Transcripts For KYW CBS This Morning 20170615 : comparemela.

Transcripts For KYW CBS This Morning 20170615



>> we are strongest when we are unified and when we work together for the common good. >> washington unites after an attack on congress. >> it appears that the gunman was motivated by a hatred of the republican party. >> he had no regard for humanity, human life. he's no more democraore to me t on the moon. >> it's not just an attack against a republican or democrat. it was against all americans. >> it's completely meaningless at a moment like this. with we are just really pulling for our friends. a high-rise apartment building in london is a deadly inferno. >> no one is expected to be pulled out alive. two gunmen who are on the run stole another vehicle. reports of a dirty bomb on board a container ship. coast guard says all is clear now. all that -- >> pittsburgh penguins hold the stanley cup over the city. >> -- and all that matters -- >> we're going to win. >> members of this house have deniedet not to give in to fear. the annual congressional baseball games will be scheduled. >> i'm not sure. i'll be the one coaching third. >> -- on "cbs this morning." >> honestly for me was heart warming for me to see members of congress united at human beings. >> i want to say thank you to the leadership and president to responding to this act of terror that in a way gives us hope that whatever our differences we'll always be the united states of america. thank you for that. welcome to "cbs this morning." norah o'donnell is off. we're pleased to have jeff glor with us. the house republican steve scalise is in critical condition shot by a man with a rifle during baseball practice cell phone video captured the scene yesterday in virginia. >> he was rushed in a medevacked helicopter for emergency surgery. a bullet tors through his abdomen breaking bones and damaging internal organs. president trump and first lady melania visited him last night. mr. trump also met capitol police officers crystal greiner. she was hit in the ankle when she returned fire. lobbyist mike mika and zachary barth were also shot. the gunman was shot as well. >> the gunman approached from the third base line where more than 30 people were practicing. jeff pegues is at the crime scene with new details on the investigation. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. we're about 50 yards away from the third base line. we're seeing what the gunman was seeing it was filled with republican congressmen when the gunman who was heavily armed opened fire. gunfire pierced the air for ten agonizing minutes as james hodgkinson opened fire. >> there's also a victim down in the baseball field. >> reporter: u.s. capitol police officers, part of house republican whip steve scalise's security detail fired back. witnesses say hodgkinson was armed with a handgun and rifle when he approached the fence along the third base line and started firing. he never got on the field. representative scalise standing on second base was shot first in the hip. others took cover in the dugout. >> i could see steve scalise out in the field. >> reporter: arizona rep jeff flake waited for an opportunity to help his colleague. >> i ran low out to steve and started putting pressure on the wound. >> reporter: investigators believe the 66-year-old long kinson originally from illinois was out of work and had been living in his van in the alexandria area since march. the near by "y" was struck by bullets. locals saw him there frequently. >> he always had his laptop. he was always with his laptop, laptop bag, always getting set up. >> reporter: his facebook page shows he supported bernie sanders and did not like trump. he was a member of the terminate trump party. >> we're exploring all angles and we'll let the facts take it where it goes. >> reporter: so dud the gunman target someone specifically on the baseball field or was this just a target of opportunity for him? that's what investigators are looking into among other things. congressman jeff duncan of south carolina says before the gunman opened fire, he asked him if there were republicans on the field. jeff. >> jeff, thank you very much. the fbi is seeking more information on james hodgkinson and his motive. agents searched his bell ville, illinois, home for evidence yesterday. authorities believe hodgkinson had not lived there since march when he arrived in virginia. dean reynolds is outside of the baseball field where he opened fire. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. those who knew the man who lived in this house behind me say he was unhappy with the political direction of the country, but they never expected him to turn violent. known to many as tom, james hodgkinson grew up in bellville, graduating from a local high school in 1968. he lived in this house with his wife and ran a home inspection business until his license expired last december. ray page knew him for 30 years. >> i never have seen the man violent since i've known him. >> reporter: deeply engaged in politics, hodgkinson did not keep his views secret. >> 99% are getting pushed around and the 1% are just not giving a damn. >> reporter: in a 2015 facebook poej hodgkinson shared a political cartoon about yesterday's victim congressman steve scalise. he said, here's a republican who should lose his job but they gave him a raise. in recent months he began showing disdain for the current administration. in a march 22nd post, he wrote, it's time to destroy trump and company. just two days later a neighbor complained after hearing 50 shots fired from hodgkinson's property. >> he was very nice. he said i'll take it to a range where it's somewhat safer and that was the end of it. >> reporter: republican mike bost said he had called and september e-mails. >> he wasn't happy with my position, if i voted this way, he'd vote this way, i'll work but no threat beyond that. >> reporter: now hodgkinson had an arrest record dating back to the 1970s, but they were mostly minor offenses that were later dismissed. gayle? >> dean, thank you very much. congressional leaders confirm tonight's baseball game will go ahead. it's washington tradition that brings democrats and republicans together. president trump called for greater unity after the shooting. >> we may have our differences, but we do well in times like these to remember that everyone who serves in our nation's capitol is here because above all they love our country. >> house speaker paul ryan repeated that theme when he spoke to members yesterday. nancy cordes is at nationals park in washington. that's the site of tonight's big game. nancy, good morning. >> good morning, gayle. there was really no serious talk about canceling this game. in fact, when it was announced the game would take place as scheduled, members of congress erupted with applause. >> we're not going to let incidents like this change our lives or our daily routine. >> the republican and democratic team managers said the game will go on even though a couple of players are now on the injured reserved list. >> if you're not sure,'ll be the one on third coaching with crutches. >> he injured his leg while diving for cover. house speaker paul ryan summoned his colleagues to the floor yesterday for a message of unity. >> we're united in our shock, we're united in our anguish. an attack on one of us is an attack on all of us. >> democratic leader nancy pelosi did the same. >> i pray. my prayer is that we can resolve our differences in a way that furthers the preamble to the constitution and takes us closer to an injury in the family, the staff and a cog league for his leadership. >> even a visible increase in security, lawmakers are on edge, particularly those who were at the scene. >> i was up the back when this shooting started. i heard a loud noise. >> i was about ten feet from that mike. he was really shot bad. >> new york republican claudy tenney received this disturbing e-mail, one down, 215 to go. >> republican chuck fleischman said -- >> we represent people every day in this country on both sides of the aisle. >> in a show of solidarity the democratic players invited the republican players out to dinner last night, but both sides say tonight they'll be all businesslet this is a long-time rivalry, charlie, and nobody's going easy on anybody. >> nancy, thanks. alabama congressman w maman was only 20 feet away from the ill kerr. good morning. >> good morning, charlie. >> set the scene of what you heard, what was going on. >> we were taking batting practice. i was at shortstop. steve scalise was at second and frank kelly was at third. when i heard the gunshot i knew immediately what it was. i turned to trent and said that was a gunshot. he said, yeah, and he turned and said he's got a gun. frankly it's a miracle that he missed. trent's a big guy. we move aid cross the baseball diamond toward the first base side where the only open space in the fence was. i heard two more shots and i saw scalise go down. i knew he had been hit. i knew he had been hit low, but i didn't know whether it was in the hip or the leg. >> congressman, we're all trying to process what happened yesterday. i think many people are still reeling from it. and now reports say it might have been politically motivated. this man apparently was unhappy with the republican party and said many disparaging things. what do you think when you hear about that. what do you think is happening in the country right now? >> i think our republic's in danger, gayle. i think we're furring at the edges. i'm hearing some reports of what this gentleman had posted on his facebook page, and it's not that different from some of the things we're hearing from other people. so we have got to tone down the rhetoric. i think it has to begin with us, both parties. but it's got to come from media. it's got to come from other people who are speaking to the country. and particularly in the social media. >> congressman, that's a pretty serious thing to say the republic is in danger and the country is furring at tejs. do you think it starts h washington? does it start with social media? what concrete steps need to be taken many your estimation? >> i think we've got to lead by example. obviously republicans and democrats differ on issues, but i think we can have a civil discussion. >> you said that the democrats at playing field were actually praying when they heard about the shooting on the republican side. teddy roosevelt used to call the white house the bully pulpit. do we begin with leadership from the white house in terms of trying to cool down things and trying to create more stability and trying to create a more common ground? >> i think it begins with me, it begins with my colleagues. i think all of us have a stake in this and every one of us need to take responsibility if for what we see and how we see it. >> do you think this will take on a different view about guns and gun control. i think people thought after sandy hook things would change and unfortunately very little seems to have changed. >> all i know is first of all, governor mcccauliffe got his sts wrong. it's inaccurate in the context he was using it. as a gun owner, i wish i had had one yesterday. >> you wish you'd had a gun yesterday so you could have fired back? >> yes, charlie. i would have liked to have a fire arm. there are a number of others e. that wish we would have been able to defend ourselves and come to the aid of the capitol police who were extraordinary. >> congressman, thank you for joining us. >> thank you, charlie. in our next hour, we will talk with one of the people who was shot. that's legislative aide zach barth and congressman bost who was injured. it's reached a potential turning report. counsel robert mueller is trying to determine if the president obstructed justice. >> this morning the president tweeted, quote, they made up a phony collusion with the russian story, found zero proof, so now they go for obstruction of justice on the phony story. nice. major garrett is at the white house. good morning. >> good morning. cbs news has learned dan coats of national intelligence has agreed to be interviewed by robert mueller. one of the topics about the russian investigation. the counsel's probe will now look into whether or not president trump attempted to obstruct justice. looking into that question doesn't necessarily mean evidence will be found or a charge will be brought. a spokesman for his personal attorney marc kasowitz said the fbi leak of information regarding the president is outrageous, inexcusable, and illegal. there's no proof that the fbi is the source of this leak. nsa director mike rogers is also cooperating. he was asked to push back on the russian operatives. the two men refused to answer questions about those conversations during senate testimony last week. former fbi director james comey did testify the president asked him to try to lift the cloud of the russia investigation and when he did not, jeff, the president fired him. >> thank you very much. the driver who killed three drivers at a ups warehouse made a formal complaint about working too much overtime. a union representative said jimmy lam filed his degree advance in march. he killed himself after he shot five employees during a meeting yesterday. the men who died were 56 dwrrld wayne chen, 50-year-old benson louis who loved to play basketball and michael lefiti, father of three known as big mike. he'd been with ups for 15 years. customers say he went out of his way to help others. the jury in the cosby case return for a fourth day of deliberations. jurors asked to review two more pieces of equipment yesterday. the first was the testimony that andrea constand gave last week detailing the alleged assault back in 2004. the other was testimony of a detective who interviewed bill cosby about the encounter. so far the jury has asked the judge six questions and deliberated for more than 26 hours. >> the death toll in the london apartment fire has risen to at least 17. the burned out apartment complex could take weeks now to search. ahead, we're going to take you to the scene for the search of missing people and have new many say the three capitol police officers who were at the baseball field when the gunman opened fire prevented a massacre. >> ahead, why those who know them were not surprised they risked their lives to save others. >> you're watching "cbs this morning." (roosevelt) i always thought that cigarette up your lungs.messed i never thought that at only 45 it would give me a heart attack. my tip is; do your heart a favor, and quit now. (announcer) you can quit. for free help, call 1-800-quit-now. masteone above the rest.risesnt. lindt excellence created by our master chocolatiers. pure, rich, elegantly thin. experience excellence with all your senses. from the lindt master chocolatiers. only tylenol® rapid release gels have laser drilled holes. they release medicine fast, for fast pain relief. tylenol® the toothpaste that helps new parodontax. prevent bleeding gums. if you spit blood when you brush or floss you may have gum problems and could be on the journey to much worse. help stop the journey of gum disease. try new parodontax toothpaste. ♪ only new tena intimates has ♪ it'pro-skin technologyiend designed to quickly wick away moisture to help maintain your skin's natural balance. for a free sample, call 1-877-get-tena. working on my feet all day gave me pain here. in my knees. so i stepped on this machine and got my number, which matched my dr. scholl's custom fit orthotic inserts. so i get immediate relief from my foot pain. my knee pain. find a machine at drscholls.com. ( ♪ ) a dog's big life is measured in wags. and when you feed your dog nature's recipe, you fuel the wag with our 35-year history of premium recipes like chicken, sweet potato and pumpkin. ( ♪ ) (bark) the bigger the life, the bigger the wag. nature's recipe. fuel the wag. hi guys. in the desert.be here. at the mall. on the mountain. at school. at the beach. in the big easy. yeah yeah today i want to show you guys the next-gen chevy equinox. what do you think? that's pretty. pretty sexy. it looks aggressive. but not overbearing. it's not too big. not too small. seems like the perfect car for anybody. i would take it anywhere. she's a bad mama jama. (laughter) current qualified gm lessees can get this introductory lease on the all-new 2018 chevy equinox for around $249 a month. find new roads at your local chevy dealer. atblue diamond almonds wein our almondmilk.ia-grown and we're proud of that. but the whole "care-and-nurturing" part? that idea... ...we borrowed from the experts. blue diamond almond breeze. the best almonds make the best almondmilk. watching this breath savers protect mint neutralize the plaque acids in my mouth. i can't see anything! that's because it's working so hard. hey, what are you guys doing? karen. we're neutralizing. maybe i want to neutralize. you ever think of that? so i use excedrin.ments from my life. it starts to relieve migraine pain in just 30 minutes. and it works on my symptoms, too. now moments lost to migraines are moments gained with excedrin. sfx [heartbeat] flea bites can mean misery for your cat. advantage® ii monthly topical kills fleas through contact. fleas do not have to bite your cat to die. advantage® ii. fight the misery of biting fleas. and i smoked while (amanda) my i was pregnant. this is the view i had of my baby in the nicu. my tip is, speak into the opening so your baby can hear you better. (announcer) you can quit. for free help, call 1-800-quit-now. ahead, what a new fed interest rate hike means for your credit card bills an your mortgage. an undocumented teenaged good morning, i'm rahel solomon. it looks like the philadelphia beverage taxis here to stay. a pennsylvania appeals court agrees with last years court decision that the beverage tax does not duplicate the sales tax. also, city new says that the tax revenue will fall short of the estimated $46 million it was supposed to raise this fiscal year. lets check the forecast with meteorologist katie fehlinger. it looks like a nice day. >> i think so. very