tv CBS This Morning CBS May 29, 2017 7:00am-8:59am EDT
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>> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ captioning funded by cbs good morning. it's memorial day, may 29th, 2017. welcome to "cbs this morning." president trump is back at the white house facing new tests from north korea and the russian investigation. the administration is defending jared kushner's reported attempt to set up back channel communication with moscow. the military experience a deadly tragedy. an elite navy s.e.a.l. plunges to his death after a parachute malfunction. plus a new keep sake at the veterans memorial in washington. we'll go inside and look at stored hundreds of thousands of
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memen mementos. but we begin this morning with today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >> we need to get to the bottom of what was going on during this investigation, the answering of the obvious questions that are arising. >> the trump administration defends jared kushner. >> there's a lot of different ways to communicate. i don't see any big issue here. >> north korea has tested another short-range missile. >> it landed in the sea of japan. >> north korea is continuing to test these missiles, frankly defying the rest of the world to do anything about it. >> german chancellor angela merkel said it's time for europe to become self-reliant and stop defending on traditional allies. >> british police made more arrests in the manchester terror situation. >> they're going through the final push to get isis out of mos mosul. >> destruction everywhere. >> our strategy right now is to accelerate the campaign against
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isis. >> what keeps you awake at night? >> nothing. i keep other people awake at night. >> an investigation is under way to find out what went wrong in a skydiving event over new york harbor that killed a navy s.e.a.l. >> scary moments at a water park. >> a little boy went airborne, launching right out of the water park. >> all that -- >> the indianapolis 500 is won by takuma sato. >> -- and all that matters. >> the funny guy. everyone wants to be around the funny guy and that's what i was. >> girls want to date the funny guy? >> not really. not really. you know, not really. >> -- on "cbs this morning." ♪ america, america >> today we remember their courage, we remember their selflessness, and we remember how they lived. today we remember for the families that have fallen, every day memorial day.
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♪ brotherhood from sea to shining sea ♪ >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" is presented by toyota. let's go places. and welcome to "cbs this morning." on this memorial's day i'm anthony mason along wit. he's dealing with provocative action from north korea and new drama in the russian physician. north korea fired a new anti-air draft weapons system yesterday and this morning it tested a short range missile. >> and new reports this weekend focused on the president's son-in-law and senior adviser jared kushner. he held purported meetings to
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set up a secret communications channel with the kremlin. >> in a tweet yesterday he said many of it is fabricated lies made up by fake news meet ya. errol barnett is in washington. good morning. >> good morning le. he calls him a very good person. but the latest revelations have some demanding increased scrutiny for kushner while administration officials say these allegations have been blown up out of proportion. >> i don't see any big issue here relative to jared. >> secretary of homeland security john kelly sees jared kushner's alleged communications with the russians as standard practice. >> any time you can open lines of communication with anyone, whether they're good friends or not so good friends is a smartd thing to do. >> sources tell cbs news in
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december kushner met with sergey kislyak. it was during that meeting kushner ask ed kislyak to set u back channel communications. there would have been security risks for moscow and the trump team. >> they are not our friends. >> former intelligence leader james clapper was unaware of kushn kushner's defense. >> my dashboard light was clearly on and i think that was case with all of the intelligence committee. >> they believe kushner's status is in question. >> i do think there ought to be a review of his security clearance to find out whether he was truthful, whether he was candid. >> republican senator lindsey graham is channeling the back channel request which purportedly revealed conversations between kiss lee
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ak and moscow. >> the whole story line is suspicious. >> now, while the president was overseas, cbs news has learned his team was working on a restructuring of the white house communications staff including setting up a rapid response team to handle russian investigation matters. dana? >> errol, thank you. german chancellor angela merkel is coming up with a new reality. speaking at a campaign event yesterday, merkel suggested that europe can no longer count on the u.s. and britain as reliable ally. she said the european union needs to take its fate into its own hands. at last week's g7 summit they failed to convince president trump to stay in the paris climate deal. he said he'll announce his decision next week. north korea fired another missile. it was launched from the
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country's east coast. it flew 280 miles before landing in the sea off the coast of japan. president trump has been briefed but has no other comment. ben tracy is there with the rising tensions. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. it appears to be a short-range scud missile. it could have easily hit a plane or a ship. anyone thought they would slow down their missile testing, it appears they're mistaken. they've conducted nine missile launches this year, three in just the last three weeks. the latest comes after the country's leader kim jong-un saw a successful test this past weekend. japan was quick to condemn the missile launch as was south korea who says they want better
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relations with north korea. despite u.s. sanctions their military has continued to grow. they've perfected a medium range missile that they would start mass producing and earlier this month it tested what is believed to be its longest missile yet. capable of carrying a nuclear warhead but still not able to reach the united states. 2014 is the last time u.s. tested its west coast defense system which has only worked in about half of its trials. on tuesday they'll attempt to shut down an intercontinental missile for first time. the trump administration has now sent two aircraft carriers to peninsula. but he said on "face the nation" a military conflict with north korea would be catastrophic. >> they have hundreds of the
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military planes. >> it has not conducted a nuclear test which many people have expected. when we were in north korea last month i asked the minister if they would conduct it. he said the president will do it whenever he does it. susan page is washington's bureau chief. susan, good morning. >> good morning. >> let's start with north korea. as you heard secretary mattis, the military options would be catastrophic. what options does the administration have here? >> we've seen president trump put a lot of faith and pressure on the chinese to act. i'm not clear how will ig china is willing to to that nor if it will work but that is seen as a more promising option than military action would put millions of south koreans at risk. >> this weekend jared kushner
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and reports that he tried to set up a secret back channel with the russians, what does this do? >> i see problems with it. outside experts describe this as quite an extraordinary thing to use russians' secret equipment to communicate in a way which was designed to keep u.s. intelligence agencies know what was going on. i don't think we've heard the end of it. it's part of this cloud of the investigation that continues to loom over the administration. >> susan, does the fact that the former national security adviser michael flynn was involved in this. does that make it more prop at ilk for the white house and for kushner? >> i think it does. we know he's become a target and subject of an fbi investigation and an inquiry.
