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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  June 5, 2013 7:00am-9:00am EDT

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answers to that performance-enhancing drug is ready to talk. tensions boil over on capitol hill. lawmakers grill pentagon leaders over sexual assaults in the military. and one of the highest paid university leaders in the country is forced out. you'll hear the jokes that infuriated his bosses. but we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. there's a simple fix. i would hope that they would contact us and make the recalls happen. >> a recall standoff between chrysler and the federal government. >> u.s. safety regulators want the auto maeker to recall 3 million jeep grand cherokees and jeep liberties. >> they say the vehicles can start on fire when struck from behind. >> chrysler says the vehicles are safe. according to a report, major league baseball will try to suspend as many as 20 players including alex rodriguez and ryan braun. has a pledge from anthony
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bosh on players who used the p.e.d. >> i don't know the specifics of the story. i already addressed it and commented and will say nothing further about it. you have lost the trust of the men and women who have relied on you. the hearing on the sexual assaults in the military. >> sexual assault cases should remain within the chain of command. for the first time we're hearing the phone conversation between the surviving boston marathon bombing suspect and his mother taped while at a prison hospital. hundreds of people have evacuated along the mississippi river. water is now at least two miles inland. fishermen in california reel in a shark, 1,300 pounds. >> my sharking career is over. >> all that and all that matters. >> the process that fills the u.s. senate seat must allow the senate to have the choice to
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determine their nominees. >> he would appoint an interim senator but not expect hope. hello. nope. there we go. >> -- on "cbs this morning." >> kim kardashian and kanye are expecting baby girl. >> we need another kardashian like we need another michael douglas revelation. captioning funded by cbs welcome to "cbs this morning." and good morning, norah. >> good morning, charlie. big new this morning. >> we begin with sports. a big breaking story. the founder of a clinic is agreeing to cooperate with investigators fully. >> the investigation is expected to lead to suspension of big named players. terrell brown is with us this morning. good morning. >> good morning. according to reports, investigators pursued employees for months. it was reportedly enough to make
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him break his silence. major league baseball is turning up the heat on players suspected of used banned substances like steroids. cbs sports is learning that anthony bosh has agreed to tell baseball investigators what he knowed. girardi says his bigger worry is for the game. >> i worry about baseball being affected as a game, the whole thing and what it's been through in the last 15 years, and that's my concern. >> baseball has threatened long suspensions for players found guilty, but proving the charges could be difficult. there are reportedly no positive drug tests involved and the players union is expected to present a strong challenge to investigators. the players involved are said to be some of the biggest names in the game facing suspensions that could cost them more than half the season, charlie. >> thank you. with us, chris russo, a sports
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talk show host on sirius xm radio. >> good to be here. >> what is your feeling? >> football doesn't go as hard on it as you'd like. baseball is very serious about knocking steroids out of the sport for good. bosch is going to talk. he's got everyone all over him. he needs to get his practice back. this is going to be a prolonged process. they did not fail a drug test. you're going to have to get them suspended without the drug test. it's a long process here, charlie. >> are there people who would be worried? >> i would be worried about a-rod. he's under the gun. what else is new. he's always in trouble. and ryan braun. last year he got away with it as a technicality. last year as a brewer, he got away with it because he threw
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the fedex driver under the bus. >> now, if these penalties are handed down, it's my understanding it would be the largest performance-enhancing drug scandal in american history. it's going to be more than these two players, right? >> it's about 15, 20 guys. we know some of the names associated with the story that came out last year. the names that came out last year were nelson cruz and melky cabrera. so there's a lot of players involved here. but, again, it's going to be a long process. i don't know about 100 games. i think 50 would be a bit much. >> 100-game suspension. >> yeah. i would say 50, but, remember, that players' association is going to back their players up. >> can i talk about sports in general? why is mlb tougher than anybody else? >> because records are so important. home run records. there's more of a protocol for baseball. it's more of a statistical
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sport. football, do you care? you don't see him anyway. but the pitcher, the record, you care about that stuff. baseball is a little more wrapped up in records than say football and basketball are. and, again, baseball has been pretty proactive here. they've been heads in the sand forever. they took a long time to join the party, but they've joined the party in a big way. >> chris, thank you. >> charlie, thank you. norah, thank you. now chrysler is taking a defiant stance against the government. they say they will not go along with a voluntary recall. jim axelrod is here. jim, good morning. >> good morning, charlie. the government says the older model jeeps are defective and at risk for gasoline fires in a rear end collision. chrysler disputes it. in a rare move the company is refusing to recall the vehicles. chrysler fired back at the national highway traffic safety administration saying the vehicles are not defective and
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they do not intend to recall them, charging that the agency's initial inclusions are based on an incomplete analysis. it's a bold move, according to industry experts. justin at "car and driver" magazine wonders about it. >> calculating that it's going to be cheaper to fight this and deal with the public's backlash, we're assuming that's what they have done. >> reporter: in its letter to chrysler the agency states that the gas tank placement in jeep grand cherokees built from 1993 to 2004 and jeep liberties can cause gas leaks that can lead to fire. chrysler conducted its own analysis arguing that the risk analysis is no more comparable
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than those made by other companies. the national highway traffic safety administration says it's identified 37 fatal rear end impact fires in the two models resulting in 51 deaths. >> the fact that in this case they're compliant with it doesn't excuse them or defend them from any problems. >> when they know that something that meets the standards is burning paem to death, the general public deserves some action. >> reporter: >> jenelie embrey was involved in a crash in which two people died. she's vowed to get the vehicles off the road. >> what any ordinary person would do is take the vehicles back and make them safe. >> reporter: on tuesday chrysler released a statement saying the company stands behind the
