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medicare. >> we will have more on today's birthday including a look at why presidents seem to age so much faster than the rest of us "early" this thursday morning, august 4th, 2011. captioning funded by cbs good thursday morning to you. i'm erica hill. nice to have you with us this morning. >> i'm chris wragge. good morning everyone. ahead this morning we will meet a british police officer they are call robocops. we saw him yesterday knocked down by a hit and run driver. he gets up and see gives chase to the driver running away. he eventually caught the guy and asked him what was going through his mind during after all after nearly being run over. >> amazing. the guy has a pretty good sense of humor about it, so i hear. also at home ahead it is the heat that is really just relentless at this point. the numbers yesterday, 114 degrees in little rock. 109 in dallas. the death toll has also climbing around the country. this is dangerous stuff. marysol castro is in dallas this morning with the very latest on the heat wave for us. first, we get to a massive nationwide recall of ground turkey meat. 18,000 tons of it. it's one of the biggest product recalls in u.s. history. the contaminated turkey is blamed for food poisoning causing one death and made dozens of other people sick. steve large hat later. >> reporter:. cdc linked a outbreak of salmonella to cargill that owns and operate is the plant is recalling 36 million pounds of ground turkey products. at least 76 people in 26 states have been kick sickened. the heavy concentration in michigan and ohio. one death here in california is believed connected to the contamination. >> these are complex investigations. they sometimes take months to complete. >> reporter: the recall applies to ground turkey products dated february 20th to august 2nd and containing estp-963 on the label. can be sold under the following name brands. as they have been released by cargill, the company says suspending production until they, quote, can determine the source of the salmonella and take corrective action is the right thing to do. >> they should know where it's coming from. >> reporter: the cdc estimates 50 million americans get sick from food poisoning and 3,000 die from it each year and they say cooking food thoroughly is the best prevention. >> if you don't see any red you know it's thoroughly cooked. as mi husband, it should be like the sole of a shoe. >> reporter: customers who bl believe their meat is under the recall should return the package to the store for a refund. the first case of salmonella poisoning was reported back in march but it wasn't until yesterday that the recall was officially announced. now a horrifying story about the largest international child pornography ring ever discovered. u.s. officials say more than 70 people face charges and there could be hundreds more. cbs news justice correspondent bob orr has the latest now from washington. >> reporter: good morning, chris. you say this is an awful case involving the sexual exploitation of dozens, if not hundreds, of children in the u.s. and abroad by predators who produced and shared kiddie porn on the internet. the website was called dreamboard. beyond the innocent name and colorful graphics, worked a private online club of child molesters dedicated to the sexual abuse of young children. >> some of the children featured in these videos were infants and, in many cases, the children being victimized were obvious and intentional pain. >> reporter: the child porn cybertrading post shut down this spring when immigration and customs and enforcement agents began addressing dozen of dreamboard participates. >> there were no dream boards in this case. just the criminal exploitation of young defensely children. >> reporter: 52 people arrested and 43 in the united states. including tennessee police officer richard chandler and virginia high school football coach joseph matt wheeler. april greenway has children in wheeler's school district. >> usually, it's the people you think you can trust the most that you really can't trust. >> reporter: more than 600 people suspected of participating on dream board using enkristed files and phony names to hide their identities. some of the aliases including the following. a reference to dream board's goal featuring sexual exploitation of kids 12 and younger. rules were strict. only people who contributed child sex videos could participate and the most prolific porn producers were rewarded. >> membership status was upgraded for those who produced and shared their own child porn and videos. >> reporter: more than 500 suspected dream board users are still out there somewhere, but those in custody aren't going anywhere. nearly all are being held now without bail. at the same time, investigators are going for a huge amount of material. the xilveted we a equivalent of 16,000 dvds trying to identify who the young victims were. >> bob orr in washington, thank you. the latest on the heat in the south. the deadly heat wave is threatening to break all-time records for 100-degree temperatures with numbers like this. 115 degrees in ft. smith, arkansas, yesterday. almost as hot in dallas where we find marysol castro standing by this morning and i'm sure