comfortable. humidity has dropped off, that is so often key to our comfort , it doesn't matter necessarily how warm it is, within reason, not humid, it does feel so much better. that is story to day. we will find some cloud, we will have that since this morning since the sun has been up but we do seek comfortable warmth, 81 the high. dropping dunn to 53 just cloud and looking ahead it starts to go downhill tomorrow, front lifts in thomas spotty shower or storm through weekend and by monday heavier rain and storms from a potent cold front passage. >> we are still looking busy throughout plus we have problems overturned vehicles 295 northbound at delran pulled off to the shoulder. disabled vehicle on 295 another area northbound at route 42 at 76, right lane compromised and accident investigation on route one near washington road. head up for that. rahel, over to you. next update 7:55. up next officials defend their decision to detain a 19 year-old and his mother on immigration c there was another horrific shooting in america, this time targeting apparently gop members of congress. you do have any thoughts on what happened today? >> it was great to see people from both sides seeing this and united under the banner of human and american before anything else. that's something that's lacking in american politics is politicians showing from both sides of the aisle that they are friends. it's almost become like wrestling where the fans don't realize that those people get along. those people fight every single day, but like paul ryan said today, like nancy pelosi said today, we fight like tooth and nail but we don't for get we're friends, families, colleagues. it's like hey, we fight, you fight, but don't forget, at your call, we are americans. don't ever forget that. >> that was the message yesterday. so great to see humanity wins. >> for all the anger you see online, playing baseball together. >> that's right. he that's one thing that came out of it yesterday. we are americans united after all. steve scalise is out of surgery. the republican congressman is still in critical condition after a gunman opened fire yesterday at a congressional baseball practice. doctors say the bullet broke bone bones and caused damage. gabby giffords was shot outside a supermarket in 2011 in arizona. she said parties need to put aside partisan differences an talk with one another. scott kelly spoke last night on the cs evening news about the capitol police. >> we had a lot of friends who were capitol police. we became very close with them. >> the three capitol police officers who immediately returned fire when the gunman attacked at the republican baseball practice are being called heroes. speshlg agents crystal greiner, david bailey, and henry cabrera. chip reid is outside the capitol with new details on their bravery. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. congressman steve scalise travels with a detail of police officers. it's a very good thing he was there because his security team kept that baseball field from becoming a killing field. >> i know sure as u i'm standing here right now there's no way we would have lived through that. >> reporter: representative mike bishop said two of the agents rushed on field as the staffers fled. >> the problem is he's got a rifle and they've got handguns. it wasn't a fair fight. they knew they weren't going to hit him but they were trying to give us cover. >> i yelled out, is this friendly, is this friendly, are you friendly to the person who was fire behind our dugout and greatly it was a member of the capitol police. >> agent crystal greiner was hospitalized with a gunshot wound to her ankle. she graduated in 2006 from maryland's hood college where she played on fwabl team. retired police chief kim dine. >> she's amazing and epitomized a hero. >> reporter: agent david bailey is recovering. he's from brazil. his friend rachel brooks wasn't surprised by bailey's heroics. >> he always talked about becoming a police officer and i remember when he first shared that he was working in washington, d.c., and that he was a police officer, he was so proud. >> reporter: representative joe barton was there with his two sons. his gratitude to the two officers who saved him was clear. >> capitol police immediately began to return fire. >> reporter: that sentiment echoed throughout the capitol. >> we are as ever awed by the tremendous bravely of the capitol police. >> survivors say that if the capitol police officers had not been there, hay would have been sitting ducks, and i tell you, gayle, i know from long experience here on capitol hill that the capitol police often feel like furniture, wallpaper. they feel unappreciated. but today they're being thanked profusely for being the first line of defense. >> they really do have to hear the applause for them across the board and the unique fact that they were there because congressman scalise was there. >> as congressman bishop said it wasn't fair. they had baseball bats and handguns compared to a rifle. thank you very much, chip. london's police chief say this morning death toll will rise in the devastating london apartment fire. firefighters put out the last of the flames this morning more than a day after the massive fire broke out. 17 people are confirmed dead at this time. dozens of others are believed to be missing. 74 people are hurt. prime minister theresa may went to the billing this morning and promised an investigation. during an emotional visit overnight adele went to comfort them there. jonathan vigliotti is in london with new details on the investigation. jonathan? >> reporter: good morning. the building behind me looks like a skeleton, many of these floors completely gutted by the flames. firefighters are back on the scene battling hot spots. the small pockets of flames. fire officials say at this hour, it's too dangerous to gain total access inside. >> reporter: the morning after reveals what a day of raging flames did to this 24-story apartment. the damage so severe fire officials say it will take weeks to inspect each and every floor. for now drones are the safest tool for investigators. the cause of the fire is still unclear as is how it spread so quickly. they believe the cosmetic cladding or siding that was added to the building's exterior may to blame. >> the cladding is outside the wall and there's this space in between it and you're saying because it was installed incorrectly, oxygen was able to get through causing a chimney effe effect. >> sometime during the fire the cladle gets involved. >> he conducted fire inspections on building. >> it has the chimney effect. it's like a flue. >> reporter: the fire struck in the mid of the night trapping many. some desperately screaming for help. >> you're going to bring the smoke in. >> the video you're about to see was shot inside the burning building on the 24th floor. we have no information if the person who took the video survives. we warn you, it is disturbing. >> oh, my gosh. >> close the door. >> sur vavers say they spent years complaining about fire hazards including blocked exits but say the management company wasn't responsive. more than a dozen are still missing, their faces growing around the donation center for the hundreds now left homeless. and the construction company that put in that cladding said in a statement they met all fire installations. cadaver dogs are being brought in to search for the bodies of the missing. charlie, the bbc spoke with a firefighter who fears that as many as 100 people may have been killed. >> jonathan vigliotti in london. thank you so much. here's look at some of the other headlines this morning. u.s. news & world reports approves sanctions. the vote yesterday was 97-2. the sanctions target key sectors of russia's economy and individuals who carried out cyber attacks. the bill also required congressional review if the president tries to ease or end current penalties. >> the "washington post" says criminal charges will be announced today against members of the turkish president's security detail. last month 12 turkish guards allegedly attacked protesters outside the ambassador's resident in washington, d.c. officials say arrest warntss have been issues. all of the suspects are believed to have been returned back to turkey. > minivans are billion recalled recall ed. there's a wire problem. it's linked to 13 minor injuries. and the "usa today" says your credit debt is about to get costlier. that's because of the federal hike of a quarter percentage point. it will affect credit card users as well as homeowners with adjustable home mortgages. rates change according on the benchmark rate. just hours before his senior prom a teenager was detained and faces deportation. ahead, how members of congress are raising the case about immigrants. plus the great white shark is changing how thousands spend their summers. you're watching "cbs this morning." father daughter dance. na welcome everyone toe walk, move and earn money... ...for out-of-pocket medical expenses. he's ok! unitedhealthcare you brush your teeth diligently... two times a day right? but 80% of bacteria aren't even on teeth. eughty purschunt?! colgate total's different. it fights bacteria on teeth, tongue, cheeks and gums. protecting 100% of your mouth's surfaces. colgate total for whole mouth health. is thno, it's, uh, breyers gelato indulgences. you really wouldn't like it. it's got caramel and crunchy stuff. i like caramel and crunchy stuff. breyers gelato indulgences. it's way beyond ice cream. wearing powerful sunscreen? yes! neutrogena® ultra sheer. unbeatable protection helps prevent early skin aging and skin cancer with a clean feel. the best for your skin. ultra sheer®. neutrogena®. but when we brought our daughter home, that was it. now i have nicoderm cq. the nicoderm cq patch with unique extended release technology helps prevent your urge to smoke all day. it's the best thing that ever happened to me. every great why needs a great how. if you have moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis like me, and you're talking to your rheumatologist about a medication... ...this is humira. this is humira helping to relieve my pain... ...and protect my joints from further damage. humira has been clinically studied for over 18 years. humira works by targeting and helping to... ...block a specific source... ...of inflammation that contributes to ra symptoms. it's proven to help relieve pain and... ...stop further joint damage in many adults. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened, as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas... ...where certain fungal infections are common and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flulike symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. talk to your doctor and visit humira.com this is humira at work. undocumented immigrant arrested just before his high school prom has failed to win extra time in the u.s. lawyers for him say they denied the request for a stay of removal. his mother and he face deportation back to ecuador. tony dokoupil shows us what led to his arrest. >> good morning. diego puma macancela was set to go to his prom. he found himself cowering in a closet in his cousin's home while agents prepared to arrest him. >> we felt leak they were going to break the doors. >> reporter: federal agents came to gaby macancela's home looking for diego. >> it's scary. it's your own house. you're supposed to be safe there. >> reporter: he spent the night there after his mother was detained by authorities the previous day. he and his mother left their native ecuador in 2014. they were told by a judge last november to leave the u.s. >> the i.c.e. agents were wearing vests with police on the back. >> reporter: victoria gearity witnessed it. >> in this case, it feels very different. diego and his mother don't seem dangerous to us. >> if you're violating the law, you should be uncomfortable. he should be looking over his shoulder. >> reporter: on capitol hill this week congresswoman ossining asked -- >> you're going after a student who's graduating and is law abiding into he's not law abiding. he was told to leave and he failed to do so. >> reporter: according to gaby, they threatened the rest of the family. >> so the agents said give us de'go or we take everybody. >> yes. >> did he say anything. >> he said, by, gaby, take my wallet. give it to my dad. i'm going to be fine. >> has what happened to diego and your aunt changed the way you feel about america? >> it's a great country for all immigrants. >> gaby was brought to the u.s. as a child as is protected by the obama d.r.e.a.m. act. legal counsel report that diego and his mother are now in the same facility in new york after officials kept them in separate facilities. >> thank you very much. tomorrow on "cbs this morning," new technology for boarding a plane. how airlines are reinventing security with facial recognition and fingerprints. how a road not all fish oil supplements provide the same omega-3 power. megared advanced triple absorption is absorbed three times better. so one softgel has more omega-3 power than three standard fish oil pills. megared advanced triple absorption. twenty more years of this my kids say go for it, mom. be that woman who does what she loves. knows what she wants. yeah, mom's gonna go for it! except... i don't have a clue where to start. hey we hear you. that's why aarp has resources to help you navigate the job market. we'll connect you with employers that value your experience and provide tips and tools to find work you love. if you don't think "this is right for me" when you think aarp, then you don't know "aarp". get to know us at aarp.org/possibilities. ♪ ♪ give extra. get extra. ♪ ♪ ♪ we all drive, some cats just know how to roll. say no to this because of my bladder? thanks to tena. not anymore! only new tena intimates has pro-skin technology designed to quickly wick away moisture. to help maintain your skin's natural balance. it goes beyond triple protection from leaks, odor and moisture. so you can feel fresh and free to get as close as you want. for a free sample call 1-877-get-tena coppertone sport versus the sun. coppertone sport stays on strong when you sweat and is strong enough to stop up to 98% of the sun's damaging uv rays. coppertone. because protection matters. hitting the mid-morning wall? with up to 24 grams of hearty protein jimmy dean bowls help you avoid it. shine on. ♪ depression is a tangle of multiple symptoms. ♪ that's why there's trintellix, a prescription medication for depression. trintellix may help you take a step forward in improving your depression. tell your healthcare professional right away if your depression worsens, or you have unusual changes in mood, behavior or thoughts of suicide. antidepressants can increase these in children, teens and young adults. do not take with maois. tell your healthcare professional about your medications, including migraine, psychiatric and depression medications, to avoid a potentially life-threatening condition. increased risk of bleeding or bruising may occur, especially if taken with nsaid pain relievers, aspirin or blood thinners. manic episodes or vision problems may occur in some people. may cause low sodium levels. the most common side effects were nausea, constipation and vomiting. trintellix had no significant impact on weight in clinical trials. ask your healthcare professional about trintellix. cell phone video captured a woman being dragged along a california freeway on the right side of your screen. it happened after a suspected road rage incident. the woman got out of the car and knocked on the window of a black honda. the driver sped off and she held on. eventually the car slowed down and she let go. the highway patrol is investigating. >> you look at that and you go, what conversation preceded that that made either one think i'm going to jump out and grab the car. >> you go from a little bit of yelling to nuts. >> nuts. out of control. don't do that. more than dranking rights will be on the lean. the congressional baseball game ahead. a look at the bipartisan tradition that stretches back more than a century. we'll be right back. human papillomavirus. who knew hpv could lead to certain cancers and diseases? who knew my risk for hpv would increase as i got older? who knew that there was a vaccine that could have helped protect me from hpv when i was 11 or 12, way before i would even be exposed to it? did you know, mom? dad? what will you say? don't wait. talk to your child's doctor today. learn more at hpv.com. the toothpaste that helps new parodontax. prevent bleeding gums. if you spit blood when you brush or floss you may have gum problems and could be on the journey to much worse. help stop the journey of gum disease. try new parodontax toothpaste. ♪ nearly fifty years at of experiencety, has taught us that we're not so different. we all want to be healthy humans. we all want strong bodies for our families, who we love... most of the time. the drive to whip up a gourmet dinner... or order out, and destroy the evidence. and healthy hearts to pursue our passions, celebrate friends' victories... and endure their endless victory dances. we get it, you're good at bowling. that's why nature's bounty packs our nearly fifty years of wisdom into all we make. because we're all better off healthy. one dark chocolate rises masteringabove the rest.inement. lindt excellence created by our master chocolatiers. pure, rich, elegantly thin. experience excellence with all your senses. from the lindt master chocolatiers. as fast as you can. you can't catch me; i'm the gingerbread man. it will be mine. ♪ i've got it now. introducing an all-new crossover, toyota c-hr. toyota. let's go places. i was infected with hpv. maybe my parents didn't know how widespread hpv is. while hpv clears up for most, that wasn't the case for me. maybe they didn't know i would end up with cancer because of hpv. maybe if they had known there was a vaccine to help protect me when i was 11 or 12. maybe my parents just didn't know. right, mom? dad? what will you say? don't wait. talk