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quality of its vehicles and that they remain committed to working with nhtsa. the company must file a formal response by june 18 in which the parties will negotiate a settlement or the matter could be decided in court. another committee in congress takes up the assault crisis in the military day as it considers a defense senate bill. senator john mccain says he is so disgusted he told a mother he cannot give unqualified support to the idea of her daughter enlisting. david martin is at the pentagon. david, good morning. >> good morning. for decades, military leaders have vowed zero tolerance for sexual assault without making a accident in the problem. so members of the armed services committee want to know what's different this time and they were not pleased with the answers. >> reporter: they testify about their effort to deal with sexual
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assault, senator claire mccaskill was a little more than disappointed. >> i'm a little taken aback. it sounds like you are all very bullish on the status quo. just listening to your testimony from a distance. and i just want to tell you that with this senator and other senators, the status quo is not acceptable. >> reporter: she is pushing legislation that would require the military to kick out anyone convicted of sexual assault. >> we can prosecute our way out of the problem of sexual predators who are not committing crimes of lust. my years of experience in this area are telling me they're committing crimes of domination and violence. >> reporter: senator kiersten gillibrand has introduced legislation that would take the decision to prosecute sexual assault away from commanders who she says don't have the
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background to deal with sex crimes. >> not every commander know as what a sexual assault is and not every senator can distinguish between the slap on the ass and a rape. >> they all objected to her legislation. >> our goal should be to hold commanders more accountable, not remember der them less able to help correct the crisis. >> but they all agreed the current rate of sexual assault, about ten new cases each day, is, indeed, a crisis. >> it's shameful, it's repulsive, and we're aggressively taking steps to eradicate it. >> one thing that's different this time that is that women have more political power and the bills they have introduced would fundamentally change the way sexual assault is prosecuted in the military. charlie, norah? >> thank you. and new this morning cbs news has confirmed a major shakeup in president obama's national security team.
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we have learned that his national security adviser tom donilin will be resigned and will be replaced by susan rice. let's bring in cbs news and political analysis john dickerson. this has created a shakeup of the team and susan rice becoming part of the inner circle. >> that's right. susan rice, remember that long journey she's been on. she got caught up in the benghazi matter and was considered at the heart of it by a lot of rns who went after her and were seen to have basically kept her out of that secretary of state job. when that happened white house officials told me basic she he was next in line for the job. it's been a long time coming. swhoenlt have to go through a senate confirmation. we now have learned through the e-mails that rice wasn't really in the middle of the talking points that became such a big deep. that doesn't mean that her name here won't kick up a lot of
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political reaction. >> is this because of susan rice or tom donilin. he's made some very, very famous trips overseas representing the president. >> well, i don't think it's unhappiness. i think rice was -- they want -- rice has a lock relationship with the president. he -- when she didn't get the secretary of state job, people inside the white house said this was a real disappointment to the president because they saw the world in the same way. donilin has served the president for four years. so i think rice was -- they wanted to have her more in the inner circle, although, of course, as the cabinet post at the united nations she was there a little bit more. so i'm not sure what the exact answer to that is, charlie. but rice is -- go ahead. >> john, it's my understanding the president said to make this announcement this afternoon. what about the timing of it? the president is about to leave
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for california with a huge meeting on friday with the president from china, something that the former direct over national security was over there setting the whole thing up. >> this weekend the meeting is taking place. >> they can still go forward with their conversations. he hasn't stopped working and moved on. so the very sensitive discussions with the chinese top of the list, of course, is this discussion of cyber snooping and the delicate negotiations over that and the chinese looking and taking essentially u.s. technology in secret. that all will continue. and it continues the pace. this transition won't happen instantaneous instantaneously. >> john dickerson, thank you. for the first time we're also hearing the voice of the surviving bombing suspect dzhokhar tsarnaev.
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bob is with us this morning. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, charlie. he's charged with using a weapon of mass destruction and if convicted he could face the death penalty. if he's concerned, he's not at all showing it. he told his parents everything's all right. it is the first time since the twine explosions on poils tboyl street the family has heard from the suspect. the accuse bomber tried to call his family and urge them not to discuss his case. everything is good, he said. please don't say anything. zubeidat says she spoke to him from the prison hospital. she asked dzhokhar if he was in pain.
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no, of course, not, dzhokhar said. i'm already eating and have been for a long time. they're giving me rice and chicken now. everything's fine. for zubeidat, everything was a surprise. >> i thought he would scream and ask what's going on, to the world, what's going on. instead he was coming to me down, you know what i mean? >> reporter: tsarnaev has been granted one call a month to his parents in. sources say before being read his rights he did confess to the bombing. dzhokhar said he and his brother tamerlan wanted to avenge the killings of muslims overseas. now cbs news contacted a number
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of victims of the boston bombings and no one wanted to comment. in fact, most people said they didn't want to waste any more energy talking about czar nauchlt meanwhile the prosecutors are forming their case. an indictment could come in a few weeks. a huge victory for the assad regime. the syrian army says it claimed a town from rebel troops. it's near the lebanese border. the army says a large number of them were killed. it's time to show you this morning's headlines from around the globe. "wall street journal" says investors are taking a look at one investment. it's being tied to mortgage garages blamed for helping unleash the financial crisis. >> a woman shouting for gay rights interrupted the first lady's speech. the first lady said be quiet or i won't finish mine.
