sentenced turner, judge aaron persky up for re-election today. in spite of the anger over the lenient sentence, the judge doesn't have to worry, scott. he is running unopposed. >> john blackstone, at stanford, thank you. overseas, bombs and booby traps are slowing the progress of iraqi forces trying to retake the city of fallujah from isis. iraq is getting help on the ground from iran and from the air by the united states. today, seth doane reports from the aircraft carrier "harry s. truman" where many of the strikes are launched. >> reporter: this is what pilots
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see operating from the aircraft carrier. their air strikes are targeting isis. this lieutenant is a u.s. navy pilot. >> these are precision guided weapons theyshould strike where they need to. >> reporter: 20% of coalition air strikes, launch from the "u.s.s. harry s. truman." 1800 sortees since december including bomb factories, logistics hubs and stock piles of cash.
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lieutenant commander paulo singh is matlook's wing man. >> reporter: you are trying to hit everything at the base of the cause, rather instead of pecking at the little guys here and there. >> reporter: was that pecking at the little guys what was happening before? >> no, i wouldn't say that at all. i think that, that the targets have evolved and they're constantly going to evolve. >> reporter: u.s. special forces are playing advisory role in fallujah their presence is shaping what pilots are able to do from above. >> whether we are supporting them being the eyes in the skies or actually striking targets that they're passing out to us. they're, you know, it's, it's a team effort. >> reporter: are you seeing anything on the ground change? does it feel any different being up there today? >> on the ground you can see exactly what's happening when you are actually in those hot areas i guess you could say. seeing where the ground has been taken where it has been lost. or gained. >> reporter: recent gains on the battlefield may be traced back to the deck of the aircraft carrier. scott, the pilots told us while they may see some change during a deployment, this is going to be a long term effort. >> seth doane covering the navy at war. seth, thank you. today a tweet caused a few shreeks reporting falsely the death of nfl commissioner roger goodell. we asked anthony mason to crack the case. >> roger goodell's obituary was
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posted on the verified twitter feed. we regret to inform fans, commissioner roger goodell has passed away, the tweet read. goodell is alive and well. the nfl had been hacked. we got into a social media employee's e-mail and found the account password there, one of the hackers told the website tech insider, by e-mail. weak password have become a chronic problem according to the security firm trustwave. they account for more than a quarter of cyberbreaches. >> these are live pass words cracked in real time. >> to show how easy, trust wave analyst, gary pikaloni had we
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enter a seven character password. >> we can make 91 billion guesses a second. didn't take long to crack. >> here is your password here. >> my password. >> 45 second not even. >> 37. >> 37 seconds. >> well that's scary. >> reporter: pikioni says 7, 8 characters are no longer enough. >> computer hard ward reached this point we are able to attack them stow quickly, a password that small isn't practical any more. for sensitive things like financials, on line banking. >> facebook founder mark zuckerberg made the mistake. his twitter and pinterest accounts were hacked sunday. the hacker, posted the password he reused, which they claimed to have found in a database of 117 million pass words taken from a linkedin hack. >> security experts say the more characters in a password the longer it takes to hack. the nfl has engaged law enforcement to determine how the account was hacked. >> eight characters no longer enough. anthony mason, thank you. coming up next, can warning labels help americans slim down.
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a report today says that more than 40% of american women are obese. which is based on their body mass. it's 35% of men. many experts say sugar is the enemy and we report cities are declaring war. >> reporter: across the country, the obesity epidemic is on the rise. in baltimore, one out of three kids is obese or overweight. city health commissioner dr. lena wen. it is our duty to make sure parents hatch the most accurate information to make the best choices for their kids. >> reporter: wen supports a bill debated that would put warning labels in stores and restaurants that sell sugar sweetened
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drinks. not the first time the soda industry has been targeted. in july, san francisco will be the first to require health warnings on advertisements. in 2014, berkeley, california became the only city to impose a one cent an ounce sugar tax. philadelphia wants to go even further. mayor jim kenny is proposing taxing soda at 3 cents an ounce. >> they have been selling a product for generations that have made them multibillionaires and we just want a little piece of it back. >> reporter: the plan says you could raise $400 million in the course of five years where would money go? >> expanding quality prek for 8,000 to 10,000 kids in four years. >> experts say the tax will result in 50% decline in beverage sales. >> american beverage association spent $3 million fighting the philadelphia sugar tax. they say the bill will cost jobs and unfairly impact low income families. ellen valentineo is executive vice president of the maryland beverage association. >> so do we need government mandates, bans, restrictions on
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tonight, first responders are mourning one of their own. a golden retriever known as bretagne, believed to be the last of the 9/11 search dogs. bretagne with texas task force one. spent ten days searching for the victims in the rubble of the world trade center. in recent years she suffered from kidney disease. yesterday, volunteer firefighters served as an honor guard as bretagne was brought to a vet and put to sleep. she was 16 years old. some one once said dogs only fault is that their lives are too short. and we'll be right back.