to your child's doctor today. learn more at hpv.com. oo, yeah. are you ready for a rush? yes, yes i am. you're in for a treat. fast play is the new way to play fast and win instantly from the pennsylvania lottery. pick a game, get your ticket and see if you've won. i won! pretty fast, huh? fast play. play fast. win instantly. good morning, aim jim donovan. police in bucks county are warning residents to be wear of bears, and eyewitness sent us photos from buckingham township and officials believe we're looking at a mother and her cubs. state game officials say don't approach the bears and secure anything that can attract them , like bird feeders and trash cans. lets send it over to katie for a look at today's forecast. >> all and all it looks like a very pleasant day, we have low humidity, comfortable warmth with time here and feels nicer when you walk outside the door not as steamy but here at storm scan three we have a few cloud working their way through so it is skewing that sunshine out there don't expect that anything will fire up on the radar at lee not today, tomorrow bit of the different story but time we do again warm up nicely to 81 degrees. now by tomorrow old front is lifting back in so few showers and storms will pop up in scatter fashion and it is, lead nothing to a generally un settled pattern for next few days. >> more rain. >> all right, katie, thanks very much. we are looking outside at a dry roadway and looking busy. here we have an accident 95 north near woodhaven, left lane is compromised clearly as you can see putting on your breaks and move around there give yourself extra time there take a quick peak bridge inspections on the schuylkill between different times between that too. jim, over to you. our next update 8:25. coming up on cbs this morning great white sharks are impacting summer beach business in southern california, i'm jim donovan. make it a so, when it's your turnt to do the shopping and you need to get... raspberries for john... strawberries for amy... bananas for mom...wait, what's a jicama? and at these prices, i can make it all happen. take a fresh look at giant's produce prices. it is thursday, june 17th, 2017. welcome back to "cbs this morning." congress grets back after the shooting that left republican congressman steve scalise in critical condition. ahead we'll talk with a staffer who was hit in the attack. plus we'll talk about how a baseball tradition brings unity to capitol hill. but first here's today's "eye opener" at 8:00. >> that baseball field was filled with republican congressmen when the gunman opened fire. >> those who knew the man who lived this this house behind me said they never expected him to turn violent? they say it might be politically motivated. what do you think needs to happen based on what is happening in the country right now? >> i think the republican is in danger, gayle. i think we're furring at the edging. >> they usually feel like furniture or wall paper. today they were the first line of defense. >> there was really no serious talk about capsling the game. in fact, when congressional leaders announced it would take place, members of congress erupted in applause. >> they win if we give in. america doesn't give out. america gives in. we must play this baseball game. if we don't play, then they win. so that's the reason. this is america. the greatest country in the world. if you punch us, we will punch back. i'm charlie rose with gayle king and jeff glor. >> hospital staff says steve scalise will need more surgery for his gunshot wound. representative scalise in critical condition after a gunman attacked republicans practicing for tonight's congressional baseball game. the president and mrs. trump visited scalise and capitol police officer crystal greiner who was also wound. >> steve scalise, the third ranking house republican was shot in the hip. the hospital said he suffered broken bones and injuries to internal yore against. crystal greiner was hit in the ankle while she and her colleagues returned fire. lobbyist mike mika was hit in chest. he gave his family a zack barth was also in the hospital but he'll be released shortly. david bailey and congressman roger williams were both hurt. the fbi say he lived in a van in the alexandria area since march. police came to his illinois home in march to investigate complaints that he was shooting in the wooding. he did have a valid firearms license. hes with not charged. hodgkinson supported former democratic presidential candidate bernie sanders and lashed out against president trump on social media. in march he wrote on facebook it's time to destroy trump and company. >> barth was shot in the leg while retrieving baseballs in the outfield. rogers hurt his ankle in the chaos. the two men are joining us from the capitol. good morning to you both. >> good morning. >> i can't tell you how thrilled you're alive and able to communicate with us this morning. zack, i want to talk with you first. during that horrible situation you managed to tweet, to call your mom. can you tell us what your thought process was at that time? >> sure. i was out there shagging fly balls in center field when i heard a loud pop and everybody stopped wondering what was going on. then we heard more pops, more cracks of a rifle, saw somebody with a long gun. somebody said shooters, run, i hightailed to right field. there was nowhere for me to go. i got on all fours. at that point i saw him train his gun at me. everything around me started to possible pop. i got hit in the leg. i was full of adrenaline and my fight or flight kicked in. i thought if i wanted to live i needed to make a run for it. i ran down the first base line to the dugout. at that point my single focus was to keep alive and keep everybody safe. i jumped into the congressman's arms. thank the lord for special agents greiner and bailey. without them, i don't know that i'd be talking to you right now. >> congressman williams, what happened to you? >> i was on the third base sight of the batting cage hitting ground balls to trent. didn't realize the shooter was probably 20 yards behind me. i finished and went over to the other side of the batting bag and hit ground balls to steve scalise. i hit a ground ball to him and immediately we heard a pop. like many i thought it was a car backfiring. then we heard pop, pop, pop. everybody yelled, he's got a gun and ran for cover. instinctively, i ran for the dugout. it's about six feet into the ground. i immediately dove onto the concrete. when i was in there, a lot of other colleague us was in there. i found myself with senator flake and congressman mo brooks. we were there and all of a sudden out of nowhere comes zack, my partner, sitting to my left. he came in. he was bleeding. mo brooks took his belt off and we made a turn cat to cut his bleeding off and we kept our heads down. and in this dugout was several generations. you had someone in their late 60s like myself and we had zack barth and a 10-year-old. i want to tell you as you've heard so many times, these capitol hill police saved our lives. we would not be here if it were not for the thin blue line, our heroes. we owe it all to them. >> one of the things that remain, you think these were targeted shootings with someone in particular, a target. >> well, i'm not so sure a target. i think the congresspeople were the target. i'm not so sure any one person was a target. but i do think we were the targets as congresspeople, and that's what he woke up to do was to kill congresspeople. >> congressman, our reporting is that a number of your colleagues has asked about diverting some of the campaign funds to hire protection or security because as you know, steve scalise was the only one who had protection this, and if he wasn't there, lord, we don't know what would have happened. is that something you're interested in doing? >> well, i want to look at it. i thought newt gingrich put it good one night. he said, one thing about it, we're elected officials. we represent about 800,000 people. not all of them voted for us but they can talk to us. i think that's important. i think when you have 25, 30 congressmen in one group, we ought to study that as far as security. that doesn't make for a good situation if someone has us in harm's way. that makes for a good study. >> i know zack's going to go. i'm not going to make him go to the game but i'm going to be coaching third base on my crutches. i guess i'm going to be the only third base coach on crutches but i ool going to be there. >> don't make any wide turns. >> zack barton, i'm sure your mom appreciates the call. >> thank you so much for joining us. >> thank you. president trump is making calls for unity following the shooting. >> we can all agree that we're blessed to be americans, that our children deserve to grow up in a nation of safety and piece and that we are strongest when we are unified and when we work together for the common good. >> republicans and democrats will have a chance to show that tonight at the annual congressional baseball game. the contest draws thousands of fans each year. it's been a tradition for more than a century. proceeds and donations go to charity. jan crawford is overlooking nationals park in washington where tonight's game will be played. jan, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, charlie. you know, there aren't many bipartisan traditions left. but for 108 years the congressional baseball game has been one of them and that show of unity is why despite yesterday's shooting the game is on. the skills on the field while not major league might surprise you. and when republicans and democrats square off on the diamond -- >> the level of competition is intense snoomg he's been covered the game for five years. >> they take it very seriously with a lot of smack talk. >> he said one of the most determined players on field is louisiana republican steve scalise. scalise was shot in the hip wednesday while practicing for tonight's showdown. >> he's one of the toughest competitors out there, one of the hardest workers. >> i did tell joe i love him before the game and after the game, but during the game, we're going to play to win. >> reporter: wednesday afternoon the managers of the two team rngs republican congressman joe barton and democrat mike doyle announced despite the shooting the game is on. >> it will be play ball. >> reporter: the congressional baseball game was created in 1909 by pennsylvania congressman john tener. a former pitcher for the white stockings. war and depression sometimes canceled the game. when they played, they played hard and for keeps. women started playing in 1973. linda sanchez has played for 15 years. she said it's a chance to shed by par tanship. >> it's fun to have fun with our colleagues as part of a national pastime. >> reporter: now tonight's game will actually be a tiebreaker for the two teams. each have won 39 games, lost 39 games and tied once. and then after yesterday's shooting they actually added a new charity to their recipients who will be getting the proceeds from tonight's game. the capitol police memorial fund. >> this will no doubt be the big effort night. >> i hope so. >> does the score really matter? >> you're right. >> it's about getting together and watching. >> the format is people want to win. >> tied at 3939. cbsn will have coverage of tonight's baseball game at 7:00 p.m. eastern, 6:00 p.m. central. former navy s.e.a.l. is using his battlefield experience to help transform. he joins stanley mcchrystal. how they say lessons from their military resume can still ahead jamie yuccas shows us how sharks are creating newishes along the california coach. >> reporter: on a typical day on this california beach you could see as many as 10,000. but because of the white shark sightings on shorelining it's a little empty. we'll take a look at how it impacts business coming up on "cbs this morning." i'm phil mickelson, pro golfer. i'm karen, i'm a teacher. my psoriatic arthritis caused joint pain. just like my moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis. and i was worried about joint damage. my doctor said joint pain from ra can be a sign of existing joint damage that could only get worse. he prescribed enbrel to help relieve pain and help stop further damage. enbrel may lower your ability to fight infections. serious, sometimes fatal, events including infections, tuberculosis, lymphoma, other cancers, nervous system and blood disorders, and allergic reactions have occurred. tell your doctor if you've been someplace where fungal infections are common, or if you're prone to infections, have cuts or sores, have had hepatitis b, have been treated for heart failure, or if you have persistent fever, bruising, bleeding, or paleness. don't start enbrel if you have an infection like the flu. joint pain and damage... can go side by side. ask how enbrel can help relieve joint pain and help stop joint damage. enbrel, fda approved for 18 years. he's got a condo. he's got a car. he's got a career. but that still doesn't mean he gets you. time to shine. orbit. fothere's a seriousy boomers virus out there that's been almost forgotten. it's hepatitis c. one in 30 boomers has hep c, yet most don't even know it. because it can hide in your body for years without symptoms, and it's not tested for in routine blood work. the cdc recommends all baby boomers get tested. if you have hep c, it can be cured. for us it's time to get tested. ask your healthcare provider for the simple blood test. it's the only way to know for sure. smart sightinheetings along california coast have been occurring. many of them happen along the 40-mile stretch of the beaches in orange county. jamie yuccas is in san clemente where many worry it will hurt their summer business. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. this is the first week of summer. this usually means parents are dropping off their kids for summer camps. but with so many white sharks spotted just offshore, businesses report numbers are down even when the surf's up. sun shining, waves ready to ride, and this year sharks lurking offshore. after dozens of sightings, businessing are feeling what's known as the shark effect. this is his lowest business in 15 years that i normally have 20 classes and we have to weightlift. >> his business has been down 50%. fewer are willing to get in the water. >> the mom will say, i'm so sorry, i talked to my husband, and it's just that one chance. they're just nervous. >> candice lazar is one of those moms. since maher family witnessed shark sightings and beach closings. that's why at the last minute she decided daughter sloane would sit it out. >> it's hard to know how to react. you don't want to overact. >> there's that chance. >> yes, there is. >> that does weigh on your mind. >> yes. >> you'd never forgive yourself. >> oh, my gosh, never. you would never for given yourself. that's why i took the step that i did. there was so many reports, one right after the other. and it was just getting out of hand. it was crazy. >> within the last year alone, two shark attacks took place within a 20-mile stretch on the southern california beaches. a 36-year-old mom lost part of her right leg. she remains hospitalized. lifeguards begin each morning scanning for sharks. san clemente lifeguard chief bill humphrey says the predators impact crowds. >> the biggest picture is there's far more sharks than there's ever been. >> 11-year-old had to convince her mom to let her train as a lifeguard in her group. even she doesn't want to hang in the ocean alone. >> i'm a little scared of sharks. >> did you used to surf? >> i used to sewer but i'm not going to surf for a long time. >> it sunk a local come surfing come pe physician for kids scheduled for later this month. the beaches surrounded by ice cream parlors, surf board stores and others have fewer customers. >> thank you. ahead, best-selling author malcolm gladwell is here. why glaring golf courses are a glaring example of privilege. we'll be right back. reduces wrinkles in just one week. neutrogena® mmmm. mmmm. mmmm... ugh. nothing spoils a moment like heartburn. try new alka-seltzer ultra strength heartburn relief chews. it's fast, powerful relief with no chalky taste. [ sings high note ] ultra strength, new from alka-seltzer. enjoy the relief. so i use excedrin.ments from my life. it starts to relieve migraine pain in just 30 minutes. and it works on my symptoms, too. now moments lost to migraines are moments gained with excedrin. sfx [heartbeat] when i created ingredients for real taste. absolutely no artificial flavors or preservatives. new knorr selects real ingredients for real taste. not all fish oil supplements provide the same omega-3 power. megared advanced triple absorption is absorbed three times better. so one softgel has more omega-3 power than three standard fish oil pills. megared advanced triple absorption. takesmiss hoffman gets us to mathere safe every time. mrs. migliaccio teaches us all about fractions - and haikus - and the erie canal! miss reeves makes us sound amazing. and miss santoro always takes time to see how we're doing. miss simpkins keeps our school looking great. recess wouldn't be recess without miss basile. and mrs. mccarthy always has tons of good books to read. which makes for a pretty good day at school. ♪ good morning, i'm rahel solomon. the top graduate from his high schools all across philadelphia will be recognized by school district today. students will receive certificates highlighting their achievements at a reception hosted at school district offices, student musician from his various schools will provide some entertainment, students will also be honored at today's school reform commission meeting. congratulations to all of them we will send it over to katie for the forecast and it looks nice out there. >> definitely we do have cloud but there is a comfort when you walk outside the door right now we do have gannon satellite cloud cover helping to skew that bright blue sky and sunshine but there will be sun throughout the course of the day peeking through, in the necessarily any wet weather in