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the u.s. "financial times" says amp say. apple can still appeal the decision. and "the christian science monitor" says the cuban government is providing expanded internet access. there will be more than a hundred internet providers across the communist nation, but they won't come cheap. users will be charged more than $4 an hour. officials near st. louis say they're in desperate need for help. another levee has been breached. forecasters warn rain could be on the way. the deadly tornado that ripped through oklahoma on friday is wider than anyone ever reported across the u.s. winds hit 200 miles an hour. forecasters say it was an ef-5. that's the strongest category.
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it killed 19 people. to give you some perspective, if it had hit the tip of manhattan >> announcer: this national weather report sponsored by invisalign, the clear path to straighter teeth.
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one of the highest state university leaders in the country has talked his way out of his job. you'll hear what's causing the shakeup at ohio state. a 10-year-old girl may have weeks to live. she's in need of a lung transplant but isn't allowed to receive one from an adult. >> that she's left to die. it's really devastating and not a human response. >> why the obama administration says it's not stepping in. and the catch of a lifetime. you'll meet the fisherman who took on a shark the size of car. the news is back in the morning
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here on "cbs this morning." stay tuned for your local news. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by bi-flex. the best stuff in the joint. can help your bones, osteo bi-flex can help your joints. osteo bi-flex... now available in all major retailers and warehouse clubs. [ female announcer ] only aveeno daily moisturizing lotion has an active naturals oat formula that creates a moisture reserve so skin can replenish itself. aveeno® naturally beautiful results. aveeno® gotta get that bacon! yummy, crunchy, bacon bacon bacon there in that bag! who wants a beggin' strip?
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check this out. true story. burger king has developed a hands-free whopper holder that goes around your neck and holds your burger. that geesd. that's good. it goes around your neck and holds your burger. after hearing this, whopper
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eaters ask, "what's a neck?" welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, smokers cost a bundle? we'll ask our legal expert jack ford. and the fight to save a little girl is turning into a national controversy over organ donation. health secretary torrey kathleen sebelius is making what she calls a truly agonizing decision. that story is ahead. house state president gordon guy abruptly announced his retirement tuesday. it comes after controversy over a joke he made last december. it involved the rival notre dame and the catholic community. jeff glor is on the ohio state campus in columbus. jeff, good morning. >> reporter: charlie, good morning to you. the announcement came with little warning in the form of an e-mail on tuesday. in it gordon said he took a family vacation recently and a
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time for self-reflex. for neil half his leaf gordon lee has been a president. he's now walking away. >> time is right for me, as a matter of fact. >> were you forced out? >> was i forced out? no. the truth of the matter is i've been thinking of this for some time. >> reporter: it comes days after the "associated press" obtained an audio recording. on the tape guy, a mormon, joked about why notre dame, a catholic team, was not invited to the catholic conference. >> the father is holy on sunday and holy hell the rest of the weechlk you can't trust those damn catholics on a thursday or friday. >> reporter: it was the latest in a long line of gaffes. >> we have these 18 colleges
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auld floating around like p.t. boats. they were shooting each other. it was kind of like the polish army or something. i have no idea it was. >> reporter: he apologized for his word bus the school board of trustees sent him a warning letter in march. in a conference call tuesday he said the anger over his latest remarks played a minor role over his decision. >> i have apologized for it and feel incredibly sorry, but i've moved on. >> reporter: on campus, some students said they were sad to see their president go. >> i mean i know he was joking and obviously he took it too far. i don't think he meant it to offend anyone. >> reporter: as he left his office tuesday, guy widely credited with reshaping the university for the better, controversial remarks not withstanding, hinted at his future. >> i'm retired from the presidency, not ohio. i love ohio state. i'm scarlet and gray through and
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through. i'm not leave anywhere. you'll have me around for a long time. >> guy who made $2.5 million a year will make more at his news conference. his retirement is effective july 1st. >> thank you. in pennsylvania, time is running out for a little girl. she needs a lung transplant. her parents are fighting to change that and the battle is now reaching all the way to the obama administration. elaine quijano is here. elaine, good morning. >> good morning to you, norah. for many it seems unthinkable not to intervene. >> hi, sweetheart. >> i lost two teeth. >> reporter: 10-year-old sarah murnaghan has end stage cystic fibrosis. doctors say a lung transplant is her only chance of survival. >> when we came down our doctors told us she has weeks, not
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months. >> reporter: sarah is only eligible for lungs from a child donor as opposed to adult lungs, which are far more available. >> to say she and other children are going to be left to die is really devastating and not a human response. >> first as a mother and grandmother, i can't imagine anything more agonizing than what the more urnaghans are goi through. >> time is running out. please suspend the rules until we look at this policy which we all believe is flawed. >> this is an incredibly agonizing situation where someone lives and someone dies. >> based on their age. based on their age. >> sir -- >> reporter: sebelius asked for a policy review and said she's sympathetic but explains the rules are there for a reason.
