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

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major garrett and john miller have details. tropical storm andrea races up the east coast after slamming florida. millions are in the storm's path. and one of the world ee most divisive figures, wikileaks founder julian assange talks to us from asylum. the justice department may be really to go after him. but we begin this morning with today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. seemed like it was a freight train coming through here. it just shook the whole house. >> tropical storm andrea marches up the east coast. >> drenching millions of americans who live from georgia all the way up to maine. >> andrea tracks through eastern north carolina this afternoon. >> yesterday the storm slammed ashore in florida with drenching rain, powerful winds, even some tornadoes. the controversy over government snooping on cell phone calls appears to be expanding to internet companies. >> the program called prism looks at audio, e-mail, video,
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and even connecting logs to track movement. >> it's not brand new. it's been going on for some seven years. >> well, president obama wakes up this morning in california where later today he'll begin a historic summit with china's president. lawmakers are outraged all over the irs, this time over the big spending at the $4 million conference and the infamous "star trek" video. >> not only is it a waste of the nation's money but an insult the "star trek." wall street staged a rally ahead of -- prince philip is in hospital. all that -- >> wins game one here in the 2013 finals. usain bolt comes up short in his signature race, beaten out by an american. >> -- and all that matters --
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the bottom line is the u.s. government has phone records of millions of americans who have nothing, absolutely nothing do with terrorists. >> -- on "cbs this morning." the obama administration called this program a critical tool and protecting the nation from terrorist threats in the united states and not just because anyone who's dealt with verizon's customer service wants to kill someone. captioning funded by cbs welcome to "cbs this morning," and good morning, norah. >> good morning, charlie. a lot of information about government snooping and surveillance on all kinds of things including the internet and phone records. >> they not only involve the phone records of many of us. >> the obama administration's top official says the tracking is legal and necessary. major garrett is at the white house. major, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, norah
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and charlie. the white house insists we're not talking about a dragnet congress. people want to know more about it. the obama administration has already had to admit about the sweeping details. as for information about the new searches, they prompted james clapper to release a statement. he said, and i quote, information collected under this program is among the most important and valuable foreign intelligence information we collect and is used to protect our nation from a wide variety of threats. clapper also said leagues about the surveillance are reprehensible. prism has never been disclosed before. the national security agency already involved in tracking the phone calls of millions of americans are reportedly trolling daily through internet videos, photographs, e-mails, and blogs. looking for evidence of terrorist attacks in the making.
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the program has been in place since 2007. analysts track phone calls and sift through billions of pieces of internet data trying to determine patterns. if they notice something suspicious and it involves someone in the u.s., authorities still need a court order to wire tap a phone or monitor an online conversation. the legal basis grew out of the patriot act after noip. only a handful of lawmakers knew of prism and all were sworn to secrecy. but revelations of the program this week raised alarms from both parties on capitol hill. lawmaker james sensenbrenner is outraged. democratic senator jeff murkily. >> millions of phone records are being tracked daily who you're talking to, how long, all the details except the actually
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conversation itself. what else is being collected. >> reporter: those who have been briefed on the program argues surveillance has stopped attempted terrorist attacks in the united states. >> i hope americans appreciate the work. i hope the american people appreciate that the way you protect the homeland is you try to find out what the enemy's up to. >> reporter: the prism program involves some of the biggest technology companies including apple. they told cbs news, quote, we have never heard of prism. we do not provide any government agency with direct access to our servers, and any government agency requesting customer data must get a court orders. the foreign intelligence surveillance court can issue directives that allow the government to have access to internet servers and the trove of private data they obtain. prism is now responsible for putting so much before the president in his daily briefing,
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it's now a driving force in giving the president a window to dealing with terrorist threats. >> john mill eric former director with national intelligence. good morning. >> good morning. >> what does that mean to the average person? >> well, what it means to the average american is not that much because the rules don't change. they can look at this is the spying business. these are spy agencies. that's what they do for a living. they spy. but by u.s. law they can only spy on foreigners outside the united states. now, if you're going to investigate -- that's different. that's what you do with americans -- that requires all the same hoops, you have to get a court order and so on. the question is how do you know when you're looking at ip addresses when you stumble into an american. and they have built-in algorithms and a lot of cautions and when they think it's an american, they have to look into
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it. is this a u.s. person, foreign person, so on. there's a lot of angst every day to make sure they're not going through yourself and my stuff and if they have a reason to, they bring it to the fbi and say you have to investigate this and they jump through all the normal hoops. >> there are some in congress calling for them to declass nigh it. >> if you look at the classic example, there on september 6, 2009, around dawn, an e-mail comes from an ip address to another ip address. one of them is nothing we're paying attention to. the other is one that's been flagged as an al qaeda mail drop that is rarely used. so when that bell rings, they say, hey, they hardly ever use this account but he's behind it. who's he talking to? when they find out the other ip
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address is connected to colorado, and there's a plot to blow up the new york subways, that's all prevented. that's how it works. >> you have "the new york times" today echoing some of the real concerns about privacy in this whole thing says the administration has now lost all credibility on this issue. mr. obama is proving the truism that the executive branch will use any power it is given and very likely abuse it. what about those concerns? >> well, i think that there is law upon law and rule upon rule and lawyer upon lawyer built into these programs to protect americans from this kind of surveillance and i think that is the point the dna is trying to make. secondly, every time we try to reveal how it works, they all change their behavior when they learns that and it makes it harder to collect. >> john miller, thank you. the first named storm of the atlantic hurricane season now threatens the entire east coast.