this forecast at all in, fact here today it will be a warm comfortable day with a few cloud so not bad, at all we will look at our live neighborhood network outside junior/senior high school but i do think you will brighten up with time. we will just take solace in the fact it is very comfortable for now but this pattern does go back downhill tomorrow scattered showers and storms at anytime, saturday and sunday a p.m. issue and on monday, that is right now looking like it will be the wetest day of the pack. >> little roller coaster again , all right, katie, thanks very much. good morning. looking outside we have an accident i-95 north near columbus boulevard. ninety-five north has been a problem child all morning long and continues to do so, again, 95 north near columbus boulevard pulled off to that left lane, very slow moving around there. ninety-five north near wood have then left lane compromised route 70 westbound at 295 that center lane is also compromised so slow yourself and give yourself a couple extra minutes, rahel, back over to you. next update 8:55a head this morning reintern continuing, overlooked and often miss understood historical events. i'm rahel solomon, good i need the phone that's where i happen to be... to be the one that rings. i need not to be missed phone calls... to not be missed. i need seamless handoff... canyon software. from reception, to landline, to mobile. i need one number... not two. i'm always moving forward... because i can't afford to get stuck in the past. comcast business. built for business. comcast business. ♪ luis waited his whole life being crowned champions. so our wellness coaches developed a plan, to keep him fit and healthy. and when his moment finally arrived, his knees were up to the job. aetna. you don't join us, we join you. ♪ i love this picture. you know why? it shows you are never too old to rock on. rock on, dude. this gentleman of a certain age proves that he's showing no signs of stopping as he head bangs his way to a hard rock metallica song in his car. even his air drumming is to the point. >> wraparound glasses and banging on the steering wheel. >> we don't know his name or anything about him. you can tell by looking at this guy, he's a fun guy. i like that. welcome back to our "cbs this morning" -- >> party. >> welcome back to "cbs this morning." i'm trying to say we're going to go to the green room. sorry about that. hec let's go to the green room. you've about got a general, a navy s.e.a.l. and a best-selling author. who's who, charlie? >> malcolm gladwell is the general. and stanley mcchrystal is the best-selling author -- >> there you go. right now it's time to show you some of this morning's headlines. the "washington post" reports that dennis rodman had a gift for the president there. it was president trump's book called "the art of deal." he gave it to the sports miniter stored but it was intended for king jong-un. rodman says his trip to north korea has nothing to do with the white house. billboard reports on the grammy announcing sweeping changing for the first time. members of the recording academy will be able to cast their awards online. songwriters will be recognized in the album of the year category. they'll be established for wrap, contemporary instrumental, and new age genres around the definition of an album will be expanded. the "los angeles times" reports on a much anticipated fight that will happen in las vegas. the august bout will bring may weather jr. out of retirement and he'll face connor mcgregor. the irishman faces long odds. he's considered to be a 25-1 favorite. >> there's a lot of trash talking already. one of classic rock's anthems could be getting a revised song writing credit. they want to credit yoko ohno as a co-writer. ohno is the widow of the late beatle. he said ohno deserved credit due to her inspiration on the song. this week defense secretary james mattis was granted authority to set those levels to increase troops. retired four-star stanley mcchrystal commanded american and international forces in afghanistan. he also served as commander of the joint special operations command. mcchrystal was tasked with re-imagining the battlefield of the middle east. he outlined how he did that in his 2015 bestseller "team of teams." >> fussell has followed that up with a book of his own. the book is called "one mission: how leaders build a team of teams." the bookses abo is about applyio anyone in the field. >> there's concern around the world. give me a sense because you think of national security, yo think about this country and the timely conversation. what was your reaction when you watched that yesterday and what we need to be thinking about. >> well, i think like everybody else. it's horror at what happened but it's the hope that it starts a national conversation about a number of issues. one is about partisanship, conversation, and another is about why so many people are being killed by guns in our people. i think we need thoughtful people to come together and take on a tough issue. >> that's what struck me yesterday. we've been reporting on it all morning. 50 toe 100 shots. when you hear the gunshots and how long it took. as a navy s.e.a.l., you know the sound. what were you thinking when you looked at that and what it all means? >> obviously sympathy for the folks and the families. >> of course. >> and broader problem here, which i think stan just identified. this is increasing and we have to get our hands around this issue. and for people who haven't been exposed to that before, that's a life-changing moment they'll wrestle with for years. >> what sort of leadership do you need and lessons can be taken from the book? >> the first is it's not just about a single leader. it's about a communitiet when we come together, we get more brains involved, wisdom involved, different perspectives, and we can have some kind of consensus and support. so if we always look for a single iconic person, we'll look for a mistake. >> you write about a leadership mikt. what is that in. >> we want to look for one person who will lead us through tough times. we saw that before. we've got the right general in place. >> we always heard in business you can only have one leader. >> what they've always dunld and what's more important than ever is they create teams that can connect. they did that for us in the military. it's being done in industry and politics. >> leadership leadership is leadership, whether it's in the military, whether it's in business, whether it's in politic sthoos that's right. that's right. >> what are the core principle os thereafter kind of leadership? >> well, in today's world i think it's more important thanner that leaders that are close to these very different problems, they're being driven by interconnected problems. leaders have to empower those. that's what worked for us in the service and that's what we see working well in the industry as folks start to apply that sort of mod >> what did you take that you learned on the battlefield because most of us don't have your skills or your skills in general. we're not navy s.e.a.l.s and we're not equipped to do the things that we do. there are things on the battlefield that can really translate into business. >> i've been out of service for five years and i've been constantly impressed. there's great leaders, great people in those organizations that want to do great things. they want to be part of something that has teamer meaning. that was critical to us in terms of how special operations worked and i think there are several indications. >> admiral mccraven was here. he talked about his book, lessons he learn and it starts with making your bed. one thing about navy s.e.a.l.s is you're often surprised by those who make the cut. are you surprised? >> it really is interesting. you'll have someone who finished an iron man triathlon who can't make it to second training and a kid from iowa who's never seen the ocean who made it as a top graduate. so it's about inner character. >> what did you see in him, general? one of your favorite words, charlie, intellectually curious. there was something that stood out you do of all the people. >> when i was first commanding, chris was asking different questions. he was asking big questions. he was asking how the pieces fit together, not about the focused narrow think things and that makes an immediate impression. >> one thing about the secretary of defense, mattis. the president has seemed to have given him lots of thofrmt is that a good thing or do we need to be reminded that the heart of the american system is civilian control? >> i think it's a good thing to empower is up back cousubordina. the american people ultimately still have ownership of those decisions. so it has to be a melded system in which civilians and military leaders together arrive at right decisions but also prosecute policies that everybody supports, that everybody understands ultimately. the men agree going in, but when policy is set, we all have the idea to carry on. >> where should troop levels be many. >> it's hard to say. i would defer what jim matusz and mcnichols on ground are recommending. but i think we need to ask ourselves, if we sent more troops and that doesn't solve the problem or make the change we hope, what will we do then? that's the question nation needs to ask itself about its long-term things in afghanistan and what we hope to achieve. >> thank you so much. good to see you do. >> food goode to see the two of you. thank you so much. the name of the book is "one mission." it's on sale now, wherever you like to buy your book. bestseller malcolm gladwell says he's made his podcast even weirder. his thoughts on forgotten events including the recipe change at mcdonald's that he malcolm gladwell has been named as an inflew yen chal writer. so has charlie rose. >> he's more deserving. >> i don't know about that. >> he's the bestseller of five. now he's back with the second season of his pod raft. it's called revisionist history. series looks at events and ideas from the past that have been overlook or misunderstood. he joins us once again at the table. congratulations on season two. >> thank you, gayle. >> i love your start at season two. it as about private golf courses in los angeles. you said -- you describe the golf courses as crack cocaine for rich guys. you have a reich guy at the table. what are you talk about? >> i have a little fun game of golf. >> yes, you do. >> i point out how it's played by rich white guys that and women as well. >> yes, yes. i'm more interested many the question using the private golf courses of l.a. as an example. how is privilege protected and enshrined as a society. et's a fascinating example of a small group of very wealthy people have managed to essentially not pay any property taxes for generations on these huge golf courses in the middle of city. >> and no one else gets to play on it. >> and l.a. is a city that has one of the fewest amount of parkland of any major american city. it is under parked. and so i would go to l.a. and i would be confronted by this weird fact which is i'm a runner. there's nowhere to run in l.a., and yet there are these 100-aker dub there are subscription or seven with chain link fences that and you report that nobody was on the course. why can't you go and walk around shoo that's how i got thinking how privilege gets embedded in the structure of our society. et's one of those -- what i'm trying to do with the podcast is use these kind of a very seemingly lighthearted questions to examine much more important questions. >> because of the bizarre case. it becomes a jumping off point to talk to landscape architects, to go anywhere you want to go. >> there was a moment when e was making this episode where i thought, i need to talk a philosoph philosopher. h is getting so complicated. i called a guy at the university of washington, mark cohen, who's so much fun. it was one of those things you can do in a podcast. you know, there's no rules. if you want to talk to a philosopher, you can talk to a philosophy. that's what i love about the forum. >> talk about what you learned about the ceos who play golf and what their companies are doing. >> there's an economist named lee bickerstaff who did this lovely work. if you're a serious golfer, you post your scores on the usga's website so you can calculate your handy cape. what he did is looked at all the people who posted their scores and matched it to a list of ceos of public companies and was able to figure out how much ceos play golf and then he was abe to figure out what effect does playing golf have on the performance of your company. and first of all he showed that ceos play an astonishing amount of golf and the more you play, the worst your company does. at a shareholders ming they should stand up. >> do you think, therefore, the country did badly because president obama loved to play golf? >> no. i would say this. i would be happy if presidents as a group played less golf and spent more time mastering the details of their presidency. but i have nothing against people doing sports for recreation. my problem is when an addiction to a certain sport affects the rest of us and affects the citizens of los angeles. they don't have any place to go. the there's no park space for them to go. >> i agree with what you're saying. the yofd people to get outside and run or play golf and just do something in the complex world today, that's a very good thing. >> i'm not going disagree about that. >> you also did something about mcdonald's. it broke your heart. first i was stunned you eat mcdonald's. >> after his run. >> after your run. there was something that broke your heart in 1990. >> they changed the recipe for the french fries. those of us who remember, they used to be amazing, right? that's why you went to mcdonald's. they were the most incredible fries you've ever eaten. and they're not anymore for a reason. that is mcdonald's changed formula on july 23rd, 1990. and i think that formula change was catastrophic. >> and you brought in millennials to do a blind test and they picked old fries. >> i went to america's r & d house to make me fries the old way and new way and we did a blind test. >> the old way was 100%. >> there's no distinction. >> malcolm glad well. it's available now. can hear more of "cbs this morning" on our podcast as well. find them on itunes and apples ipodcast. you're watching "cbs this morning." we thank malcolm well, that doe good morning, i'm jim donovan, jurors will deliberate in the bill cosby sex assault case a again today with 30 hours of deliberations already in the books. cosby arrived at montgomery county courthouse in norristown about 10 minutes ago. he is accused of drugging and sexually assaulting a temple he plea in 2004. jury is sequestered for the trial and members of the jury were select from western pennsylvania, because of possible pretrial publicity. and now lets check on the weather with katie, hi there, katie. >> good morning, jim. we have seen humidity get scaled back so it feels very comfortable outside. there are some cloud out there and that is certainly evident on satellite right now as we look at storm scan three but quiet. we will not find wet weather throughout the day and little veil of cloud that worked its way over city of philadelphia is starting to break apart now we will see a mix throughout the day that goes for the shore points as well. nice beach day, not as hot, or you know, maybe not as much of an excuse to jump in the waves here but it will be a very pleasant day at the shore that rip current risk is moderate. next couple days turning steamy, heating up and then going downhill with the wet wet weather. spotty showers or storms tomorrow, saturday and sunday but meisha, monday looks like it could get nasty out there. >> that is what i was looking at. all right, thanks very much. we are still looking busy particularly on i-95, moving oddly enough in the northbound direction so 95 north atwood haven has reopened for an earlier accident, residual delays they are still out there southbound actually looking good, accident i-95 north near columbus boulevard blocking two left lanes but you are getting by there better now and walt whitman bridge eastbound we have another accident mid span 21 miles an hour, jim, back over to you. >> thanks, meisha. >> that is "eyewitness news" for now. join us for "eyewitness news" at noon. i'm jim donovan. make it a great ♪ ♪ >> dr. phil is in the house. his outrage over a controversial school campaign. >> professionally speaking that's the most idiotic thing i have ever seen. >> this iron nun's secret to stay running at 86. >> it harmonizes my body and soul. >> announcer: plus -- >> buried alive, burned at the stake, attacked by sharks. >> announcer: a modern day daredevil is able to cheat death on a regular basis. >> nothing is a trick! [ applause ] ♪ >> dr. travis: welcome to the show, joining us today is ob/gyn dr. nita landry. welcome! [ crowd cheering ] [ applause ] >> thank you! >> dr. travis: so, let's start off with this topic. a study says that orgasms change your brain activity so much that it can literally put you in a trance-like state. >> "it sure can ...". [ laught

Related Keywords

New York , United States , Alabama , Alexandria , Al Iskandariyah , Egypt , Washington , Turkey , Brazil , Woodhaven , Illinois , Whitehouse , District Of Columbia , California , Virginia , Russia , London , City Of , United Kingdom , Erie , Pennsylvania , Arizona , Iowa , Center Field , Togo , Ecuador , Ireland , Capitol Hill , Americans , America , Turkish , Irishman , American , David Bailey , Scott Kelly , Jeff Duncan , Steve Scalise , Gabby Giffords , Jan Crawford , Linda Sanchez , Nancy Pelosi , Mike Rogers , Zack Barton , Henry Cabrera , Dennis Rodman , Los Angeles , Robert Mueller , Yoko Ohno Asa , Malcolm Gladwell , Nita Landry , Phil Mickelson , Candice Lazar , Jim Donovan , Jeff , Mike Mika , Newt Gingrich , Diego Puma , Paul Ryan , Stanley Mcchrystal , Bernie Sanders , Connor Mcgregor , Mayweather Jr , December Ray ,

© 2024 Vimarsana