it's well on its way to another hot day there, mary. >> reporter: you're absolutely right, erica. it yesterday was hotter here in dallas than new delhi and dah mass cass. it's really taking a toll on folks here who have suffered through 33 days of consecutive triple digit heat. but we did find a brave few who find a way to charge through it all. it's the sole of nearly every town in this state, high school football. but even soles are tested and they know it well. every sprint, tackle and pass executed under 112-degree heat. there is no cloud cover, there is no breeze. while only the third day of practice, residents of dallas, texas have suffered through triple digit heat for 33 days straight. heat that has buckled roads and put energy companies on high alert throughout the region. for daniel perez and robert morales, both 16, the four hours of practice is a test in tenacity. >> have the objective in my head and just stay focused on what i have to do so i don't think about this heat. >> 1-2-3! >> one nation! >> reporter: this is just the beginning. for when everyone else walks off the field into the cool air of the field house, both daniel and robert don't get a break. instead, they go to work outside! daniel swaps his cleats for a cooler and his helmet for a sledge hammer. the temperature holds steady at 112 degrees in the shade. he works four hours straight like he did in the morning but there is no coach giving him a mandatory rest or water break. you would prefer to work outside? >> yes, i would. >> reporter: why is that? >> it will help me during football. if i can do all of this, when i go on the football field, i can work just as hard without stopping, without thinking about the heat. >> reporter: across town, robert has traded in his playbook for flyers and while they not be like the linebackers he faced on the field this morning the 1:00 p.m. sun is punishing enough. what do you get more excited about, your job or football? >> probably football. >> reporter: even in the heat? >> yep. >> reporter: and why are they working so hard in the scorching sun? for every teenager's dream -- a new car. and, today, dallas is expected to break another record 109 degrees. the heat is a big story. the other big tory, tropical storm emily. just off the coach of port-au-prince and stationary packing 50-mile-per-hour winds and hasn't strengthened but we are following the flood and rain. no paths or warnings for florida. emily is crossing haiti and then cuba and expected to stay east of the florida coast and seeing from 2 to 5 inches but, of course, we will keep an eye on it for you over the next 24 to 48 hours. that's all for now. erica, back to you. >> thanks. check in with you in a few minutes. jeff glor at the news desk with a check of the day's other headlines. president obama is calling on congress to come back. get back to washington so they can end the partial faa shutdown. congress left for vacation this week without approving funding. almost 75,000 people are out of work right now. more than 200 construction projects halted and trps secretary ray lahood yesterday begged for action. >> i'm asking congress to come back and do for the american people what they have been talking about, put 75,000 people back to work! the government could lose more than a billion dollars in taxes on airline tickets. in newpo to the latest on britain's tabloid scandal. paul mccartney's ex-wife contains a london tabloid listened to her phone messages. charlie d'agata has more from london. >> good morning, chris. >> reporter: the new allegations take britain's hacking scandal well beyond the realm of rupert murdoch's empire as more news and names get dragged into the controversy. heather mills says a senior journalist called her up in 2001 with intimate details of her rocky relationship with then boyfriend paul mccartney. >> quoting the messages from my machine. >> reporter: she says she told him he obviously hacked into her phone and if the paper went with the story, she was going to the police. >> he said, okay, okay, okay. yeah, we did hear it on your voice messages. i won't run it. >> reporter: mills said the journalist was from the trinity mirror group and daily mirror, the time with cnn host peers morgan who built a career on spilling celebrity beans with his insider knowledge. mills made clear the unnamed journalist who called her that day was not morgan but the allegations seem to echo morgan's own words in an article he wrote in 2006 in "the daily mail." at one stamg, i was played a tape of a message paul had left for heather on her mobile fine. it was heartbreaking. he sounded lonely, miserable and desperate and even saying we can work it out into the answer phone. the marriage of former beatles sir paul mccartney to heather mills was a textbook tabloid story. the day-to-day sles and celebrity of their relationship made for irresistible fodder for morgan's "daily mirror." morgan calls mills claims unsubstantiated and saying he never hacked phones or told anybody else to but his claim he never knowingly published this story obtained through hacking is looking less convincing to some british lawmakers. >> he has to answer. i always obey the law. he really has to give an explanation for that. >> reporter: now there have not been any