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tropical storm andrea has already flooded parts of florida. at least eight tornadoes were reported as the storm hit the gulf coast. sloane is in wrightsville, florida. sloane, good morning. >> good morning, charlie, good morning, norah. we're feeling the effects, let me tell you. it is rainy, it is windy, and let me tell you, check out those waves. so far no damage or injury. one thing is for sure, andrea has kicked off this hurricane season with full force. >> oh, my god, doug. you might get hit by blowing debris. >> reporter: flooding parts of the state with heavy rains and spawning multiple tornadoes. >> it started sounding like a
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freight train was outside. it lasted 30, 40 seconds. i run over to the other side of the house and the oak tree comes through the front window. >> reporter: just outside palm beach, the storms knocked down power lines, toppled trailers, and snapped trees in its path of destruction. >> i thought as soon as it's over, i have to go check on my horses. thank god they were okay. >> reporter: harsh winds were a big problem in ft. myers as andrea blew over both and tossed some sailors into the water. >> when i went out there, it wasn't nearly as bad. not too windy. >> reporter: despite the damage left behind, this tropical storm didn't claim any lives, but local residents know it's still early in hurricane season and anything can happen. >> we certainly are shown every day we have very little control over the nature, but we're just thankful there was no loss of life at any of this and this point and we rejoice that things
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can be prepared. >> reporter: andrea is supposed to dump more rain on wrightsville beach today, and a flash flood watch is in effect through the evening and we could see more rain over the next few days because of this system. charlie, norah? >> sloane, thank you. jeff berardelli is tracking this. where do we expect to know and who's going to be hardest hit? >> it's going to move up the carolina coast into new york city. it looks like rain will be a possibility. also the threat of tornados. let's go to the map and see where it's located right now. pretty close to south carolina. it's racing to the northeast at 20 miles an hour. the winds have subsided a bit, only 45 miles an hour. by this afternoon it's over north carolina. overnight the storm is located off the coast of new york city and new england and it's in canada by tomorrow afternoon. the good news is the conditions will certainly improve by tomorrow afternoon. looking at the radar and
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satellite, the watch box. certainly the possibility of isolated tornadoes. heavy rain up and down the eastern seaboard, also into boston. how much rain are we going to see? notice the strip of yellow and orange. that's as much as 5 to 8 inches of flooding rainfall. flooding is possible, charlie and norah, today. that's where president obama is meeting his chinese counterpart later today. the summit is expected to focus on economic issues, north korea, and cyber security. chip reid is in san jose, california. chip, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, charlie and norah. you know, economic issues are always big at chinese/american summits but this one could include accusations by the u.s. that chinese is hacking u.s. businesses and defense systems. the pentagon believes china is hacking into u.s. computers to
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learn about high-tech weapons systems. defense secretary chuck hagel made the charge last week. >> some of which appear to be tied to the chinese government and military. >> reporter: white house officials say president obama will at a minimum ask the chinese president for an explanation. >> there's a broad array of topics the two leaders will discuss, and certainly cyber security will be one of them. >> reporter: other topics on the u.s. agenda will be lobbying china to prevent north korea from creating nuclear missiles, and persuading beijing that new u.s. military activity in asia is about protecting u.s. allies, not protecting china. the two will meet at sunny lands, a retreat where they hope they'll be available. the talks will be less rigid, more candid, and to produce real
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conversation. >> i want to welcome vice president sheets to the oval office. >> they met more than a year ago when xi was the vice president of china. >> we have tried to emphasize that because of china's extraordinarily -- extraordinary development over the last two decades that with expanding power and prosperity also comes increased responsibilities. >> and, charlie and norah, one really interesting thing about president xi, when he was in his early 0s he lived in a rural area in iowa with a family. the white house hopes that will help the two presidents connect. >> thanks, chip. wall street investors will be watching the jobs report.
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the dow jones industrial average has gained 80 points to finish over 15,000. anthony mason is with us this morning. what's going on? >> the market's got a little volatile in the last week or so. i think that's kind of a minor anxiety attack about what's the fed going to do and what impact. that's a big reason why they're concerned about the jobs report today and what that's going to show. the thing you've got to remember is the dow, even with this recent volatility is 12% for the year, which, of course, is a huge number. >> what about the report that the americans have gained most of the wealth that they lost due to the recession. who does that apply to? >> well, obviously it applies to wealthy americans as opposed to ordinary americans but make no mistake, it includes homes, stocks, assets. it went up 3.5 to $4 trillion. it takes us back to precrisis
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levels. the wealth of the nation is now $7 trillion. if your home is worth more, if your retirement fund is worth more, yo feel wealthier and you're more likely to spend. for the underlying economy, that's a very important thing. >> if they have said clearly they're going to focus on jobs -- >> they're waiting for unemployment to get down to 6.5%. and we're a point away from it. we've got a six-month number that's about 2,000 a month. we need more than that. but some on wall street worry if the number is too good the fed may start pulling money out of the economy and that may affect the entire economy. >> and interest rates. >> yes. >> thank you. prince philip is having surgery today and is expected to remain hospitalized for up to two weeks. on monday he turns 92. charlie d'agata is outside in
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london where he is staying. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, charlie and norah. the prince is said to be in good spirits. he looked well at buckingham palace. guests say he was laughing, cracking jokes. he was relaxed. hours later he was admitted to hospital. what we're told is preplanned exploratory operation on his abdomen. he'll be here for two weeks, meaning he'll spend his 92nd birthday in the hospital. the queen is said to be doing business as yaususual. he was hospitalized twice last month for bladder conditions. time to show you news around the gloub.