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we end with a great success story. kids from a tough city prove they're even tougher. they have just graduated from high school in compton, california, at the top of their class. the key team work. here is chris martinez. >> they are daughters of immigrant parents, most of whom didn't finish high school. so there was plenty of pride as diplomas were handed out to nancy reevas, kimberly fernandez, janet gomez, and elizabeth perez. >> congratulations class of 2016. >> reporter: it began with a
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pact made in middle school for each to succeed they all had to. it included several ap courses and intensive study sessions. >> because we are so connected and we sort of all like, nobody is competing against each other. we're helping each other. >> reporter: the girls defied the odds and harsh reality their school district ranks among the bottom 10% in the country and compton is among the most violent cities. when they would meet students from other schools? >> are you okay in compton? do you hear shootings? >> what do you think when people say that? >> make you fool like you are inferior. >> we are able to prove all stereotypes about them wrong. >> tell me what your gp is? >> 4.3.
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>> 4.5. >> 4.3. >> 4.5. >> if i was to get lower than an a. >> cynthia washington has a name for the group. >> super six. the super six. these girls need to be acknowledged. it is historic in compton the you may see that in a more have flewn't community. it is a rarity here. >> reporter: all the girls have been accepted to top universities and will leave compton. but compton will never leave them. >> i think i want to come and help my community. counsel juveniles. try to get them an education. and make them see their life is not over. >> caller: on campus they relish their roles as celebrities. >> kids in class, you're part of the super six. we are like, yeah. >> i'm like, mom, i am graduating number one. >> lifting up not just each other but also their troubled town. chris martinez, cbs news, compton. that's the "cbs overnight news" for this wednesday. for some of you the news continues. for others, check back with us a little bit later for the morning news and cbs this morning. from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm scott pelley.
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welcome to the overnight news. i'm michelle miller. the outrage continues to boil over the six-month sentence given to a former stanford swimming star. and the sexual assault of an unconscious woman. brock turner could have faced 14 years in prison. instead he will likely spend no more than 12 weeks in the county jail. santa clara county judge, aaron persky take the heat, former captain of the stanford lacrosse
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team and critics say he was too soft on the star athlete. persky up for re-election this fall. so far he has no opponent. but there is a recall petition circulating to remove him from the bench. john blackstone is outside the elmwood correctional facility outside san jose. >> reporter: at his sentencing brock turner could have received 14 years in prison. instead, he got just six months here in the county jail which means he is actually likely to spend just three months behind bars. brock turner is a former stanford university swimming star, his 23-year-old victim who is not a stanford student remains anonymous. but her letter to the judge describing the emotional impact of sexual assault is finding a wide audience. you took away my worth, my privacy, my energy, my time, my safety, my intimacy, my confidence. she wrote. i don't want my body any more.
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i was terrified of it. she admits to drinking too much at a fraternity party and blacking out. she was discovered nearly naked on the ground behind a dumpster. the attack was stopped by two grad students who happened to ride by on bicycles. >> she was unconscious the entire time. i shaked her. she dent move at all. the two later told authorities that they saw turner on top of the victim aggressively thrusting his hips into her. >> the guy stood up, then we saw that she wasn't moving still, so we called him out. and the guy ran away. my friend peter chased after him. >> turner claims she consented. she wrote, his attorney constantly reminded the jury the only one we can believe is brock because she doesn't remember. that helplessness was traumatizing. >> it was kind of a punch to the gut. >> the prosecutor in the case. >> i cried. i was felt like i didn't do my part in representing her interests in the case. because of the slap on the wrist sentence that the defendant got. >> reporter: last week turner was sentenced to six months in jail and must register as a lifelong sex offender. in a petition, thousand are calling for judge aaron persky to be removed from the bench
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after what they consider to be a light sentence. brock turner's father is also being criticized for a statement he read to the court. his life will never be the one that he dreamed. that is a steep price to pay for 20 minutes of action. jon krakauer is author of the book, missoula, a book that focuses on sexual assaults involving student athletes at the university of montana. >> that happens over and over again. we think, oh my god you are rube ruining this poor boy's life, nobody thinks of the victim, her life, already ruined. >> brock turner's attorney isn't talking. the judge said at sentencing. turner's age and lack of criminal history were factors in his decision. he said a prison sentence would have had a severe impact on turner. >> the gorilla exhibit at the cincinnati zoo is open again. one week after a 3-year-old boy slipped through a fence and fell into the gorilla's grip. harambe,
