tv Eyewitness News at 6 CBS August 11, 2009 6:00pm-7:00pm EDT
6:00 pm
right person. >> several people have reviewed the videotape. and they believe the person holding the gun is not his client. now, all of that video was recorded from this very city watch camera at the corper of pulaski and will hem. -- wilhelm. >> this showed the shooting that severely injured 5-year- old raven wyatt. the video wjz obtained from our newspaper partner, the baltimore sun, shows people scattering. the gunman is hard to distinguish. police say he is 17-year-old lamont davis. who has a long record. arrested more than a dozen times since he was 10. at the time of the shooting, he was on home monitoring, wearing an ankle bracelet. his lawyer, a public defender, told wjz, the shooter on this video is not his client. because, he says, he is not wearing that ankle bracelet
6:01 pm
monitor. these are davis' legs, enhanced for a closer view. investigators believe he was fighting with another teenager, pulled out a gun, fired over and over, hitting little raven, who had nothing to do with that dispute. >> what are we as parents speeded -- supposed to do? kids can't walk the street. they can't go to school. she was just a little girl. >> do not let this baby, whatever happened to her, be in vain. >> reporter: this has raised questions over how the juvenile justice system handled davis. >> what i wanted to know was to make sure we knew and that we did something about it as soon as we knew. >> reporter: the juvenile justice system in maryland has outlived its usefulness. >> the bullet hit raven in the head. she has survived the injuries. this will be key in davis' defense. >> and he faces attempted murder charges. he remains in custody at this hour.
6:02 pm
reporting live in southwest baltimore, mike hellgren, wjz eyewitness news. >> okay, mike. thank you very much. and police say several witnesses identified davis as the shooter. we're still following the breaking news we told you about last hour. a two-alarm house fire remains over the scene. captain mike perry with the very latest. >> reporter: hello, sally. i think i did misspeak. we had a two-alarm fire. about seven pieces from a fire apparatus. now, this is just south of queens town and north of 404. you can see heavy fire throughout this single family home. no reports of injuries at this time. but still plenty of fire apparatus on the scene. several dozen still running back and forth between a golf course, taking water from the scene. that's what they had to use to knock down this fire. but as you can see, it consumed most of the home before fire officials were able to knock down the fire. the cause is not known at this hour. we'll stay tuned as you get
6:03 pm
updated. >> thank you very much. it has been another hot day out there in the sun. out on the docks of the patapsco river. crabbers had a hard time staying school. -- cool. and brooklyn park. they hope to make efforts in the heat. still very warm this tuesday evening. but there are some storms moving through the region. eyewitness news is live with first warning weather coverage. meteorologist bernadette woods and bob turk are tracking live doppler radar. where these storms are going on. temps have dropped to around 70, 71 degrees. take a look. all across northern baltimore county. southern york and adams county. and now, approaching harford county. there you see them. just moved through parkton. right around hereford. right on 439. and just northeast of westminster. a lesser storm. but there's more activity off to the north and west. strong storm approaching
6:04 pm
gettysburg, moving to the southeast. that was moving into carroll county in the next 10 to 15 minutes. you can sea a whole cluster. there's another one right around just to the west of the frederick county line. and east of hagerstown. that's going to head down toward the frederick area. so there is pretty good activity out there. and any of these storms can produce heavy downpours. maybe as much as an inch of rain in some of these. and gusty winds over 40 miles an hour. and this will continue, at least on or off probably until about 10:00 or 11:00 tonight. and another chance of more activity tomorrow. speaking of activity, we've got some stuff finally going on in the eastern atlantic. tropics are getting a little more active. bernadette. >> it has been an incredibly quiet season. and the tropics, part of the reason it's been so cool around here, it's all combined. but as we've heated up, so are the tropics. way off to the far right part of your screen right there. that is a tropical depression. there is a good chance that this will become a tropical storm. at this point, winds are 25
6:05 pm