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"the philadelphia inquirer" said there was a warning about the billing weeks ago. the work on the building was shoddy. the demolition work, he said, was safe to continue. "the boston globe" says two massachusetts men are suing the "new york post." they claim the post falsely portrayed them as suspects in the marathon bombing. the post plaft tered their picture on page one headlined bad men. the post says they did not identify them as suspected. the "usa today" says the fda panel favors to ease the ban on avandia. the level shows it may not affect heart attacks as people originally thought. >> officials in newtown, connecticut, decided to demolish
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the building where 20 children and six adoesn'ts were shot to death. "the new york times" says more restaurants are using a no tips policy. they say it's part of providing an authentic japanese >> announcer: this national weather report sponsored by city simplicity card. go to citi.com/simplicity to
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apply. a black eye for the marine corps. 14 current and former marines accused of being part of a huge auto theft ring it's connected to military contra band, drugs, meth amphetamine, cocaine, as well as guns. >> the putins are getting a divorce. hear what russia's president says in one of his strangest public appearances yet. and delta air lines is cutting dozens of flights and
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workers. we'll talk with peter greenberg, how it's affecting more than just travelers. "cbs this morning" is back. stay tuned for your local news. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by safelite autoglass. [ female announcer ] a classic macaroni & cheese from stouffer's
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tonight will be the last show until september 4th. i'm actually leaving i think for a very noble reason. i don't know if anyone knows this, i'm getting a massive makeover. here it is.
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it's my show now. you can't even -- hey, look, look. i've got your pens. i'm putting them in my pants. i'm putting them in my pants. i thought you had left. i'm sorry about the pen. >> jon stewart is going to take a hiatus. >> and i love john oliver too. it will be fun to watch him. >> not really a break but directing. >> welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, the newest airline cutback that's hitting memphis, tennessee. passengers and employees are sure to fill the impact. peter greenberg weighs in on delta's plan to shut down. a major hub. and vladimir putin took his
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wife to a ballet last night. when they came out, he said they were getting a divorce. we'll find out why he said that after facing years of rumors. more than a dozen marines are accused of taking part in a stolen car ring in san diego. as carter evans reports, the suspects may have stolen vehicles and weapons from their own base. >> please. co . >> reporter: earlier this week they fanned out across san diego and arrested 50 people suspected in taking part in a massive auto theft ring involving 92 vehicles worth nearly $70,000. >> of those 50, really are military, seven marines who are active as well as seven who have separated from service. >> reporter: 19 of the suspects pleaded not guilty in san diego superior court on thursday.
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the others are awaiting a hearing date. the incident goes far beyond a simple case of auto theft. >> it's connected to not just car thieves, auto thieves, but it's connected to military contraband, meth an get mean, cocaine, and drugs. all that combination makes it a startling case. >> reporter: it including everything from bullets to gas masks. police believe some of it was -- >> marines are human. sometimes they do bad things but it is disappointing. >> reporter: officials at camp pendleton had no comment on the case but they say military has fully cooperated in what is now a ten-month-long investigation. only a small portion of those indicted are connected to the military, but those individuals like all the suspects in the case now face up to 25 years in
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prison. for "cbs this morning," carter evans, los angeles. when delta northwest airlines merged in 2008 officials say they would not close any of their hubs. now they say they're slashing flights at northwest hub in memphis. that leaves delta with six hubs. 30 workers in memphis could lose their jobs. cbs news travel editor peter greenberg has more this morning. why is delta claiming this? >> if you look at the map, the close proximity of memphis to their fortress hub in atlanta. remember when memphis says they're going to close it, will it me given you a little history. in 2009 when this happens, there were 240 flights a day. now today it's down to about 96, and by september it will be down to 60. >> peter, why should this concern the average flyer, the average passenger? >> well, it's all about air.
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you've got to be concerned. how do you keep your corporations in memphis if people can't fly to there or from there or airfares are so high they can't afford it. this is happens to a number of cities across the country. >> is this what happens when airlines merge? >> initially they get much bigger and then much smaller. we see contractions all across the board. this happened in 2000 when they basically took over twa. when this happened, that's where twa was based. they opened a brand-new runway, a third raunway to accommodate what they thought was an skpapgs. they dropped to 36 and they hardly ever use that runway. you can go bowling on that runway right now. >> what does that mean that promise is made, peter? >> well, when delta made this announce mnlts in 2009, their executives at that point said we're not going to include any hubs. this is not about subtraction. this is about addiction. well, that never happened.