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a rare lowland gorilla was killed by zoo officials. his death sparked a firestorm of criticism aimed at the zoo and the boy's mother. jamie yuccas has more from cincinnati. >> reporter: the opening comes one day after the hamilton prosecutor decided to not press charges against the child's mother. >> witnesses told hamilton county prosecutor, it happened so quickly, there was nothing the boy's mother could have done. >> oh, my god. >> she was, being attentive to her children by all witness accounts. her fear can be heard on this frantic 911 call. >> my son fell in with the gorilla. a male gorilla. he is dragging my son. i can't watch this. >> reporter: the boy and his three sisters were all at the zoo as well as a friend and her two sons. the boy slipped into the gorilla enclosure after his mother momentarily turned her focus to one of her other kids. >> if you don't believe a 3-year-old can scamper away so quickly, you have never had
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kids. they just do that. some times. >> reporter: the family of the young boy released a statement saying they were "very pleased with the decision. it is what we expected." inside the zoo, a memorial for harambe continued to grow while zoo officials reinforced the enclosure around the closed gorilla exhibit. the new barriers at gorilla world will look similar to the lion exhibit you will notice protective, netting and taller wood beams. the new fence is 6 inches taller. now reaching 3 1/2 feet. it also has solid wood beams at the top and bottom. >> they really are truly heartsick about this. but they have just made some remedial changes to the enclosure. hopefully -- this will never happen again. >> muhammad ali's hometown of louisville kentucky is ready to say a final farewell to the greatest. traditional muslim prayer service planned for tomorrow at noon.
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followed friday by a star-studded funeral. jericka duncan. >> 29,000 free tickets will be given away to those who want to wish their final good-bye to the champ. now those services at the end of the week will carry a message of inclusiveness. something that guided ali's great life. >> it certainly will be like a funeral i have never seen before. >> reporter: he will lead thursday's islamic prayer service. something that ali began planning over a decade age it will be held at louisville's freedom hall where in 1961, ali defeated willie besminov in a match that helped launch the boxer to greatness. several years later after defending sunny liston. cascius clay announced to the world he converted to islam and wanted to be called muhammad ali. worthy of all praises. ali means most high. >> where and how he will be buried is part of his faith a
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process that started friday, his body was washed shortly after his heart stopped. >> i have never seen a body as well prepared for burial as muhammad ali. we are going to have a brief recitation from the koran. and then maybe one or two people will give a brief talk. >> reporter: the next day, ali's casket will travel by motorcade through the streets of louisville. the find good-bye at an interfaith, at kfc yum center. 15,000 tickets handed out to an event where millions can watch a live stream of the service online. >> when you lose a person of that magnitude. it leaves a gaping hole in the community. that is not likely to be filled. >> reporter: ali's body will be buried at louisville's cave hill cemetery.
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>> the overdose death of rock superstar prince focused attention on opioid addiction in our society. prescription drug abuse is often seen as a medical problem. but illegal drug abuse as traditionally been treated as a criminal activity. now, after 40 years and a trillion dollars, the war on drugs is changing drastically. scott pelley and "60 minutes" spoke to america's drug czar who claims he doesn't even like that title. >> it's actually a title that i don't like. >> reporter: why? >> because -- >> it conotes the old war on drug focus to the work that we do. it portrays we are clinging to kind of failed policies and failed practices in the past. >> reporter: are you saying that the way we have waged the war on drugs for more than 40 years has been all wrong? >> is has been all wrong.
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>> blunt force didn't knock out the drug epidemic. 21 million americans are addicted to drugs or alcohol. and half of all federal inmates are in for drug crimes. >> we can't arrest and incarcerate people. it is inhumane. it is ineffective. it cost us billions upon billions to keep doing this. >> what have we learned? >> we learned addiction is a brain disease. not a moral failing. not about bad people choosing to continue to use drugs because they lack will power. you know we don't expect people with cancer just to stop having cancer. >> aren't they doing it to themselves. isn't a heroin addict making that choice? >> of course not. the hallmark of addiction is that it changes your brain chemistry. it actually affects that part of
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your brain responsible for judgment. >> that is the essence of michael's approach. addicts should be patients not prisoners. he did it in massachusetts. as director of substance abuse services. there his initiative thousands included a high school for teens in recovery. and -- expanding drug courts like this one in washington, d.c. where offenders can choose treatment over jail. and the charges can be dropped. you know that there are people watching this interview. and they're saying to themselves, oh, great he wants to open the jails and let the drug addicts out. >> uh-huh. >> we have to base our policy on scientific understanding. we have had really great models. and evaluated models to show we can simultaneously divert people away from the criminal justice system without increase in crime. it reduces crime. >> reporter: botticelli pursues reform with the passion of the converted because he himself is recovering from addiction. back in 1988, he was a university administrator whose car slammed into a truck.