miles per hour. if it does get higher and does become tropical storm, it will be the first named one of the season. and it will be called ana. that's the list. we haven't even touched on it so far this year. we could be seeing more of that as we head through the prime months. hurricane season. and we will keep you updated. i'll have a complete forecast coming up shortly. tonight, a howard county man is charged with the attempted murder of hison aunt and -- his own aunt and uncle. it happened in laurel. where they attacked john and susan helier. their nephew is charged with attempted homicide and first- degree assault. the mother of a toddle are, starved to death by religious cult, will soon be out of rural maryland. kai jackson has more on this increasingly bizarre case. >> reporter: that's right. authorities say a baltimore cult denied the boy food because herefused to say amen
6:06 pm
after meals. ria ramkissoon pled guilty to the murder of her son. her sentence has been suspended because her co-defendants have not been to trial yet. instead, she will be sent to a farm for counseling. >> the murder case gained national attention when the court agreed to request from the defendants that the baby -- if the baby comes back to life, all charges would be dropped. a 93-year-old baltimore man says he's glad to be alive tonight after being held hostage for hours by an armed man. eyewitness news is live at the scene. suzanne collins reports, one suspect has been captured. and police are searching for a second. it's high drama in gardenville. as the city police s.w.a.t. team converges on mary avenue, after a gas station robbery. one suspect barricades himself in a house. the homeowner, 93-year-old william doerfler is held hostage.
6:07 pm
after five hours, police rescue the victim, who tells his son he was treated well. >> the intruder was calm. and basically, what he said was, he said, i'm not here to hurt you. i'm just here to rest up. and i'm going to run away after that. >> reporter: the older man who uses a cane and a walker, reports he was abducted from his backyard at 10:00 a.m. yesterday, while feeding leftover pancakes to birds. he describes it to wjz on the phone, from good samaritan hospital, where he is undergoing tests. >> he picked you up? >> he carried me upstairs. and laid me in my bed, in my bedroom. and he said, don't call nobody and don't talk, tell anybody i'm here. and i won't hurt you. >> reporter: the 93-year-old said he complied. and when police and family members called on the phone, he hung up. officers tracked the suspect with dogs to doerfler's backyard and surrounded the house. the family waited at the fire department around the corner,
6:08 pm
being briefed by police. william doerfler would be rescued first. then tier gas -- tear gas would be fired into the home. >> after being held hostage for hours, william doerfler shouted at the suspect that if the suspect came in, he would shoot him. >> reporter: the son says his father did have a handgun in the bedroom, fully loaded to carry out that act. but police saved him first. doerfler, a world war ii veteran, said it was terrifying. >> i was scared [ bleep ]. >> a 26-year-old is now charged with taking him hostage. >> the 93-year-old expects to be released from the hospital later today. >> an anne arundel county woman checks out a yard sale. and she is shocked to find some of the items for sale were stolen from her home. police say this saturday man who held the yard sale.
6:09 pm
46-year-old david perticone. it turned up $25,000. he is charged with burglary and theft. america is saying goodbye to a philan thropee -- philanthro pee engineer. some of the many lives eunice kennedy shriver touched. >> reporter: an adoring family surrounded shriver at the hospital before she died. her sole surviving brother, senator edward kennedy said, though the special olympics will always be a monument to her, he she will always be remembered as a wonderful sister, wonderful mother, wonderful wife. california governor arnold schwarzenegger said his mother changed his life when she drafted him for the special olympics. they -- president obama
6:10 pm
described her as a woman that cannot restrain the mental spirit. >> reporter: eunice kennedy shriver orinized -- organized the first special olympics in 1968. >> she preferred to be with the athletes, with the coaches. and really, what mattered the most, to make the most difference for their lives. >> in hyannis, visitors dedicated to her brother, president john f. kennedy wrote special condolences. >> here's the highlight of her own life that supersedes the tragedies. and it's a legacy. >> reporter: a legacy of service, carried on by shriver's five children. and a legacy of hope for nearly 3 million special olympic athletes. in more than 180 countries. drew levinson, wjz eyewitness news. >> shriver's ties to maryland brought the special olympic games here to college park and olympic headquarters remain in linthicum, anne arundel county
6:11 pm
to this day. still to come tonight on wjz eyewitness news. strength in numbers. state employees ban together in annapolis, opposing governor o'malley's budget cuts. the latest from this afternoon's afternoon's hearings. sole survivor. we have an update on the only child to survive a deadly wrong- way crash in new york. were oysters moved to their new home. that story as eyewitness news continues. and take another live look outside. stay tuned. the updated first warning weather forecast is next.
