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tv   CBS Morning News  CBS  June 8, 2011 4:30am-5:00am EDT

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firestorm, that wind-driven arizona wildfire continues to grow, threatening more towns and forcing thousands more to evacuate. pre-summer sizzle, a blistering dose of record temperatures triggers heat warnings up and down the east coast. in the hot seat, calls for congressman anthony weiner's resignation become louder. >> what advice would you give him if he asks you? >> call somebody else. captioning funded by cbs >> good morning, everybody. thanks for joining us. i'm betty nguyen. we begin this morning with
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that massive wildfire in eastern arizona. it's still out of control, still growing, and forcing more evacuations. the fire has now consumed about 500 square miles near the border with new mexico. residents in eagar, arizona, were told to evacuate last night. the fire is being fanned by strong, gusty winds. you can get an idea of how big the fire is by these pictures taken from space. sandra hughes has our report. >> reporter: from the arizona/new mexico border, a gigantic plume of smoke rises above the blaze. firefighters say they've never seen anything like it in this area. already almost 3,000 people have been evacuated, 7,000 people in springerville and eagar, arizona, were on standby until tuesday evening. >> the fire is starting to move again quickly. the winds are very erratic, they're swirling, and getting into heavy fuels and crossed that line where we feel it's safe and asked the folks from eagar to move on out. >> reporter: five structures
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have burned and firefighters are trying to save more. >> the other night we're doing another night burn and we are literally our backs are to two buildings, people's homes, and i think one of those, you know, had gone down. >> reporter: winds were strong tuesday afternoon but not as are shall as predicted. new mapping shows the fire perimeters appear to be holding. >> last night we went in burnt out maybe about four miles of line and every night's different. >> reporter: the fire has grown the most on the north side which is burning national forests. no serious injuries have been reported. sandra hughes, cbs news. a huge eight alarm fire at a former rhode island rubber plant is out this morning, but the century old building is destroyed. the fire started last night at what was once the largest rubber goods manufacturing plant in the world. one firefighter was injured battling the blaze. the enormous building, built in
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1889 eventually collapsed in on itself. if you live anywhere from the southern plains to the northeast it is going to feel hot today, we are talking record-breaking heat, an unusual pre-summer heat wave is kicking in and moving north. record temperatures some in the triple digits are expected from texas to the northeast. heat advisories are in effect from minnesota to the east coast. schools in baltimore have already announced they are closing early today and power companies say to expect some outages. >> the equipment by nature is already hot. it heats up even more when it's hot outside because there's more power flowing through the lines. it heats up even more because the exterior temperature is hot. >> along with the heat comes poor air quality. the heat wave is expected to break by the week's end. the first named storm of the 2011 hurricane season has formed in the pacific. tropical storm adrian is currently 350 miles south of
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acapulco mexico. it has winds of about 45 miles per hour but it is expected to strengthen rapidly. a wild goose chase for sheriffs deputies in texas sent to a farmhouse to look for human remains, they found nothing. sheriffs deputies were directed to the site northeast of houston by phone tips from a person claiming to be a psychic. the caller mentioned more than 25 bodies including children. the sheriff is investigating the unidentified caller. overseas, nato continued its air strikes on libya before dawn this morning but a defiant moammar gadhafi says he will never surrender. waves of nato jets struck tripoli yesterday targeting gadhafi's compound. it was the heaviest daytime bombing since the air strikes began in march. to washington, german chancellor angela merkel was honored with a dinner outdoors in the white house. dinner was serviced outdoors in the rose garden. president obama awarded merkel
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the presidential medal of freedom. earlier in the day mr. obama and chancellor merkel held talks on the global economy. economic issues are front and center for the president today as well. he will visit a community college in suburban washington to emphasize the importance of training u.s. workers and cutting unemployment. joel brown is in washington with more on this. good morning, joel. >> betty, good morning to you. the unemployment rate up, housing prices down and the president's out to convince skeptical americans that the latest economic news is not a trend, just a bump in the road. president obama is trying to give the economy and american confidence a boost. >> i'm not concerned about a double dip recession. i am concerned about the fact that the recovery that we're on is not producing jobs as quickly as i want it to. >> reporter: he'll tour an auto repair program at a community college to stress the importance of job creation. his visits come on the heels of last week's disappointing jobs report which showed only 54,000
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jobs were created in may. unemployment rose to 9.1%. even people who are working are feeling the impact. effie jacoby owns a cafe. >> people are more concerned money wise. >> reporter: like president obama, fed chairman ben bernanke blames the slowing economy on higher gas prices and the crisis in japan, factors he calls temporary. >> i expect hiring to pick up. last month's pace has grown strength since the second half of the year. >> reporter: in atlanta tuesday the fed chair predicted a stronger rebound in the coming months but warned of more trouble from the job market doesn't improve. for republican presidential candidates the shaky economy is their latest ammunition. tuesday former minnesota governor tim pawlenty accused the president of being satisfied with a second rate economy produced on his "third rate" policies. pawlenty went on to propose new tax cuts for businesses and
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individuals. what he didn't say was whether those cuts would increase the federal deficit. betty? >> joel brown in washington, joel, thank you. now to congressman anthony weiner, who is feeling no love from fellow democrats as pressure mounts on him to resign. monday weiner refused to resign after admitting to inappropriate online relationships. speaker nancy pelosi called for an ethics investigation and republicans are demanding that weiner step down. senator majority leader harry reid refused to defend weiner. >> i know congressman weiner. i wish there was some way i can defend him, but i can't. >> weiner spent yesterday huddling with his staff. several democrats say they'll return money weiner donated to their campaign. and speaking of politics, in las vegas it is all in the family. carolyn goodman won the mayoral race last night with 61% of the vote. she replaces her husband, oscar, who was prevented from running again by term limits. he campaigned almost nonstop for his wife. just ahead on the morning
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news, the airport checkpoint of the future. plus nintendo unveils the latest game console to make you say wii! this is the "cbs morning news." wii! this is the "cbs morning news." fleas and ticks, it repels most ticks before they can attach and snack on us. frontline plus kills but doesn't repel. any tick that isn't repelled or killed may attach and make a meal of us. [ male announcer ] ask your veterinarian about k9 advantix ii.
