and run for your life, tyler. our fifth super fan gets a close up look at pamplona s legendary running of the bulls. we ll go live to spain early this thursday morning, july 8, we ll go live to spain early this thursday morning, july 8, 2010. captioning funded by cbs welcome to the early show here on a thursday morning. good morning, i m chris wragge. i m erica hill. we ll update you. yesterday afternoon a terrible accident happening in philadelphia. one of the duck tours, you go through the city and then you go in the water, hit by a barge. here you re looking at exclusive pictures our affiliate in philadelphia has now of this collision. we re going to get a closer look at the accident. to people remain missing this morning so we ll update you on the search for those two. a tragic accident for those trying to enjoy a nice day. coming up, we are an update on the story we brought you yesterday, the happy ending of a young girl from missouri who went missing, reunited
they want to say listen, you re a celebrity, you re going to do the time, but now the sheriff is saying maybe 25 percent of the 90 days. we re also hearing her lawyer is going to try to send her straight to rehab so she doesn t go to jail at all, straight good the 90-day facility for in patient treatment. it s up in the air. but everyone thinks she s not going to serve the 90 days. gregg: yep, i have a feeling you are right about that. kelly zenk, good to see you, thank you very much. thank you. martha: all right. let s look at the market action this morning, on that note, up about 38 points at the moment. it closed up about 57 yesterday after a really rough week. investigators are keeping a close eye on the global markets, a very rough situation, and we ll keep an eye on that. here s the question: are rental companies putting you at risk? a bombshell report. [ matt ashworth ] the things that make us americans
and a heat advisory remains in effect until tonight for much of the mid-atlantic and northeast. there were record-setting triple digit highs in new york, baltimore and philadelphia. power grids are pushed to the limits and some railroad tracks got so hot that trains had to slow down. cbs s jeff glor reports. reporter: it was 102 degrees when the air conditioning went out inside this nursing home near philadelphia. residents were carried out on stretchers. at 100 in boston, a minor fire turned into a major scene when firefighters had to get hosed down to avoid overheating. we re at the point we re about ready to pass out. reporter: in new york the the energy company con ed was expecting the highest day ever. how confident are you right now? i m sweating just because it s hot. i m cautiously optimistic. reporter: for many, the power system stressed this week rekindled fears of what happened in 2003, when a massive failure left 45 million people in eight states without
70 today. also, the icon that turned 70 today. nightly news begins now. captions paid for by nbc-universal television announcer: from nbc news world headquarters in new york, this is nbc nightly news with brian williams. good evening. in some of the american cities we re about to show you where new all-time temperature records were set today the old records there have stood since the 1800s, some of them, until today when temperatures in many places soared above 100. the problem is, aside from the health complications and discomfort, parts of this nation s power grid date back almost this long. with demand this high and the massive load on the system, some are remembering all those promises we made to ourselves and heard from politicians about modernizing the power grid. it never happened, so we are left to hope on nights like tonight that it holds. we begin our reporting tonight with nbc s ron allen here in new york. ron, good evening. good evening to you, brian. th
good morning. martha: what s the big deal with burwick. this is serious, what you have in dr. burwick is somebody widely respected because of his out of the box thinking, some would cay radical thinking in how to reform the cost side of the health industry. now, in the past, he s written books, he s a professor at harvard, also a pediatrician and he s written books where he s talked about ways to control cost. now, when a private sector person says control costs, they re talking about the bottom line for a hospital. when a government official talks about controlling costs they re ultimately talking about government rationing. so this has republicans way up in arms, and for the obama administration, we should point out maybe they don t really have a choice because if they were to bring dr. burwick forward for confirmation a lot of unpleasant elements from his past writings might come out and there s a very real chance he might not get confirmed. martha: let s take a look a