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what you're seeing is contraction all across the board and some are claiming that delta broke their promise. >> all right. peter greenberg, thank you. and after years of speculation, russia's president and his wife finally announced last night they're getting a divorce. like many of his public statements it happened in a rather odd way. russia's president vladimir putin is known for his publicity stunts, riding on a horse without a shirt, flying alongside a flock of endangered cranes during their winter migration. but on thursday he alongside his wife made one of his more bizarre appearances. they smiled for photographers, complimented the performers and then casually announced their
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29-year marriage was over, nearly 30 years. for all of his very public displays of bravado he's notoriously private about his personal life. even questions rose about his couple who in recent years have rarely been seen together. they became a constant source of conversation leading the president to a series of younger women, most notably with an oliympic gymnast. she won a gold medal in the 2004 games. some are speculating that the 30-year-old beauty whose made the cover of russian vogue is behind the split. she is said to have had two children with putin. but thursday night there was no mention of elenelena. they would have seemed like a picture of domestic bliss had they not been announcing the end of their associate yet union. they say their split is civilized and they'll always
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remain close. >> this is apparently the first divorce for a russian leader since pete ter great and people are always interested in the private lives of leaders. whether he has a relationship with this former oliympic gymnat and has children with her. >> we'll find out. beaches and swimming pools can be dangerous places, we know. >> i'm don dahler. 700 children will drown in beaches and lakes around the country. will you recognize the warning signs? they may surprise you. that story straight ahead on "cbs this morning." [ male announcer ] this is bob, a regular guy with an irregular heartbeat. the usual, bob? not today. [ male announcer ] bob has afib: atrial fibrillation not caused by a heart valve problem,
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she would help her child. go! goooo! [ male announcer ] with everything. but instead she gives him capri sun super-v. with one combined serving of fruits and vegetables. capri sun super-v. [ male announcer ] osteo bi-flex helps revitalize your joints to keep 'em jumpin'.° like calcium supplements can help your bones, osteo bi-flex can help your joints. osteo bi-flex... now available in all major retailers and warehouse clubs. richard, why are you wearing grandpa's jacket? i'm not richard. i'm grandpa smucker. [ male announcer ] tim and richard smucker knew that just like their grandfather they too would make the world's best jam. with a name like smucker's, it has to be good.
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hey, how about that alerks rodriguez using those illegal performance-enhancing drugs. let me tell you. i've about seen a-rod play, and he should be getting his money
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back from the steroid people. >> quite a remark when dealing with that issue. we turn now to a very important subject. more than 700 children drown a year in the united states. it's the second most common causes of death for children 14 and under. much of it could be prevented if people knew what droubing looks like. don dahler is in camden, new jersey. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, charlie and norah. i worked my way through school as a lifeguard and thankfully i never lost a swimmer, but i had plenty of close calls. this is the hollywood version of a drowning victim, but that's not what it was like for christina's son ryan. two years ago while playing in the community pool her 3-year-old almost drowned. >> i thought there would be some
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sort of warning, some sort of cry for help, but it was silent and it was straight down like an anchor. there was nothing. >> reporter: frank was a lifeguard for 20 years and has made a lifelong study of drowning. >> what does it look like when someone's drowning in the real world. >> to the parent it may look as though the child is dog paddling. >> reporter: if the movement is only up and down, that's a signal. as part of his research he would set up a camera at the beach. that lifeguard is a young frank pia. his parents were two feet away, completely unaware. a quarter of the drownings happen with people present. pia says when a person starts to drown their body goes into survival mode, making deliberate actions like yelling or waving
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their arms over their head nearly impossible. here's other clues. their head may be in the water, that i bha tilted back, they may look like they're climbing an invisible ladder. small children may apea to be rolling onnen their back. if you see these signs, you don't have long to react. >> i was so lucky. if it had been one second later it could have be been too late. >> reporter: she's right. it could happen within seconds. if they're not rescued quickly and administered cpr, they could be gone. frank says if you take your kids to a pool even if lifeguards are present, you need to watch them too. if you want to relax and read the bestseller, he says pull the kids out of the water for a while. >> that's a really important story. think about that when i have young chirp. you think they can swim at age 6. you think you don't have to
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watch them as closely. this will raise awareness in all gnatters in 1982. the public gets go inside the king's castle. can you guess where that is? the answer is next on "cbs this morning."
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24 hour wear. flawless results. if yand you're talking toevere rheuyour rheumatologistike me, about trying or adding a biologic. this is humira, adalimumab. this is humira working to help relieve my pain. this is humira helping me through the twists and turns. this is humira helping to protect my joints from further damage. doctors have been prescribing humira for over ten years. humira works by targeting and helping to block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to ra symptoms. for many adults, humira is proven to help relieve pain and stop further joint damage. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal events, such as infections, lymphoma, or other types of cancer, have happened. blood, liver and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure have occurred. before starting humira , your doctor should test you for tb.
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ask your doctor if you live in or have been to a region where certain fungal infections are common. tell your doctor if you have had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have symptoms such as fever, fatigue, cough, or sores. you should not start humira if you have any kind of infection. ask your doctor if humira can work for you. this is humira at work. that's why we're donating to wounded warrior project. at brawny® paper towels, we admire strength. we stand strong with our nation's heroes and their families. pick up a specially marked package of brawny® to learn how you can help. ♪
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where we've switched their fruits and veggies with produce from walmart. it's a fresh-over. that's great. tastes like you just picked them. so far, it's about the best strawberry i've had this year. walmart works directly with growers to get you the best-quality produce they've ever had. all this produce is from walmart. oh, my gosh. i'm shocked. [ laughs ] i know where i'm going to be shopping for strawberries now. find fresh berries and all your quality produce backed by our money back guarantee. walmart. you know that song. "all that mattered" 31 years ago today graceland opened to the public five years after elvis presley died.