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botticelli was drunk. in truth he had been drunk for years. >> reporter: did you love drinking? >> i would say i had an unhealthy love affair with drinking. you know, i grew up as this kind of insecure kid. you know, kind of making my way. and you know, drinking took all of that away. you know, people drink and do drugs for a reason because it makes them feel good. until it doesn't anymore. >> reporter: is it true after the accident you wok up handcuffed to a gurney? >> i did. i did. and you know you think to yourself. how did i get to this point? you know in my life?% >> reporter: that point included imminent eviction from his apartment because the booze had washed away all of the money. >> very wise judge said, michael, you have two options. you can either get care for your drinking problem or we can continue with criminal proceedings. >> reporter: it was at that point that you walked into this church and went to the -- 12 step meeting in the basement?
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>> i did. >> reporter: what was the first meeting like? it's hard for me to talk about this. not from a since of sadness. from a sense of tremendous gratitude. this was the first time that i raised my hand and said that i was an alcoholic and that i had a problem. with the miraculous thing about that movement, people rally around you in ways. addiction is such an isolating incident in your life. you feel alone. and, you know, when you -- when you admit, when you come into a fellowship like this, and people just surround you and say, we will help you, that you are not alone. that we have been through it before. and you will get through it. just, just gives you such great hope. >> he has been alcohol free for 27 years. today, he oversees a 26 billion dollar budget across 16 government agencies. just over half of the money goes
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to drug enforcement. what do you say to those who argue and there are many. if you lock down the southern border you solve the drug problem. >> i think it is overly simplistic to say any one strtegy will change the focus and change the trajectory of drug use. >> for example he says the heroin crisis was created here at home. >> we know one of the drivers of heroin has been the misuse of pain medication. if we are going to deelt with heroin and heroin use in the punited states. we have to focus on reducing the magnitude of the prescription drug use issue. >> many pain drugs are opioids like heroin. and the number of opioid prescriptions has risen from 76 million in 1991, to 207 million today. >> we have a medical community
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that gets little training on pain. little training on addiction. and quite honestly has been promoting and continues to promote the overprescribing of these pain medications. some are born addicted. we met bottacelli, at massachusetts general where dr. leslie kerzner weans infants off opioids. >> give him this little bit of morphine in his cheek. >> in the last decade the number of expectant mothers on opioids has increased five fold. >> if they don't get the treatment they can have a seizure that is what we worry about. >> how is a person addicted to prescription pain medication find themselves on heroin. >> prescription drugs and heroin act on similar ways on the brain. unfortunately, heroin becomes of its widespread availability is a lot cheaper on the streets of boston and many places around this country. >> heroin is cheaper than prescription painkillers. >> a bag of heroin can be as
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cheap as $5, $10. >> more than 120 americans die of drug overdecembers each day. that is more than car wrecks or gun violence to. save lives, he started an experiment in 2010 with the quincy massachusetts police. lieutenant patrick glen is head of narcotics. >> when some one dies of an everdose, the community becomes very small. the everyone knows each other even in a large city as ours. in the past four to six months some officers lost children. off awe in a city of 100,000, did i understand you to say that some of your officers have lost children to drug overdoses. >> how many? >> two, two did. two lost sons. awe in what period of time? >> in the last sex months. >> reporter: >> he helped arm every quincy officer with a nasal spray antidote for overdose. lieutenant grown saw it work on an unconscious addict. >> within 45 second to a minute. they moved around. eyes fluttered. sat up and speak.
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>> must have looked like a miracle. >> it is surreal. >> reporter: and they got to the victim in time due to a controversial innovation called the good samaritan law. >> one of the changes that came under the administration was some one involved in drugs if there is an overdose they could call 911. they would not be arrest ford having drugs on the premesis? >> correct. >> what difference did that make? >> opened the floodgates of people calling 911. >> today, 32 states have a similar 911 law and the antidote is carried by 800 police departments. in massachusetts, botacelli made treating addiction routine health care so patients can get opioid treatments now in a doctor's office. >> things have been going well for you.