6:14 pm
lawmakers are briefed on the likelihood of some of those workers losing their jobs. political reporter pat warren reports from annapolis, the outlook is gloomy. >> what do we want? >> public services. >> with when do we want it? >> now. >> reporter: they make an energetic plea. >> no more cuts on state employees. the fed has been cut. the muscle -- fat has been cut, muscle has been cut. we're down to the bone. >> reporter: but the mood is solemn as they dish up the gruel. not only is there no better on -- butter on the bred, there is not enough bread to go around. >> i don't know that we'll be rapidly climbing out of our predicament. >> and wait until you hear what we're spending.
6:15 pm
>> the numbers are like $239 million a day. >> try cutting that out of your household budget. darrell brown knows he and his coworkers are in a predicament. >> nothing is going up, especially our pay. that's what everybody is concerned about. furloughs. everybody is a little nervous, wondering whether we're going to lose our jobs or whether they're going to take positions away. implementing more technology. and everybody is a little more scared. >> what do we want? >> public sercheszs. >> reporter: -- >> public services. i think what the administration is hoping to do is avoid as many landmines as possible. they know there's going to come some pain to state workers. they're trying to gauge how much they can get away with. and yet not suffer any repercussions. and from a political point of view, that might be understandable. but the families need to know how they're going to plan their budgets, what they're going to do this year. because let's face it.
6:16 pm
they rely on the state for their income and also for their benefit. thousands of you marylanders have offered your ideas on the governor's website. today is the deadline. on thursday, your suggestions will be published and posted. and according to the administration, taken under advisement. reporting from annapolis, i'm pat warren. back to you on television hill. governor o'malley's chief of staff says the plan is still under discussion. a state program to buy back unused crab licenses. the state hoped to purchase at least 300 licenses. instead, they received only 500 proposals. some were sent in protest and asked for millions of dollars. officials say unused licenses could throw off their efforts to manage crabbing in the bay. in terms of upkeep, adopted oysters aren't much harder to raise than pet rocks. but the payoff could be
6:17 pm
significant for oysters in the bay. >> reporter: docks along the tread avon river in oxford hold many boats. young native oysters, cared for by volunteers. >> they are 174 here in the river for a total of 658 cages that have been deployed. >> that works out to be about 1 million new oysters. this beg last september. back then, cages were new. and stocked with shells, containing baby oysters or spat. >> there's one spat there. there's another there. there's one there. these are a little harder to see on the other side. looks like there's six or eight oysters on this one shelf. >> -- shell. >> this mimics what used to happen on the bay when there is good recruitment. >> now, they will expand the program to 10 more maryland
6:18 pm
rivers. with up to 5,000 cages. the reason most sign up. >> i've lived around the bay most of my life. and i know it's deteriorating. seems like a simple helping hand. it's kind of fun actually. >> and a shot in the arm for oysters. they will hopefully reproduce on their own and build a tolerance for the diseases that have ravaged native stock. >> they can try to get over these diseases. >> with a little help from their friends. alex demetrick, wjz eyewitness news. >> now, if you're wondering about the work load of raising oysters, the only thing volunteers have to do is lift the cage up and down the water once a week. >> i think i can handle that. >> it would be good if kids could. [ laughter ] let's take a look at -- we've got some activity developing around the region. thunderstorms across baltimore, cal and harford county. this looks like it's going to miss the city for the time being. but you folks in baltimore,
6:19 pm
6:22 pm
we saw they took the tarp off the field down there in orioles park. >> looked for the time being that the city would stay dry. in fact, areas are getting showers right now. northern baltimore county, much of western and central harford county. pretty good stuff going on out there. as you can see. it's all moving off to the east and southeast. heavy just stuff in hereford. another strong cell around gettysburg. you can see, a whole crust of activity. another approaching hagerstown. another southeast of the bay area, just on the catoctin mountains there. looks like most of us will see something going on this evening over the next several hours if we keep watching. and another batch developing across the counsels of western
6:23 pm
pa. pretty good chance of cooling rain. i guess you might call it a nice break from what we have called the next few days. got a report out of parktson, only 69 with the rain. and 74 in oakland. mind in cumberland. dew point was up to 71. yesterday at this time. tomorrow, about the same. we're a little cooler with the risk of more showers. 89 today. that was our high. yesterday, got to 94. it's a 5 degree drop. airport picked up almost three quarters of an inch. the city, under an inch. 86/65 would be average. and the records of 154. take a look to the west. this first patch going through us right now.