Transcripts For KYW CBS This Morning 20170615 : Comparemela.com

Transcripts For KYW CBS This Morning 20170615

Card image cap



>> we are strongest when we are unified and when we work together for the common good. >> washington unites after an attack on congress. >> it appears that the gunman was motivated by a hatred of the republican party. >> he had no regard for humanity, human life. he's no more democraore to me t on the moon. >> it's not just an attack against a republican or democrat. it was against all americans. >> it's completely meaningless at a moment like this. with we are just really pulling for our friends. a high-rise apartment building in london is a deadly inferno. >> no one is expected to be pulled out alive. two gunmen who are on the run stole another vehicle. reports of a dirty bomb on board a container ship. coast guard says all is clear now. all that -- >> pittsburgh penguins hold the stanley cup over the city. >> -- and all that matters -- >> we're going to win. >> members of this house have deniedet not to give in to fear. the annual congressional baseball games will be scheduled. >> i'm not sure. i'll be the one coaching third. >> -- on "cbs this morning." >> honestly for me was heart warming for me to see members of congress united at human beings. >> i want to say thank you to the leadership and president to responding to this act of terror that in a way gives us hope that whatever our differences we'll always be the united states of america. thank you for that. welcome to "cbs this morning." norah o'donnell is off. we're pleased to have jeff glor with us. the house republican steve scalise is in critical condition shot by a man with a rifle during baseball practice cell phone video captured the scene yesterday in virginia. >> he was rushed in a medevacked helicopter for emergency surgery. a bullet tors through his abdomen breaking bones and damaging internal organs. president trump and first lady melania visited him last night. mr. trump also met capitol police officers crystal greiner. she was hit in the ankle when she returned fire. lobbyist mike mika and zachary barth were also shot. the gunman was shot as well. >> the gunman approached from the third base line where more than 30 people were practicing. jeff pegues is at the crime scene with new details on the investigation. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. we're about 50 yards away from the third base line. we're seeing what the gunman was seeing it was filled with republican congressmen when the gunman who was heavily armed opened fire. gunfire pierced the air for ten agonizing minutes as james hodgkinson opened fire. >> there's also a victim down in the baseball field. >> reporter: u.s. capitol police officers, part of house republican whip steve scalise's security detail fired back. witnesses say hodgkinson was armed with a handgun and rifle when he approached the fence along the third base line and started firing. he never got on the field. representative scalise standing on second base was shot first in the hip. others took cover in the dugout. >> i could see steve scalise out in the field. >> reporter: arizona rep jeff flake waited for an opportunity to help his colleague. >> i ran low out to steve and started putting pressure on the wound. >> reporter: investigators believe the 66-year-old long kinson originally from illinois was out of work and had been living in his van in the alexandria area since march. the near by "y" was struck by bullets. locals saw him there frequently. >> he always had his laptop. he was always with his laptop, laptop bag, always getting set up. >> reporter: his facebook page shows he supported bernie sanders and did not like trump. he was a member of the terminate trump party. >> we're exploring all angles and we'll let the facts take it where it goes. >> reporter: so dud the gunman target someone specifically on the baseball field or was this just a target of opportunity for him? that's what investigators are looking into among other things. congressman jeff duncan of south carolina says before the gunman opened fire, he asked him if there were republicans on the field. jeff. >> jeff, thank you very much. the fbi is seeking more information on james hodgkinson and his motive. agents searched his bell ville, illinois, home for evidence yesterday. authorities believe hodgkinson had not lived there since march when he arrived in virginia. dean reynolds is outside of the baseball field where he opened fire. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. those who knew the man who lived in this house behind me say he was unhappy with the political direction of the country, but they never expected him to turn violent. known to many as tom, james hodgkinson grew up in bellville, graduating from a local high school in 1968. he lived in this house with his wife and ran a home inspection business until his license expired last december. ray page knew him for 30 years. >> i never have seen the man violent since i've known him. >> reporter: deeply engaged in politics, hodgkinson did not keep his views secret. >> 99% are getting pushed around and the 1% are just not giving a damn. >> reporter: in a 2015 facebook poej hodgkinson shared a political cartoon about yesterday's victim congressman steve scalise. he said, here's a republican who should lose his job but they gave him a raise. in recent months he began showing disdain for the current administration. in a march 22nd post, he wrote, it's time to destroy trump and company. just two days later a neighbor complained after hearing 50 shots fired from hodgkinson's property. >> he was very nice. he said i'll take it to a range where it's somewhat safer and that was the end of it. >> reporter: republican mike bost said he had called and september e-mails. >> he wasn't happy with my position, if i voted this way, he'd vote this way, i'll work but no threat beyond that. >> reporter: now hodgkinson had an arrest record dating back to the 1970s, but they were mostly minor offenses that were later dismissed. gayle? >> dean, thank you very much. congressional leaders confirm tonight's baseball game will go ahead. it's washington tradition that brings democrats and republicans together. president trump called for greater unity after the shooting. >> we may have our differences, but we do well in times like these to remember that everyone who serves in our nation's capitol is here because above all they love our country. >> house speaker paul ryan repeated that theme when he spoke to members yesterday. nancy cordes is at nationals park in washington. that's the site of tonight's big game. nancy, good morning. >> good morning, gayle. there was really no serious talk about canceling this game. in fact, when it was announced the game would take place as scheduled, members of congress erupted with applause. >> we're not going to let incidents like this change our lives or our daily routine. >> the republican and democratic team managers said the game will go on even though a couple of players are now on the injured reserved list. >> if you're not sure,'ll be the one on third coaching with crutches. >> he injured his leg while diving for cover. house speaker paul ryan summoned his colleagues to the floor yesterday for a message of unity. >> we're united in our shock, we're united in our anguish. an attack on one of us is an attack on all of us. >> democratic leader nancy pelosi did the same. >> i pray. my prayer is that we can resolve our differences in a way that furthers the preamble to the constitution and takes us closer to an injury in the family, the staff and a cog league for his leadership. >> even a visible increase in security, lawmakers are on edge, particularly those who were at the scene. >> i was up the back when this shooting started. i heard a loud noise. >> i was about ten feet from that mike. he was really shot bad. >> new york republican claudy tenney received this disturbing e-mail, one down, 215 to go. >> republican chuck fleischman said -- >> we represent people every day in this country on both sides of the aisle. >> in a show of solidarity the democratic players invited the republican players out to dinner last night, but both sides say tonight they'll be all businesslet this is a long-time rivalry, charlie, and nobody's going easy on anybody. >> nancy, thanks. alabama congressman w maman was only 20 feet away from the ill kerr. good morning. >> good morning, charlie. >> set the scene of what you heard, what was going on. >> we were taking batting practice. i was at shortstop. steve scalise was at second and frank kelly was at third. when i heard the gunshot i knew immediately what it was. i turned to trent and said that was a gunshot. he said, yeah, and he turned and said he's got a gun. frankly it's a miracle that he missed. trent's a big guy. we move aid cross the baseball diamond toward the first base side where the only open space in the fence was. i heard two more shots and i saw scalise go down. i knew he had been hit. i knew he had been hit low, but i didn't know whether it was in the hip or the leg. >> congressman, we're all trying to process what happened yesterday. i think many people are still reeling from it. and now reports say it might have been politically motivated. this man apparently was unhappy with the republican party and said many disparaging things. what do you think when you hear about that. what do you think is happening in the country right now? >> i think our republic's in danger, gayle. i think we're furring at the edges. i'm hearing some reports of what this gentleman had posted on his facebook page, and it's not that different from some of the things we're hearing from other people. so we have got to tone down the rhetoric. i think it has to begin with us, both parties. but it's got to come from media. it's got to come from other people who are speaking to the country. and particularly in the social media. >> congressman, that's a pretty serious thing to say the republic is in danger and the country is furring at tejs. do you think it starts h washington? does it start with social media? what concrete steps need to be taken many your estimation? >> i think we've got to lead by example. obviously republicans and democrats differ on issues, but i think we can have a civil discussion. >> you said that the democrats at playing field were actually praying when they heard about the shooting on the republican side. teddy roosevelt used to call the white house the bully pulpit. do we begin with leadership from the white house in terms of trying to cool down things and trying to create more stability and trying to create a more common ground? >> i think it begins with me, it begins with my colleagues. i think all of us have a stake in this and every one of us need to take responsibility if for what we see and how we see it. >> do you think this will take on a different view about guns and gun control. i think people thought after sandy hook things would change and unfortunately very little seems to have changed. >> all i know is first of all, governor mcccauliffe got his sts wrong. it's inaccurate in the context he was using it. as a gun owner, i wish i had had one yesterday. >> you wish you'd had a gun yesterday so you could have fired back? >> yes, charlie. i would have liked to have a fire arm. there are a number of others e. that wish we would have been able to defend ourselves and come to the aid of the capitol police who were extraordinary. >> congressman, thank you for joining us. >> thank you, charlie. in our next hour, we will talk with one of the people who was shot. that's legislative aide zach barth and congressman bost who was injured. it's reached a potential turning report. counsel robert mueller is trying to determine if the president obstructed justice. >> this morning the president tweeted, quote, they made up a phony collusion with the russian story, found zero proof, so now they go for obstruction of justice on the phony story. nice. major garrett is at the white house. good morning. >> good morning. cbs news has learned dan coats of national intelligence has agreed to be interviewed by robert mueller. one of the topics about the russian investigation. the counsel's probe will now look into whether or not president trump attempted to obstruct justice. looking into that question doesn't necessarily mean evidence will be found or a charge will be brought. a spokesman for his personal attorney marc kasowitz said the fbi leak of information regarding the president is outrageous, inexcusable, and illegal. there's no proof that the fbi is the source of this leak. nsa director mike rogers is also cooperating. he was asked to push back on the russian operatives. the two men refused to answer questions about those conversations during senate testimony last week. former fbi director james comey did testify the president asked him to try to lift the cloud of the russia investigation and when he did not, jeff, the president fired him. >> thank you very much. the driver who killed three drivers at a ups warehouse made a formal complaint about working too much overtime. a union representative said jimmy lam filed his degree advance in march. he killed himself after he shot five employees during a meeting yesterday. the men who died were 56 dwrrld wayne chen, 50-year-old benson louis who loved to play basketball and michael lefiti, father of three known as big mike. he'd been with ups for 15 years. customers say he went out of his way to help others. the jury in the cosby case return for a fourth day of deliberations. jurors asked to review two more pieces of equipment yesterday. the first was the testimony that andrea constand gave last week detailing the alleged assault back in 2004. the other was testimony of a detective who interviewed bill cosby about the encounter. so far the jury has asked the judge six questions and deliberated for more than 26 hours. >> the death toll in the london apartment fire has risen to at least 17. the burned out apartment complex could take weeks now to search. ahead, we're going to take you to the scene for the search of missing people and have new many say the three capitol police officers who were at the baseball field when the gunman opened fire prevented a massacre. >> ahead, why those who know them were not surprised they risked their lives to save others. >> you're watching "cbs this morning." (roosevelt) i always thought that cigarette up your lungs.messed i never thought that at only 45 it would give me a heart attack. my tip is; do your heart a favor, and quit now. (announcer) you can quit. for free help, call 1-800-quit-now. masteone above the rest.risesnt. lindt excellence created by our master chocolatiers. pure, rich, elegantly thin. experience excellence with all your senses. from the lindt master chocolatiers. only tylenol® rapid release gels have laser drilled holes. they release medicine fast, for fast pain relief. tylenol® the toothpaste that helps new parodontax. prevent bleeding gums. if you spit blood when you brush or floss you may have gum problems and could be on the journey to much worse. help stop the journey of gum disease. try new parodontax toothpaste. ♪ only new tena intimates has ♪ it'pro-skin technologyiend designed to quickly wick away moisture to help maintain your skin's natural balance. for a free sample, call 1-877-get-tena. working on my feet all day gave me pain here. in my knees. so i stepped on this machine and got my number, which matched my dr. scholl's custom fit orthotic inserts. so i get immediate relief from my foot pain. my knee pain. find a machine at drscholls.com. ( ♪ ) a dog's big life is measured in wags. and when you feed your dog nature's recipe, you fuel the wag with our 35-year history of premium recipes like chicken, sweet potato and pumpkin. ( ♪ ) (bark) the bigger the life, the bigger the wag. nature's recipe. fuel the wag. hi guys. in the desert.be here. at the mall. on the mountain. at school. at the beach. in the big easy. yeah yeah today i want to show you guys the next-gen chevy equinox. what do you think? that's pretty. pretty sexy. it looks aggressive. but not overbearing. it's not too big. not too small. seems like the perfect car for anybody. i would take it anywhere. she's a bad mama jama. (laughter) current qualified gm lessees can get this introductory lease on the all-new 2018 chevy equinox for around $249 a month. find new roads at your local chevy dealer. atblue diamond almonds wein our almondmilk.ia-grown and we're proud of that. but the whole "care-and-nurturing" part? that idea... ...we borrowed from the experts. blue diamond almond breeze. the best almonds make the best almondmilk. watching this breath savers protect mint neutralize the plaque acids in my mouth. i can't see anything! that's because it's working so hard. hey, what are you guys doing? karen. we're neutralizing. maybe i want to neutralize. you ever think of that? so i use excedrin.ments from my life. it starts to relieve migraine pain in just 30 minutes. and it works on my symptoms, too. now moments lost to migraines are moments gained with excedrin. sfx [heartbeat] flea bites can mean misery for your cat. advantage® ii monthly topical kills fleas through contact. fleas do not have to bite your cat to die. advantage® ii. fight the misery of biting fleas. and i smoked while (amanda) my i was pregnant. this is the view i had of my baby in the nicu. my tip is, speak into the opening so your baby can hear you better. (announcer) you can quit. for free help, call 1-800-quit-now. ahead, what a new fed interest rate hike means for your credit card bills an your mortgage. an undocumented teenaged good morning, i'm rahel solomon. it looks like the philadelphia beverage taxis here to stay. a pennsylvania appeals court agrees with last years court decision that the beverage tax does not duplicate the sales tax. also, city new says that the tax revenue will fall short of the estimated $46 million it was supposed to raise this fiscal year. lets check the forecast with meteorologist katie fehlinger. it looks like a nice day. >> i think so. very comfortable. humidity