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3,000 people paid $5 each to tour his memphis mansion that day. more than 18 million elvis fans from around the globe have made the pilgrimage to graceland. one of them, do you remember, charlie, was the former prime minister of japan who idolized elvis. he was the guest, i remember, of, i think president bush and he went to graceland with him. an elvis fan. >> esther williams, one of hollywood's biggest stars of the 1940s and 1950s died yesterday. she was a swimmer before mgm turned her into the million-dollar mermaid. she started in dozens of musicals. her synchronized swimming inspired the olympic sport. she retired in 1952 and started
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her own swimwear business. esther williams was 91 years old. >> sorry to see her go. and the justice department getting ready to crack down on julian assange. we're going to take to him from his place of asylum, you'll see him only on "cbs this morning." we went out and asked people a simple question: how old is the oldest person you've known? we gave people a sticker and had them show us. we learned a lot of us have known someone who's lived well into their 90s. and that's a great thing. but even though we're living longer, one thing that hasn't changed much is the official retirement age. ♪ the question is how do you make sure you have the money you need to enjoy all of these years. ♪ ( birds chirping )
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it is 8:00 a.m. welcome back to "cbs this morning." tropical storm andrea is causing troubles for the carolinas to new england. the threat includes flooding and
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tornadoes. only on "cbs this morning," julian assange, the wikileaks founder, we'll ask him about the bradley manning trial. plus this. should american men take a lesson from carey grant or george clooney? we'll talk to a writer who says we are losing our charm. but first here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. the obama administration has already had to admit to sweeping phone tracking and it declassified under pressure some details about the program. it not only involved the phone records of millions of us. a company called prism collected data from the internet. every time we explain how this works, the terrorists, the spies all make changes and it makes us harder to change that. >> it looks like rain is going to be the big threat today up and down the eastern seaboard.
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>> the most contentious moment at this meeting could well be the accusations by the united states that china is hacking the u.s.'s defense system. some on wall street are wondering if the world is too good they could start pulling money out. >> he's said to be in good spirits before his operation. he will be under general anesthetic which is risky business for a man about to turn 92. president putin and his wife announced last night they're going to get a divorce. or in simpler terms, steven segal is turns into the villain like steven sa gal, the movie. i'm charlie rose along with gayle king and norah o'donnell.
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the storm caused damage but no one has died. meteorologist jeff berardelli is watching the storm as it moves up the east coast. jeff, where's the storm going? >> gayle, the storm is moving quickly up the earn seaboard. it's headed up toward new york city later today and overnight tonight. let's go to the maps and show you what we've go. you can see where it's located over north carolina. lots of heavy rain and a tornado. as we follow the track to the north you can see all the heavy rain occurring in philadelphia and new york city. as far as total rainfall, notice the strip of orange and red that's five inches of flooding rainfall. charl charlie, norah, gayle? >> jeff, thank you. we reported yesterday on government's surveillance of millions of americans' phone calls. now we're learning about other
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tracking data from a company called prism. it tracks search history, e-mail content, files sent and received and even live chats. good morning. >> good morning, gayle, norah, and charlie. the government wanted to keep it secret but now some of the phone tracking has been declassified. also james clapper confirmed it was legal and had saved american lives. he called recent surveillance leaks reprehensible. prism has never been disclosed before. the national security agency already involved in tracking the phone calls of millions of americans are reportedly trolling daily through internet videos, photographs, and blogs, looking for evidence of terrorist attacks in the making. the legal basis grew out of the patriot act passed after 9/11.
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only half of them knew of prism and were sworn to secrecy, but it raised alarms from both parties on capitol hill. republican jim sensenbrenner helped draft the act. >> i'm angry. i think they have abused this by going too far. >> reporter: but both the chairman of the senate and house committees briefed on the program. the american people appreciate that the way you protect the homeland is you try to find out what the enemy's up to. >> the foreign intel jenn sulig surveillance court can give access to the trove of private data. that information drives many of the threat assessments president obama sees every day. >> major, thank you. cyber security will be a major issue for president obama as he meets with china that's president today. sunny lands was built in the
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1960s as a winter home for a publisher walter annenberg. it's an informal setting for the two. it's to help them relax and m e make. >> it's raising some concerns in the u.s. however, in a new gallup poll, 55% of americans say they see china as an ally rather than an enemy. seth doane is with us from beijing. seth, good morning to you. >> good morning to you, gayle. yes, we want to know what the chinese were saying ahead of the summit, so we decided to go with the next generation of diplomats. china's college student. in this international relations act at beijing's communication's university in china, today's summit provides a real life lesson in diplomacy. >> they're going to talk to each other. that's important. >> we sat down with this
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24-year-old, 22-year-old and 25-year-old. they think china's economic rise is seen as a threat by the u.s. and worry about the u.s. military buildup in asia. till they say the two presidents should focus on common goals. >> we still hold out hope for no nuclear weapons. >> you're saying in some cases the u.s. and china share the same perspective about north korea. >> yeah, yeah. >> what about sicyber security, these two countries stealing secrets from each other. >> cyber security prompted a blank stare despite being a key issue for the u.s. >> is cyber security something that you all think about, worry about? >> it's not involved in our class, in our curriculum. >> reporter: allegations that chinese hackers have stolen u.s. military secrets and cost u.s.