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we know he had contact, was taking money and not reporting it. he was center of the storm. is he the target or the source to flip to tell us what was really going on in the trump administration and in the trump campaign with regard to russia. >> susan, i want to ask you about these remarks that german chancellor angela merkel said yesterday. she said we europeans have to take destiny into our own hands but it's to some extent over. how significant is it in your view to hear the chancellor of germany say that? >> you know, anthony, we've been looking at this nine-day trip. the white house has portrayed it as being very successful. but i think this will be the most significant development that will come out of the president's first trip and that is the deterioration and architecture that's kept the peace largely -- u.s. european alliance, nato. now we have the german chancellor saying they can no
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longer rely on it. europe has to rely on itself. it's a fundamental shift and a deterioration of the role of the united states and the american president when it comes to our traditional alliance. >> susan, how much of this is merkel trying to speak to people she is trying to have re-elect her at this point many. >> well, she is up for re-election, that is true. and all politics local, as we know. i think what she is saying is very consistent of leaders in france and other leaders, that they were shaken by what they heard and saw on president trump on a vary ietd of issues unclugd russia and also this paris climate accord. big decision coming up on that this week from the white house. >> susan page, thank you. >> thank you. british police made a new arrest over the weekend in the manchester deadly bombing. two suspects were arrest ed whee
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salman salman abedi. authorities say he had returned to libya from britain just four days earlier. investigators will reportedly review how they dealt with abedi. a navy s.e.a.l. was killed after his canopy failed to open properly during a skydiving demonstration yesterday. e somehow separated from the parachute and landed in the hudson river. the parachute was found in a nearby parking lot. anna werner is in liberty state park in libertiy, new jersey. an narks good morning. >> reporter: good morning. crowds were here to watch the parachuting leapfrog team make that jump. now investigators have to determine how and why an expert jumper died. >> down in the water.
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parachuter, jumper down that they rushed in to rescue navy s.e.a.l. who plunged into the water. the s.e.a.l. was taken to the local hospital in new jersey where he was later pronounced dead. >> our hearts and prayers go out to his family and i ask for all of your prayer os the navy s.e.a.l. community who lost a true patriot today. >> after jumping from a helicopter, the navy s.e.a.l. was somehow separated from his parachute seen here which landed in a jersey city parking lot without him. >> as they were landing, out of the corner of my eye i saw a splash and heard a very distinct thump. >> reporter: the leapfr frogs a
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the navy s.e.a.l. diving team. leap frogs die from as high as 2,000 feet using smoke canisters, flags, and multi-for makes. >> considering i have a son in the military and somebody's got to report that to their family, it's horrible. >> reporter: the navy has not yet released that navy s.e.a.l.'s identity as they notify the next of kin. anthony? >> anna werner. so sad. thank you. a shooting rampage in mississippi took the lives of aid people including a sheriff's deputy. deputy william durr was killed saturday after responding to what was a domestic disturbance call. willie corey godbolt was arrested. the other seven victims are reportedly members of god bold's family. david begnaud is in
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>> the man allegedly pulled a weapon from the back pocket. shot and killed a deputy and three other women at the home and then his arrest was caught on camera. >> love my wife. i love my kids. they would not me live and let live. >> officers tackled and arrested the alleged killer willy godbolt following a shooting spree. the first shooting happened around 11:30 at this home where godbolt's wife was staying with two children. the wife purportedly left him abouteeks a. >> someone called the ofdo.
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they cost him his o women at th and then roughly sixou four moe at two other homes county, mississippi. once wanted the police to kill him. he cops kill me. >> barbara blac ju se blackwell, her grandson, was one of the victims. a ventriloquist was an amazing died. >> he made a promise to durr's widow. >> i told him, we've got to your back. if you ever need us, here we are. >> deputy durr is survived by
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his wife and a young son. >> the alleged killer did not pshoot his own wife or children who were inside this home. when this all ended we're told the homeowner shot the suspect but then ended up being killed by that suspect. >> such a tragic story. thank you, david. severe thunderstorms could threaten areas. the beggist risk is across the carolinas and parts of south texas. in lower mississippi powerful gusts pushed over trees and knocked out power thousands. one person still missing after floodwaters swept away their car. sunday's indianapolis 500 was a battle from start to finish with lot of accidents in between. >> oh, my goodness. what a huge crash. >> the scariest of the day involved scott dixon on lap 53.