has dropped off, that is so often key to our comfort , it doesn't matter necessarily how warm it is, within reason, not humid, it does feel so much better. that is story to day. we will find some cloud, we will have that since this morning since the sun has been up but we do seek comfortable warmth, 81 the high. dropping dunn to 53 just cloud and looking ahead it starts to go downhill tomorrow, front lifts in thomas spotty shower or storm through weekend and by monday heavier rain and storms from a potent cold front passage. >> we are still looking busy throughout plus we have problems overturned vehicles 295 northbound at delran pulled off to the shoulder. disabled vehicle on 295 another area northbound at route 42 at 76, right lane compromised and accident investigation on route one near washington road. head up for that. rahel, over to you. next update 7:55. up next officials defend their decision to detain a 19 year-old and his mother on immigration c there was another horrific shooting in america, this time targeting apparently gop members of congress. you do have any thoughts on what happened today? >> it was great to see people from both sides seeing this and united under the banner of human and american before anything else. that's something that's lacking in american politics is politicians showing from both sides of the aisle that they are friends. it's almost become like wrestling where the fans don't realize that those people get along. those people fight every single day, but like paul ryan said today, like nancy pelosi said today, we fight like tooth and nail but we don't for get we're friends, families, colleagues. it's like hey, we fight, you fight, but don't forget, at your call, we are americans. don't ever forget that. >> that was the message yesterday. so great to see humanity wins. >> for all the anger you see online, playing baseball together. >> that's right. he that's one thing that came out of it yesterday. we are americans united after all. steve scalise is out of surgery. the republican congressman is still in critical condition after a gunman opened fire yesterday at a congressional baseball practice. doctors say the bullet broke bone bones and caused damage. gabby giffords was shot outside a supermarket in 2011 in arizona. she said parties need to put aside partisan differences an talk with one another. scott kelly spoke last night on the cs evening news about the capitol police. >> we had a lot of friends who were capitol police. we became very close with them. >> the three capitol police officers who immediately returned fire when the gunman attacked at the republican baseball practice are being called heroes. speshlg agents crystal greiner, david bailey, and henry cabrera. chip reid is outside the capitol with new details on their bravery. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. congressman steve scalise travels with a detail of police officers. it's a very good thing he was there because his security team kept that baseball field from becoming a killing field. >> i know sure as u i'm standing here right now there's no way we would have lived through that. >> reporter: representative mike bishop said two of the agents rushed on field as the staffers fled. >> the problem is he's got a rifle and they've got handguns. it wasn't a fair fight. they knew they weren't going to hit him but they were trying to give us cover. >> i yelled out, is this friendly, is this friendly, are you friendly to the person who was fire behind our dugout and greatly it was a member of the capitol police. >> agent crystal greiner was hospitalized with a gunshot wound to her ankle. she graduated in 2006 from maryland's hood college where she played on fwabl team. retired police chief kim dine. >> she's amazing and epitomized a hero. >> reporter: agent david bailey is recovering. he's from brazil. his friend rachel brooks wasn't surprised by bailey's heroics. >> he always talked about becoming a police officer and i remember when he first shared that he was working in washington, d.c., and that he was a police officer, he was so proud. >> reporter: representative joe barton was there with his two sons. his gratitude to the two officers who saved him was clear. >> capitol police immediately began to return fire. >> reporter: that sentiment echoed throughout the capitol. >> we are as ever awed by the tremendous bravely of the capitol police. >> survivors say that if the capitol police officers had not been there, hay would have been sitting ducks, and i tell you, gayle, i know from long experience here on capitol hill that the capitol police often feel like furniture, wallpaper. they feel unappreciated. but today they're being thanked profusely for being the first line of defense. >> they really do have to hear the applause for them across the board and the unique fact that they were there because congressman scalise was there. >> as congressman bishop said it wasn't fair. they had baseball bats and handguns compared to a rifle. thank you very much, chip. london's police chief say this morning death toll will rise in the devastating london apartment fire. firefighters put out the last of the flames this morning more than a day after the massive fire broke out. 17 people are confirmed dead at this time. dozens of others are believed to be missing. 74 people are hurt. prime minister theresa may went to the billing this morning and promised an investigation. during an emotional visit overnight adele went to comfort them there. jonathan vigliotti is in london with new details on the investigation. jonathan? >> reporter: good morning. the building behind me looks like a skeleton, many of these floors completely gutted by the flames. firefighters are back on the scene battling hot spots. the small pockets of flames. fire officials say at this hour, it's too dangerous to gain total access inside. >> reporter: the morning after reveals what a day of raging flames did to this 24-story apartment. the damage so severe fire officials say it will take weeks to inspect each and every floor. for now drones are the safest tool for investigators. the cause of the fire is still unclear as is how it spread so quickly. they believe the cosmetic cladding or siding that was added to the building's exterior may to blame. >> the cladding is outside the wall and there's this space in between it and you're saying because it was installed incorrectly, oxygen was able to get through causing a chimney effe effect. >> sometime during the fire the cladle gets involved. >> he conducted fire inspections on building. >> it has the chimney effect. it's like a flue. >> reporter: the fire struck in the mid of the night trapping many. some desperately screaming for help. >> you're going to bring the smoke in. >> the video you're about to see was shot inside the burning building on the 24th floor. we have no information if the person who took the video survives. we warn you, it is disturbing. >> oh, my gosh. >> close the door. >> sur vavers say they spent years complaining about fire hazards including blocked exits but say the management company wasn't responsive. more than a dozen are still missing, their faces growing around the donation center for the hundreds now left homeless. and the construction company that put in that cladding said in a statement they met all fire installations. cadaver dogs are being brought in to search for the bodies of the missing. charlie, the bbc spoke with a firefighter who fears that as many as 100 people may have been killed. >> jonathan vigliotti in london. thank you so much. here's look at some of the other headlines this morning. u.s. news & world reports approves sanctions. the vote yesterday was 97-2. the sanctions target key sectors of russia's economy and individuals who carried out cyber attacks. the bill also required congressional review if the president tries to ease or end current penalties. >> the "washington post" says criminal charges will be announced today against members of the turkish president's security detail. last month 12 turkish guards allegedly attacked protesters outside the ambassador's resident in washington, d.c. officials say arrest warntss have been issues. all of the suspects are believed to have been returned back to turkey. > minivans are billion recalled recall ed. there's a wire problem. it's linked to 13 minor injuries. and the "usa today" says your credit debt is about to get costlier. that's because of the federal hike of a quarter percentage point. it will affect credit card users as well as homeowners with adjustable home mortgages. rates change according on the benchmark rate. just hours before his senior prom a teenager was detained and faces deportation. ahead, how members of congress are raising the case about immigrants. plus the great white shark is changing how thousands spend their summers. you're watching "cbs this morning." father daughter dance. na welcome everyone toe walk, move and earn money... ...for out-of-pocket medical expenses. he's ok! unitedhealthcare you brush your teeth diligently... two times a day right? but 80% of bacteria aren't even on teeth. eughty purschunt?! colgate total's different. it fights bacteria on teeth, tongue, cheeks and gums. protecting 100% of your mouth's surfaces. colgate total for whole mouth health. is thno, it's, uh, breyers gelato indulgences. you really wouldn't like it. it's got caramel and crunchy stuff. i like caramel and crunchy stuff. breyers gelato indulgences. it's way beyond ice cream. wearing powerful sunscreen? yes! neutrogena® ultra sheer. unbeatable protection helps prevent early skin aging and skin cancer with a clean feel. the best for your skin. ultra sheer®. neutrogena®. but when we brought our daughter home, that was it. now i have nicoderm cq. the nicoderm cq patch with unique extended release technology helps prevent your urge to smoke all day. it's the best thing that ever happened to me. every great why needs a great how. if you have moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis like me, and you're talking to your rheumatologist about a medication... ...this is humira. this is humira helping to relieve my pain... ...and protect my joints from further damage. humira has been clinically studied for over 18 years. humira works by targeting and helping to... ...block a specific source... ...of inflammation that contributes to ra symptoms. it's proven to help relieve pain and... ...stop further joint damage in many adults. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened, as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas... ...where certain fungal infections are common and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flulike symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. talk to your doctor and visit humira.com this is humira at work. undocumented immigrant arrested just before his high school prom has failed to win extra time in the u.s. lawyers for him say they denied the request for a stay of removal. his mother and he face deportation back to ecuador. tony dokoupil shows us what led to his arrest. >> good morning. diego puma macancela was set to go to his prom. he found himself cowering in a closet in his cousin's home while agents prepared to arrest him. >> we felt leak they were going to break the doors. >> reporter: federal agents came to gaby macancela's home looking for diego. >> it's scary. it's your own house. you're supposed to be safe there. >> reporter: he spent the night there after his mother was detained by authorities the previous day. he and his mother left their native ecuador in 2014. they were told by a judge last november to leave the u.s. >> the i.c.e. agents were wearing vests with police on the back. >> reporter: victoria gearity witnessed it. >> in this case, it feels very different. diego and his mother don't seem dangerous to us. >> if you're violating the law, you should be uncomfortable. he should be looking over his shoulder. >> reporter: on capitol hill this week congresswoman ossining asked -- >> you're going after a student who's graduating and is law abiding into he's not law abiding. he was told to leave and he failed to do so. >> reporter: according to gaby, they threatened the rest of the family. >> so the agents said give us de'go or we take everybody. >> yes. >> did he say anything. >> he said, by, gaby, take my wallet. give it to my dad. i'm going to be fine. >> has what happened to diego and your aunt changed the way you feel about america? >> it's a great country for all immigrants. >> gaby was brought to the u.s. as a child as is protected by the obama d.r.e.a.m. act. legal counsel report that diego and his mother are now in the same facility in new york after officials kept them in separate facilities. >> thank you very much. tomorrow on "cbs this morning," new technology for boarding a plane. how airlines are reinventing security with facial recognition and fingerprints. how a road not all fish oil supplements provide the same omega-3 power. megared advanced triple absorption is absorbed three times better. so one softgel has more omega-3 power than three standard fish oil pills. megared advanced triple absorption. twenty more years of this my kids say go for it, mom. be that woman who does what she loves. knows what she wants. yeah, mom's gonna go for it! except... i don't have a clue where to start. hey we hear you. that's why aarp has resources to help you navigate the job market. we'll connect you with employers that value your experience and provide tips and tools to find work you love. if you don't think "this is right for me" when you think aarp, then you don't know "aarp". get to know us at aarp.org/possibilities. ♪ ♪ give extra. get extra. ♪ ♪ ♪ we all drive, some cats just know how to roll. say no to this because of my bladder? thanks to tena. not anymore! only new tena intimates has pro-skin technology designed to quickly wick away moisture. to help maintain your skin's natural balance. it goes beyond triple protection from leaks, odor and moisture. so you can feel fresh and free to get as close as you want. for a free sample call 1-877-get-tena coppertone sport versus the sun. coppertone sport stays on strong when you sweat and is strong enough to stop up to 98% of the sun's damaging uv rays. coppertone. because protection matters. hitting the mid-morning wall? with up to 24 grams of hearty protein jimmy dean bowls help you avoid it. shine on. ♪ depression is a tangle of multiple symptoms. ♪ that's why there's trintellix, a prescription medication for depression. trintellix may help you take a step forward in improving your depression. tell your healthcare professional right away if your depression worsens, or you have unusual changes in mood, behavior or thoughts of suicide. antidepressants can increase these in children, teens and young adults. do not take with maois. tell your healthcare professional about your medications, including migraine, psychiatric and depression medications, to avoid a potentially life-threatening condition. increased risk of bleeding or bruising may occur, especially if taken with nsaid pain relievers, aspirin or blood thinners. manic episodes or vision problems may occur in some people. may cause low sodium levels. the most common side effects were nausea, constipation and vomiting. trintellix had no significant impact on weight in clinical trials. ask your healthcare professional about trintellix. cell phone video captured a woman being dragged along a california freeway on the right side of your screen. it happened after a suspected road rage incident. the woman got out of the car and knocked on the window of a black honda. the driver sped off and she held on. eventually the car slowed down and she let go. the highway patrol is investigating. >> you look at that and you go, what conversation preceded that that made either one think i'm going to jump out and grab the car. >> you go from a little bit of yelling to nuts. >> nuts. out of control. don't do that. more than dranking rights will be on the lean. the congressional baseball game ahead. a look at the bipartisan tradition that stretches back more than a century. we'll be right back. human papillomavirus. who knew hpv could lead to certain cancers and diseases? who knew my risk for hpv would increase as i got older? who knew that there was a vaccine that could have helped protect me from hpv when i was 11 or 12, way before i would even be exposed to it? did you know, mom? dad? what will you say? don't wait. talk to your child's doctor today. learn more at hpv.com. the toothpaste that helps new parodontax. prevent bleeding gums. if you spit blood when you brush or floss you may have gum problems and could be on the journey to much worse. help stop the journey of gum disease. try new parodontax toothpaste. ♪ nearly fifty years at of experiencety, has taught us that we're not so different. we all want to be healthy humans. we all want strong bodies for our families, who we love... most of the time. the drive to whip up a gourmet dinner... or order out, and destroy the evidence. and healthy hearts to pursue our passions, celebrate friends' victories... and endure their endless victory dances. we get it, you're good at bowling. that's why nature's bounty packs our nearly fifty years of wisdom into all we make. because we're all better off healthy. one dark chocolate rises masteringabove the rest.inement. lindt excellence created by our master chocolatiers. pure, rich, elegantly thin. experience excellence with all your senses. from the lindt master chocolatiers. as fast as you can. you can't catch me; i'm the gingerbread man. it will be mine. ♪ i've got it now. introducing an all-new crossover, toyota c-hr. toyota. let's go places. i was infected with hpv. maybe my parents didn't know how widespread hpv is. while hpv clears up for most, that wasn't the case for me. maybe they didn't know i would end up with cancer because of hpv. maybe if they had known there was a vaccine to help protect me when i was 11 or 12. maybe my parents just didn't know. right, mom? dad? what will you say? don't wait. talk to your