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>> because the lungs are different than other organs. it's based on the survivability. > this is different. sarah's case is different. doctors have said she could survive with an adult lung. it could be modified to save her life. why wouldn't we do it. >> reporter: kaplan says it's because pediatric lung participants generally face greater risks. >> what the parents want to do for their child isn't really the best use of the scarce supply of organs. >> reporter: while sarah's doctors say they could perform a successful transplant, making an exception for her is not the obvious choice. >> we don't have the situation where we say save me or don't save me. we're saying save me as opposed to someone else. that's the toughest ethical problem that i think can arise in medicine. >> reporter: but kaplan says there is an argument for re-evaluating the rules when it comes to children and lung transplants. >> did you know everyone sent in
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prayers for you? >> yes. >> what do you think of that? >> thank you for saying prayers. >> at this point, sarah's options appear to be limited because potential policy limits could take more time than she has. for people who want to help, dr. kaplan says the best thing to do is to sign up for organ donation. charlie, norah? >> thank you. that's tough. doctors say they think they can do it and it's got to be one of the most frustrating things in the world if you're a parent if there's some red tape that you believe -- when you want to do anything you can to save your child's life. >> absolutely. and if they can modify it and within reason demand that somehow they consider it. >> absolutely. all right. and now to this story. the controversial issue of smoking and the nation's work force. smokers cost employees almost $6,000 a year more than nonsmokers. that's according to a new study in tobacco control magazine, and they break the numbers down even
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more. >> more than $3,000 of that extra money comes from smoke breaks and here's something else to consider. companies save cash when it comes to pensions. that's because smokers don't live as long as nonsmokers. a new report raises new questions. legal analyst jack forward. good morning. >> good morning. >> does this give them ammunition? >> it certainly does. now, especially given this report, i think you're going to see a movement toward banning smokers from the workplace. you know, the employers -- a couple of things you need to know. first of all there are 29 states in the district of columbia that prohibit employers who say i'm not going to hire you because you're a smoker. that leaves 21 other states where this is going to become a battleground. i think what you're going to see as you said employees will look at this and will say i have an economic justification. >> one of our cbs medical
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consultants has said that now that more employers are going to be required to provide health insurance will say i don't want to hire people with chronic diseases or habits that may be more costly. >> well, we knee that even in this affordable care act the obama administration has pushed, if i'm buying health insurance and i'm a smoker, it's going to cost me more. >> and it's legal to charge more. >> they say you can buy out of that if you get involved in a smoking cessation program. that's a good thing. a number of major companies say they're not going to hire smokers because it costs way too much. the second issue is if you are employed and you as employee are paying part of your health care costs, can the employer say, you know what? it's going to cost you more here. in some places you're seeing that play out already. >> is this the kind of case that will be brought on by appeal?
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>> i think so, charlie. the courts have looked at some job categories and said it's okay to fire people. if you're a fire person, the clerk says it's okay not to hire them because you're 500 pounds and out of shape. as all thing, ultimately we're going to hear from a higher court and they'll give us some direction on it. >> thank you. and they might need a bigger boat. we're going to show you the monster shark caught off southern california and meet the man who reeled this huge guy in. look at that? they say he's the size of a volkswagen. that's next. tomorrow on "cbs this morning," neil patrick harris, the star of "how i met your mother," is going to be hosting. neil patrick harris tomorrow on "cbs this morning." [ female announcer ] you told jcpenney what kind of home
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this is the mother of all fishing tales but it happens to be true. a group of men off the coast of southern california landed a massive shark. louisa hodge from our los angeles station reports it could be a history-making camp. >> reporter: 1,323 pounds. that's what they say is the official weight of a mako shark they reeled in from catalina. >> that thing was a true killing machine. when it came in, the jaws on it, it was traveling at 50 miles an hour. >> reporter: jason johnston was one of the crew members filming for a film on the outdoor channel called "the
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professionals." they planned on catching a mako shark, but johnston said once the belt was on him, he truly wasn't. >> it was truly horrifying. imagine being locked on to a volkswagen for a million hours. >> when he first was captured it was like a million children screaming. this thing came up and wanted to bite. bite, bite, bite in every direction. >> it was the craziest thing i ever did. don't ever want do it again. i think my shark fishing career is over. >> reporter: the shark itself lo be donated for scientific research. for "cbs this morning," louisa hodge, huntington beach, california. >> can you imagine two hours fighting this shark. >> i know. the teeth on it. >> you know how hard it was. my fishing days are over.
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i caught the big one. >> really. a 1,300 police say a suburban mom was also running a huge drug selling operation. we'll see the warehouse where people were growing a fortune in pot. that's ahead on "cbs this morning."
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several others were wounded. well, michelle miller's father was there. he was in the room, a surgeon that rushed to help out, and now she has uncovered some fascinating new details about that night. this is such an incredible story on this anniversary of 45 years ago when rfk was killed. we're going to have that story ahead. >> it raises all kinds of questions. how did she not know? >> she knew but there were pictures of them. i still want to reveal the whole story. stay tuned. it will really blow your mind. it's an incredible piece of history. that's ahead of "cbs this morning." when it comes to getting my family to eat breakfast, i need all the help i can get. that's why i like nutella. mom, what's the capital of west virginia? charleston. nutella is a delicious hazelnut spread my whole family loves. mom, have you seen my -- backpack? nutella goes great on whole-wheat toast or whole-grain waffles. and its great taste comes from a unique combination of simple ingredients like hazelnuts, skim milk and a hint of cocoa. yeah, bye.
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i'm anne-marie green. i'm anne-marie green. i'm anne-marie green. i'm anne-marie green. good morning to you. it's 8:00. welcome back to "cbs this morning." there is a shakeup in the white house this morning.