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he went airborne atz you can see. hit a fence after striking jay howard's car. you won't believe it. both drivers walked away. ta cue ta sato became the first japanese driver to win the indy 500. he screamed into his radio, once, twice, and had some more and had his 2% milk to celebrate it. >> big milestone for japan. good for him. a scary mishap caught on camera is causing new concerns about water slide safety. ahead, how a young boy was tossed on
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months after birth. >> this is cbs-3 "eyewitness news." >> good morning, i'm rahel solomon, philadelphia police are investigating a stabbing in kensington, that left one man dead, and another injured. it happened last night, inside an apartment complex, along the 3400 block of frankford avenue. both men were stabbed several times, a 40 year old man died at the scene, 67 year old man in critical condition. so far, no arrests. well, quick check on the forecast with meteorologist, matt peterson. for a part of the day, another dreary. >> i for the first half of the day, showers out here this morning, cloud cover, as well, we will be watching for this to continue for the next couple of hours or so, before we could see some sunshine later this afternoon, you can seal, on storm scan3, just out near the harrisburg area, that's where the line of showers and thunderstorms that we're watching, will track to the north, and that could affect the poconos, temperatures out there right
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now, in the 50's, and 60s, we will be rising this afternoon, up to about 80 degrees, meisha, and again, hopefully we'll get little sunshine later in the day, as well. >> that's what we're hoping for, thanks so much. happy memorial day to you. looking outside very wet out there, 422 at the turnpike, headlines eastbound direction, not congestion, just wet roadways causing some myfoxphilly.com. we have accident here with fuel spill, route 130 closed, use the alternates, 206, 295, new jersey turnpike, going to be your best bet, rahel, back to you. >> thank youment next update 7:55, up next on cbs this morning, how the victims of the portland stabbing are being hailed as heroes, coming to the aid of two young women. i'm rahel solomon, good morning.
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morning" on this memorial day. americans will honor servicemembers across the country today. people are already out in the nation's capitol. here's a look at the world war ii memorial. >> later president trump will lay a wreath at the tomb of the unknown and address those. british guardian says british airways passengers are facing a third day of disruptions at laup's heathrow airport. they grounded all flights in london on saturday after its computers crashed. thousands of traveler waited hours in line. many spent the night in terminal. they say gatwick airport should run at full force today. the telegraph talked about the much talked about the handshake between president trump and the new france president emanumanuel macron.
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he said the firm handshake was intentional. it's called a moment of truth. a brushfire was sparked by a gas powered weed whacker. it's now mostly contained. "the baltimore sun" says that city's mayor is considering removing confederate monuments. mayor katherine pugh said, quote, following in the foot steps of new orleans. baltimore could auction off its monuments. >> and "the wall street journal" outlines president trump's plan to save the postal service $47 million within ten years. they could drop delivery days such as saturday. it suggests new ways to set rates and complete deliveries. the post office has suffered
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mul multi-billion-dollar losses since the last decade. muslims are praising two who were killed by teenagers during a deadly tie r.a.i.d. one of the women was wearing a muslim head covering. they killed recent grad and a retired army veteran. mireya ville rla real is near te scene. >> reporter: good morning. thousands have left candles and cards. messages of support all for the people, men who died who intervened. the messages are different but the consistent theme is you are heroes. >> they lost their lives because of me and my friend and the way we look. >> destinee man fwum and her
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friend were confronted by jeremy christian. as they were told to get out of his country, three bystanders came to his defense. >> he started arguing and stabbing people and there was just blood everywhere. we just started running for our lives. >> two of the three men were killed. 23-year-old taliesin myrddin and namkai-meche were killed. rachel macy tried to help them. >> i held him. i want everybody on the street to know i loved them. >> reporter: 53-year-old ricky best was also killed. an army veteran and father of four. his son eric says he's not surprised he stepped in to help. >> it doesn't matter their color or religion. he helped those in need.