child's doctor today. learn more at hpv.com. oo, yeah. are you ready for a rush? yes, yes i am. you're in for a treat. fast play is the new way to play fast and win instantly from the pennsylvania lottery. pick a game, get your ticket and see if you've won. i won! pretty fast, huh? fast play. play fast. win instantly. good morning, aim jim donovan. police in bucks county are warning residents to be wear of bears, and eyewitness sent us photos from buckingham township and officials believe we're looking at a mother and her cubs. state game officials say don't approach the bears and secure anything that can attract them , like bird feeders and trash cans. lets send it over to katie for a look at today's forecast. >> all and all it looks like a very pleasant day, we have low humidity, comfortable warmth with time here and feels nicer when you walk outside the door not as steamy but here at storm scan three we have a few cloud working their way through so it is skewing that sunshine out there don't expect that anything will fire up on the radar at lee not today, tomorrow bit of the different story but time we do again warm up nicely to 81 degrees. now by tomorrow old front is lifting back in so few showers and storms will pop up in scatter fashion and it is, lead nothing to a generally un settled pattern for next few days. >> more rain. >> all right, katie, thanks very much. we are looking outside at a dry roadway and looking busy. here we have an accident 95 north near woodhaven, left lane is compromised clearly as you can see putting on your breaks and move around there give yourself extra time there take a quick peak bridge inspections on the schuylkill between different times between that too. jim, over to you. our next update 8:25. coming up on cbs this morning great white sharks are impacting summer beach business in southern california, i'm jim donovan. make it a so, when it's your turnt to do the shopping and you need to get... raspberries for john... strawberries for amy... bananas for mom...wait, what's a jicama? and at these prices, i can make it all happen. take a fresh look at giant's produce prices. it is thursday, june 17th, 2017. welcome back to "cbs this morning." congress grets back after the shooting that left republican congressman steve scalise in critical condition. ahead we'll talk with a staffer who was hit in the attack. plus we'll talk about how a baseball tradition brings unity to capitol hill. but first here's today's "eye opener" at 8:00. >> that baseball field was filled with republican congressmen when the gunman opened fire. >> those who knew the man who lived this this house behind me said they never expected him to turn violent? they say it might be politically motivated. what do you think needs to happen based on what is happening in the country right now? >> i think the republican is in danger, gayle. i think we're furring at the edging. >> they usually feel like furniture or wall paper. today they were the first line of defense. >> there was really no serious talk about capsling the game. in fact, when congressional leaders announced it would take place, members of congress erupted in applause. >> they win if we give in. america doesn't give out. america gives in. we must play this baseball game. if we don't play, then they win. so that's the reason. this is america. the greatest country in the world. if you punch us, we will punch back. i'm charlie rose with gayle king and jeff glor. >> hospital staff says steve scalise will need more surgery for his gunshot wound. representative scalise in critical condition after a gunman attacked republicans practicing for tonight's congressional baseball game. the president and mrs. trump visited scalise and capitol police officer crystal greiner who was also wound. >> steve scalise, the third ranking house republican was shot in the hip. the hospital said he suffered broken bones and injuries to internal yore against. crystal greiner was hit in the ankle while she and her colleagues returned fire. lobbyist mike mika was hit in chest. he gave his family a zack barth was also in the hospital but he'll be released shortly. david bailey and congressman roger williams were both hurt. the fbi say he lived in a van in the alexandria area since march. police came to his illinois home in march to investigate complaints that he was shooting in the wooding. he did have a valid firearms license. hes with not charged. hodgkinson supported former democratic presidential candidate bernie sanders and lashed out against president trump on social media. in march he wrote on facebook it's time to destroy trump and company. >> barth was shot in the leg while retrieving baseballs in the outfield. rogers hurt his ankle in the chaos. the two men are joining us from the capitol. good morning to you both. >> good morning. >> i can't tell you how thrilled you're alive and able to communicate with us this morning. zack, i want to talk with you first. during that horrible situation you managed to tweet, to call your mom. can you tell us what your thought process was at that time? >> sure. i was out there shagging fly balls in center field when i heard a loud pop and everybody stopped wondering what was going on. then we heard more pops, more cracks of a rifle, saw somebody with a long gun. somebody said shooters, run, i hightailed to right field. there was nowhere for me to go. i got on all fours. at that point i saw him train his gun at me. everything around me started to possible pop. i got hit in the leg. i was full of adrenaline and my fight or flight kicked in. i thought if i wanted to live i needed to make a run for it. i ran down the first base line to the dugout. at that point my single focus was to keep alive and keep everybody safe. i jumped into the congressman's arms. thank the lord for special agents greiner and bailey. without them, i don't know that i'd be talking to you right now. >> congressman williams, what happened to you? >> i was on the third base sight of the batting cage hitting ground balls to trent. didn't realize the shooter was probably 20 yards behind me. i finished and went over to the other side of the batting bag and hit ground balls to steve scalise. i hit a ground ball to him and immediately we heard a pop. like many i thought it was a car backfiring. then we heard pop, pop, pop. everybody yelled, he's got a gun and ran for cover. instinctively, i ran for the dugout. it's about six feet into the ground. i immediately dove onto the concrete. when i was in there, a lot of other colleague us was in there. i found myself with senator flake and congressman mo brooks. we were there and all of a sudden out of nowhere comes zack, my partner, sitting to my left. he came in. he was bleeding. mo brooks took his belt off and we made a turn cat to cut his bleeding off and we kept our heads down. and in this dugout was several generations. you had someone in their late 60s like myself and we had zack barth and a 10-year-old. i want to tell you as you've heard so many times, these capitol hill police saved our lives. we would not be here if it were not for the thin blue line, our heroes. we owe it all to them. >> one of the things that remain, you think these were targeted shootings with someone in particular, a target. >> well, i'm not so sure a target. i think the congresspeople were the target. i'm not so sure any one person was a target. but i do think we were the targets as congresspeople, and that's what he woke up to do was to kill congresspeople. >> congressman, our reporting is that a number of your colleagues has asked about diverting some of the campaign funds to hire protection or security because as you know, steve scalise was the only one who had protection this, and if he wasn't there, lord, we don't know what would have happened. is that something you're interested in doing? >> well, i want to look at it. i thought newt gingrich put it good one night. he said, one thing about it, we're elected officials. we represent about 800,000 people. not all of them voted for us but they can talk to us. i think that's important. i think when you have 25, 30 congressmen in one group, we ought to study that as far as security. that doesn't make for a good situation if someone has us in harm's way. that makes for a good study. >> i know zack's going to go. i'm not going to make him go to the game but i'm going to be coaching third base on my crutches. i guess i'm going to be the only third base coach on crutches but i ool going to be there. >> don't make any wide turns. >> zack barton, i'm sure your mom appreciates the call. >> thank you so much for joining us. >> thank you. president trump is making calls for unity following the shooting. >> we can all agree that we're blessed to be americans, that our children deserve to grow up in a nation of safety and piece and that we are strongest when we are unified and when we work together for the common good. >> republicans and democrats will have a chance to show that tonight at the annual congressional baseball game. the contest draws thousands of fans each year. it's been a tradition for more than a century. proceeds and donations go to charity. jan crawford is overlooking nationals park in washington where tonight's game will be played. jan, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, charlie. you know, there aren't many bipartisan traditions left. but for 108 years the congressional baseball game has been one of them and that show of unity is why despite yesterday's shooting the game is on. the skills on the field while not major league might surprise you. and when republicans and democrats square off on the diamond -- >> the level of competition is intense snoomg he's been covered the game for five years. >> they take it very seriously with a lot of smack talk. >> he said one of the most determined players on field is louisiana republican steve scalise. scalise was shot in the hip wednesday while practicing for tonight's showdown. >> he's one of the toughest competitors out there, one of the hardest workers. >> i did tell joe i love him before the game and after the game, but during the game, we're going to play to win. >> reporter: wednesday afternoon the managers of the two team rngs republican congressman joe barton and democrat mike doyle announced despite the shooting the game is on. >> it will be play ball. >> reporter: the congressional baseball game was created in 1909 by pennsylvania congressman john tener. a former pitcher for the white stockings. war and depression sometimes canceled the game. when they played, they played hard and for keeps. women started playing in 1973. linda sanchez has played for 15 years. she said it's a chance to shed by par tanship. >> it's fun to have fun with our colleagues as part of a national pastime. >> reporter: now tonight's game will actually be a tiebreaker for the two teams. each have won 39 games, lost 39 games and tied once. and then after yesterday's shooting they actually added a new charity to their recipients who will be getting the proceeds from tonight's game. the capitol police memorial fund. >> this will no doubt be the big effort night. >> i hope so. >> does the score really matter? >> you're right. >> it's about getting together and watching. >> the format is people want to win. >> tied at 3939. cbsn will have coverage of tonight's baseball game at 7:00 p.m. eastern, 6:00 p.m. central. former navy s.e.a.l. is using his battlefield experience to help transform. he joins stanley mcchrystal. how they say lessons from their military resume can still ahead jamie yuccas shows us how sharks are creating newishes along the california coach. >> reporter: on a typical day on this california beach you could see as many as 10,000. but because of the white shark sightings on shorelining it's a little empty. we'll take a look at how it impacts business coming up on "cbs this morning." i'm phil mickelson, pro golfer. i'm karen, i'm a teacher. my psoriatic arthritis caused joint pain. just like my moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis. and i was worried about joint damage. my doctor said joint pain from ra can be a sign of existing joint damage that could only get worse. he prescribed enbrel to help relieve pain and help stop further damage. enbrel may lower your ability to fight infections. serious, sometimes fatal, events including infections, tuberculosis, lymphoma, other cancers, nervous system and blood disorders, and allergic reactions have occurred. tell your doctor if you've been someplace where fungal infections are common, or if you're prone to infections, have cuts or sores, have had hepatitis b, have been treated for heart failure, or if you have persistent fever, bruising, bleeding, or paleness. don't start enbrel if you have an infection like the flu. joint pain and damage... can go side by side. ask how enbrel can help relieve joint pain and help stop joint damage. enbrel, fda approved for 18 years. he's got a condo. he's got a car. he's got a career. but that still doesn't mean he gets you. time to shine. orbit. fothere's a seriousy boomers virus out there that's been almost forgotten. it's hepatitis c. one in 30 boomers has hep c, yet most don't even know it. because it can hide in your body for years without symptoms, and it's not tested for in routine blood work. the cdc recommends all baby boomers get tested. if you have hep c, it can be cured. for us it's time to get tested. ask your healthcare provider for the simple blood test. it's the only way to know for sure. smart sightinheetings along california coast have been occurring. many of them happen along the 40-mile stretch of the beaches in orange county. jamie yuccas is in san clemente where many worry it will hurt their summer business. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. this is the first week of summer. this usually means parents are dropping off their kids for summer camps. but with so many white sharks spotted just offshore, businesses report numbers are down even when the surf's up. sun shining, waves ready to ride, and this year sharks lurking offshore. after dozens of sightings, businessing are feeling what's known as the shark effect. this is his lowest business in 15 years that i normally have 20 classes and we have to weightlift. >> his business has been down 50%. fewer are willing to get in the water. >> the mom will say, i'm so sorry, i talked to my husband, and it's just that one chance. they're just nervous. >> candice lazar is one of those moms. since maher family witnessed shark sightings and beach closings. that's why at the last minute she decided daughter sloane would sit it out. >> it's hard to know how to react. you don't want to overact. >> there's that chance. >> yes, there is. >> that does weigh on your mind. >> yes. >> you'd never forgive yourself. >> oh, my gosh, never. you would never for given yourself. that's why i took the step that i did. there was so many reports, one right after the other. and it was just getting out of hand. it was crazy. >> within the last year alone, two shark attacks took place within a 20-mile stretch on the southern california beaches. a 36-year-old mom lost part of her right leg. she remains hospitalized. lifeguards begin each morning scanning for sharks. san clemente lifeguard chief bill humphrey says the predators impact crowds. >> the biggest picture is there's far more sharks than there's ever been. >> 11-year-old had to convince her mom to let her train as a lifeguard in her group. even she doesn't want to hang in the ocean alone. >> i'm a little scared of sharks. >> did you used to surf? >> i used to sewer but i'm not going to surf for a long time. >> it sunk a local come surfing come pe physician for kids scheduled for later this month. the beaches surrounded by ice cream parlors, surf board stores and others have fewer customers. >> thank you. ahead, best-selling author malcolm gladwell is here. why glaring golf courses are a glaring example of privilege. we'll be right back. reduces wrinkles in just one week. neutrogena® mmmm. mmmm. mmmm... ugh. nothing spoils a moment like heartburn. try new alka-seltzer ultra strength heartburn relief chews. it's fast, powerful relief with no chalky taste. [ sings high note ] ultra strength, new from alka-seltzer. enjoy the relief. so i use excedrin.ments from my life. it starts to relieve migraine pain in just 30 minutes. and it works on my symptoms, too. now moments lost to migraines are moments gained with excedrin. sfx [heartbeat] when i created ingredients for real taste. absolutely no artificial flavors or preservatives. new knorr selects real ingredients for real taste. not all fish oil supplements provide the same omega-3 power. megared advanced triple absorption is absorbed three times better. so one softgel has more omega-3 power than three standard fish oil pills. megared advanced triple absorption. takesmiss hoffman gets us to mathere safe every time. mrs. migliaccio teaches us all about fractions - and haikus - and the erie canal! miss reeves makes us sound amazing. and miss santoro always takes time to see how we're doing. miss simpkins keeps our school looking great. recess wouldn't be recess without miss basile. and mrs. mccarthy always has tons of good books to read. which makes for a pretty good day at school. ♪ good morning, i'm rahel solomon. the top graduate from his high schools all across philadelphia will be recognized by school district today. students will receive certificates highlighting their achievements at a reception hosted at school district offices, student musician from his various schools will provide some entertainment, students will also be honored at today's school reform commission meeting. congratulations to all of them we will send it over to katie for the forecast and it looks nice out there. >> definitely we do have cloud but there is a comfort when you walk outside the door right now we do have gannon satellite cloud cover helping to skew that bright blue sky and sunshine but there will be sun throughout the course of the day peeking through, in the necessarily any wet weather in this forecast