formal requests for piers morgan to appear before lawmakers and many are wondering where heather mills is waiting until now she is a victim of hacking more than ten years ago. >> cbs' charlie d'agata in london for us, thanks. >> each day. still ahead this morning, happy birthday bash for the president. barack obama turns 50 today and, boy, it is not easy. when you are aging as a president, you can chalk a lot that up to the sfres and a few other things. we will tell you what. baseball investigating alex rodriguez in poker game. we will show you what is in the cards coming up for a-rod coming up here on cbs. lots of sun, some rain and that's how they ge thet this big and beautiful. our fruit has to be perfectly ripe because it's delivered on the same day. for me? this is so beautiful! edible arrangements. enjoy the most delicious fruit ever. guaranteed. starting at $25. hello parents, it's going to be your kids are going to climb rope. they're going to have a year long tug war with the ceiling. and by the time they get out of 8th grade, they're going to do it with sweat on their brow and achievement in their hearts. so, this is what they're gonna need: running shoes, t-shirts, tube socks, fruit cups, cheese sticks, energy bars, rope climbing gloves, rope burn ointment, and a jump drive. not sure what that is, but they're gonna be jumpin'. school takes a lot. target has it all. if you 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[ male announcer ] get five dollars in money-saving coupons at v8juice.com. in money-saving coupons from virginia... the virginia tech campus is locked down right now. that, after a person with a gun was hall. it's the good morni. i'm frank mallicoat. the virginia tech campus locked down right now. that after a person what a gun bass reported near a dining hall there. you may recall it's the same campus where a student killed 32 students and faculty in 2007. we'll keep you updated there. iran's ambassador to iraq says he expects cal grads shane bauer and josh fattal to be released soon. they are accused of spying in iran. they were in court there on sunday. could be out very soon. two early-morning fires in oakland are now out no injuries reported in either fire. one displaced five people from a home on 107th avenue, another damaged a home on altura place. stopping violence in east palo alto, the subject of a town hall meeting at 6 p.m. tonight at city hall. the mayor and the police chief called the meeting after four homicides in just the last two weeks. traffic and weather coming right up. ,, ,,,,,,,,,, ,, good morning from the traffic center. let's take you to 280 in the south bay. just checked in with chp. no accidents but look at this extra busy northbound through downtown san jose. lots of brake lights through that area. also seeing some slight delays northbound 101 through san jose, as well. live look at the bay bridge toll plaza. traffic getting backed up again at least to the first overpass there. 26 minutes right now carquinez bridge to the maze. high wind advisory continues for the bay bridge so use caution as you work your way across the span. you see our camera dancing around. the altamont pass is slow from 205 to the airway. >> clouds extending inland trying to break up but it's going to be a slow burn today and that means temperatures way down. heavy drizzle at the coastline. and that makes the roads very damp if you head in that direction. by the afternoon we'll still see some 70s and low 80s in the warmest spots inland. that's it. you have a lot of 60s inside the bay. 70s at the santa clara valley. 50s and 60s at the coastline. warmer on the weekend. ,,,,,,,, welcome back to "the early show" here on a thursday morning. chris wragge, erica hill here in new york. coming up a hero cop right out of the movies. we showed you this video a few days ago. a hit and run driver in a stolen car, knocking the officer over. the officer is hurt, gets up, goes after the driver, the officer's name is dave pascoe. >> hurts to watch, but talk about thinking on your feet. >> one tough cop. >> for sure. online data theft hitting a new high. a new report points to 72 wide scale attacks in recent years and blames a state actor. some computer experts says what that means is china is doing the hacking. what some big companies are doing and also and it's important, what they're not doing to keep your information safe. >> those stories coy iey ies co. >> the language is always amusing blaming state actors. good morning to everyone at home. we begin with 36 million pounds of ground turkey being recalled nationwide following salmonella concerns. the turkey was processed at a cargill plant in arkansas, linked to an outbreak killed one person and sickened 76 across 26 states. there's been another tour bus crash, the bus landed upside police in fullerton, california, which is south of los angeles are under heavy pressure over the death of a mentally ill man. cbs news national correspondent ben tracy reports how he died last month after a violent confrontation with police. >> reporter: in this chilling cell phone video recorded at a bus stop july 5th, he screams as he's tased a reported six times. thomas was confronted and allegedly beat into a coma by six police officers. witnesses say the attack was