6:24 pm
a bit of a break. we've got a pretty good chance, i think, of getting activity later in this evening. each into tomorrow. with scattered showers and thunderstorm activities. any of these could have briefly heavy downpours, wind gusts. maybe small hail. we've had reports of heavy rain, as much as an inch in an hour in some of these. but they are moving through the region. haven't seen too much in the way of blooding. around the region, the front moves through the area, with scattered storms. over the next couple of days, the storm will head to the south. probably through the end of the week. north winds at 5 knots. not much going on there. 83 is the bay temp. that's about as warm as it has been all summer long. kind of muggy. a low of 70.
6:25 pm
tomorrow, sort of like today. about 86. but a warm and muggy day. or humid. sun and clouds. thunderstorms. pretty good shot in the afternoon. possible heavy rains and low storms. you know, we all watch the price is right on wjz. now here's your opportunity to be a contestant. you can take part in a contestant search on thursday, from 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. that's on falls road. there is a contestant form you can fill out. and you can find that on wjz.com. just click on the link at the top of the home page. still to come. divers are back on the waters in the hudson tonight. in a tricky recovery mission, 60 feet under. the important piece of wreckage they have recovered today. the president fights back against the loud opposition to healthcare reform. i'm joel brown. it's coming up. a group home here in annapolis has caught the attention of the county executive for all the wrong
6:26 pm
reasons. i'm derek valcourt. i'll explain coming up on eyewitness news. this is mark viviano at the ballpark. we'll hear from pitcher jeremy guthrie. a fight breaks out at ravens camp. and we'll hear more. when eyewitness news continues. abrasive on dentures? look, scratches collect and grow cause bad breath instead clean without scratching causing bacteria every day
6:29 pm
the time is close to 6:30. it is 87 degrees. and partly sunny in baltimore. good evening, everyone. and thanks for staying with eyewitness news. here are some of the stories people are talking about tonight. opponents of the president's healthcare reform plan went straight to the top to voice their protest. hundreds marched outside president obama's town hall meeting in new hampshire. joel brown has both sides of this heated issue for wjz. opponents and supporters of the president's plan to overhaul healthcare drew the battle lines outside his new hampshire town hall meeting. >> healthcare for all. >> reporter: while loud protestors maid their case --
6:30 pm
made their case outside. >> first time in 68 years i've protested. >> reporter: inside, president obama tried to take over the debate by addressing critics. >> where we do disagree, let's disagree over things that are real, not these wild misrepresentations that bear no resemblance to anything that has actually been proposed. >> reporter: the president is trying to calm fears by changing his message. focusing more on how his plan will help those who already have health insurance, rather than the 50 mill million who don't have health coverage. >> he claims the plan will ban insurance companies from denying people with preexisting conditions. >> i don't think government should be meddling. but i also don't think insurance bureaucrats should be meddling. [ applause ] >> reporter: but the president's words weren't enough to convince some protestors outside the event.