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>> reporter: christian was arrested after someone called the police. this video of christian was was taken just one day before the attack. >> we've got a christian or muslim driver,'ll stab you too. move forward. >> reporter: christian does not hide. >> he was at those rallies yelling hate speech. >> reporter: portland's police chief hopes they do not remember the multiple abilities of violence. >> one of the diseased is a war veteran on memorial day. that's rough to have people step in and do that? that's courage. >> reporter: the surviving attack victim 21 yeardley
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fletcher survived. another helped him with his wounds. christian is set to be arraigned tomorrow. a 10-year-old boy walked away with only scrapes and bruises in bay area a he flew off a water slide in a brand-new park. video shows him sliding over the edge and tumbling opt the concrete. the park had just opened for memorial day weekend. slide is closed today and will be inspected by the manufacturer. tee marco morgan looks as the investigation. >> they show as he was plunged. as he gets to the drop you can see him ride along the edge. he was able to get up and walk away. >> we will shut the slight down and make sure that the slide is
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operating safely. >> the boy suffered only minor injuries including scratches on his back and shoulder. his parents took him to the hospital and he was checked out to be okay. >> he was checked out by our staff. he was fine and in good mobility and good spirits when he left. >> reporter: in kansas city last august a 10-year-old caleb schwab died while riding the tallest water slide. that ride will be demolished. they settled the case for nearly $20 million. this happened on dopening day. the rides were tested extensively before the park opened. the height requirement is 48 inches. >> our thoughts are with the family who had this experience and we don't want to have that repeated. we're going to do everything we can to make sure that doesn't happen again. >> wow. that's scary.
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>> you said something interesting. it's how you fall. >> luckily he looks like he fell out of it the right way. >> he was low at that point. >> weekend road rash. all right. babies born to mothers with the zika virus are carefully monitored. ahead, a mom who got zika when she was seven-months pregnant. see how her 4-month-old baby doing now. today is the 100th anniversary of president kennedy's birth. bob schieffer remembers the significance of america's first tv president. you're watching "cbs this morning." my day starts well before i'm in the kitchen. i need my blood sugar to stay in control. i need to shave my a1c i'm always on call. an insulin that fits my schedule is key. ♪ tresiba® ready ♪ (announcer) tresiba® is used to control high blood sugar in adults with diabetes. don't use tresiba® to treat diabetic ketoacidosis, during episodes of low blood sugar, or if you are allergic to any of its ingredients.
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happened in florida. a recent study reports the virus likely began spreading last year in florida months earlier than the first confirmed locally transmitted case. miami/dade county is working to control mosquito populations and reduce zika infections. the virus is especially dangerous for pregnant women. manuel bojorquez. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the unofficial start of summer means a renewed push for zika awareness. the cdc says it's still seeing up to 40 new pregnant women with zika every week nationwide. the department of hh there's been no new locally sin there's been no new locally sin but miami officials are not guad
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she looked normalno obvious bikts thanks the birki she still con measured for devepm be every big forward? >> part of the reason we continue to bring her baby back for checkups, we want see are the backs of the eyes developing normally, is the baby hearing normally. >> reporter: dr. christine curry heads the department in miami. sort of serious birth defect but she worries that many are not receiving critical follow-up
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care. >> we lose about a quarter of those families after delivery where they go community hospital, community pediatrician, and they don't stay engaged with our kay. that means we don't have any data on what's happening with them. >> reporter: in south florida crews are hitting the ground early using kill the mosquitos before they hatch. st year they dropped it in many zika zones and residents protested. miami/dade's mayor -- >> it's your personal responsibility that you don't become a transmitter. he's our message. all of us have te not every homeowner is thought it was gon >> yes. it's not gun. yessica f
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so other women anxiety. to live with? >> we live in and this is something we're going o there's h this season and next treatment, vaccination, or both, this is the world that we live in. >> reporter: the zika vaccinets testing. a recent report from stanford can be transmitted at a temperature of 84 degrees. that's 6 degrees lower than originally thought. the high temperature today in miami is expected to be in the 90s. >> manuel bojorquez, thank you. two americans we've been followed made it to the top of mt. everest over the weekend. that makes this unique because they
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talk to your advisor about a brighter financial future. the summit is right there. >> he made a triumphant return to mt. everest. he made it to the huest peek. he and his partner cory richards have been posting on snapchat. last year we followed the two as they tried to scale mt. everest minus oxygen tanks. at that time adrian did not make it while categoriy did. this year was different. adrian was able to push to the top. john blackstone got a taste.
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>> reporter: hawaii can't export its sun, sea, and sand, but the island's favorite food is now making it big on the mainland. we'll do some poking around about poke coming up on "cbs this morning." ♪ [beeping] ♪ wow. good to know we have that on our prius! ♪ [beeping] ♪ and lane departure alert. see what i mean? with so many safety features like pedestrian detection and lane departure alert, toyota doesn't need us test dummies as much. oh, i get it, man! hey, i gotta get my thrills somehow. the 2017 prius with toyota safety sense standard. toyota. let's go places. the bathroom. when things go wrong here, you remember. quilted northern is designed to work so well, you can forget your bathroom trips.
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>> good morning, wilmington police trying to figure out what spark gunfire that sent 14 year old girl and 38 year old plan to the hospital. twenty-nine were found on the 700 block of north van buren street. at this time no arrests. over to matt peterson, looks like the rain is not done with us yet? >> not just yet. we have it out here this morning, it will be a little spotty through the rest of the morning, maybe even at times early in the afternoon. temperatures, on the cool side, and few spots, seeing only 50 degrees, mount pocono, with again showers to the north, as women. fifty-nine here in center city. zero six headed back down toward atlantic city. there is storm scan3, all of the showers on, again, it will be lasting through the rest of the morning, and maybe into
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afternoon temperatures, today, sunshine, hopefully in the afternoon, meisha. >> all right, matt thank you. wet roadways, looking at the boulevard here, you can see, taillights moving in the southbound direction toward the schuylkill. once you jump on to the schuylkill, same story. not so much congestion at all today. just wet roadways, and the pooling, and the ponding just heads up. take a little easy. accident here with fuel spill out there, route 130 northbound closed at 5:45, you will have to use these alternates to get around it, over you. >> next update 8: 25, coming up cbs this morning, the legacy of john f. kennedy balloon would have been his 100 birthday. i'm ronald mcdonald house. good morning.