unprovo unprovoked. the surveillance footage from a city bus captured passengers describing the incident. thomas, who suffered from schizophrenia refused to take medication and was homeless by choice. five days after the beating, he died in the hospital. his father, a former orange county sheriff's deputy, wants justice for what happened to his son. >> if you or i did this we'd go to prison for murder, that's what needs to happen to the group of rogue officers. >> local residents are furious as well, they expressed their anger to city officials and the police chief at a town meeting wednesday. >> you should be utterly ashamed of yourself. you should resign. >> thomas's father also addressed the panel. >> listen to my son beg those officers, please, please, god, i'm sorry, i'm sorry and the last words of his life, "dad, dad!" i want to you hear that the rest of your life like i will. >> the police department contends the altercation began when the officers responded to a call about a man attempting to steal from cars. thomas resisted arrest and injured officers, causing them to use force. nearly a month after the incident, all six officers have been placed on administrative leave. a candlelight vigil was held for thomas wednesday across from the fullerton police department. >> they beat him to death, overdid it. >> the cops think they'll get away from murder and i want them to know they're not going to. >> reporter: supporters believe they are thomas's voice now and want to send the department a clear message. ben tracy, cbs news, los angeles. >> tough story, very tough story. just ahead this morning, a-rod in the headlines, not just because he's rehabbing his knee but also because he could be a gambler, major league baseball wants to talk to him about it. >> why alex rodriguez is being wants to talk to him about it. >> why alex rodriguez is being called [ female announcer ] we all want cleaner laundry. we all want fewer chemicals. new all free clear oxi-active. a free clear detergent that's tough on stains and gentle on skin. try new all free clear oxi-active. ♪ oh, love me ♪ oh oh oh ♪ just 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prebiotics baseball superstar alex rodriguez hasn't played for nearly a month because of a knee injury. now he could not play for longer because of a different game, poker. >> walkoff grand slam! >> what he does on the baseball field makes alex rodriguez a superstar. what he does off the field often gets him in trouble, allegations in "star" magazine and aid dar online suggests he may have been involved in a high stakes poker game. >> "we take this seriously and have been investigating this matter since the initial allegation as part of the investigation the commissioner's office will interview mr. rodriguez." >> basically they want to find out who was there, what they knew, what kind of gambling was going on and was a-rod there, at which point they will speak with a-rod. >> 1919 several members of the white sox accused of throwing the world series, betting on baseball got pete rose permanently banned from the game. >> another walkoff home run! >> this is not rodriguez' first brush with gambling. 2005 he met with baseball officials concerned about his pension for poker. just one of several incidents that has kept the 14-time all-star in the spotlight for all the wrong reasons. >> alex rodriguez was involved in a highly publicized bitter divorce. alex rodriguez admitted to taking performance-enhancing drugs a few years back and now he's being investigated by major league baseball for potentially an involvement in high stakes poker game. >> alex is a victim of a number of things, guilt by association in the fact he's the polar opposite from the guy who stands 20 feet away from him, derek jeeter, constantly under the microscope and i don't think he totally gets it, when you're involved in stuff like this, right or wrong it's not perceived well. >> we'll see. up next, hit and run, we'll speak with the british policeman knocked down by a stolen car. >> didn't stop him. he got up, chased the guy down. he'll talk about it ahead on "the early show." ♪ [ both ] you just 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[ female announcer ] from one a day. an alarming new report reveals an unprecedented spree of cyber attacks hitting 72 organizations worldwide including the u.s. and major corporations all of this happening over the past five years. protecting online data has never been so important. of course not just for governments and companies but for you the consumer as well. cbs news correspondent whit johnson has more. >> reporter: amid the glitter of las vegas last night a special tribute for the unsung cyber heroes. >> we were trying to make them feel like the ofters. >> reporter: alexander sodorov and dino organized the pony awards, those who successfully prevent computer hacking and those who fail. >> one of the biggest data thefts was the sony case, where they lost the information, names, addresses of everybody who was using their playstation network. >> reporter: sony's 77 million customers were exposed because their information remained stored after their purchases. digital storage is legal, big business, doubling in size every two years. >> information has economic