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so, you don't care what anyone says, you want to save this company money! that's exactly what i was saying. hmmm... priority mail flat rate envelopes, just $4.95 only from the postal service. a simpler way to ship. a spectacular nighttime a spectacular nighttime launch in kazhakstan as a russian soyuz rocket blasted off for the international space station. it's carrying u.s. astronaut mike fossum and two others to the space station for the next six months. nasa calls this a family portrait, a unique view of the now completed space station with the shuttle "endeavour" docked at the top of the picture. the portrait was taken last month by three crew members leaving the station in a soyuz capsule. one shuttle mission remains, "atlantis" will blast off july 8th.
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on the "cbs moneywatch," more weakness for stocks in asia. ashley morrison is here in new york with the latest on that. good morning, ashley. >> good morning, betty. most asian markets lost ground on continuing fears about the u.s. economy. hang sang dropped 1% and tokyo's nikkei was flat. on wall street the market tries to get back on track today. on tuesday an early rally ran out of steam as stocks fell for the fifth day in a row. the dow lost 19 points while the nasdaq slipped one. oil prices fell to nearly $98 a barrel ahead of the opec meeting in austria. most analysts think the 12 nation group will decide to increase crude production though some members are dead set against it. increased production would likely push gas prices lower which could take some pressure off the global economy. ford is thinking big by thinking small. the automaker has announced plans to grow global sales by 50% by the year 2015 with sales of compact cars accounting for
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more than half. the company sees its biggest opportunities in asia and africa. ford was the only detroit automaker that did not need a government bailout to survive. airport security could soon get a lot less invasive. the international air transport association unveiled a futuristic security tunnel tuesday that can quickly scan shoes, carry on luggage and check for liquids and explosives. the group says it's trying to maintain safety while reducing the everyday hassles and privacy concerns of boarding a plane. and spirit airlines wasted little time in taking advantage of the latest scandal on capitol hill. tuesday the low cost carrier unveiled its weiner sale with round trip fares starting at $9 each way, the promotion urges consumers to buy now before "the sale gets hacked." betty it's too easy, wide open. >> we could really get in trouble here but that's a pretty good deal.