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welcome to maxx you. you are whimsical, vibrant, statement making. we see what makes you unique. so we have something for everyone, at a price that's just right for you. maxx you. maxx life. t.j.maxx one hesave snack time.ion to watch babybel in the great snack rescue. you want a piece of me? good, i'm delicious. creamy, delicious, 100% natural cheese. mini babybel. snack a little bigger. it's memorial day,
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monday, may 29th, 2017. welcome back to "cbs this morning." we remember john f. kennedy, bon 100 years ago today. bob schieffer looks at how his groundbreaking news of media compares to our current president. first, your "eye opener" at 8:00. >> the president is standing by his son-in-law. >> german chancellor angela merkel no longer relying on the u.s. and britain. >> how significant is that? >> the white house has portrayed
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it of being very successful. this will be the most seg can't. >> if anyone thought the pressure from the u.s. or china would have slowed things down, that appears to be wishful thinking. >> crowds gathered as they became witnesses to the tragedy. now experts have to determine how and why an expert jumper died. >> takuma sato won the indy 500. >> there's one reason i came here today. i love ice cream. >> former vice president joe biden gave a commencement speech. >> he was honored with his own flavor of ice cream, the big red, white, and biden. >> it's really good. >> everybody shows up for ice
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cream. >> is there such a thing as bad ice cream? >> no. hi, there. i'm anthony mason with vladimir duthiers and dana jacobson. charlie, gayle, and norah are off. president trump is defending his son-in-law jared kushner. there were discussions between him and russia. >> homeland security's john kelly said there's nothing abnormal and alarming. >> it's acceptable. any way you can communicate with people, particularly organization organizations that are not particularly our all lies is a
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good thing. the terror group is using snipers and awe suicide car bombers in heavily civilian areas. the battle for the stronghold has lasted more than seven months. charlie d'agata is on the edge of mosul's old city covering what may be the final days of the fight. >> reporter: good morning. this is as far as iraqi forces have been able to get toward the old city. they advance from the other side of the mound. they've been taking sniper fire. we witnessed as heavy weapons an mortars have been fired into this area which came as a surprise to us. the u.s. estimates they may be 200,000 civilians trapped inside the old city and it may be more difficult to isolate them as we move around these densely populated ear yas. as they advance from the south, the north, and the west, three
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different iraqi forces close in on the old city. they're making progress. and they have made progress over the weekend but it's getting slowed as they reach these narrow streets and alley ways where they have to hunt them douchblt they told us they're waiting for a surge of patients after the people that are inside that old city who have been under nourished, malnourished, and in some cases coming under fire, collapsed buildings will force them out of there. there will be a flood of refugees in desperate need of help. for "cbs this morning" charlie d'agata, mogul,sumosul, iraq. >> excellent reporting.
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today would be john f. kenty's 100th birthday. he created a famous line that still resonates today. >> and so my fellow americans ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country. >> reporter: but kennedy was also the youngest president to leave office. he was shot to death less than three years after that speech. cbs news contributor bob shifr covered it. he's in washington with the president's legacy and how he mastered the megaphone of his age. good morning. >> good morning. you know the youth, the glamour of the white house, they turned it into blazing technicolor and then with his tragic death he became not only an icon but almost a mythical figure. to many the kennedys became america's royal family.
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he created some real accomplishments. he created the peace corps, going to the moon, and he did. the most he had to do with shaking his presidency was television. he was our first television president. >> reporter: the nation had never seen a presidential debate until the little known senator from massachusetts faced vice president richard nixon in 1970. >> nixon was sweating. the makeup was sweating down his face and some said he looked like he'd been enfwraltd.
