Transcripts For KPIX CBS This Morning 20130808

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southern california. the silver fire remains out of control. burning east of los angeles. >> we had about 15 structures burned. >> oh, wow, just exploded right there. >> 1500 people have been evacuated. >> man with a hose trying to keep that fire from spreading to the home. >> in yemen, a suspected drone strike killed six militants. >> here's what those who would cowardly attack civilians don't get. the united states is never going to retreat from the world. we don't get terrorized. >> a rain maker hovering over parts of kansas and missouri. major highways have been closed and more than 100 homes are flooded. >> suspects now in custody in a dallas shooting spree that left four people dead. >> president obama canceled his meeting with russian president putin next month in moscow. >> he didn't like putin's demands the summit be held shirtless. >> three power ball tickets match in last night's drawing. >> china, throwing passengers from their seats. 23 were injured. >> hugging christian renaldo. >> uh-oh, he's feeling it. the big finish. >> and all that matters. >> caretakers implementing an innovative way to keep vegetation under control. they're bringing on the goats. >> on "cbs this morning." >> if the president wanted to hurt putin, he would have said he was coming and stood him up. trust me, that hurts the most. welcome to "cbs this morning." charlie rose is on asignment so anthony mason is with us. as you're waking up in the west a wildfire is racing across southern california threatening about half a dozen communities. 1,500 people have been evacuated. several homes burned. >> so far, three people are hurt. the silver fire broke out about 80 miles east of los angeles. ben tracy is at the scene in cabazon. >> reporter: anthony and norah, good morning. with daylight here in the west we can see how much damage has been done. this mountainside behind me has basically been charred. 15 structures have burned in this fire. many of them believe to be homed. three people have been injured. california fire officials are calling this extreme fire behavior. 1,000 first responders and firefighters worked into the night, using helicopters to combat the flames from above. they worked to fight the blaze that erupted across thousands of acres. the fire broke out shortly after 2:00 on wednesday afternoon. within an hour it had spread to 200 acres. >> we have to realize how quickly this fire moved. we were over 2,500 acres. the difficulty was in getting evacuations. that's always our key. life first property next. >> reporter: flames burst through, fueled by dry brush and raging wind gusts. as smoke poured into neighboring towns, fire officials shut down highways and began evacuating residents. >> i'm hoping that my house is still okay because we left and the fire was just right there. but the fire that was further up hadn't yet come this way. >> reporter: dave clark called his neighbors to tell them their home was safe as he watched his own engulfed in flames. >> the half was burned. i have another building with all my stuff. >> reporter: there are few buildings in the rural area but the rapid-moving fire consumed what it found. one resident spraying his garage with a garden hose hoping to prevent the flames from spreading to his home. late wednesday, helicopters and tankers worked to fight the blaze which remains uncontained this morning. with the sun up the helicopters and dc-10 that breaks the retardant should be up shortly. hoping they can finally get a handle on this fire. so far, no word on the cause. >> ben tracy, thank you. people in the midwest are cleaning up after powerful tornadoes. an ef-2 tornado destroyed a church in northeastern wisconsin. it packed winds of 110 miles an hour. governor scott walker tours the storm damage this morning. another twister hit wayne county, ohio. roof ys pulled right off homes. heavy rain triggered flash flooding in downtown nashville this morning. more than 4 inches fell in some spots. some drivers got stranded after trying to make it through. more than a dozen had to be rescued. in missouri as lindsey day shows us floodwaters have turned deadly. >> reporter: after another round of heavy thunderstorms dumped more rain on south central missouri early wednesday, this is the kind of flood devastation many area residents woke up to. >> i know one particular individual, he woke up this morning and he got up to a wet floor. lost his vehicle. lost everything. >> in waynesville, a couple hours southwest of st. louis, a 4-year-old child was killed after being swept away by rushing water. dozens of homes and businesses were flooded out. >> the flash flood hit so fast a lot of people were unaware of it. we've had flooding and damage done to some of the local houses here in the county where people had to be rescued. >> reporter: driving waters forced officials to shut down a major interstate snarling traffic for miles. and with more rain in the forecast authorities are urging residents not to take any chances. >> evacuate. if there's any concern, go to a friend's house, get to higher ground. >> reporter: for cbs this morn lindsey day, springfield, missouri. for the third day in a row, there are reports of an american drone strike in yemen. local officials in southeast yemen say at least six suspected al qaeda members were killed. yesterday, yemen said it obstructed a major plot by al qaeda. charlie d'agata. >> reporter: clearly something serious is going on in yemen. something has drawn the attention of u.s. drones flying over the country. yemen has long been a haven for al qaeda leadership. and this disrupted plot may have exposed potential targets. the yemeni government officials say security forces are turning up the heat on al qaeda militants. after foiling a plot to strike foreign embassies, gas and oil installations in the country's port. there's even a shoot to kill order on anybody who looks suspicious and refuses to identify themselves. the alleged plot appears similar to the january attack in algeria when gunman stormed a gas plant killing ging more than 3worker. the u.s. epbase in emweren has come under attack by furious protesters after release of an anti-islam film. the country's also home to al qaeda in the arabian peninsula, one of the most aggressive branches of the terrorist group. that suspected plot may be the reason for stepped-up u.s. drone strikes, says former fbi and cia official bill mudd. >> we've got defensive measures in place around embassies but we've got to take out operatives. we might have done it in the past weeks. we might do it in coming weeks with drone strikes. >> reporter: in the meantime, yep yemen remains a no go area for americans. the embassy remain closed along with 18 other posts throughout the middle east and africa as this perceived threat stretches beyond yemen's borders. >> charlie d'agata, thank you, charlie. applauding president obama's decision to cancel september's meeting with russian president putin. the white house and kremlin remain at odds on a variety of issues. the case of nsa leaker snowden may have been the breaking point. margaret brennan is at the state department. >> reporter: good morning. a deecision to cancel was unanimous. it signals u.s./russian relations are no longer in that period of reset. the state department said it simply was not worth president obama's time to meet face-to-face with vladimir putin. >> major issues were not teed up to make significant progress on the level of president to president summit. >> reporter: the white house signaled everything from a lack of progress on missile defense, arms control and security issues. the two countries back opposing sides in syria's civil war. another factor was edward snowden. and russia's disappointing decision