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tom donilin is out and ambassador susan rice is taking on an important new role. robert f. kennedy was shot 45 years ago today. our own michelle miller learns new details behind the connection to that event. and does this look like fine art to you? we'll show you why somebody paid big bucks this morning to photos taken by a chimp. yes, a chimpanzee. but first here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. the players involve ready said to be some of the biggest names in the game. >> the founder of a florida clinic is agreeing to cooperate fully with investigators. >> i don't know about the 100 games, but remember that players' association is going to back their players up. it's going to be tricky. >> cbs news has confirmed tom donilin will be resigning and will be replaced by susan rice. >> when she didn't get the job, people at the white house said this was a real disappointment.
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>> the government says the older model jeeps are detective. chrysler disputes the claim, refusing to recall the vehicles. >> for decades military leaders have vowed zero tolerance for sexual assault so members of the armed services committee want to know what's difrp this time. >> we want to know how many men and women are being raped on an annual basis, and we have no idea right now. a group of men off the coast of southern california land add massive shark. >> this one came up wanting to kill every single thing in its sight. it was fight, fight, fight in every direction. >> you're going to see a movement toward banning smokers from the workplace. russia enacted a new law that bans smoking in public places. workers weren't hachlt well, this is russia. >> i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. as president obama gets ready to meet china's president this week
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his national security adviser is about to step down. >> officials say tom donilin will be replaced by u.n. ambassador susan rice. cbs political analyst john dickerson is in washington. john, good morning. >> good morning, norah. >> what's the reason behind this and the timing of this too? >> well, one officials say tom donilin has been in that job for four years. when susan rice, you remember, was the focus of so much controversy in the senate, when she was considered for the secretary of state job, republican senators basically torpedoed that nomination, and when that happened white house advisers said she was really next in line for that national security job and so for many months it's been assumed that she would get it whenever that time came. white house advisers say it's now been four years for donilin. he has been working on this deal with the chinese, this meeting that's taking place later this week, and that he will leave in july after that -- that meeting has taken place, and then rice will come in. >> so he leaves government.
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that's not a new position for tom donilin. go ahead, john. >> not as far as i know, no. >> he was a personal adviser. was there any dissatisfaction on the part of the president about tom donilin? >> there is -- in that job, you can always get reports from somebody who's unhappy about the way the national security adviser is doing their job. and so there's been some reporting about his sharp elbows, but there are also a lot of people in the white house who say there's absolutely no disappointment from the president, vice president, chief of staff dennis mcdonough who used to work under donilin, so there's very strong pushback from people from the white house. >> john, do you think this move is more about susan rice than tom donilin and does it possibly send a message to republicans who came down hard on susan rice during that benghazi hearing? >> the president, as we know, ever since susan rice worked on his campaign and by all accounts
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from those inside the white house sees the world as the president does, they have a very good relationship, he was disappointed during the secretary of state circus as they saw it, so this is someone with whom the president has a close relationship, even more on the circuit was a member of the cabinet of the u nations. >> john, then susan rice will leave open the position of u.n. ambassador. i understand samantha powers will replace her, another close adviser to the president. >> tliets. she was a strong advocate for intervention in libya. she has spent her professional career working against genocide and mass atrocities. the question is what le l she do on that question related to the massive refugee flows out of syria in this new post at the united nations where they're trying to get the united nations to move on that question. >> all right. john dickerson, we thank you. america's top military
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commanders told the senate yesterday that sexual assault is like a cancer in the ranks. but the joint chiefs of staff say they oppose any new lawing regarding the way they handle the case. members of the armed service committee were not persuaded. >> you have lost the trust of men and women who rely on you that you will actually bring justice to these cases. >> just last night a woman came to me and said her daughter wanted to join in the military and could i give my unqualified support for her doing so. i could not. >> we failed on this in the past. it has not been a top priority in the years past, the decades past. if it was, we wouldn't be here today. >> our david martin has covered the pentagon for 20 years. david, you know that building and many of the people that serve inside it better than anybody else. was there some suggestion that the optics of that hearing with a lot of male commanders against
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seven female senators asking really tough questions that that may lead to some real changes? >> well, if you saw the picture, it was 12 top military leaders. 11 of them were men and one was a woman. the navy's top lawyer was a woman and that's a reflection of the fact that restrictions on women serving in combat have barred women from the job from order you need to go through. that's started to change. . one of the witnesses yesterday was an air force colonel i first met whelp she was a lieutenant and the first woman to fly combat aircraft. she now is a wing commander. so slowly but surely, women are starting to get to the top of the service. but this is a -- a generational thing, and it's going to take a generation to happen. >> david, have all these stories
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so made these male commanders committed to change the culture that produced? >> i think they are serious this time. i mean for one thing, the president of the united states called them in and told them to get serious. and for another is they're under much greater political pressure than ever before because of the women in the senate, women in general have more political power. and i think finally the military leaders have come to understand that this is not just about political correctionness. this is about unit cohesion in the military where the role of women is expanding. >> all right. david martin, thank you. in your last hour when you said ten new cases reported a day, it was a stunning number, so i hope
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marathons are taking off, and that's good news for the schumachers, including one that's taking on the big names with help from warren buffett. in london this morning people threw their bidding paddle high in the air to make this work. would you pay $76,000 for a photo taken by this guy? this cute little chimp? somebody did. that's ahead on "cbs this morning.." >> depends on the photo. >> depends how good it is, right? it also repels most ticks before they can attach. the leading brand kills, but doesn't repel. a tick that isn't repelled or killed
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this is national running day. everybody put on your sneaks, go out for a run. some of us only run to stay healthy, but other people can't live without it, and as ben tracy shows us, one shoe company is showing traction by taking a different path to profit.