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>> the priceline has been held very well within the united states. >> but those who watched on tv thought kennedy was the clear winner. tv debate tipped the legislate. he became the first president to 'lou live coveragesen his new conference. that that meeting should probably be prepare at lower level. >> they called it the 6:00 hour. the journalists loved him. >> he with us briefly a knapp man in his youth. he under the power. that a nation that isn't afraid to let its people judge truth is a nation that is afraid of its people. >> through a new medium,
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americans came to know kenty in a more personal way than any of his predecessors which made his tragic day that day in dallas all themore. as a nation we had never skmengsd anything like that. >> president keepdy died at 1:00 p.m. central standard time. >> for the first time they watched the screens unfold and those who sate will neff forget. >> the fact that kennedy was assassinated contributing to the idea that he is a kind of immortal figure. he's floezen at the age of 46. >> his candy dadi fcy lasts overall. >> he has the kind of
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charismatic hold on the public's imagination and then we hib in a time when people are ville disillusioned with politics and leadership and they lack to the past. >> steven levinson who offer as book sees the parallel between it. >> both of these pen they'll load the new media into his lighthouse. >> e always felt best masters consider nomdom nateling. kennedy was the absolute best at television and there's no question president trump used
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tweter. here's test. everywhere i turn i hear trump supporter says if only he would stop those tweets. >> bob, do you think hoe's become less effect tev. >>. >> he ha to look at what's going on be the riggs resorg. he's going need some evidence. until he does, that he can tweet till the cows come home and it's not going to make any difference. >> bop sheffer with per spep till. chip reid has a special look. >> reporter: in boggss and on shelf of this huge warehouse in
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raw fish in a bowl may not sound like real food. who says that. but when you call it powe carrick people can't get enough of it. ahead, the issues from the popularity of this hawaiian export. you're watching "cbs this morning." but do they need help making more of their own tears? if you have chronic dry eye caused by reduced tear production
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but it's racing concerns about it. john blackstone traveled to hawaii to look at the appeal. >> reporter: millions seek hawaii each year for the sun and sea breezes. increasingly they also come for poke. >> it's really good. >> it's an essential part of a diet for hawaiians like ray ho. >> how long have you been eating poke? >> all my life. >> lately he's seen it transf m transformed. >> they're looking at different ways of making it. >> reporter: at a restaurant on the beach. >> we have a sesame oil. >> he's a poke perfectionist. >> you've done it, chef. >> i've made a few. >> reporter: as poke has made a
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promise they're popping up across the country. zack is hoping to take it across the country. >> reporter: it makes some in hawaii proud but others a little bit fishy. >>'ve looked at it pt. we don't throw pineapples and boynes. i've seen weird things leak what is that. >> reporter: what he worries about is new popularity of poke could lead to overfishing. they report that 90% of fish stocks are fished or overfished. even in hawaii, fishermen doan
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know. >> there's nobody living under the water who says, oh, there's more. >> the aloha poke company says it uses sustainable and reliable business to make sure fish and business sticks often for a long time. >> a lot of people wonder if it's fad. i'm here to say poke is here. >> he can get poke at home in california. it's just not the same as having it in hawaii the truth is palm trees and sea breezes may make everything taste better. for "cbs this morning," john blackstone, hawaii. >> i don't know. i don't know. >> everything in hawaii does taste better. >> i mean, it's fish.
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it's delicious. >> maybe with the pineapple. >> the boyne. >> yeah, all right. another seafood story coming up. a california man thought he was done when the shark attacked his kayak. ahead, video of the encounter and what happens next. plus o oscar winning actress melissa leo and her executive producer jim carrey. you're watching "cbs this morning." to help maintain your skin's natural balance. for a free sample, call 1-877-get-tena. the opioid my doctor prescribed for my chronic back pain backed me up-big time. before movantik, i tried to treat it myself. spent time, money. no go. but i didn't back down. i talked to my doctor. she said: one, movantik was specifically designed for
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squlook it. see that kayak? >> yeah. >> it looks like it was take ever over bethe shark. watch it. >> forget "jaws." this video shows a real great white shark attack. it happened in monterey bay. you see him in the circle there. an onshore bystander took the video. you see the shark thrashing around the kayak. the man was able to swim away and was rescued by somebody nearby on a sailboat. >> you want may kayak, you can have it. >> you're going to need a bigger boat. >> prince williams says it's taken him 20 years to talk about princess diana's death.
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good morning, i'm rahel solomon. investigators are trying to pinpoint what sparked a house fire that killed three people, in north philadelphia. prudence, seven year old dean figueroa that and their 54 year old grandmother monday evening died. flames swept through the flames north sixth street, montgomery avenue. children's parents were able to jump top safety. now, checking the forecast with meteorologist, matt peterson in the weather center. looks like dreary monday. >> yes, unfortunately, some showers are out there for our memorial day morning, and spotty chances for showers will continue, as we go through the rest of the morning and at times in the afternoon, as well, now most of the precipitation at this point north of the city so center city and areas down toward the shore, probably not too much of a shower chance
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for the rest of the morning, but again, upon up shower not completely out of the question. areas to the north headed toward the poconos maybe better chance for shower, maybe even isolated rumble of thunder through the morning and afternoon, 50's and 60s to start i day out, rising today, looks like into the 70s and hopefully few peaks every sunday shine later in the afternoon, meisha, i know folks are not really traveling too much this morning, but there are couple of people out there. >> yes, couple of people, we know it will get little busier little later. thanks so much. little wet, damp roadways, all of that, 59 at cottman, but congestion levels there. really the wet roadways slowing us down, if you have hydroplane, slippery situation, something like, that we do have accident here with a fuel spill, route 130 northbound closed at route 545. and your alternates, 295, new jersey turnpike, plus this bridge closure still in effect, so just heads up, you will still need to use this alternate garden state parkway, rahel, over to you. >> next update 8:55, ahead, the momentos left at the viet
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this is a look at the vietnam memorial. ahead, chip reid reveals some of them and shows how the public will soon be able to learn from them. welcome back to "cbs this morning." right now it's time to show you some of this morning's headlines from around the globe. "fortune" reports that uber and lyft plan to be back in austin. they pulled out after they were required to have fingerprint background checks. the governor of texas is expected to sign a bill overturning the rules.