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right? >> it is. >> we'll just leave it there. ashley morrison, playing it safe today. thank you. it's called the electronics entertainment expo, e3 for short and draws video gamemakers and enthusiasts from around the world. nintendo is stealing the spotlight at this year's e3 with its new version of the popular wii game console. cnet's kara tsuboi has more. >> so today welcome to the world of wiiu. >> reporter: the wiiu is the latest console to join the nintendo family. at first glance, the combined motion control and touch screen capabilities impressed the crowd at this year's e3 in los angeles. >> stating that wiiu will change the way you play games is a pretty bold assertion. >> reporter: nintendo says the wiiu will provide live interaction with other players, video calling and web browsing access. >> it looks like an ipad but
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meant to work with a home console as well and you can use it like a second tv screen. >> reporter: there are details we still don't know, battery life, how much it will cost and the exact release date in 2012. in addition to the hardware news, nintendo celebrated the 25th anniversary of the game "legends of zelda" with a live choir and orchestra. new releases of that popular title and a gold remote will be released with all platforms june 19th. >> it is looking out at filling out the classic gaming platform, mario games, the zelda games. at some point it starts to feel a little bit tired. >> reporter: nintendo knows it's these titles that keep their fans loyal. in los angeles, i'm kara tsuboi cnet.com for cbs news. >> pretty cool stuff there. straight ahead your weather and in sports, back and forth and coast to coast, dallas and miami battle in a crucial game four. four. depression is a serious medical condition. i feel like i have to wind myself up
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it works great on wet or dry skin because it's seriously waterproof and ultra sweat-proof. coppertone protects across 100% of the uva/uvb spectrum. coppertone sport. embrace the sun. here's a look at the weather in some cities around the country. new york sunny, 96, miami, partly cloudy, 87. chicago sunny, a whopping 101 there. dallas, sunny as well, 99 and l.a., partly cloudy, 71. time now for a check of the national forecast. the latest satellite picture shows rain clouds lingering over montana and much of the northern plains. the midwest and west coast have clear skies. later today heat rolls into the northeast. the southeast and southern
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plains continue to bake as well with highs in the 90s and 100s and temperatures on the west coast cool down just a bit. in sports the nba finals are all tied up. in dallas dirk nowitski played with a 101 degree fever from the flu, but scored 21 points including 10 in the fourth quarter. dwyane wade fumbled a pass and mike miller missed a desperation shot. the mavericks beat the heat 86-83 to even the series at two games each. the next game is in dallas. in baseball the red sox are in a virtual tie with the yankees, atop of the a.l. east. boston's david ortiz smacked a two-run homer into the right field seats at yankee stadium to pad the red sox lead and the sox hung on to beat the yanks 6-4.
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in milwaukee the mets' jose reyes hit a shot off the wall for a triple to score two runs. the best play of the game was by brewers' center fielder carlos gomez who reached over the wall -- look at this -- for an incredible catch robbing carlos beltrand of a homer. but the mets won it, 2-1. finally to golf, where tiger woods will not play in the u.s. open. woods decided not to compete in the open starting next week because of continuing problems with his left leg. it will be the first open that he has missed since 1994. and when we return, another look at this morning's top stories, plus a letter containing the seeds of the holocaust written by a young adolph hitler. f the holocaust written by a young adofl hitler. [ female announcer ] you do so much...
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on the "cbs morning news," here's a look at today's weather. the northeast will feel the heat today with near record highs likely in most of the region's big cities. northern new england could see severe thunderstorms along with the great lakes and portions of central plains.
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here's another look at this morning's top stories. that giant arizona wildfire is getting bigger. fanned by gusting winds, the blaze has now burned nearly 500 square miles. about 7,000 people have been ordered to evacuate. and a pre-summer heat wave is rolling north today. record-breaking temperatures are expected from texas to vermont. the record-breaking heat is expected to last through the end of the week. now for a little history lesson. way back in 1919, a 30-year-old german soldier wrote a letter describing what he called the jewish threat. the writer was adolph hitler and the letter his first written call for killing europe's jews. that letter is on display at a museum in new york. manuel gallegus reports. >> reporter: it is a four page letter adolph hitler wrote when he was a young soldier in the german army. in it hitler labels jews as an inbred race, a tuberculosis on a nation. in one paragraph he calls on his government to have the courage
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to remove all jews from its midst. >> before he ever heard of the nazi party hitler had a plan for the jews, he had a deep seeded hatred and anti-semitism that burned within him. >> reporter: the original document known as the gimlic letter was revealed for the first time in new york's simon weizenthal center, it purchased the letter from a private dealer in california for $150,000. the letter was reportedly found by an american soldier in the final months of world war i. he said he found it i, scattered among the papers on the floor. the letter will be the centerpiece of the holocaust exhibit of the museum of tolerance in los angeles. >> it's very important for future generations to see this was one man's hatred. >> reporter: the museum's trustees are comfortable with the decision to pay thousands of dollars for hitler's work, because they feel it is too important to stay in private hands. manuel gallegus, cbs news. new york. this morning on "the early
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show," migraines, 30 million americans get them. we have tips on how to handle them. i'm betty nguyen. this is the "cbs morning news." for me, it was a calling to be there for the veterans who protect our freedoms working with today's va i can use my license anywhere in the u.s. in the city or the wide open spaces it's amazing how you can grow as a doctor a nurse a pharmacist you grow as a person it's the quality of care our veterans deserve this is what i'm called to do.
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it's going to be a hot and humid afternoon let's look at the numbers. they tell the total story. check out the dinner time numbers. still 94 degrees. lunch and dinner on the way to 98. right now, we're in the low 70s. here's what the news room will be followed for you today. an insurance agent in louisiana shoots into investgaters. jay rule will be sentenced today. adrian is the first named storm
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of the season. also, the heat is closing schools early this day. key testimony in the case of a city police officer accused of killing an unarmed former marine. what the dead man's sister said in court. >> it's anonymous, the person that called it in last night -- >> the police scramble to a home in texas expecting to find dozens of dead inside. what they actually found. we'll have more in a few minutes. [ man ] did we get anything good?
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