to grant him temporary asylum. the kremlin also voiced its disappointment. this diplomatic snub will not break relations. it does show though that the white house will take a harder line. now, tomorrow there will be a test of that relationship. secretary of state kerry and secretary of defense hagel will still meet with their russian counterparts right here in washington. >> margaret brennan, thank you. joining us now is david ignatius ignatius, for "the washington post." so relations between russia and the u.s. have been frayed over syria, human rights arms control and now edward snowden. but how significant is it to have the president of the united states cancel a summit meeting with another leader? >> it's pretty darn significant. this is the lowest point that u.s. russia relations have reached since the obama administration. and officials in the white house stress to me that we don't want to blow up the relationship but nonetheless this is quite a sharp breach. the meeting that will take place tomorrow with secretary kerry and the soviet -- excuse me russian foreign ministry sergey lavrov is important because there's a lot of business the two sides have to talk about. syria and iran are at the top of that list. we have a new government in iran that's making signals that it's interested in negotiating some kind of nuclear deal to get that done. is russia prepared to help on it? the same thing with syria. discussions will continue but the feeling is there's nothing that can be taken to the president for decision we. when you have a summit you have deliberals. that wasn't the case here. >> you predicted months ago this relationship was in some serious trouble. i mean as you point out, canceling a summit like this is a big deal. i mean my question here has this deteriorated further and is it actually reparable? >> i think what led to this final sharp break was the snowden case. russia, for many months i should be specific russian leader vladimir putin for the months has been increasingly difficult, increasingly strident increasingly reluctant to be a partner of the united states. people in the white house continue to hope they could find a way to put that back together. it just wasn't there. snowden case was important because from the u.s. standpoint this is like an intelligence defector. in the airport and for weeks, there was the hope that the russians would find a way for hip him to leave the airport and go to another country where the u.s. might be able to extradite and the russians kept that hope open. in the end when they closed it the white house was furious. >> all right, david ignatius good to see you, thank you. president obama is back in washingtondemning sexual assault in the military to an audience of marines in california. saying sexual assault undermines what the military stands for. >> we are going to work together, all of us to stop these crimes of sexual assault and uphold the honor and integrity that defines the highest military honor. and that message is coming all the way from the top. >> this morning, "the new york times" reports defense secretary chuck hagel is finishing new rules to curb sex assaults. a higher level of attention for accusations and protection for victims. a military judge expected to decide whether to allow nidal hasan to continue representing himself. the judge halted the trial at ft. hood on wednesday. the man is charged with killing 14 people and wounding 32 others in the '09 attack on the base. wednesday, standby defense attorneys objected to hasan's leg legal strategy. they say he's trying to guarantee he gets the death penalty. police say at least four people were killed four others were wounded. two of the survivors are boys age 11 and 13. the victims were found inside two homes. one in a nearby suburb. the suspect is under arrest. family members say that he had been looking for his ex-girlfriend and he may have tried to set off an explosive device in one of the homes. possibly a grenade. police in florida are investigating after a teenager died while in their custody. as mark strassmann reports, he had earlier been jolted with a taser stun gun. >> reporter: israel hernandez had two big passions skate boarding and art. >> he was really good. he wanted to make a movement of art. >> reporter: just before dawn miami police say they spotted the 18-year-old spaying graffiti on the side of this abandoned building. thiago and feelixfelix, who they say smoked marijuana with hernandez earlier that night, were acting as lookouts. >> before i could go to warn him, he was already on a foot chase. he ran around. got into a corner. then was gone. >> reporter: police caught up with hernandez. in a statement, the department said he ignored officer's commands to stop. and order to effect his arrest, the officer deployed the taser. once in custody, the suspect displayed signs of medical stress. >> they were making fun of how he tensed up. they were just laughing. >> reporter: the teen was later pronounced dead at a nearby hospital. one friend said he may have run because he was afraid of getting deported back to his native columbia. the miami-dade medical center completed an autopsy but has not ruled on a cause of death. toxicology results are pending. the police department extended its condolences to the hernandez family. last night relatives gathered around the teen's colorful artwork to mourn. for "cbs this morning," mark strassmann atlanta. and time now to show you some of this morning's headlines. "the new york times" says nsa surveillance program is more broad than previously known. searching contents of international e-mails and text messages. looking for people who even mention foreigners under surveillance. the nsa says the activities are legal. >> "usa today" says consumer borrowing went up $13.8 billion in june from may. the increase was driven by car and student loans. but credit card borrowing dropped by nearly $3 billion. >> ut san diego says a kidnapping suspect may be headed for canada. a massive search is on for 40-year-old james lee dimaggio. he's suspected of killing a woman in california. and abducting her 16-year-old daughter. dimaggio is believed to be driving a blue 2013 nissan versa. the chicago tribune has an update on a story we brought you a few weeks ago. the fbi says it has reopened its investigation into the kidnapping of a newborn from a chicago hospital in 1964. paul joseph franzic was reunited with his parents a year after he was abducted. earlier this year dna tests show he's not the baby taken from the hospital. the fbi confirms it is taking another look. and the "los angeles times" says the sun's magnetic field is about to flip. the effect will be felt throughout the solar system including earth. we may get to see some auroras. the sun flips its magnetic field once every 11 years. at least three people became very, very wealthy overnight. power ball officials say one ticket sold in minnesota and two in new jersey matched all the numbers drawn late yesterday. they were 5, 25 30 5, 59 and the power ball, 32. the winners share $448 million. kathryn brown of our affiliate station is in new jersey where a winning ticket was sold. >> reporter: good morning. this is going to be a busy day here at the stop and shop in south brunswick, new jersey. this is the lottery counter where one of the three winning power ball tickets was sold. lottery officials say three lucky winners hit the jackpot in last night's power ball drawing. two from new jersey one from minnesota. the two from new jersey another sold just about 60 miles away from here in a town called little egg harbor. these two stores in new jersey again, just about an hour away from each other. we've been talking to a lot of people. those who didn't win say they're a little disappointed. they're happy someone in their region is striking