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>> reporter: running a marathon used to be something for only the most elite athletes. now even your grandma is running 26.2 miles. in 199 0e, 224,000 americans finished a marathon. that number more than doubled by 2011 when 518,000 did. >> i think a lot of us that run need to run. it's that powerful if our lifve. >> reporter: jim weber is the ceo of brooks. the bank was calling their loan. >> there was nothing more that create add crisis and that was what was happening at brooks. we were trying to be something for everybody. >> reporter: weber canceled half of the company's product line to focus solely on running shoes. how much of a risk was that to basically get rid of all your other lines and say it's just running.
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>> reporter: i think the perception in the industry was, oh, my gosh. they're crazy. what's really interesting is i think the biggest risk you take is kind of being like everybody else. >> reporter: nike is the undisputed leader, a $24 billion company. brooks is number three at $500 million. he says nike spends more advertising by lunchtime than he spends in the average year. >> the market is 80 times larger than we are. not eight, 80. >> reporter: so if this is david and goliath, let's assume you're david? >> let's just say we have to run fast. >> reporter: yet brooks has a big rock in its sling shot. his name is warren buffett. he plans to grow a $1.5 billion running empire. after all avid runners purchase
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more than three pair of running shoes each year. >> it's not about being everything to everyone. it's about being highly relevant to who you're most focused on. >> reporter: so brooks put the shoes through their paces. replicating the punishment customers will later give them. it allows the company to build highly technical products. they test them beyond the door with what they call elaborates. they have now hooked me up. i now have 54 of these little sensors on me. the sensors allowed eric moor to dissect my run. so what are you actually testing for, looking for while i run? >> we're collect 2g 00 data points. of that data is built and designed into building the design of the shoe. >> reporter: brooks can literally measure the success. cameras count how many are wearing their shoes. they say they're routinely in the top one or two.
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>> reporter: so this race to being a $1.5 billion company, what mile are you at? >> oh, my gosh. we're just at mile seven. we're just getting started. >> you're at the first round stop. >> absolutely. >> reporter: because when it comes to the running shoes by, weber is not content at being the runner up. for "cbs this morning," ben tracy, bothell. >> a personal connection to the tragedy and also a hero of the night. that's ahead on "cbs this morning." >> announcer: cbs "healthwatch" brought to you by our sponsor sore with the inside story on shingles. it was very painful situation. i'm very athletic and i swim in the ocean. shingles forced me out of the water. the doctor asked me "did you have chickenpox when you were a child?"
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the pain level was so high, it became unbearable.
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púw
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e t. in london this morning a collection of photos have been sold at auction. 18 of the images have been given attention. as charlie d'agata shows us, their value comes from who is
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behind the lens. >> reporter: the photographs are as good as you might except from a monkey. out of frame and out of focus shots of moscow's red square taken back in 1998 by mikki, the monkey in the middle. here's where it gets kind of nuts. the photos are going up for auction at sotheby's auction house this morning, the photos fetch a whopping 76 grand. what the fury pry might is that all about? >> i think mikki is a bit of an abstractist. >> reporter: or there is another perspective. >> pretty much crapola. >> is how jerry saltz, senior art critic at new york's magazine. >> it doesn't matter if you call it art. you can call it sewing for all i
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care. my question is it good art, and the answer is, way no, way no, and not because a chimpanzee took it. it's just bananas to think that this is anything but just monkey business. >> reporter: that monkey business may have something to do with the organ grinders who taught mikki how to point and shoot. the russian born american artists have made a reputation for themselves collaborating with animals, mainly elephants in ohio and thailand where they raised proceeds for animal protection. just a few years ago the world went wild for artwork, paintings that went for $25,000. you only have to go around the internet to find adorable examples of animals with flair.