value. it has value in terms of telling you about people, what their preferences are, what their interests are, and what do they do with that profile? they use that profile to sell you particular ads, sometimes they share it with other marketing companies. >> reporter: the aclu's chris calabrese is among those lobbies congress to give more privacy options online. >> everything we do is saving a record, going online, all of our correspondence and all saved on third party computers and can be ac sessioned by other people. >> reporter: instances of malicious software, stuff hackers can use, are on the rise, going from nearly 106,000 last march to more than 287,000 in june. >> you don't know what data is stored, data about you stored, you don't know how well it's stored, you don't know if the company is doing the equivalent of leaving their file cabinet open on the streets, oh there's files of the random people that shouldn't be there. the pony for the most epic fail. >> reporter: last night at the ponies -- >> the winner goes to -- >> reporter: sony got that award for epic failure. >> sony! >> reporter: proof that with technology growing so rapidly, even those on the cutting edge can hardly keep up. whit johnson, cbs news, washington. still to come this morning, just why do some presidents look say ten years older after only a four-year term? >> guess. a doctor who studied presidents will tell us why, he believes they age twice as fast as the rest of us. your local news is next. u.s.a.a. auto insurance is often handed down from generation to generation, because it offers a superior level of protection and because u.s.a.a.'s commitment to serve the military, veterans, and their families is without equal. begin your legacy. get an auto insurance quote. u.s.a.a. we know what it means to serve. ,, iran's ambassador to iraq says he expects u-c ber good wednesday morning -- it's thursday. i'm grace lee. iran's ambassador to iraq says he expects uc-berkeley alumni shane bauer and josh fattal to be released soon. the two are accused of spying in iran. they claim they were simply hiking in iraq and accidentally crossed the unmarked border. convicted kidnapper and rapist phillip garrido reportedly denies involvement in the 1988 disappearance of michaela garret of hayward. he made the denial during a jailhouse interview in may according to el dorado district attorney vern pierson. the mystery hotel is no longer a mystery for some san jose state university students. they are being forced to live off campus staying at the clarion on north fourth street. sjsu suddenly had a housing crisis with the incoming freshman class, about 1 1/2 times the size of the last one. so bigger class than they expected, they will stay at the clarion. traffic and weather coming right up. ,,,,,, ,,,,,, good morning. we have a brand-new accident to report along 880 northbound right at davis involving a motorcycle blocking lanes. you can see traffic just crawling along on that northbound side through there. traffic slows down a bit north of there as you head into oakland. but headed toward the maze not too bad. looking good northbound through there. southbound a little sluggish into hayward. off the eastshore freeway towards the bay bridge, slow and go westbound as you hit berkeley and emery develop but the bay bridge in the too bad. metering lights on at the toll plaza but overall light. >> the weather looking groomy in the bay area today. we have low clouds and fog stretching onshore. ocean beach, yes, it has been very damp out there this morning, heavy drizzle at the coastline. roads very slick if you head out this morning. looks like we are going to watch a slow burnback toward the coast today and that means temperatures are going to be cooler than they have been much cooler than the average for this time of year. 80 degrees the expected high in fairfield. 77 in livermore. about 77 in san jose. 61 in pacifica. low clouds even drizzle there. a little warmer on the weekend. ,,,,,,,, top of the hour now. we welcome you back to "the early show." i'm erica hill along with chris wragge. keeping the kids off the street at night has become a major issue for the city and not just for parents. especially in chicago where dozens of children have died in the violence we have talked about in recent years. they are beefing up their curfews for kids under 12 telling parents they can face a serious fine, we are talking it starts at $500 if their kids are out too late. chicago's new mayor will talk about that curfew in a few minutes. also coming up, how important organ donation can be. this is about a little girl who needed a new heart. she was 7 years old at the time and doctors said she wouldn't last much longer. now two years after a life-saving operation she is doing great. we'll talk to her and her parents coming up. first, president obama turns 50 today. he got a jump on his birthday celebration last night at a fund-raiser in chicago. ♪ happy birthday to you >> 2400 supporters led by jennifer hudson sang "happy birthday" to the president who apparently enjoyed it. >> i couldn't have had a better early birthday present than spending tonight with all of you. >> the 50-year-old is in good shape, but as we mentioned earlier, he does have more gray hair than he used to. could