it rich. this is the first lottery jackpot pay out in new jersey since lawmakers changed the law allowing winners to remain anonymous for up to a year. they say that is for their protection. we may know who won, we may not find out for quite some time. about $100 million a ticket. not so bad. >> did you buy one? >> i had a ticket yeah. i don't think i had any of those numbers. >> or anything close. we're starting out with overcast at the shoreline as you can see at in view of ocean beach. sun will come out later in the day today and this afternoon sunshine inland, temperatures in the mid-70s. 72 around the bay. low 60s at the shore specifically. we are looking for that low to spin inland over the bay. and finally give us a break so numbers warm up a little bit in the city today. we'll hit 62 degrees. extended forecast bit of a warming trend. we'll be back near 90 degrees by wednesday. . >> announcer: this national weather report sponsored by hilton honors anywhere weekend anywhere sale. visit hiltonweekend.com. new developments in battle by the families of firefighters killed in arizona. many of them say they're being kept from getting survivors benefits. we'll show you what's being done about it. plus the only man who made it out alive shares hisstore of the disastrous wildfire. >> that that's the last time i heard my super inpendant's voice, i was crushed mentally and emotionally. >> brendan mcdonough's message to the world after the inferno. a new question on the safety of cars. the news is back on "cbs this morning." stay tuned for your local news. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by choice the official hoe it is of summer. book direct at choicehotels.com. mine was earned in djibouti africa. 2004. vietnam in 1972. 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those arches are made of gold? >> a little cameo for gayle there. i like to see that. >> coming up in this half hour there's brand new data about the safety of small cars. we'll show you why they're being put through a new test and why many aren't getting the grade. it's no surprise banks are making money off your fees but how you're getting hit. and an update now on a story we brought you tuesday. help may be on the way for all the families of those 19 hotshot firefighters killed in arizona in june. many of them feared they would be left with nothing after the tragedy because of a city policy. carter evans is in los angeles. carter, good morning. >> good morning, norah and anthony. on wednesday surviving family members got good news that arizona state legislators are drafting a proposal that would offer full-time employee benefits to all members of the hotshots. on the same day the loan survivor finally broke out about the tragedy that led to the death of his friends. when the yarnell fire scorched more than 8,000 acres of arizona wilderness, it claimed the lives of 19 granite mountain hotshots. at the time their families were assured their families would be taken care of. but more than a month after the tragedy, one of the widows said the city of prescott is not keeping the promise. >> it's a terrible tragedy and the bigger tragedy is the people that can make it right aren't making it right. >> reporter: juy an ashcraft is 24 years old. she's now raising four children on her own. the 13 families were denied because their relatives were considered seasonal employees. >> you work full-time hours, he had full-time responsibility full-time salary. there is no way that i can fathom how the city is justifying him as seasonal or part-time. >> arizona announced a draft bill that would grand full-time state benefits to any first responder who dies on state land. the bill is retroactive to the 30th meaning the new bill would apply to the fallen hotshots and their families. among ashcraft supporters is 21-year-old brendan mcdon nan, the only survivor of the blaze. >> please support these families. >> reporter: in an interview mcdonagh also described for the first time the final moments that led to the deaths of his 19 friends. he was their lookout on that fateful day. >> as i looked back to see how they're doing, i turned around and i could already see the wind had shifted. >> reporter: he knew his friends were trapped once they were deploying their fire shelters. >> that's the last time i heard my superintendent's voice. i was crushed. mentally and emotionally. >> reporter: five weeks after the fire mcdonagh and the family left behind our hopeful. the state of arizona will follow through with its promise to make the ultimate sacrifice. >> i want a result for all families. if the senators with working together to make it right, bless them. >> if the state of arizona does end up awarding lifetime benefits to seasonal first responders it raises the question of how it might affect communities in other areas that also employ part-time and seasonal first responders. anthony and norah? >> carter efrps. thanks, carter. we have new information how small cars hold up in crashes. they released its first ever findings from what they call a small overlap front test. 12 cars were evaluated. only half earn add safety rating of good or acceptable. john is a senior analyst. good morning. >> good morning. >> first of all, what were we cars for the first time. what did we find out? >> half the cars as anthony said did not pass by a marginal rating. >> should we be alarmed by that john? >> not at all. overall the cars are safe. this is the ihh warting to test cars more regularly. >> why was this just the first time that they've done this? >> again, they saw a spike in automotive fatalities in 2012 which they've attributed to distract the driver. >> this is the first time, right? >> we've never seen one before. >> i think that's fascinating that you think that you think it's because of distracted driving. texting and talking on the phone. >> that certainly has spiked it. i think when you consider this kind of test is one that might be associated with that kind of driving behavior meandering or hitting a pole. >> even half that got poor or moderate ratings do you think the car companies are going to make any design changes? >> absolutely. the automotive makers are really good at this. >> if your car has not done well in this test should you be concerned? >> i wouldn't have be concerned at all. >> why not. >> because it's the -- the car is essentially safe. they're just looking at trying to make it that much safe wher they see an area getting more impacts than it might not have gotten. >> a lot of people like small cars because they're more fuel resistant. >> that's the balance that they look at. >> do we need to be concerned here that we've got the beginning of a trend here in terms of fatalities? >> i think it all comes down to driving behavior. i think we all have to understand if you're behind the wheels of a car, eyes on the road, not on your cell phone. more than 16 years ago johns hopkins researchers took cells from henrietta lax. if you don't know the story, you should. the cells were used for medical breakthroughs but without her consent. terrell brown reports on that story and terrell is with us. good morning. >> good morning to you. henrietta lax' cells have been used for more than six decades and she and her family were never asked for permission now. they're getting a say in how those cells were used. in 1951 she came to johns hopkins hospital for cervical cancer. they took some of her cells and found they could survive in lab. it was something that had never bun done before. >> it was something that could grow forever. >> reporter: they were used to discover the polio vaccine and help with aids and cancer. they've saved millions of lives. >> this is everywhere. >> but lax, poor and uneducated died in the hospital and the scientists took the cells without her consent. her family's fight to control its use was chronicled in the bestseller "the immortal life of henrietta lax." it will be made into a movie. now 62 years later the national institutes of health is giving them the final say. it will be approved by a panel with two lax family panel members on it. >> this is the first time for someone to consider the family. >> he hopes it will host a shift in science. >> let's say "may i," explain it and give the person a chance to say yes or no. they also said in order to find cures, patients need to provide the type of information that was taken from help rita lax. the family won't receive any financial gains from this new agreement. >> it's such a fascinating a story. they took it without her concept. yet her cells and the growth of those have saved millions of lives. >> so many break throughs. we're so glad. thank you. banks are making billions of dollars from the fees they charge you. we'll show you why it's happening despite a crackdown from regulators. that's ahead on "cbs this morning." 