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"variety" says "pirates of the caribbean" was number onet the box office. it took in $61 million in its first three days. meanwhile "baywatch" belly flopped. "it only took in $189 million. petra kvitova was stabbed in the hand last year and needed extenze itch surgery to save her a rear. sergei. he plans to use it for personal travel as well as humanitarian missions worldwide. britain's prince william opens up to british "g "q"
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magazine. he regrets that his moe will never meet his wife katherine or his kids. he said i could not do my job without the stability of my family. i will fight for them to have a normal life. you can see the full shoot in the july issue of "gq oklahoma city thunder "gq on thursday. an asian elephant was born friday after a pregnancy of nearly two years. the poor mother! his birth rate -- >> worth it. >> ready for this? -- 287 pounds. >> like me. >> i don't know if that's big or small for a baby. >> i suppose small. i don't know. >> memorial day is a time for americans to remember more than 11 million men and women in the military who have died serving our country. thousands of motorcycles roared through washington yesterday in the annual ride for freedom.
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the nonprofit advocacy group rolled through. the service is scheduled today. the black gra nitd slab features 58,0 58,000. chip reid is at the wall with the tributes that find many closure. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. hundreds is walked by here this morning. as you can see here behind me through the people's legs, they even left everything from letters to flags to photographs. other here, a teddy bare. it's all in an effort to honor them. they ee less it a white range of responses. some stand in silence. others pray or offer a final salute.
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many feel compelled to leave things. they send them here, a massivewarehouse in maryland, filled to the rafters with object left since 1982. >> reporter: ranger j er catalo them. >> do you know the at the? >> we don't have a total but a guess. 400,000. we won't fully know up till we have everything cat lolged which we don't r they range from works o art to dog tags to a motorcycle. this harley was left by the hall thanks to a wisconsin chapter,
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vietnamed advocacy group to remember the vietnam members missing in action. each item is treated with reverence but some hit harder than others. >> this is a letter from someone to someone in vietnam who passed away. >> reporter: he didn't come home. carol wrote, dear jim, you are still the 21-year-old chopper pilot, curly haired and blue eyes and bracelet. they symbolize whou you are. >> i imagine the lady who wrote it and think of my husband. >> we want to have that visceral representation. >> reporter: jason bane is a curator with the vietnam veteran's war foundation. e's working with the service for an educational center to be built near the wall.
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>> what we have here is an infant's letter. >> reporter: soon after this was built. >> i wanted to bring you a teddy bear but couldn't part with it. instead, broit your first sweater. yo are always in my heart. how i love you. >> that's typical of the kind of authentic you find there. >> some of the early objects are just packed with that raw emotion. >> reporter: other etem like this care package are haunting reminders of families suffering unbearable loss. >> it arrived in country about the time he was killed in action and unfortunately it was simply stamped with the date, kia. >> killed in action. >> and that was sent home to his family. >> and that's what they saw. >> years later they left the package. >> he said, charles stewart, mom
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and dad want you to have these cookies and kool-aid. >> some items reflect the deep longing for closure felt by many vietnam veterans. one left this photograph. >> delta 1. your face haunts me and the name is gone. >> so this photo was left by someone who knew him by how he looks but didn't know which name was his on the wall. >> couldn't identify him, couldn't take a name rubbing. in a way couldn't co. pleat that experience. for us that's really the mission. it's connect the faces to the name. >> he hopes putting objects on display along with photos o the fallen will help families and the nation to heal. >> it will give vitters to the center a but more depth o that experience to not just read the names but to see these faces and to understand that these were real people, real human beings who had lives taken short. >> they're still raising money
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for the vietnam warred indication center but the plan is to build it across the road and understood growth so it won't interfere with the visual experience of visiting wall and in additioning they also hope to include photographs of everybody single person whose name is on this wall. dana? >> chip reid with a wonderful story there. i mean you look at that. the last words there, the idea that it would be personalized, everybody can sort of associate now, not just see a name. >> i covered the opening of the vietnam veterans memorial in 1982. it was then and is now. it immediately makes it personal but there are always objects at the wall that people leave. 's so touching. >> 58,000 american heroes. thank you, chip. >> especially today. that's what today is about. those who paid the ultimate
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he's a crook. >> he's organized. >> he's a cab driver. i don't think so. i think he's goic to steal your son's money and rob him blind. >> incredible acting. she's played more than 100 characters in more than ten years. she started on "all of my children." she's been in lots of means. >> jim carrey who got his start back then is the executive produce. leo plays goldy, the famed owner of the young comedy club that makes our breaks young comics. >> do you want to go on "the tonight show"? let me find you. we'll find a voice --
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>> i have a voice. >> it sheds life on the mutual experience. u'll put you on the stage. >> they're all up there on your stage. there's loom for me too. i need the stage to prove it. >> when you're ready. >> milliliter leo is with us. good morning. >> good morning. thank for having me. >> you think, comedy. you think it's just going to be funny. what can viewers exhibit from this? >> it's a drama about standup comics the way i like to seet. they're playing comics. we have actors playing comics. both our writer and our producer, michael
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david. >> you play a very powerful figure here. you're goldie and you run the club. you basic le anoint these comedians who all want to get on "the tonight show." >> you say anoint like she's some kind of god. pea think that of her. wu she's not. she knows funny from not funny and that's all she's interested in. she doesn't care if you're white or black or boy or girl. she doesn't want you on her stage if you not going to be fun iffy. >> makes sense. you are a method actress. tell me how long it takes? >> how long do you have? >> it's an often long
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if you want to act, i hope to got you've god a method. i had to use -- sometimes as an actor you use little or no technique. you can step right into the role. not so for me and goldie. goldie has talents that i don't possess. she has a way that is not my way. she presents herself to the world in a way that not the way i present myself to the world. she is what i would call a long reach for me. i'm more interested in the character than myself. that's par of the my method. >> and people know that time and remember missy shore and the role she made. this isn't missy shore though.