he be a casualty of the office? do presidents age quicker than the average american? >> joining me now is the wellness officer at the cleveland clinic. he has studied presidents back to 1901. thank you for being here. >> good to be here. >> you say the presidents age faster. >> for every year they are in office from teddy roosevelt to now, they age two years for every year they are in office. >> is it just the stress? is that the leading indicator? >> the stress have the leading reason, but we all have stress. you have stress, erica has stress, but we manage it with friends. they lose all their friends. even their wives at the end of their term are asking them for favors, can you do this? can you do that? they end up with no one giving hem unakuwaited love except for pets. >> just a person who is always in your corner giving you a break. >> that's right. that's what the rest of us have. they have huge amounts of stress, obviously. you saw in the last debate, right? the president loses his friends. they are criticizing him. so what do you do? you feel like you've got the stress, you do have the stress of the world on you, and you have nothing to help. teddy roosevelt had gained weight and had heart disease. every one of them develops high blood pressure or heart disease or aging of the arteries. clinton has it, too. why are these guys running in this society, right? it is a very tough job. >> they get such great medical care while in office. do they not exercise the option to make sure they are being well maintained? >> well, the best medical care can't replace friends. they have a purpose in life, which helps them, obviously. they have a driving force, but they realize how tough it is to get their mission done. and so then they end up with -- most of them will exercise and eat reasonably, although you showed, if you will, teddy roosevelt, who went from 210 pound to 340. all of them gain weight, usually. don't eat as well. and they really end up with arterial disease. >> they can reverse it. president clinton is looking better out of office. it probably helps now that the office has ended. >> we get to change it. he's on a diet and has changed his diet radically and is getting more friends. >> maybe you should send a note to this president about that. dr. roizen, thanks. now let's go to jeff glor to check on the latest headlines. >> good morning, guys. good morning to everyone at home. millions of pounds of ground turkey is being pulled off store shelves following a huge recall. the food giant cargill recalled 36 million pounds of fresh and frozen ground turkey. it is linked to the sal no nel la outbreak blamed for killing one person and sickening at least 76 people in 26 different states. the turkey was sold under several labels including honeysuckle white, shady brooke farms, safeway and kroeger. all recalled packages carry this code, estp-963. craft foods announced it plans to split into two publicly traded companies. one would handle the snack products and the other groceries. it will allow kraft to focus on its business seeing increased competition. australian police are hunting for a man behind a bizarre bomb scare that turned out to be a hoax yesterday. we followed this one after a man broke into a wealthy man's home in sidney and chained a bomb to the neck of an 18-year-old woman. police spent ten hours getting that off her but found no explosives. they think it was some sort of extortion plot. and in sweden one man's hobby is another man's atomic scare. this is what richard handel's stove looked like after three radioactive plmts blue up in a small nuclear meltdown. he was trying to split atoms inside his apartment as a hobby. why not? he was arrested yesterday for unauthorized possession of nuclear material. find another hobby, buddy. marysol castro is checking out the this weather report sponsored by at&t. rethink possible. >> thanks so much. that's your latest weather. now back over to chris in new york. marysol, thanks so much. children in chicago now have a new official bedtime. city official just approved a curfew in an effort to cut down on crimes and bring a long-running series of child killings to an end. dean reynoldes has more now from chicago. >> reporter: it is the latest reaction to the violence in the city that is ravaging the young. >> i just want my kids safe. i want a curfew policy that's clear and unambiguous. making sure that kids like i used to have, lights go off, you go home. >> reporter: the city council is sponsoring a new weekday curfew means kids younger than 12 must be off the streets by 8:30 every night and 9:00 on weekends. for 12 to 16, the times are 10:00 on weekdays and 11:00 on weekends. new mayor rahm emanuel says its past time to turn the tide in the city that's become infamous for murdered kids. >> whether you are indoors or an adult supervised activity, you are safe. >> reporter: critics of concerned parents point to lack of enforcement of the existing 10:30 curfew. in 2009 police issued 23,000 curfew citations. last year 19,000. but halfway into this year the number is only 8,000. the mayor says that will change, particularly since the new ordinance will hit parents in the wallet. a parent or guardian can face community service or a fine of up to $500 if their child