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(announcer) love. it's what makes a subaru, a subaru. if you think your bank charges a lot of fees you're right. a new study shows the average checking account as 30 separate fees. dawn kopecky covers banking for the bloomberg news. good morning. >> good morning. >> first of all, why the fees? >> they're not making as much money as they used to. they have to hold more reserves so federal regulators are requiring them to hold more money. interest rates are so low, they've been so low for so long that their profit margins on lending are at historic lows right now and so they have to find new avenues for revenue. >> but the four biggest banks just reported massive profit jumps. >> they did. they did. part of that is because of mortgage lending because rates were so low for so long their mortgage fee revenue has jumped because of refinancings, but that's going down right now. they're also not making as much. those profit numbers you saw, a lot of that wasn't real money. it was accounting adjustments. so the real cash coming in. the reliable money is fee rev new from customers like you and i. >> what's the fee that hits the consume ter hardest? >> the hardest hit is the overdraft fee, $35 on an account. if you go to walmart or write a check and there's not enough money, the bank will cover that but they'll charge you $35. so this could be like a $4 transaction at starbucks and you get charged and it's $35. >> wow. >> so if you're signing up for a new bank account or you currently have one what should you can ask about what kind of fees you're being charged? >> you have to opt in to these overdraft protection but it's kind of tricky and a lot of consumers don't read the fine print. if you don't ask for it you're automatically enrolled. you can opt out but when you go to swipe your debit card you'll be charged for that particular coverage of the overdraft. one tricky fee is if you don't have enough in your checking account and you have it in your savings account, a lot of banks are charging you $10 to transfer. it's your own money, but they're limited. they're also limited in the types of fees they can charge and because of that they've been coming up with new ways to find money. >> all right. dawn o we're starting out with overcast at the shoreline as you can see at this view of ocean beach. sun will come out later in the day today and this afternoon sunshine inland, temperatures in the mid-70s. 72 around the bay. low 60s at the shore specifically. we are looking for that low to spin inland over the bay. and finally give us a break so numbers warm up a little bit in the city today. we'll hit 62 degrees. extended forecast bit of a warming trend. we'll be back near 90 degrees by wednesday. you may want to trade your morning cup of coffee for some hot chocolate. a new study says it could be good for your brain and your memory. we'll show you how ahead on "cbs this morning." at panera, we believe in starting the day right with freshly baked whole grain bread. then we add all-natural eggs... lean antibiotic-free ham... and vermont white cheddar. get 16 grams of protein and 23 grams of whole grain in the breakfast power sandwich. ♪ ♪ ♪ i've got something for you too. 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[ male announcer ] advair diskus fluticasone propionate and salmeterol inhalation powder. get your first prescription free and save on refills at advaircopd.com. ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] wouldn't it be great if all devices had backup power? the chevrolet volt does. it's ingeniously designed to seamlessly switch from electricity to gas to extend your driving range. no wonder volt is america's best-selling plug-in. that's american ingenuity to find new roads. ♪ ♪ the 2013 volt. charge ahead of the rest in the hov lane. ♪ ♪ >> your realtime captioner: linda marie macdonald good morning, everyone. it's 7:56. i'm frank mallicoat. get you updated on some bay area headlines now. major league baseball has asked a federal judge to dismiss a lawsuit filed by the city of san jose. the city recently sued mlb over its failure to decide whether the as can pursue a downtown ballpark. the giants are trying to prevent that as move. the judge is expected to hear the issue in october. a bicyclist is injured after being struck by a car this morning in fremont. this is a live look at the scene. it happened just before 6:00 this morning on fremont boulevard. investigators are treating this as a hit-and-run and are looking for a dark colored 1995 toyota four-door sedan. southbound lanes of fremont boulevard remain closed between old warm springs and south primer street. traffic and weather coming up right off the break. good morning. here's a live look over at the bay bridge toll plaza. traffic is actually lighter than we usually see it this time of the morning. backed up towards the overcrossing. by the way, there is a pretty large power outage on treasure island. it is not affecting the lights right now in the yerba buena island tunnel. so traffic on the upper deck and the lower deck of the bridge getting by okay. also, quick note, giants take on the brewers later on this afternoon. expect some traffic tie-ups around at&t. that's traffic. here's brian. >> only enough time to tell you that we're starting outline cool, we have a lot of fog around, the 49ers are playing the broncos at 6:00 in a game aired here on kpix 5 and it will be a chilly day around the bay area. bundle up. it guides you to a number that will change your life: your sleep number setting. it even knows you by name. now it's easier than ever to experience deep, restful sleep with the sleep number bed's dualair technology. at the touch of a button the sleep number bed adjusts to each person's ideal comfort and support. and you'll only find it at a sleep number store. where right now our newest innovations are available with 48-month financing. sleep number. comfort individualized. good morning everybody. it is 8:00 a.m. in the west. welcome back to "cbs this morning." an out of control california wild fire threatens several hundred homes. president obama says no thanks to a private meeting with russian president, vladimir putin. why can't these superpowers get along. a rare look inside china's effort to save the panda. we will take you behind the scenes. first, here is a look at today's eye-opener at 8:00. structures have burned in this fire. three people have been injured including two firefighters. the silver fire broke out about 80 miles east of los angeles. >> i am hoping that my house is still okay. people in the midwest are cleaning up after powerful tornadoes. >> heavy rain triggered flash flooding and in missouri floodwaters have turned deadly. >> clearly something serious is going on in yemen. for the third day in a row, there are reports of an american drone strike to cancel the meeting. signals that u.s. russian relationships are no longer in the period of recess. >> this is like an intelligence defector. one of the three winning powerball tickets are sold. he had full-time hours and a full-time responsibility. there is no way i am fathom how the city is justifying him as seasonal or part-time. he has been used in more than 74,000 studies for sick decades. she and her family were never asked for permission. if a-rod is suspended, he also won't be able to play in japan, south korea, and taiwan. which means someone's company softball team is really going to start kicking -- korea, or taiwan which means somebody's company softball team >> i'm norah o'donnell with anthony mason. charlie rose is on assignment and gayle king is off. thousands of people in southern california are watching a fast-growing wild fire and worrying about their homes. the fire threatened several communities this morning. 