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we will figure out the path you can walk down to stay in recovery. >> reporter: today the affordable care act requires most insurance companies to cover addiction treatment. >> i often say substance abuse is one of the last diseases where we let people reach their most acute phase of this disorder before we offer them intervention. you have heard the phrase, hitting bottom. well we don't say that with any other disorder. so the medical community has a key role to play in terms of doing a better job of identifying people. in their early stages of their disease. in doing a better job at treating people, who have this disorder. >> notice the word. disorder. he prefers it to addiction. he wants to lift the stigma, changing the language as he did this past october in a rally on the national mall. we must choose to come out in
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the light and be treated with dignity and respect. so let's stop whispering about this disease. >> you can see scott's full report on the website. cbsnews.com. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. like leather, skin is stronger when it's hydrated. that's why dove men+care bodywash has a unique hydrating formula to leave skin healthier and stronger. our bacteria family's been on this alright kiddos!erations. everybody off the backpack, we made it to the ottoman. i like to watch them clean, but they'll never get me on the mattress! finally there's a disinfectant mist designed for sofas, mattresses and more. introducing new lysol max cover. its innovative cap has a 2x wider spray that kills 99.9% of bacteria. max cover is another great way to lysol that.
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saving people money on more than just car insurance. it has been a season of tragedy and triumph at the top of the world. six climbers have died so far this year on mt. everest. but 400 others have made it to the summit. and come back alive. one of them is a u.s. marine whose life nearly ended in a minefield in afghanistan. he is the first american wounded in combat to make it to the top.
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jericka duncan has his story. >> it took charlie linville to reach the top of mt. everest. this was his third attempt. and he did it with a five-pound prosthesis strapped to his thigh. >> pushed my bed to the ultimate extreme and came out victorious. that's confidence i get to carry with myself forever. >> reporter: the 30-year-old marine, member of a bomb disposal unit was badly injured in 2011 while in afghanistan. the pain in his right leg was so severe he asked doctors to amputate it. >> i was in a hospital bed where people wanted to push me mu my wheelchair, nothing put pity for me. felt sorry for me. wanded to take care of me all the time. >> soon after linville was introduced to tim medvitz. >> going to fall, fall straight
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back. founder of the heroes product featured on "60 minutes." the organization trains gravely wounded veterans to climb the world's highest mountains. to help them regain their strength, and ready themselves for a lifetime of highs and lows. >> we are going to show you what you are capable of and what the prosthetic legs are capable of. and what this is, you are capable of here and here. >> how have you changed as a person? >> when i first got wounded i was depressed. it really -- definitely flipped me 180 degrees from where i was three years ago. >> linville says the journaly wasn't about himself. >> when i got to the summit of mt. everest. i took a few -- tokens of fallen service members. some really great friend that i remembered. i said a prayer. not only for them, but for every service member that has given their life for our great country at the top of the world for. me that is, as close as i can get.
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another home grown theme park beat the mouse to the punch. adriana diaz reports from beijing. >> shanghai disney doesn't open until next week. critiques are rolling in. some are praising the park. others may be attempting a magic kingdom coup d'etat. it is donald, the other donald practicing tie committee. characters will have chinese characteristics. this is our minnie mouse said an employee at a preview event. very chinese with a jade brussels and traditional chinese dress.
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but the richest man in china think the park isn't chinese enough. the time has passed when people blindly follow and go crazy for donald duck and mickey mouse said the real estate mogul wong lin, a business man. wong's wanda group, or wanda for short, has spent $3 billion or a venture in central china. it boasts the country any highest roller coaster and 14 more parks are in the works. wanda and disney are vying for china's 120 million theme park goers. a number expected to double by 2020. disney's pouring $5.5 million into its shanghai park. but wong hopes domestic touris are for his local brand and ditch disney. chinese culture led the world for 2,000 years. he said at his park's opening. but for the last 300. we lacked confidence in our
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culture and have fawned over foreign culture. th >> the rejuvenation of chinese culture and ways of sort of reducing western culture. that's why he puts emphasis on something like mickey mouse. >> mickey is popular in china. the mouse himself was spotted at wong's own properties. along with other does neap faces and masks. wanda told cbs news that independent stores on their property use disney characters on some merchandise for promotional purposes. and adding the use is officially licensed by disney. whatever the draw, attendance was strong on wanda's opening day. they hope to welcome 10 million visitors a year. i guess we will see how it all plays out.
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captioning funded by cbs it's wednesday, june 8th, 2016. this is the "cbs morning news." >> we are all standing under a glass ceiling right now. history for hillary clinton. the presumptive nominee praises the moment, facing donald trump in the election. >> donald trump is temperatu temperamentally unfit to be president. >> he's facing backlash from republican leaders over racist remarks. >> i do think that those comments are
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