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>> i don't think it's a slap in the face to anyone. if anyone i would be honest and say komar and melamid, you can do better than this. get better. >> reporter: if anything it understood lines the eternal question when is art art and when is it a bit of monkeying around? for "cbs this morning," charlie d'agata. >> sometimes i feel like a monkey behind the lens. >> how much would your art go qs g. l rhydyd
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this is a real pain in the shin believe it or not. shin kicking. this is a sport in england. opponents try to outdo each
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other with hard kicks. they can wear the padding. get your opponent to the ground and there's no kicking above the knee. there's something about that that looks like fun to me. >> i didn't get that. >> looks like something i did with my brothers growing up. it wasn't quite a sport. >> and you turned out okay. >> in the middle? >> one older, one younger. that's what you do in big families. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up, all fruits and vegetables are not created equal. if you're going to eat an apple a day or corn on the cob, she'll tell you which produce gives you the most bang for your health. plus today marks 45 years since robert f. kennedy was shot. there were heroes that night, one of them was from our own machine shell miller. only now does she learn how much he did in the middle of the chaos. she'll join us ahead. and a suburban mother of two
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is charged in a real life episode of "weeds." she lives in this wealthy suburb but this morning she's in jail charged with running a multi-million-dollar drug business. gayle. people who know her are amazed. >> blew my mind, especially knowing her, interacting with her day by day. once in a while we'd catch her smile, but, yo smell but we thought it was the neighborhood kids. >> it has a very disstrict smell. >> you've heard. >> i've heard. you know, there's that show on showtime actually called "weeds," which looks sort of like that. >> also "breaking bad." >> "breaking bad" too. >> right now it's time to show you this morning's headlines. this morning's headline, the
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no, times say that kids kick off their flight. the kids refused to sit down and turn off their phones. the students claim they were treated like terrorists. many of them claim the crew treated them like anti-sem tichl. according to online readers, the top unfinished books of all time is catch-22. a close second is "lord of the rings." i think it's hard to give up a book, even if you don't like it. >> no. you try for a while. >> and there's some books that you have to get to page 100 whatever before it gets interesting. "the seattle times" says amazon is looking at expanding its fresh grocery drivenly service. it could come to los angeles as soon as this week and san francisco later this year. bients available in seattle for more than fiechb years but
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amazon fresh has struggled to turn a profit. amazon's ceo says profit has been made. farmers are still seeing one cash crop going away but now they find a new one. >> reporter: 72-year-old james brown has been working his farm in southern virginia for more than 50 years. so your father was a tobacco farmer. >> and my grandfather and great grandfather. >> reporter: tobacco was so familiar to brown it's like an old friend. this will grow to be about how bigsome. >> about three feet high. >> like that high. >> that's right. >> reporter: but just down the road in another of his fields there's a newcomer that just recently poke through the summer. is this your first time to plant chickpeas? >> this is my first time planting chickpeas. >> reporter: yes, here in the heart of tobacco country the
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chickpea is taking root. >> do you think there's any chance of this tobacco country albuquerquing chickpea country? >> we'll try. >> now it's exploding in popularity in the u.s., no longer an ethnic or specialty stores, it's on supermarket shelves across america. low in fat and high in protein, hummus has a growing following among the health conscious. last year the u.s. harvest was up a staggering 51% over the year before. the u.s. crop is now grown mostly in the pacific northwest but row anyone zohar is expanding to virginia to meet growing u.s. demand. >> we want to make sure we have enough chickpeas and we want to reduce the risk we are having right now by growing chickpeas in only one part of the country. >> reporter: the largest hummus
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plant is in richmond. also nearby is virginia state university where research is funded in part by him are trying to determine which if any type of chick peas grow best in virginia. brown and other farmers in the area were invited to join in the experiment. >> you know, virginia was a wonderful solution. >> reporter: 'zo har says with the demand for tobacco going down and hummus growing up, using the tobacco fields for the growing of chickpeas is a win/win situation. >> reporter: had you heard of hummus before? >> no, i hadn't. >> reporter: if all goes well, he hopes to plant more, a lot more in the years to come. >> reporter: especially if it makes your farm more profitable. >> that's the truth. make it a whole lot better. >> reporter: brown says he's tried hummus and he likes it but what he likes even more is the excitement after all these years
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of growing something new. for cbs, chip reid, clover, virginia. >> go, farmer brown. i think hummus may be his new favorite food very soon. there's growing evidence that produce are sometimes far healther this than others. jo robinson is the author of a new book called "'ding on the wild side." good morning. >> good morning. >> we just saw farmer brown growing his chickpeas, but you say farmers for used have been struping nutrients out of their vegetables, not knowingly. >> not knowingly. it's not 50 or 100 years. you conditional go back and eat the fruits in our great grand patients' gardens. we've been stripping them out. >> how? >> unwittingly we're driven toward sweet and starace food and away from bitty food and many of these that fight
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antioxidant os bitter, so generation after generation wi chose things that were less bitter but more nutritious. >> i love this book. let's start with salads. how do you know which salads to use? >> iceberg has the least and then you get to leafy greens. they're better for you. the best are those with leafy greens with brown hints to it. >> in fact, you say arugula. >> it's beyond lettuce. it's a different species yeegs and it's almost a wild vegetable. that's what i want people to do is learn food in the supermarket that's close to the plants. >> the next is ownnions. you say don't choose sweet onions. why? >> you want sweet onions if
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you're going to put them on a sandwich. but the stronger ones have strong antioxidants. if you cook for five minutes, you're going to lose that anyway. >> what about apples? >> an apple a day -- >> ams are low in sugar and higher in antioxidants. the much better would be granny smith, fuji, red delicious and even honey crisp and if you can, eat the skin. >> are there some that are better? >> we can. but it's not complete without a little bit of bitterness. >> one thing that's important is corn. you say don't boil it. >> it's better to cook it in its
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husks. you can microwave it in the husk and barbecue it that way and it actually tastes better. >> do you practice all these things? >> i do. >> i believe you. >> thank you. >> thank you so much. 45 years after robert kennedy's assassination, a cbs news correspondent learns
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45 years ago today robert f. kennedy was shot at the ambassador hotel in california. he had just claimed victory. the role of a doctor who tried to save kennedy has been lost to history, but not to his family. his daughter's here and she is our own michelle miller. michelle, good morning. >> good morning do you all. this is a very, very personal
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story. part of my own family lore. growing up, my father used to talk about how he rushed to senator kennedy's side, but not until my own son dared me to prove it did i look for evidence to back up what my dad had told me. with calm precision dr. ross miller described to cbs news correspondent terry drinkwater the tragedy that had unfolded backstage hours earlier. >> reporter: can you describe the senator's wounds? >> well, it was a mass of blood and head injuries. the extent of the them could not be ascertained immediately. >> reporter: i never knew this interview existed. few did. it was buried deep within the cbs news archives. >> how did mrs. kennedy appear to take this? >> well, obviously she was terribly upset. i thought she handled herself expertly. she was not in a state of panic.