6:31 pm
they're convince said the healthcare reform movement means a government takeover of medicine. it's a message the white house and democratic lawmakers will have to fight hard against before congress returns to work on the plan next month. in washington, joel brown, wjz eyewitness news. across the country, some of the protests have been so bad that lawmakers have brought in heavy security or even replaced town hall meetings with teleconferences. breaking news just moments ago. the final two bodies involved in a plane crash over the hudson river have been recovered. a piece of the plane had been recovered over an houring hour ago. it had been under about 60 feet of water. divers said it's not immediately clear if the section that was raised was holding the body. seven other bodies have been recovered. the young survivor of a wrong-way crash has been
6:32 pm
released from the hospital. on june 26th, his mother drove the minivan on the wrong way on an interstate. five people in the minivan. three people in the suv were all killed. an autopsy found shuller had been drinking and smoking marijuana at the time of the crash. the investigation into michael jackson's death is getting more complicated tonight. a pharmacy was raided by police and federal agents today. law enforcement officials say the propofol given to jackson was picked up at that pharmacy. authorities in anne arundel county take aim at an annapolis group home for troubled teens after a firefighter was responding to a fire alarm call. county officials say the city requires so much attention, it's becoming a burden for taxpayers. >> reporter: police say they don't mind responding for help. they say the problem is, they spend way too much time here.
6:33 pm
>> set back from the street, the eastern point group home, licensed for 12 juvenile offenders. it's here a firefighter was assaulted by one of those teens this weekend. and it's not the first problem here. police say they have been called here 456 times over the last three years. the fire department 65 times. >> what is that volume of calls doing to the police department? >> well, again, i mean, it's taken officers off the road. and off the street from answering other calls for service. and sometimes, you know, important calls for service, where people are in dire need of help. >> reporter: county executive, john leopold agrees. >> it calls for greater monitoring. better security. more accountability. >> he's already complained to the department of juvenile services and the department of human resources, which has jurisdiction over the home. both agencies say they are investigating and promise more frequent monitoring. when we went to the group home. >> we have questions from the police say they have an inord
6:34 pm
nant amount of calls here. >> reporter: executive director lori harper says she manages the facility and would only make a brief statement on cameras. >> right now, as you're all aware, djs, and county resources are well aware of it. they're doing their investigation. we're going to follow their protocol on what they direct us to do. >> reporter: neighbors say they're tired of the frequent fire and police calls. >> there are lots of elderly folks in this neighborhood. many of them living by themselves. and i just think that it's uncomfortable for them. and it's certainly concerning for me. >> in fact, so many of the homeowners in this area are so concerned about the problems with this group home, they're going to be having a neighborhood homeowners association meeting tomorrow to discuss it. in annapolis, i'm derek valcourt, wjz eyewitness news. >> the department of human resources says it has agreed to step up help for the group
6:35 pm
home. police are looking for information from this man in connection with the stolen credit cards. they say the theft happened between july 23 and 24th. the suspect is also wanted for questioning concerning a stolen motor vehicle. thousands of area residents are appealing their receipt property tax assessments. a decline in home values has prompted more than 20,000 homeowners in maryland and the district of columbia to file challenges. the state reassesses property values every three years. time now for a quick look at stories you'll find in tomorrow morning's edition of the baltimore sun. local lawmakers and lobbyists are preparing for a debate. safeway joins other area supermarket chains in lowering prices. and new raven, matt burke's recipe for a two-fisted burger. and remember to look for the updated weather forecast. in tonight's eyewitness
6:36 pm
news healthwatch. a common headache medicine in your medicine cabinet could help treat cancer. a new study finds aspirin can reduce your risk of dying from colon cancer if you've been diagnosed from the disease. >> reporter: 8 months ago, cindy martinez got a big shot. a diagnosis of colon cancer at 46 years old. >> i was in denial. had a healthy lifestyle. >> reporter: after surgery, she is now in remission. >> i have a less than 10% chance of reoccurrence. i'm grateful, pretty much every day of my life. >> reporter: now, a new study finds a simple routine of aspirin could help with colon cancer. >> it's the first major study that shows by taking what's available over the court could -- counter could help reduce colon cancer-related deaths.