1500 residents have been told to evacuate. ben tracy is in cabazon, california 50 miles from los angeles. >> reporter: the d.c. 10 that drop the flame retar dant should shall back in the air shortly. the fire quickly grew out of control yesterday. it started at 2:00 and within a matter of hours, it grew from 300 to 5,000 acres. it has now burned about 6,000 acres. we are told 15 structures have been burned. many of those believed to be homes. three people have been injured, including two firefighters. they have had to evacuate several small towns in the mountain areas here. heavy smoke drifted into nearby palm springs. one of the big questions today will, of course be the winds. on a good day, this is a horribly windy part of southern california. firefighters are hoping those wind gusts which around here can be 30 40 miles an hour don't show up today. so far anthony and norah, no cause on this fire. >> that scene behind ben is extraordinary. it is amazing how fast that can spread. absolutely. >> he said high winds today. we will continue to watch that. ben, thank you. nelson mandela's ex-wife is talking candidly about his struggle to overcome a lung infection. she says she gets emotional watching south africa's first black president in his hospital bed. >> it is so painful to watch him. struggling like that. and there is nothing you can do. i have lived with him and knowing his strength and to see him the way he is, it is hard to take. >> mandela entered the hospital two months ago today. his condition is described as critical but stable. >> russian officials say they are disappointed that president obama has called off next month's one-on-one meeting with president, vladimir putin, in moscow. the talks were scrubbed less than a week after russia gave temporary asylum to snowden. it is not the first time they have gone sour. margaret brennan is at the state department this morning. >> good morning. good morning to anthony and norah. this decision to skip the meeting marks the first time in decades that any american president has canceled a publicly announced visit to russia. this high-level diplomatic snub is a sign that the white house's attempts to reset relations with russia are now on pause. improving u.s./russian relationships were one of president obama's top goals when he came to office. >> it is difficult to forge partnerships between adversaries. it is hard to change habits that have been engrained. that's why i have called for a reset in relations between the united states and russia. >> that started with a natural mock reset button which then secretary of state hillary clinton handed her russian counterpart. it was famously mistranslated. >> we worked hard to get the right russian word. do you think we got it? >> you got it wrong. >> there was also little obvious warmth between the two leaders. vladimir putin, a former kgb agent played the strong man in public and private. he refused to budge on syria, arms reduction and missile defense. the two countries continued to spy on each other. the snowden affair is the latest damaging incident. president obama blamed it on outdated thinking. >> there have been times where they slipped back in the cold war thinking and the cold war mentality. what i consistently say to them and what i say to president putin is, that's the past. that complicated relationship heated up during the cold war. many a president tried to ease tensions manage a nuclear arms race and stop the spread of communism. >> mr. gorbachev, tear down this wall. >> after the soviet state fell relations warmed under bill clinton and president boris yeltsin. little changed. things seemed to start well when vladimir putin entered office. george bush said he trusted him after just one meeting. >> i was able to get a sense of his soul. >> bush later said putin changed. conflicts and mutual distress rose again. ambassador stephen pfizer was a russian specialist and said russia still cease the u.s. as an adversary. >> russia's mind-set how it looks at the outside world, still looks at itself as a competitor. if you are going to be a super power, you want to set yourself up against someone. it is not going to be italy or france. it is going to be the united states. tomorrow secretary of defense hagel and secretary of state kerry will sit down with the russian counterparts here in washington to test whether they can find any points of agreement. they will discuss arms reduction and the brutal civil war in syria. margaret thanks. the pga championship has teed off this morning. it is golf's fourth and final major of the year. as usual, all eyes will be on tiger woods. he won last week end's bridge stoen stone in ohio. >> woods has not won a major since the 2008 u.s. open. jim nance cbs sports is at oak hill country club in rochester, new york. he will lead the play by play coverage. good morning. good morning, norah, good morning, anthony. there is a lot of anticipation here in rochester. the skies have cleared after a stormy night. this course is soft now and ripe for some low scoring. tiger, i expect will take advantage of it. we will be watching. all eyes will be on tiger, i'm sure. jim nantz comes off the big win in bridge stoen. can he win this major. >> he can win it. people need to gear down about expectations because he won the week before the pga championship. this marks the eighth time he has won in his previous tournament entering a major in the seven previous times, he has not backed it up with a victory. it was a dominating brilliant performance in akron, including a 61 in the second round on friday. i don't think that translates necessarily to a victory here. i know everybody has them as their favorite. there are a lot of guys poised to play well, including phil mickelson, just three weeks removed from winning the open championship. he claims he is playing the best golf of his career. >> that's pretty extraordinary, wouldn't it? >> two in a row for him would be amazing. >> it would be. i have to tell you this, anthony. if tiger wins no question he will be the player of the year in golf. nobody is talking about it if mickelson was to win this giving him two majors another win here in the states and the british open. that is way under the radar. justin rose won the u.s. open. hasn't backed it up with strong performances yet but he should play well here. adam scott, at the open championship, he came closer to winning than tiger did on that occasion. we wrap it up most of the time around one guy. he is the greatest player of his generation and probably of all time but that doesn't faes necessarily mean he is going to win at oak hill. >> when was this that phil mickelson almost forgot to register for this tournament? >> it is amazing how complicated it sounds. it is just not that complex. thankfully there is a few little hiccups along the way. that