is caught after curfew. a pending recommendation would triple the fine for three offenses in one year. the idea is that threatening absentee parents with a heavy penalty may spare their children from paying the ultimate price. dean reynolds, cbs news, chicago. >> you talk about a heavy duty fine, $1500. >> a lot of money. >> reporter: 500 is tough far lot of folks. coming up next, a little girl's heart condition was so bad she had little hope of surviving much longer. >> but she did. we'll hear about the transplant. that gave her a second chance at life. stay can with us. you are watching "the early show" on cbs. [ male announcer ] this is the network. a network of possibilities. excuse me? my grandfather was born in this village. [ automated voice speaks foreign language ] [ male announcer ] in here, everyone speaks the same language. ♪ in here, forklifts drive themselves. no, he doesn't have it. yeah, we'll look on that. [ male announcer ] in here, friends leave you messages written in the air. that's it right there. [ male announcer ] it's the at&t network. and what's possible in here is almost impossible to say. like new splenda® essentials™ no calorie sweeteners. this bowl of strawberries is loaded with vitamin c. and now, b vitamins to boot. coffee doesn't have fiber. unless you want it to. new splenda® essentials™ are the first and only line of sweeteners with a small boost of fiber, or antioxidants, or b vitamins in every packet. mmm. same great taste with an added "way to go, me" feeling. new splenda® essentials™. get more out of what you put in. 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[ male announcer ] ask your veterinarian and off we go! seeking inspiration from the world's best yogurts for activia selects in paris we discovered the inspiration for a totally new yogurt. activia selects french so silky and smooth with lots of juicy fruit. then our search took us to beautiful greece and this thick and creamy greek yogurt, so rich and full of flavor. it was a grueling trip! try new activia french and greek yogurt. a world of great new tastes. in this morning's health watch a tiny heart. doctors in new york needed one to save the life of a desperately sick little girl. >> cbs news correspondent michelle miller takes a look at a case that shows how important organ donations are at every age. >> reporter: a bright smile with zes it's zest for life. 9-year-old alexia balentine seems the picture of good health. but just two years ago she was on the verge of death in desperate need of a heart transplant. >> when she started going to nursery school, i saw that she just couldn't keep up with the other children. >> reporter: alexia was born with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, a disease that restricts blood flow to the heart. >> i was always tired and could make up two steps and my mom would have to carry up the rest of the way. >> reporter: two steps and out of breath? >> yes. i barely could make it up one step. >> reporter: doctors warn their that her heart would eventually fail. for alexia, time was running out. what was the worst part of this for you? >> to see your child suffer. >> reporter: it seems so fresh. >> yeah. part of it is you think of it every day. >> reporter: after nearly a year on the donor list, the call finally came through. a possible match was found and alexia was rushed into surgery. >> they put her to sleep and the coordinator said okay it's time. you can leave. when she walked me out of the room, she touched me and my knees hit the floor and i just started to sob. it was for me, that moment, that i they thought this might be my last good-bye. >> reporter: alexia's life lay in the hands of dr. sam weinstein, who is one of 150 surgeons in the u.s. that specializes in pediatric heart transplants. he's operated on the tiniest of hearts from newborns to the tiniest of adults. >> alexia's transplant went smoothly and the heart began to beat within six to seven minutes. i knew i was going upstairs to talk to the family. i started getting excited. >> his exact word were "she has found her heart mate." that all he needed to say. that meant it was a perfect match. >> reporter: for alexia, receiving a new heart has given her a new lease on life. >> i try to treat every child as if they were mine, knowing alexia is bouncing around like my own son who is close in age is wonderful to watch. >> reporter: what does it mean to you? >> i think i'm really happy that i can be one of the lucky ones and be able to have a second chance. >> reporter: michelle miller, cbs news, new york. >> good for her. some transplant patients have complications and need a second transplant. others live for decades with their new organs. alexia has a heart biopsy every six months and doctors say her outlook is good. >> if you want more information logon to earlyshow.cbsnews.com. just ahead on "the early show," you "ask it early" everything about gold futures to building your credit score. >> rebecca jarvis will answer your personal finance questions and everyone can profit from that for sure. make sure you stay with us. this is "the early show" here on cbs. >> "healthwatch" sponsored by truvia natural sweetener. honestly sweet. ♪ my skinny jeans zipped in relief ♪ [ announcer ] truvia. honestly