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>> not missy. hi, missy. yeah, you're exactly light. there's one woman hadid what missy shore did it in the time she did it and that a group it. vaudeville had died. missy shore in my opinion and you can read it in the book "i'm dying up here" invented a place for sfand upkohn comics. sent only cometics and that was unprecedented and that's the only way i'm playing missy shore at all. >> another comic is jim carrey. how involved was he? >> he was involved because he would not have.
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he also give us the producer he gave us dinner and sim cari appearance. jim is tacking care of helms and we're taking care of the show. >> you work with a large ensemble of actors, comedian yans. they're so funny on show. i find myself laughing at the standup machines. do you mentor offscreen? >> no. i always work with the ones i work with whether they want to or not. indeed the stan jouped are sharing together. it was one o the great joys. it's rare in the work i do you have such a good time, a sense
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of camaraderie you imagine is there. you really love each other. >> you can see. it comes across. >> thank you for coming here on memorial day. >> my love to all the vets and their families. up next, a soccer match gets off to a flying start with a drone delivery and you can here more, expended originals and
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>> some people in the philadelphia region headed down the shore, but many actually spent the memorial day weekends close to home. overcast sometimes rainy weather, about the first annual penn's landing waterfront day. crowd gathered at the delaware riverfront yesterday for music, drinks, even some mini golf. to finish offer the night there were fireworks over the delaware. very nice. >> sends it right over to matt peterson in for katie fehlinger. look like the rain continuing into our monday. >> yes, unfortunately it is, especially, this is the morning hours, here it, does look like the showers are going to taper off as we go into the later morning, and then the early afternoon, if you're hoping it get down to the beach probably not the greatest beach day. this is what it looks lick in rehoboth. definitely a much different scene there is morning, compared to the last couple of mornings, folks are getting out early, on saturday, and
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sunday, but again little dreary down to the south. so, that's the greatest beach day, at least in the morning. showers are moving into the poconos right now, maybe isolated rumble every thunder but for the most part center city back down to the beach just few spotty shower chances going through the rest of the day, seven day forecast, 70s today, tomorrow, but sunshine backed by the time we get into wednesday and thursday, we get up into the 80s by thursday, as well, high of 78 by thursday, meisha, so little bit of wetness on the roads this morning. >> yes, sure is, and it is still looking very wet, matt, and because of it seeing some problems out there, some of which have been moved out of the way, some aren't, 42, quick peak for you for those every you maybe coming back from the shore already early this morning, you can see, this is probably the, i would say, the slowest, still traveling at posted speeds, but the slowest it has look all morning, and you can see also how damp it is. we do have this accident overturned vehicle, new jersey, route 55 northbound, past route 40, one lane is belonged there. traveling around 25 miles per hour, so this could affect some of you coming back from
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the shore, rahel, over to you. >> meisha, thank you. that's "eyewitness news" for now, join us for "eyewitness news" at noon, i'm rahel solomon, good morning. ♪ luis waited his whole life being crowned champions. so our wellness coaches developed a plan, to keep him fit and healthy. and when his moment finally arrived, his knees were up to the job.
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>> jesse ventura is on a mission. i don't want anyone suffering, we need to legalize. >> why am i wrong but i win the crowd? >> then, 23 years without a period? >> if i couldn't have kids, i would be horribly sad. >> can the doctors solve this medical mystery? >> i don't see a cervix. >> she may be the most hated mom in the world. >> it's so horrible? >> on the doctors! >> what did former spice girl victoria beckham reveal as a #1 secret to superstar skin? well, it's under that box. we will reveal it later in the show. first joining us today is our favorite legal analyst, ariva martin! [ crowd cheering ] [ applause ] >> and our first guest today has warn many hats, fr
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