happened to phil. i mentioned justin rose who won at marion. he got into a traffic accident in this great little town that we are actually in pittsburgh just outside of rochester. he had a little fender-bender this week. these guys are finally ready to tee it up and put the other stuff behind him. >> what is unique about the pga and the other majors. that's the other question. this is the last shot guys. if you don't triumph here you have to wait eight long months until the next major championship is on the schedule. that, of course being the masters in april. so you gear your whole year-round these four big events. i think there is such an added urgency to this week. you have a wonderful back drop. this is truly an american classic. i think it's a wonderful setting here to make the final statement of the year in a major championship golf. anybody can win but tiger woods and phil mickelson have the chance to but exclamations on great years. you can watch sports coverage here on . a new medical study finds more evidence that a certain i and it's not a vegle. we'll a new medical study finds evidence of a food that's good for you. we will show you how chocolate can boost your brain power next on "cbs this morning." grandpa was my dad a good athlete? no. oh dad, you remember my friend alex? yeah. the one that had the work done... good to see you. where do we go when we die? the ground. who's your girlfriend? his name is chad. and that's where babies come from. 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(newscaster ) he is doing 44 in a 45... in the nation, safe just got a little more exciting. add vanishing deductible from nationwide insurance and get $100 off for every year of safe driving. we put members first. join the nation. ♪ nationwide is on your side ♪ aw baby, i'm seeing triple again. do you see the 10% back in points plus another 10% plus free shipping? yeah. you're good. this is the member triple play deal. this is sears. you probably heard that dark chocolate could be good for your heart. now, a new small study by harvard researchers suggests drinking hot chocolate might be good for your brain. >> dr. gayatri devi is director of the new york memory and healthy aging services. good morning. any opportunity for more chocolate is a golden opportunity. where is this study found? >> i was glad they finally had a study telling us that broccoli is good for ugs. what the study found is that drinking cocoa helped improve blood flow to the brain. our brain, even though it weighs two pounds takes up 25% of the oxygen from the blood and glucose. it is a very power hungry organ. >> you are a neurologist. what does cocoa do to the brain? >> it improves the blood flow to your brain. your brain, like i said is like a car, a high-performance ferrari, if you will. it needs really a lot of fuel all the time. >> is it the sugar? >> it is the flavenoids. they are good for all the blood vessels. they increase the blood flow to your brain. >> how did they figure this out? >> they looked at people in their late 60s, early 70s, almost all of whom had high blood pressure many of whom had diabetes. they found that they did much better on memory tests and their blood flow to their brain also improved and it improved based on ultrasounds that they did. >> so does this have greater benefits for older people? >> it has more benefit for people who already have disease in their blood vessels, because normal people and people whose blood vessels constrict and dilate normally don't necessarily need this extra help that the flafplavenoids provide. we don't know it is the flavenoids but something in the cocoa. >> for people who are diet conscious, if you will are there other foods that have flavenoids that may create the same type of effect? >> anything high in anti-oxidants, apples, blueberries and exercise. any kind of aerobic exercise increases flood flow to your brain. that's really what the flavenoids will do. they increase the flow of blood to your brain. let's rev it up. great to have you here. thank you. >> thanks for having me. >> some of the smartest most competitive women around have left the workforce to be stay-at-home moms. leslie stall of 60 minutes spoke to some of them in 2004. now, we are going to meet one of those women who says things didn't go the way she planned. that's ahead on "cbs this morning." the way she plant. >> announcer: cbs "healthwatch" sponsored by v8 100% vegetable juice. i could have had a v8. 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[ female announcer ] air fresheners like febreze air effects aren't approved to kill the germs that cause the odors. lysol disinfectant spray does more. it kills germs at the source. and you can use it to freshen the air too. lysol... a fresh smelling home... ...and a healthy one. >> your realtime captioner: linda marie macdonald hi,everyone. good morning. it's 8:25. i'm frank mallicoat. right now, power has been restored at treasure island. the outage happened around 7:00 this morning. the outage started after a bird hit the power lines. but all is well now including the bay bridge. west nile virus back in santa clara county. a woman is the first human case in the county in two years. she was hospitalized last month. now recovering at home. the virus is transmitted to humans and animals through bites of infected mosquitos. a bicyclist is injured after a hit-and-run accident in fremont happened just before 6:00 this morning on fremont boulevard. the southbound lanes of fremont boulevard remain closed between old warm springs and south grimmer road. got your traffic and forecast coming up after the break. 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[ female announcer ] nature valley protein bars with simple, real ingredients, like roasted peanuts creamy peanut butter and a rich dark-chocolate flavor, plus 10 grams of protein so it's energy straight from nature to you. nature valley protein bars. good morning. we're watching a motorcycle accident it's now in the center divide westbound 580 by north livermore avenue. but there are some brake lights just behind it. that 19-mile-per-hour sensor doesn't look good. so very heavy traffic there. and through the altamont pass. westbound 4 busier conditions, traffic conditions through orinda and lafayette right now as you head toward the caldecott tunnel. but hey, look at the bay bridge. traffic looks really good slight delays maybe in the fastrak lanes but the cash lanes look very quiet at this hour. that's traffic. for your forecast, here's brian. >> liz, at 8:28 we still have fog around the bay area and the numbers are mild. 62 at oakland. 62 livermore. a lot of sports happening in the bay this afternoon. giants playing the brewers at 12:45, 62 degrees there and 62 at candlestick when san francisco takes on the broncos tonight at 6:00. we are going to broadcast that game here on kpix 5. the pinpoint forecast, 62 in the city, 73 in san jose. and 77 in fairfield. you want warmer weather? i have good news for you. the extended forecast shows for things to warm into the weekend, in fact by next wednesday, we are going to be back to near 90 inland. first, time to show you this morning's headlines. the new york fims says it is profitable and not for sale. both the boston globe and "the washington post" changed hands in the past week. times publisher says digital subscriptions are paying off "the washington post" looks at a herd of goats that have been brought in. they are feasting on poison ivy and english ivy covering 35 acres in southeast washington the detroit free press has a long distance swimmer completes a heavy-duty trip. jim dryer swims across lake st. clair pulling a ton of bricks. he battled hallucinations and pounding waves. thanks to facebook coo, cheryl sandberg lean-in, has become a new catch phrase for working women. a decade