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she was deeply concerned for her husband. >> reporter: he believed the senator was the best hope for bridging the nation's economic and racial divide. he and hundreds of supporters were celebrating kennedy's victory in the california primary. >> now it's on to chicago and let's win there. >> reporter: panic rippled through the ballroom. five rushed backstage to help including my father, a trauma surgeon. the one who shared the stage he was the first to go down. he took a head standing next to the senator. >> there's still a dent there. the bullent went through the head and out. >> you're lucky. >> very lucky. if i would have been an-inch taller, he would have got me.
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>> you check him. there's another doctor there. >> right. >> who was that o'doctor? >> i don't know. >> it was that chaotic. >> right. i was concentrating on the task at hand. >> schrade was drifting in and out of consciousness. he has virtually no memory of that night. >> so this is what we found in the cbs news archives. >> how many others were hit, doctor? >> i know of two others. i also took care of paul schrade. he had a deep laceration of the forehead, and although he had a great deal of blood loss and a lot of blood around, apparently his injuries are not critical. >> paul, to see this and see how he knew your name and he -- >> this is a real surprise for me because, you know, i didn't see him for one thing, but now i know that he was there and helping. how can i express my gratitude for that except to say to you you had a great father. >> reporter: in all there were six shooting victims including
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six journalist it. s ira goldstein and william weisel. everyone except kennedy survived. my father died in 1996 without ever again seeing the people he had helped. two publications cited his service, a cover story in "jet" magazine and a photo caption in "life," but i couldn't find him in the picture. so we tracked down the man who took it. >> so who is identified as dr. ross miller in that picture? >> i don't know. >> he's responsible for many of the iconic images of that night. >> i backed into the crowd. i'm holding the crowd back. the camera's around my neck, and every once in a while i would go like that. that's how this picture was made. >> reporter: but of all the pictures he took, none captured
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my father tending the injured. to this day he says he can't talk about that night with anyone who was there with him. >> i find it quite difficult. we all know what would have happened. >> reporter: what would have happened? >> the country would be in a far better place, i believe, had he become president. >> reporter: the loss of kennedy so traumatized him he fled to the mountains. paul schrade went to the dezzer. essentially they both found their purpose. schrade helped to build the kennedy schools. >> bob kennedy was speaking, standing about here. >> reporter: the ballroom where kennedy gave his final speech is now the library that bears schrade's name.
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that's when something jumped out at me. >> bill, i think we may have found him. >> what? >> i think we may have found him. >> let me see. >> it's a picture inside the good samaritan hospital. there in the corner standing just outside of kennedy's room, the good dor. miller. >> yes, it's him. that's him. >> reporter: finally the photographic proof that my dad actually did what he said. my family history forever intertwined with the night that may have changed the course of american history. >> thank you. >> i'm amazed. i'm amazed. >> michelle, what a story. this is incredible. >> beautiful piece, michelle. >> and to think it all started because my son said to me, mommy, i don't believe you, you're going to have to prove that to me. >> what does he say now? >> he's -- i think he's amazed by it. and i tell you one of the really amazing things. finding that cbs news archival
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footage was liquid gold. it was just priceless. and i found it reading the fbi files. there was a mention of two cbs news reporters who gave my dad a lift back from the hospital to the hotel where his car was, and in skparj for that lift, he agreed to an interview. >> and michelle, now you work at cbs. i think about the full circle. >> full circle. that went through my mind. you know, i've told people this story and i took my dad's word, and people, i think, you know, are kind of like, oh, well, that's nice. but to actually see it live and in limping col iliving color an that ballroom -- did you see the diversity of that? >> all those people. there were janitors standing next to millionaires standing next to doctors and lawyers and people working in the fields of california. to see that coalition and
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collaboration and to know it was in the '60s right after the riots and all the unrest. >> the nature of that campaign, congratulations. >> beautifully done. >> thank you. >> thank your son. how old is he? >> he's 11. and thank to my husband and daughter margo as well. >> we'll be right back. you're watching "cbs this morning."
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that is beyonce on stage for the concert in london on saturday night. there have been a lot of rumors about beyonce and her husband jay-z expecting baby number two and maybe you saw the picture that looks like she's drinking wine. some are saying it was only grape juice. so i got a call yesterday from
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team beyonce and they're basically saying stop the crazy. she is absolutely positively not pregnant at this time. it's a crazy rumor that they can't seem to stop. they want us to know she's not pregnant. >> what do they think about the questions being asked of her if she's pregnant. >> it's a very personal question. it's true. she and jay-z want to have another baby and when the time is right, they'll share it. they have standing invitations to come here any time, but she's absolutely not pregnant. >> thank you. that does it for us. >> thank you. that does it for us. up next, your l [ both ] we're foodies. [ both laughing ] but our plants were starving. [ man ] we love to eat. we just didn't know that our plants did, too. then we started using miracle-gro liquafeed
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every two weeks. now our plants get the food they need while we water. dinner's ready. come and get it. no one goes hungry in this house. so they're bigger, healthier, and more beautiful. guaranteed. with miracle-gro anyone can have a green thumb. and a second helping. [ both laughing ] when you feed your plants... everyone grows with miracle-gro.
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