and broadway beautiful. the stars of the hit carole king musical prove you ve got a friend, even if they re so far away. so nice. but first, here s today s eye opener, your world in 90 seconds. this will be a week of heartache. it also is a week of hope. the toll of the virus is hard to fathom. experts say we should brace for things to get even worse. if back to normal means acting like there never was a coronavirus problem, i don t think that s going to happen until we do have the situation where you can completely protect the population. we are at red line. people can t work any harder. staying at this level is problematic. president trump offered his best wishes to boris johnson who was moved to icu after his coronavirus symptoms worsened. americans are all praying for his recovery. he s been a really good friend. he s been really something very special. strong. resolute. doesn t quit. doesn t give up. presidential primary in wisconsin will go ahead
i m anne-marie green. the coronavirus pandemic marked a new threshold here in the u.s. infections are confirmed in all 50 states. nationwide, there are now more than 6,300 reported cases and more than 100 deaths. across the country, local officials are taking aggressive action to curb the spread of the virus. new york city s mayor is considering a shelter-in-place order for more than eight million people who live here. that action is already in effect for people living in parts of northern california. meanwhile, hospitals are in desperate need of more protective gear to handle the outbreak, and there s growing concern over whether they ll have enough beds and supplies for infected patients. in washington, congress is working on what may be the largest bailout in american history to rescue the u.s. economy from the pandemic. gwen baumgardner is in london tracking all of the detais for us. what is the latest on this stimulus package? reporter: hey, good morning, anne-marie. t
solid data and everyone watching the pound and those polled in the u.k. that is sort of dominating all the discussion. whatr: we think about could the brexit effect have on u.s. stocks and the first placed my mind goes is financials. that group was leading the way down, but we had some paring back on the end of the day. when you have people like jamie dimon trying to get brexit not to happen. joe: credit card companies all diving across the board after synchrony financial warning that it expects right off to rise. consumer has been one persistent trend, taking a hit and that something we are going to want to watch. oliver: we are also looking at at&t and verizon. at&t and verizon still involved in a deal for yahoo!. jokes: let s take a look at today s record lows in the bond market u.s. yields taking up slightly. goingrman 10 year yields into negative territory for the first time, ending right at zero. yield are looking at that and that is an extra gary chart. scarlet: that
censoring a public dock m, the justice department released the complete version. in the whack ake of orlando, senate and republicans there agreed to a series of votes tonight on gun legislation. our congressional correspondent nancy cordes at the capitol. nancy, four measures put to a vote tonight all four of them failed. even though everyone including the nra appears to agree that suspected terrorists should not have access to guns. the problem is that democrats and republicans have two different solutions to the problem and they re half-hearted attempts at compromise have gone nowhere. democrats have a measure that would block any one on a terrorist watch list from flat out being able to buy a gun. but republicans say that innocent americans could end up on the lists by accident and so their proposal would delay a sale for 72 hours while prosecutors worked to convince a judge to block the sale permanently. democrats say, that s too cumbersome. so what s remarkable, scot
he s behind in something he holds dear, money. and police transcripts shed new light to the orlando terror attack. concerns that those killed were victims of police gunfire. good morning from the studio 57 newsroom at cbs news headquaters here in new york. good to be with you. i m. lachina: i m ann marie green. two new wildfires are burning out of control northeast of los angeles forcing the he evacuations of hundreds of homes. some 4500 acres have burned. the state s largest active fire engulfed nearly 8,000 acres. good morning. the good news is temperatures have cooled off and the winds have died down but that hasn t stopped big fires from popping upright next to home. the pair of fast moving wildfires continue to burn through brush in the mountains overnight as firefighters work to keep them from merging. there s a lot of homes here. the fires erupted monday amid an intense heat wave prompting hundreds of evacuations north of los angeles. we ask you to bring