ago, much of the talk was about opting out. highly educated women walked away from their careers to stay home and raise their children. leslie stall reported in 2004. >> the resume to kill for. >> thank you. >> he clerked at the supreme court and walked away. >> i know myself. i know that when i'm working at something, i work hard. when i was at the law review i was working until midnight every night. my husband started a surgical residency where he was completely unavailable. i was afraid that if i was working, there would be no parent there with the children. i wanted to experience getting to know my children being there in a consistent way. she is hardly alone. every wednesday morning, this church in suburban maryland is filled with professional women who have chosen to step out of the full-time workforce to spend time raising children. they have organized a lecture series for intellectual stimulation. >> you go to a negotiation if you are normal feeling a certain inadequacy. >> torre hall a former analyst and sheila eisel, a once top sales representative for oracle they and ann gerzaur, are all stay-at-home moms. >> the bottom line was, it was an emotional decision not an intellectual one. it doesn't give sense to give up a great job that pays a lot of money and has a lot of satisfaction for myself just to walk away from that. >> you were voted the most likely to succeed. you went to jail penn law school. you were on that track full-time, full bore. does it bother you? >> i think about it for a little bit and then i think, i love what i'm doing for right now. i do. i would say the first six months. there were days that i had serious doubts did i make the right decision? now, there are like bumps in the road but i'm very glad that i stayed home. today, many of those women who opted out are going back in. it is the cover story in this sunday's "new york times" magazine. leslie stall is here along with sheila o'donnell, who you saw at the end of the clip. also with us, lisa bellkin who wrote the original "new york times" article that started this discussion ten years ago. so great to have you all here. >> sheila you were in the piece and said you made the right decision at the time. do you regret it? >> i don't regret it at all. i'm very fortunate i was able to stay at home. not many women have that opportunity. i'm grateful. i probably would have done things a little differently. i'm glad i was able to stay at home. >> why is now the opt-out generation opting back in? >> it varies. family to family. if there is no real one answer for that. the women i talk to they could be going through a divorce, looking at their college tuitions that are coming up for their kids. they feel like they need to get back to work to pay for that. the economy, husbands not making as much money as they used to. it really varies. it is very important. >> you did this story ten years ago about megaachieveers. all these women with incredible degrees, huge salaries and giving that up to stay at home. why did you do the piece at the time? >> i guess i was shocked. my generation women's lib racial generation. we fought so hard and wouldn't have given up. i guess i saw it as giving up. i tried very hard not to be judgmental while i was doing it sheila. i worked hard. i wanted these women to find a way to enjoy both because these women were the country's potential leaders. they were the ones going to be the congressmen and business women that we complain are not being promoted. it is a huge s.w.a.t. of our smart well-accomplished women acting out. >> you are at the forefront of this debate. what's fascinating now is for feminists of sheila's generation having it all meant having the choice to stay home. they were the warriors. they would never have thought of stopping or pausing. it would have been a disservice to the sisterhood. then, your generation, the generation in the opt-out piece, was the first one accomplished enough to look at and see the decisions they were making. they were feeling guilty no matter what they did. >> they were guilty if they were staying home or at work. they were just guilty. while we are talking about generations, what's very interesting is what's going to happen with the next one. while we are looking at the effects of your choices, we are also now seeing how the people who came after are saying i don't want that. i want a completely different work life set up from the start. >> this is what strikes me here. what's going on here is constant quest for balance. the pendulum swings one way and swings back. certainly, economically it swung completely in a different direction than it was ten years ago, which i'm sure is playing on people's decisions now. >> of course it is. you know the pressures are so much greater now. both in making that balance possible with the economy the way it is. also, in finding jobs for these women. that's really the thing. if you want to go back most of the women i spoke to thought they would go back. getting a job when you have been out for five ten years, is horrendous. very difficult. >> the economy is a factor. i also think there is a question about confidence and self-identity. you were making a half million at oracle. you opted to stay home and raise your three children. you are now back at work. you say when you were at home in a piece in "the new york times," that you lacked an independent work identity that yourself confidence plummeted. you said, "i felt like a loser." why. >> it was all timing when this interview took place over a year. it was a very tortuous year. i live in an environment where there are a lot of successful people and your identity is very closely tied to what you have done. i started working when i was 15 years old. that was a huge part of my identity from the get-go. from the moment i started working and in a professional sense, i always had a strong worketh thick and work ethic. i was who i was. when i decided to stay at home i think you don't see that day to day affirmation or even month to month affirmation that what you are doing is in the workforce. you have goals and you set them and you can achieve and move on. >> when you did this piece, you had some personal opinions at the time. you also have then told me that you could have predicted this. why? >> i thought the women, intelligence would get unhappy. i think i have seen that. we've gone back and found four of the women in my piece. we have six. two have gone back to work and two haven't, full-time. they are all looking, i think, for work where there is some idealism. i think, if you say, i have kids, and i just want to make money, why am i leaving my kids for that. if you can say, i'm leaving my kids and i'm going to do something for society, it makes it easier. it is endlessly interesting. thanks to all of you for being here this morning. thank you very much. >> ahead inside the largest panda bear sanctuary in the world. seth doane goes inside the facility in china, to find out what scientists are doing to panda bear is consideringed a national treasure in china. they're an >> endangered species because they're not breeding as much as they should and it may be up to humans to change that. seth doane takes us to the center of the research effort. >> reporter: when it comes to panda, there's no translation needed. tourists from around the world, roughly a million of them a year come to ooh and all at the research base for china panda breeding. 