6:37 pm
>> reporter: it found that people who took aspirin had a nearly 30% risk of dying from colon cancer during an average of 11 years after diagnosis. the aspirin benefit was primarily seen in patients with tumors that expressed an enzyme, called cox 2. >> a high percentage of colon cancer express this enzyme. aspirin, as well as other anti- inflammatories actually suppress this enzyme. >> reporter: dr. bret says he would suggest aspirin therapy to colon cancer patients. something cindy is very open to. >> i would definitely be very proactive in taking. that. >> reporter: it's a simple, painless step that could add years to her life. in los angeles, teri okita, wjz eyewitness news. >> experts say you should begin getting screened for colon cancer at the age of 50 or even sooner if colorectal disease runs in your family. blowing the prius out of
6:38 pm
the water. the chevy volt could be the first american vehicle ever to achieve fuel economy. why gm says it could change. how had pachyderm got out of a tight squeeze. bob turk. the first warning weather center. showers coming back our way. i'll have the exclusive first warning five-day forecast. and wjz 13 is always on. here are the top stories at wjz.com at this hour. for updates on the day's news, and the day's forecast, log onto wjz.com. it's a revolution in pain relief. (announcer) new icy hot medicated roll. for wherever you hurt. icy to dull pain, hot to relax it away. the new icy hot medicated roll. with the roll, pain's under control.
6:39 pm
6:40 pm
6:41 pm
three00 people are rescued after a typhoon causes a mud slide and hundreds are still missing. relief helicopters captured many. many were angry they weren't allowed back into their village to help find family members. this typhoon has caused the worst flooding in taiwan in some 50 years. a baby elephant makes it into a tight squeeze and can't get out. rescuers worked to free this elfant after it got stuck in a manhole. the rescue took three hours, but the elephant was unharmed. neighborhood watch groups around the country are trying a
6:42 pm
new approach to keep their streets safer. twitter. they have started using twitter and blogs to stop crime. currently, there are more than 23,000 block watch groups registered compared to only 5,000 five years ago. alexis christoforous reports. the company unveiled new details about the chevrolet volt, including the expected price. you couldn't miss the headlines. gm's long-awaited electric car promises 230 miles per gallon in city driving. >> having a car that gets triple digi -- digit economy, we believe will be good for us. the plug-in battery lasts up to 40 miles. on a highway, that gets used up
6:43 pm
quickly. and a gasoline engine takes over. >> you can charge the volt at night. which means a full fort-minute charge of the volt will cost about 40 cents. people may find the $40,000 price tag too steep, which is why the industry doesn't think the new car will save gm, but at least polish its image. >> it is a big step, as far as pride, showing, look, we stepped ahead of toyota. or we've stepped ahead of honda. >> reporter: gm has already stepped it up for month lingsz. the challenge was a car that running on kilowatt hours. office the equivalent of getting this. >> it will be four times the fuel champion, the toyota prius. luxury lex, wjz eyewitness news.
6:44 pm
gm officials say the bolt's price tag may drop with 40 models. after 72 years, fans will have to say goodbye to guiding light. they have won a combined 69 daytime awards and say they will miss the show. it's those things. those people that you won't ever see again. it's being in that studio. the final episode is scheduled to air september 18th. >> i remember my brand mother telling us all to be quiet when the show came on. katie couric has a preview of what's coming up tonight. nearly 12 million children face serious barriers to getting dental care. but now, clinics across the country are trying to help. our special series, children of
6:45 pm
6:47 pm
myth. the fact is, head & shoulders does more than ordinary shampoos and conditioners. it gives you... seven scalp and hair benefits including relieving dryness, itch and irritation. fact. one size may not fit all, but beautiful, 100% flake-free hair does. head & shoulders. respect the scalp. love the hair.