at all in, fact here today it will be a warm comfortable day with a few cloud so not bad, at all we will look at our live neighborhood network outside junior/senior high school but i do think you will brighten up with time. we will just take solace in the fact it is very comfortable for now but this pattern does go back downhill tomorrow scattered showers and storms at anytime, saturday and sunday a p.m. issue and on monday, that is right now looking like it will be the wetest day of the pack. >> little roller coaster again , all right, katie, thanks very much. good morning. looking outside we have an accident i-95 north near columbus boulevard. ninety-five north has been a problem child all morning long and continues to do so, again, 95 north near columbus boulevard pulled off to that left lane, very slow moving around there. ninety-five north near wood have then left lane compromised route 70 westbound at 295 that center lane is also compromised so slow yourself and give yourself a couple extra minutes, rahel, back over to you. next update 8:55a head this morning reintern continuing, overlooked and often miss understood historical events. i'm rahel solomon, good i need the phone that's where i happen to be... to be the one that rings. i need not to be missed phone calls... to not be missed. i need seamless handoff... canyon software. from reception, to landline, to mobile. i need one number... not two. i'm always moving forward... because i can't afford to get stuck in the past. comcast business. built for business. comcast business. ♪ luis waited his whole life being crowned champions. so our wellness coaches developed a plan, to keep him fit and healthy. and when his moment finally arrived, his knees were up to the job. aetna. you don't join us, we join you. ♪ i love this picture. you know why? it shows you are never too old to rock on. rock on, dude. this gentleman of a certain age proves that he's showing no signs of stopping as he head bangs his way to a hard rock metallica song in his car. even his air drumming is to the point. >> wraparound glasses and banging on the steering wheel. >> we don't know his name or anything about him. you can tell by looking at this guy, he's a fun guy. i like that. welcome back to our "cbs this morning" -- >> party. >> welcome back to "cbs this morning." i'm trying to say we're going to go to the green room. sorry about that. hec let's go to the green room. you've about got a general, a navy s.e.a.l. and a best-selling author. who's who, charlie? >> malcolm gladwell is the general. and stanley mcchrystal is the best-selling author -- >> there you go. right now it's time to show you some of this morning's headlines. the "washington post" reports that dennis rodman had a gift for the president there. it was president trump's book called "the art of deal." he gave it to the sports miniter stored but it was intended for king jong-un. rodman says his trip to north korea has nothing to do with the white house. billboard reports on the grammy announcing sweeping changing for the first time. members of the recording academy will be able to cast their awards online. songwriters will be recognized in the album of the year category. they'll be established for wrap, contemporary instrumental, and new age genres around the definition of an album will be expanded. the "los angeles times" reports on a much anticipated fight that will happen in las vegas. the august bout will bring may weather jr. out of retirement and he'll face connor mcgregor. the irishman faces long odds. he's considered to be a 25-1 favorite. >> there's a lot of trash talking already. one of classic rock's anthems could be getting a revised song writing credit. they want to credit yoko ohno as a co-writer. ohno is the widow of the late beatle. he said ohno deserved credit due to her inspiration on the song. this week defense secretary james mattis was granted authority to set those levels to increase troops. retired four-star stanley mcchrystal commanded american and international forces in afghanistan. he also served as commander of the joint special operations command. mcchrystal was tasked with re-imagining the battlefield of the middle east. he outlined how he did that in his 2015 bestseller "team of teams." >> fussell has followed that up with a book of his own. the book is called "one mission: how leaders build a team of teams." the bookses abo is about applyio anyone in the field. >> there's concern around the world. give me a sense because you think of national security, yo think about this country and the timely conversation. what was your reaction when you watched that yesterday and what we need to be thinking about. >> well, i think like everybody else. it's horror at what happened but it's the hope that it starts a national conversation about a number of issues. one is about partisanship, conversation, and another is about why so many people are being killed by guns in our people. i think we need thoughtful people to come together and take on a tough issue. >> that's what struck me yesterday. we've been reporting on it all morning. 50 toe 100 shots. when you hear the gunshots and how long it took. as a navy s.e.a.l., you know the sound. what were you thinking when you looked at that and what it all means? >> obviously sympathy for the folks and the families. >> of course. >> and broader problem here, which i think stan just identified. this is increasing and we have to get our hands around this issue. and for people who haven't been exposed to that before, that's a life-changing moment they'll wrestle with for years. >> what sort of leadership do you need and lessons can be taken from the book? >> the first is it's not just about a single leader. it's about a communitiet when we come together, we get more brains involved, wisdom involved, different perspectives, and we can have some kind of consensus and support. so if we always look for a single iconic person, we'll look for a mistake. >> you write about a leadership mikt. what is that in. >> we want to look for one person who will lead us through tough times. we saw that before. we've got the right general in place. >> we always heard in business you can only have one leader. >> what they've always dunld and what's more important than ever is they create teams that can connect. they did that for us in the military. it's being done in industry and politics. >> leadership leadership is leadership, whether it's in the military, whether it's in business, whether it's in politic sthoos that's right. that's right. >> what are the core principle os thereafter kind of leadership? >> well, in today's world i think it's more important thanner that leaders that are close to these very different problems, they're being driven by interconnected problems. leaders have to empower those. that's what worked for us in the service and that's what we see working well in the industry as folks start to apply that sort of mod >> what did you take that you learned on the battlefield because most of us don't have your skills or your skills in general. we're not navy s.e.a.l.s and we're not equipped to do the things that we do. there are things on the battlefield that can really translate into business. >> i've been out of service for five years and i've been constantly impressed. there's great leaders, great people in those organizations that want to do great things. they want to be part of something that has teamer meaning. that was critical to us in terms of how special operations worked and i think there are several indications. >> admiral mccraven was here. he talked about his book, lessons he learn and it starts with making your bed. one thing about navy s.e.a.l.s is you're often surprised by those who make the cut. are you surprised? >> it really is interesting. you'll have someone who finished an iron man triathlon who can't make it to second training and a kid from iowa who's never seen the ocean who made it as a top graduate. so it's about inner character. >> what did you see in him, general? one of your favorite words, charlie, intellectually curious. there was something that stood out you do of all the people. >> when i was first commanding, chris was asking different questions. he was asking big questions. he was asking how the pieces fit together, not about the focused narrow think things and that makes an immediate impression. >> one thing about the secretary of defense, mattis. the president has seemed to have given him lots of thofrmt is that a good thing or do we need to be reminded that the heart of the american system is civilian control? >> i think it's a good thing to empower is up back cousubordina. the american people ultimately still have ownership of those decisions. so it has to be a melded system in which civilians and military leaders together arrive at right decisions but also prosecute policies that everybody supports, that everybody understands ultimately. the men agree going in, but when policy is set, we all have the idea to carry on. >> where should troop levels be many. >> it's hard to say. i would defer what jim matusz and mcnichols on ground are recommending. but i think we need to ask ourselves, if we sent more troops and that doesn't solve the problem or make the change we hope, what will we do then? that's the question nation needs to ask itself about its long-term things in afghanistan and what we hope to achieve. >> thank you so much. good to see you do. >> food goode to see the two of you. thank you so much. the name of the book is "one mission." it's on sale now, wherever you like to buy your book. bestseller malcolm gladwell says he's made his podcast even weirder. his thoughts on forgotten events including the recipe change at mcdonald's that he malcolm gladwell has been named as an inflew yen chal writer. so has charlie rose. >> he's more deserving. >> i don't know about that. >> he's the bestseller of five. now he's back with the second season of his pod raft. it's called revisionist history. series looks at events and ideas from the past that have been overlook or misunderstood. he joins us once again at the table. congratulations on season two. >> thank you, gayle. >> i love your start at season two. it as about private golf courses in los angeles. you said -- you describe the golf courses as crack cocaine for rich guys. you have a reich guy at the table. what are you talk about? >> i have a little fun game of golf. >> yes, you do. >> i point out how it's played by rich white guys that and women as well. >> yes, yes. i'm more interested many the question using the private golf courses of l.a. as an example. how is privilege protected and enshrined as a society. et's a fascinating example of a small group of very wealthy people have managed to essentially not pay any property taxes for generations on these huge golf courses in the middle of city. >> and no one else gets to play on it. >> and l.a. is a city that has one of the fewest amount of parkland of any major american city. it is under parked. and so i would go to l.a. and i would be confronted by this weird fact which is i'm a runner. there's nowhere to run in l.a., and yet there are these 100-aker dub there are subscription or seven with chain link fences that and you report that nobody was on the course. why can't you go and walk around shoo that's how i got thinking how privilege gets embedded in the structure of our society. et's one of those -- what i'm trying to do with the podcast is use these kind of a very seemingly lighthearted questions to examine much more important questions. >> because of the bizarre case. it becomes a jumping off point to talk to landscape architects, to go anywhere you want to go. >> there was a moment when e was making this episode where i thought, i need to talk a philosoph philosopher. h is getting so complicated. i called a guy at the university of washington, mark cohen, who's so much fun. it was one of those things you can do in a podcast. you know, there's no rules. if you want to talk to a philosopher, you can talk to a philosophy. that's what i love about the forum. >> talk about what you learned about the ceos who play golf and what their companies are doing. >> there's an economist named lee bickerstaff who did this lovely work. if you're a serious golfer, you post your scores on the usga's website so you can calculate your handy cape. what he did is looked at all the people who posted their scores and matched it to a list of ceos of public companies and was able to figure out how much ceos play golf and then he was abe to figure out what effect does playing golf have on the performance of your company. and first of all he showed that ceos play an astonishing amount of golf and the more you play, the worst your company does. at a shareholders ming they should stand up. >> do you think, therefore, the country did badly because president obama loved to play golf? >> no. i would say this. i would be happy if presidents as a group played less golf and spent more time mastering the details of their presidency. but i have nothing against people doing sports for recreation. my problem is when an addiction to a certain sport affects the rest of us and affects the citizens of los angeles. they don't have any place to go. the there's no park space for them to go. >> i agree with what you're saying. the yofd people to get outside and run or play golf and just do something in the complex world today, that's a very good thing. >> i'm not going disagree about that. >> you also did something about mcdonald's. it broke your heart. first i was stunned you eat mcdonald's. >> after his run. >> after your run. there was something that broke your heart in 1990. >> they changed the recipe for the french fries. those of us who remember, they used to be amazing, right? that's why you went to mcdonald's. they were the most incredible fries you've ever eaten. and they're not anymore for a reason. that is mcdonald's changed formula on july 23rd, 1990. and i think that formula change was catastrophic. >> and you brought in millennials to do a blind test and they picked old fries. >> i went to america's r & d house to make me fries the old way and new way and we did a blind test. >> the old way was 100%. >> there's no distinction. >> malcolm glad well. it's available now. can hear more of "cbs this morning" on our podcast as well. find them on itunes and apples ipodcast. you're watching "cbs this morning." we thank malcolm well, that doe good morning, i'm jim donovan, jurors will deliberate in the bill cosby sex assault case a again today with 30 hours of deliberations already in the books. cosby arrived at montgomery county courthouse in norristown about 10 minutes ago. he is accused of drugging and sexually assaulting a temple he plea in 2004. jury is sequestered for the trial and members of the jury were select from western pennsylvania, because of possible pretrial publicity. and now lets check on the weather with katie, hi there, katie. >> good morning, jim. we have seen humidity get scaled back so it feels very comfortable outside. there are some cloud out there and that is certainly evident on satellite right now as we look at storm scan three but quiet. we will not find wet weather throughout the day and little veil of cloud that worked its way over city of philadelphia is starting to break apart now we will see a mix throughout the day that goes for the shore points as well. nice beach day, not as hot, or you know, maybe not as much of an excuse to jump in the waves here but it will be a very pleasant day at the shore that rip current risk is moderate. next couple days turning steamy, heating up and then going downhill with the wet wet weather. spotty showers or storms tomorrow, saturday and sunday but meisha, monday looks like it could get nasty out there. >> that is what i was looking at. all right, thanks very much. we are still looking busy particularly on i-95, moving oddly enough in the northbound direction so 95 north atwood haven has reopened for an earlier accident, residual delays they are still out there southbound actually looking good, accident i-95 north near columbus boulevard blocking two left lanes but you are getting by there better now and walt whitman bridge eastbound we have another accident mid span 21 miles an hour, jim, back over to you. >> thanks, meisha. >> that is "eyewitness news" for now. join us for "eyewitness news" at noon. i'm jim donovan. make it a great ♪ ♪ >> dr. phil is in the house. his outrage over a controversial school campaign. >> professionally speaking that's the most idiotic thing i have ever seen. >> this iron nun's secret to stay running at 86. >> it harmonizes my body and soul. >> announcer: plus -- >> buried alive, burned at the stake, attacked by sharks. >> announcer: a modern day daredevil is able to cheat death on a regular basis. >> nothing is a trick! [ applause ] ♪ >> dr. travis: welcome to the show, joining us today is ob/gyn dr. nita landry. welcome! [ crowd cheering ] [ applause ] >> thank you! >> dr. travis: so, let's start off with this topic. a study says that orgasms change your brain activity so much that it can literally put you in a trance-like state. >> "it sure can ...". [ laught

Related Keywords

New York , United States , Alabama , Alexandria , Al Iskandariyah , Egypt , Washington , Turkey , Brazil , Woodhaven , Illinois , Whitehouse , District Of Columbia , California , Virginia , Russia , London , City Of , United Kingdom , Erie , Pennsylvania , Arizona , Iowa , Center Field , Togo , Ecuador , Ireland , Capitol Hill , Americans , America , Turkish , Irishman , American , David Bailey , Scott Kelly , Jeff Duncan , Steve Scalise , Gabby Giffords , Jan Crawford , Linda Sanchez , Nancy Pelosi , Mike Rogers , Zack Barton , Henry Cabrera , Dennis Rodman , Los Angeles , Robert Mueller , Yoko Ohno Asa , Malcolm Gladwell , Nita Landry , Phil Mickelson , Candice Lazar , Jim Donovan , Jeff , Mike Mika , Newt Gingrich , Diego Puma , Paul Ryan , Stanley Mcchrystal , Bernie Sanders , Connor Mcgregor , Mayweather Jr , December Ray ,

© 2024 Vimarsana

comparemela.com © 2020. All Rights Reserved.