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00 zreds of millions of dollars are not covered in the media. this summit at this sprawling estate called sunny lands near paul. springs, california, is a chance to bridge gaps. >> i think america needs china? >> you think america needs china. >> yeah. and i think china also needs america. >> we spoke with several providers who say they were quite frustrated that so much of these hacking allegations were played out in the media. they say they want to take the allegations behind closed doors and that's what's exacted to happen with this summit. >> one thing you hope to have happen is the younger chinese will have a different attitude about this. >> chip reid who was out there,
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here's what's interesting, president xi lived with an american family in iowa. he is one of the biggest stars in the world, but justin bieber has become very unpopular with some of his california neighbors. we'll show you why they're so mad and what they're doing. ahead on "cbs this morning." ever.
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only on "cbs this morning," one of the most divisive figures in the world, wikileaks founder julian assange. he talks with us about the bradley manning trial. he's in ecuador where he has political asylum. that's coming up next on on "cbs this morning." >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by usaa. serving the financial needs of current and former military members and their families. vietnam in 1972. [ all ] fort benning, georgia in 1999.
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resuming on monday with sergeant manning. justice department prosecutors reportedly are trying to link manning to wikileaks founder julian assange. >> julian assange has been given asylum at ecuador in london. good morning to you. >> good morning. >> good morning, julian. clearly the prosecutors are trying to link the two of you in opening argument. do you feel at all guilty that bradley manning is on trial and in prison while you remain protected at this time? >> well, not guilty, but rather concerned about his fate.
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bradley manning is facing a capital offense. the prosecutors said they will only ask for life imprisonment, but that is effectively a living death. the big story, of course, is the national security agency leaks. let's ask ourselves whether the whistle blower who has revealed those -- and there's more to come -- is going in three years' time to be in exactly the same situation as bradley is in today. >> julian, one of the questions that is at the center of this debate is do people -- the terrorists don't operate in open source. do people have a right to these secret programs that protect them from the next boston marathon bombing, if that tees program that's going to link this phone call from a terrorist's number to this number in the united states? >> well, people have a right to understand what the government's doing in their name.
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of course, we need government to do all sorts of things when it's done properly. there's a law. people are aware of what the law is. there's a person carrying out the law, a person checking the law. there's open justice where judges in their decisions of trying people, themselves are tried before the public. it doesn't mean that every aspect, every detail must be public, but at least enough parameters to understand what is really going on. and there's no way that the american or international public was aware. was aware in detail of these mass spying programs, google, facebook, and so on. >> let's talk about the bradley manning case. let's talk about the bradley manning case because everybody all of us believe we need to hold government accountable but
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also there's a sense you do not do things that threaten national security and endanger the lives of innocent americans. that doesn't seem to be a concern for you and mr. manning. >> that's completely false. in fact, despite white spread speculation and hype by the tabloid media, not even the pentagon says even a single person was physically harmed as a result of any of their publications. they said they did not need to be protected. in this prosecution against bradley manning, the prosecution is not even going to claim that a single person was harmed. in fact, they have preemptively banned bradley manning from giving evidence, official u.s. government correspondents and witnesses from presenting them
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to the court to show that no one was harmed. so here we have a situation where a young man, a young soldier has been detained for three years without trial. that's the longest in history since world war ii. >> julian, do you believe the government should not be able to keep anything secret? >> the government has the responsibility to uphold right is. the government itself has no rights. it's their respondent to protect the right us of people. sometimes that -- >> how do you respond -- >> the duty of journalists to expose the behavior. sometimes these duties are in conflict and that's okay. >> you have been called, though, by secretary of state -- former secretary of state hillary clinton and the leaks not just an attack on america's foreign policy but the attack on intering inial commu
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endangered of american soldiers. >> that's simply false. speak to robert gates. look at what the pentagon is saying. it is simply false. no one in any official capacity alleges that anyone has been put at harm, nato and kabul could find no one. >> i think the real question there, julian -- the real question there could be could that be your decision to decide for 15,000 people that you're going to reveal their names and then just hope nothing happens. >> well, it's not a matter of -- [ both ] we're foodies.
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honey nut cheerios has whole grain oats that can help lower cholesterol. and it tastes good? sure does! right... ♪ wow. delicious, right? yeah. it's the honey, it makes it taste so... ♪ well, would you look at the time... what's the rush? be happy. be healthy. so are you ready for the taxi cab of the future? this morning it's parked right here outside of the cbs broadcast center. it's due to hit h tthe streets
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october. it's got a very unusual shape. it's got usb and climate control for all of your germaphobes. very easy to clean. leg room and cup holders. if you look up, you can look at the skyline through the transparent panoramic roof. and it costs $100,000 an hour. i have no idea how much it costs. >> it's very roomy. i hope it's also a green taxi cab. >> there you go. where are all the charming men these days? george clooney may be the only one left. >> no. we protest. charlie rose is at the table. >> he is one of the most charming. >> i'm going to take a lesson. we're also headed to the track. 40 years ago secretariat won.