74 giant panda and 68 smaller also endangered ones roam and ideally reproduce. >> when i knew i was coming, i thought of pandas. >> she and her american girlfriends visited as part of a u.s. state department/chinese language program. her friend maggie wants to one day work with these endangered animals. >> the panda for china is liekke that to the united states. it's such a big part of your country and heritage and what you stand foul and you need to share that. >> reporter: their guide has been a conservationist here over the last 14 years. where are we in the fight to save the panda? >> still dangerous but better than in the past. >> when bexell started there were 500. now there are 1,600. today there are more than 300. but breakneck economic development and a population boom has turned bases like this one into a backstop against extinction extinction. >> we want them to come here feel attached to the animals and go home and do something about it. >> pandas have a notoriously low sex drive. female begans are fertile for 12 hours a yeeg. their vast breeding grounds were replaced by roads and equipment. >> i've been doing this for too long. i think about everything i buy. i want to get the whole world thinking. i want a small home. when i redo my kitchen, i have to think about fortified anymore. recently a panda gave birth to two babies at the zoo. every moment was douchlted. >> you who got to be the eternal optimist to do this work these pandas will likely never be set free in the wild. all of this work here won't help the number of wild pandas. >> perhaps. unless we can get people to care while they're here education is the most important part of conservation today because until we can change human behavior to sate sane it. any else is assignment of what they can a band-aid. >> reporter: essentially change can only come if oohs and as come through the real angle. for "cbs this morning," seth doane. shej do china. >> who who knew. >> that pandas were fertile. >> 12 hours a year. >> we've got an idea. >> you like this. play marvin gaye. >> yes give them a little marvin gaye. >> get it on. ♪ let's get it on ♪ >> there you go. when we come back, an tv continues to redefine itself launching shoes on the web is becoming a viable way for producers to create and fund new program, especially unconventional shoes. jock black stone takes a look at agent 88 which briepremieres online this morning and it could make a hollywood dream come true for hod's unlikely star. >> agent 88 is dark comedy about the world's deadliest assassin, a little old lady who can conquer evil. but is a little more than forgetful. >> there's just this thing i can't find. >> 80-year-old cadorcy stars at agent 88. it's an important thing for you to be depicting. >> well, i didn't realize how important. the more years you've lived, the more richness you've got to draw on so why be ashamed of it for god sake. >> darcy has studied martial arts for years but the british grandmother never dreamed she'd get to use it as an action here rowe. agent 88 was created by writer/director digger mash. he was inspired by a jewelry store heist in hampton, new england, foiled by an elderly grandmother. >> suddenly you see this little figure in a red coat dashing down the road swinging her handback. she swings one off his bike. >> he wrote a script about an agent avenging angel and tried selling the story to hollywood. i realized wi us going to have a problem. why? >> so they took their idea to the web to kickstarter, a crowd-funding site. their goal was to raise $88,000 in 30 days. >> the public was going to love it and they're going to love us and get it made or the public ee going to hate it and go right away. >> reporter: their campaign went to $105,000 and agent 88 went into production. perhaps the only thing better than shouldering a weapon is rubbing elbows with other action heroes. that's why agent 88 went to comic-con where hollywood promotes its projects. it's an experience cadorcy only dreams about. she spent her first 70 years in england in plays. now she's allowed her hollywood type up the well lined base. >> do you think that's what products want when they're trying to sell a car? someone with a weathered experienced face. no. they want the height of a of a. >> you're helping break us out of that muddle. >> and if agent 88 becomes an internet sensation, the next step could be a feature film. for "cbs this morning," john blackstone, los angeles. >> i want to look that good at 80 and be able to do that mariel arts thing. >> let me know if you find a class. i'll do it with you. that does it for us. up next your local news. we'll see you right back here tomorrow on "cbs this morning." >> bye-bye. -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com what are you doing back there? 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(announcer) love. it's what makes a subaru, a subaru. it's time to change the way we clean, and free ourselves from the harshness of bleach. lysol power & free has more cleaning power than bleach. the secret, is the hydrogen peroxide formula. it kills 99.9% of germs and is family friendly. lysol. mission for health. >> your realtime captioner: linda marie macdonald good morning, everyone. it's 8:55. i'm frank mallicoat. we got your kpix 5 headlines on this thursday morning. family and friends spent much of yesterday putting up pictures of a missing oakland woman sandra coke. she was last seen at her home on sunday night. investigators say she may have been investigating a tip about her missing dog who was taken during a recent burglary. on the bart labor front a board of inquiry is preparing to report to governor brown so he can decide whether to calling for a cooling-off period of 60 days. bart says the gap is $100 million. the union says just $56 million. the contract negotiations resume today. they have work to do. someone in the south bay is waking up nearly $300,000 richer this morning. a powerball ticket that matched 5 of the numbers sold at a shell station on the lawrence expressway in sunnyvale, two winning tickets were sold in new jersey another in minnesota. they have already woke up, i bet they're happy. how about your weather? it's still kind of gloomy out there. let's find out when the heatup is coming. >> as we go outside we see a lot of fog and low clouds. temperatures are near 60 to start out your thursday morning with. but there are blue skies above and sunshine this afternoon at least for the east bay. it will spread slowly to the shoreline later in the day. a little bit of a warming trend for the bay area. san francisco still at 62. but fairfield is up to 77. extended forecast, look for things to warm into the mid-80s again by the end of the weekend. in fact, looking farther ahead into midweek next week, we'll be back to near 90 degrees by wednesday. hey, traffic is after a break. sleep train's interest-free for 3 event ends sunday! it's your last cha get 3 years interest-free financing on beautyrest black, stearns & foster serta icomfort even tempur-pedic. plus, get free delivery and sleep train's 100-day low price guarantee. but hurry, sleep train's interest-free for 3 event ends sunday! superior service best selection, lowest price guaranteed! ♪ sleep train ♪ ♪ your ticket to a better night's sleep ♪ ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] wouldn't it be great if all devices had backup power? the chevrolet volt does. it's ingeniously designed to seamlessly switch from electricity to gas to extend your driving range. no wonder volt is america's best-selling plug-in. that's american ingenuity to find new roads. ♪ ♪ the 2013 volt. charge ahead of the rest in the hov lane. ♪ ♪ good morning. taking a look through oakland, northbound 880 from the oakland coliseum towards downtown, the bay bridge a lot better look at this barely a delay at all right now in any of the lanes getting into san francisco as you approach the bay bridge toll plaza. westbound 580 through the altamont pass and livermore valley still pretty slow there was that earlier crash approaching north livermore avenue now out of lanes and just a quick reminder giants take on the brewers later this afternoon. so... 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