6:48 pm
we're fading now into a warm, august evening. can we expect a cooldown any time soon? meteorologist bernadette woods is live in the outback with a look at what we can expect. but first, bob has an updated look at radar. we have showers and thundershowers popping up. north of the city, through harford county. southern new york. another south of annapolis. there's a real good chance most of us will see some showers. we're going to see some of these thundershower showers and storms linger through the overnight. another warm one tomorrow. but temperatures will hold in the mid-80s for our highs. then as we head into the afternoon and evening showers, showers and thunderstorms are possible once again. looks like that will be with us probably into the weekend.
6:49 pm
6:52 pm
ravens practice started to look a little more like the eyewitness news room. >> orioles are fighting for a win. we'll get to the ravens. but first, the o's, suffering through a nine-game losing streak when they play the oakland a's. the a's beat them 9-1. birds will turn to one of their rookie pitchers. david hernandez was hit hard by the tigers in detroit five days ago. o's hitter, facing a rookie themselves. right-hander trevor cahill. he beat the birds. growing pangs for rookie pitchers. you get that. but how about a veteran like jeremy guthrie? he was hit hard by the a's last night. mark ellis pounded in five hits. guthrie lasted fewer than five innings and took the loss for his 12th defeat of the year. for sure it's a test when you have struggles for this
6:53 pm
amount of time. you know, it's been since day one, though. i didn't start off well. in the classic. i haven't pitched well for more than one or two gamessa the a time this season. >> reporter: speaking of struggles. luke scott has been struggling. only home run are the game for the o's. the o's take on the a's, 7:05 tonight. you can see it on masn 2. i was in westminster today for a heated ravens morning workout. it's clear, the ravens are ready to hit the washington redskins. and evidence of that is how the ravens have been hitting one another in this third week of practice. troy smith completes the pass. figures with a sharp to frank walker who responds with a takedown. the fight is on. figures and walker tangled. their teammates come rushing in. another scuffle came out during the attempt to bring peace. we talked to walker about the
6:54 pm
battle in camp. and his coach's view of these outbursts. you scuffle, you fight. it's over with. he's not going to say he's for it. but he's definitely -- he understands the game. he's not -- >> he understands what's happening. >> yeah. he knows what's going on. and sometimes tempers flare. it's good for some coaches to see if you got that fighting. i'm definitely not a slieping dog. i'm not all the way gone. [ laughter ] alumni day in westminster. among the colts on hand. the great artie donovan was there. among the recent retirees, john ogden, a favorite. just his second summer away from the game. we asked j.o. about the retired life. >> i miss the team atmosphere. but that's about it. i don't miss practice. i don't even miss playing in games. i played in 170-some games. i did that. but i do miss being around the guys, just the camaraderie of being part of a group.
6:55 pm
6:58 pm
finally this eaching, a group of waiters in israel get known for speedy service. they dine their bow ties and race down the streets of jerusalem. they had to carry a wine bottle, wine glass and several pieces of food on a tray. the winner gets to travel to paris to compete in a similar race next summer. >> oh. that would be me. >> he's out of there. we'll be back at 11:00. >> thanks for watching eyewitness news on wjz 13, maryland's news station. don't go away. because there's much more ahead on the cbs evening news with katie couric. and of course, they will be talking about the he
6:59 pm
>> couric: tonight the president hits the road and hits back at critics of health care reform. >> we can't let them do it again, not this time. not now. >> couric: but at town meeting the opposition gets louder. >> i don't like being lied to, i don't like being lied about. >> couric: i'm katie couric. also, they call it the wonder drug, now new research says aspirin may be able to extends the lives of people with colon cancer. imagine a car that can get 230 miles to the gallon. g. m. says this one can. and her life touched so many others all over the world. remembering eunice kennedy shriver. captioning sponsored by cbs this is the "cbs evening news" with katie couric. >> couric: good evening, everyone. it is president obama's signaturme
1,840 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
WJZ (CBS) Television Archive Television Archive News Search ServiceUploaded by TV Archive on