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dr. jon lapook saw it. we'll talk about him being trackside. look at jon lapook. wow. wow. right now time to show you this morning's headlines from around the globe. the "sacramento bee" says the transit authority has authorized its contract. the first 30-mile run will run from ma dare rowe, california, to fresno. this title, george w. obama. look at that. it's about it. when you look at them, you can see both of them very easily. it criticizes president obama for, in its words, embracing policies echoing the bush administration. "the wall street journal" says nightclubs are targeting those over the age of 30 with children. some are opening their clubs before sunset so babies and kids
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can come along too. it means more profit. are you liking this? >> however, i must say, this conversation actually came up yesterday. we to do dance parties but i don't know about a nightclub for children. it doesn't seem appropriate. >> i don't know about that one either. justin bieber, he's booked a trip to space aboard the virgin galactic. he recorded this on going, that's good news for his neighbors who would rather not have him here on earth it seems. he ee's become very unpopular w his late night parties and high-speed rides. >> reporter: justin bieber might be one of the most famous teenagers on the planet, beloved by millions. not so in kale a vasys. residents outside the tony enclave are threatening to with
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hold their association dues which can be up to $800 a month if bieber doesn't cool his rock star antics. bieber moved to the gated community last year after purchasing a six-bedroom home worth $6.5 million. since then he's had a series of high-profile run-ins with his neighbors over egg from noisy parties to high-speed joy riding on the residential streets. last week legend aary nfler spo out. >> you fly through a neighborhood. you hit and kill someone. now you stand before the judge, i'm sorry, all that crying burke if i'm a parent, i'm missed. >> real estate agent jill lieberman lives in a gated community down the street from
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bieber and many other celebrities including katherine jackson and kardashians. >> people think of stars. >> they can move behind gates, gated community. they don't have paparazzi parked outside their house. it's also a sense of community, but the privacy and security, think, is very important to them. >> reporter: how exclusive is justin bieber's community in gated community? we're driving up to it. this is just the first gate. he live behind another gate, gated community within a gated community. hi. is this all i need to get in here? >> excuse me. >> is this all i need to get in here? >> what do you need? an invitation. >> why are you filming? >> because we heard there was a bit of a controversy about one of your residents. we work for cbs news. >> you need to make a u-turn. >> so we can't come in.
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>> thank you. >> bieber's management and the homeowners association declined our request for comment but the rules are clearly spelled out in this weighty manual. >> there's a lot of rules and regulations. >> but one of the reasons people move in there is because of all the rules and regulations. >> yes, exactly. they want to have a nice man kerred lawn, they want trees, flowers, certain color of houses. they don't want anything funky or too colorful. >> and they don't want lamborghinis speeding down the road. >> they do not. >> turning a teen idol into a friendly neighbor might prove difficult. after all this 19-year-old estimated net worth is $110 million. for "cbs this morning," john blackstone, cal a bass sis, california. >> i have him on my iphone. like him. he's 19 and he needs grow up but
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i like him. i know what you're doing this weekend. justin bieber on your ipod. >> kardashian, catching up on the kardashians. >> once we heard justin bieber and then the kardashians, we knew -- >> charlie's in. >> exactly. if somebody's going to tell me a story about bieber, kardashians or anyone i want it to be john blackstone when he says he's with cbs news and they say take a u-turn. where have all the charms guys gone? hey, we've got to one at the table. everywhere we go, they say charlie rose. we talk with a male writer who says it's the thing of the check of your local weather.
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so can i buy you a drink, kate? >> no, thank you. >> i'm going to buy you a drink anyway. grape, rocks? >> i'm trying to stay sober. >> what can i get for you? >> nothing. we're good. please, don't come back forever. >> in crazy stupid love, how not to charm a woman. writer benjamin schwartz says it's also a problem in real life. his article is called "the rise and fall of charm in american men." benjamin schwartz is here along with cindi leive, editor in chief of glamor magazine. why is charm dead? >> charlie is the exception. he's a southerner.
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southern remaining men are charmers. i would say charm is dead because americans have always had an ambivalent relationship to charm. it's vaguely unmasculine. it requires a sense of social grace, and men, i think, pride themselves on being direct, on being kind of turf. >> do you think, cindi, men are lacking charm? by the way, it appeals to both men and women. >> yes. i do think that we're going through a little bit of a hoe in the charm department, probably with men and women. but i'll tell you what our readers complain about most at "glamour" in their dating lives. it's not so much the lack of guys pulling your chair up for you. they want men, as they put it, who are going to man up. these are super high achieving women.
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they've been leaning in, focusing on their careers. there are more women getting college careers. and the role models for their guys are seth rogan, zach galifianakis in hoodies playing xbox on their couches. they want men to catch up. >> what do you mean like man up? >> there's a lot they're looking for. that's what they love about the old cary grant. >> you're suggesting they don't even care about charm. they want them to get off the couch. >> that's a low bar. >> i think this is one of the things a lot of women related to about ""fifty shades of grey,"" love him or hate him. he had a salary. >> and he was interested in sex. >> he was. there was a dark side. by the way, welcome to the table. at some point we always get back
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to sex. welcome to our show. >> i want to hear from you, charlie. really. i'm not trying to flatter you but women come up to me all the time of all ages and ask about charlie rose. he's southern, very generous, very kind, and i've never heard him swear ever. >> i don't think charm is reflective of anything else. it's a quality, whether i have it or anybody else. i have it. certainly george clooney. but the toughness has nothing to do with it. the toughest people in the world can be the most charming. to see one or the other is silly. >> i agree. i wish more men felt that way as well. i do think charm is ultimately rooted in good manners. >> and a respect for people and that kind of thing and also to be charming is to -- is to listen to them, for god's sake. >> we like it when you listen. >> i do think it starts with a foundation.
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>> i think the same way that charlie got it. i think it was his parents. in other words you have to kind of say the art of conversation, which is not just thinking about yourself or talking about yourself. >> and as your article points out, hollywood is partly to blame. most of those charming figures are gone from the movies. >> although i think they're gone from the movies because it's not a quality that's particularly prized today. >> there's been a search for the next carey grant. george clooney is the most likely to do it but he doesn't do all of those roles. >> ryan gosling. >> he's a very charming guy. >> in the article, charm is charming. just don't be charmed by it. >> thanks to you both. we like to say the charm is back in the morning. >> and it was one of horse racing's greatest moments. our dr. jon lapook was la to see
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it. he remember sec retrar yacht's triple crown win 40 years ago. that's next on "cbs this morning." [ male announcer ] you know what's so awesome about the internet?
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the 145th stake will be run tomorrow. this weekend is also the 40th anniversary of what may be the greatest race of all time. sectarian won the belmont in 1973 by more than a football field. dr. jon lapook was along the rail for that historic race. >> reporter: it's the spring of 1973 and there's a horse secretariat who has the chance to win it in 25 years. so i head down to the belmont
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with a few friends. it's the '70s and things are different. i look different. there are nogy cal c digital car people to take out when remarkable things happen. i'm able to walk right down to the finish line and start snapping pictures. as the horses rate to us, there's electricity in the air, literally. a fierce thunderstorm is brewing and will strike soon after the race. >> and they're off. >> reporter: for a while it's neck and neck when secretariat and a horse called sham battle for position. they keep running. i keep snapping. then in the backstretch secretariat starts to make his move and announcer chick anderson makes his famous call. with more than a minute left in the race, the crowd realizes it is watching history.
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>> sec tre tear yacht is in a position that's impossible to catch. >> reporter: secretariat is crushing the field and transcending the sport. i feel the ground shaking from the sustained cheering of almost 70,000 fans. a split second before the race ends, i take a picture i will cherish for the rest of my life. all four hooves are off the ground as secretariat is flying to victory. and the look of this man across the track from me sums up what all of us are saying. wow. secretariat crosses the finish line 31 lengths ahead of the field, setting a world record and stands today, setting a record i've about never seen. >> dr. jon lapook joins us. all i can say is photography's loss is medicine's gain. i can't believe you took the pictures. >> i was really lucky. the right front hoof up on
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point. it's really amazing. >> how did you get access to the finish line? >> it was a simpler time. back then, 70 thousand people were there. now it's 100,000. if you look at the infield, there were a few photographers. no one had iphones in their hand. >> those pictures are worth a lot of money. did you ever think of ebay. >> i've kept them to myself and now everybody's seeing them. it's my anniversary gift. >> remarkable. i want a copy. that does it for us. let's take a look back at the week that was. have a great weekend. >> i want a copy too. >> you've got it. three veteran storm chasers tracking the tornadoes were killed. researcher tim samaras, his son paul, and colleague carl young. behind me you can get a sense for just how powerful these tornadoes are. that's plane inside that building. here at a local vocational training center -- >> i was in the second and third
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grade building where all the people got -- died was. house republicans have called several hearings on this issue just this week, and they say there will be many more throughout. may was a bad month for the military. there were a series of incidents, a sexual assault problem that appeared out of control. why should that be the case? >> what we have to create is an environmental where the victim feels like they will be protected and they will get good information, and that they can come forward without repercussions. we're demanding that change take place. germany's official word has long been removed from the english language. this word hatd 63 letters. is there a way to play that word again? do you feel at all guilty that bradley manning is on trial and in prison? >> well, not guilty but rather
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concerned about his fate. dr. j. is in the house. >> the funny thing with billy crystal, he said when hae heard juliuser ving, he thought, finally great jewish basketball player. >> something about us that makes us unique that can often cause you unease. >> in your blog, your letter, you said, i always thought i could hide the secret. were you dating women? were you making jokes? >> dating women. one, two, three. >> gee, that was a wonderful solution. before all this happened, had you ever heard of hummus before? >> no, i hadn't. now do you feel guilty for asking for popcorn and bacon? >> i love bacon. was it the fact that you could fly over someone and dunk
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the ball? >> charlie, the bigger they are, the harder they fall. it's been my dream to beat angela lansbury. >> do you see how we set that up for you? that would be easy. that was a softball. >> angela lansbury is unskbleevlg is theu unbelievable. is there any word you love saying with a british accent. narc leprosy. >> narco-~ leprosy. >> narc leprosy. >> watch. >>
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