sweet. there's another way litter box dust:e purina tidy cats. tidy cats premium line of litters now works harder on dust. and our improved formulas neutralize odors better than ever in multiple-cat homes. so it's easier to keep your house smelling just the way you want it. purina tidy cats. keep your home smelling like home. ♪ mm-mmm-mmm-mm-mm-mmm ♪ mm-mmm-mmm-mm-mm-mmm ♪ ♪ mm-mmm-mmm-mm-mm-mmm ♪ mm-mmm-mmm-mm-mm-mmm ♪ [ female announcer ] kraft cheese has more full length shreds in every bag. you'll see the difference. ♪ mm-mmm-mmm-mm this morning we "ask it early" with cbs news business and economic correspondent rebecca jarvis here to answer some of your personal finance questions which you sent in to us. we love having your viewers. first question comes to us from matt, and this one is on camera. matt? >> hi my name is matt neeley from seattle, washington. do you have a quick and easy formula to determine if we're saving appropriately for our children's college education? >> the earlier you start the better off you are. savingforcollege.com offer calculators so you can put in your specific personal information and get a good outcome. vanguard offers 529 plans, these are the plans people should be looking for when saving for college, they say if you put $100 a month into that plan for 18 years you'll come out 18 years later with about $40,000 for college. so there's something as a general rule of thumb for people to consider. it comes back to your own finances as well. >> figure out what you can do and don't neglect your own retirement. next question via twitter from erika, "what's the best way for individual investors to invest in gold, etfs, bullion, futures, rings?" >> it keeps hitting all-time record highs day after day. etfs, exchange trade funds. an investor like someone or you or me, not a big time investor, not trying to play wall street, an etf allows to you invest in gold without too much trouble, one that people should check out is ticker symbol gld. if you want to buy physical gold, first of all the commercials you see late at night saying buy our gold we've got the greatest gold, it's really not necessarily the greatest gold for people to buy. it costs you more money so go to the u.s. mint website if you want to buy physical gold. they list some more reputable gold dealers and double check the dealers with the better business bureau. if you're buying physical gold you have to pay insurance on it and you have to pay for storing it because most people store it in a bank, safety deposit box so there are costs involved. i would say most people should look at exchange traded funds. that's the best. >> you don't want to put the gold bars in your bed or under the mattress. question from lee working on your credit. >> my name is lee cummings from rio, brazil. i currently reside in new york, how can i build my credit fast? >> best thing to do, pay your bills on time, pay off the balances and make sure once you do pay off those bills and pay your balances, don't close the credit cards because the more credit cards that you have and you maintain as open, the better off your credit looks because people are looking at how much credit does this person have available when they look at credit. >> even though it feels counter intuitive. lastly from a college student wondering how to make sure she can save enough money while in school which saving is aa good thing in itself. >> i'm katie finnegan from san francisco, california. my question is what is your number one money saving tip for college students? >> don't take on credit. don't swipe the credit card. what happens with college students is oftentimes they'll swipe the credit card everywhere they go and they come out of school, they have their college loan debt but then they have credit card debt and it's so high interest rate it piles on and dpleeepletes the savings. >> it's hard. when i was in college they prey on you. credit card companies are everywhere and it feels like free money, makes people feel like they have this new level of independence but the reality is that once you become dependent on a credit card the bank is in your pocket and they will continue to take it from you as long as you have taken and swiped that card. >> great advice. >> we'll be right back. this is "the early show" on cbs, ed at virginia good morning. 8:25 your time. i'm frank mallicoat with some breaking news out of virginia. a lockdown is lift at virginia tech that after a person was reportedly seen with a gun near a dining hall there. the same campus you may remember a student killed 32 students and faculty in 2007. but it has been lifted. good news there. iran's ambassador to iraq says he expects uc-berkeley alumni shane bauer and josh fattal to be released, quote, very soon. they are accused of spying in iran. they said they were hiking in iraq and accidentally crossed on that unmarked border. but could be released shortly. convicted kidnapper and rapist phillip garrido denies involvement in the disappearance of michaela garret. he denied it in a jailhouse interview. traffic and weather coming right up. ,,,,,,,,,,,, lots of brake lights off the eastshore freeway. delays from highway 4 towards berkeley. at the bay bridge not too bad. metering lights are on. high wind advisory in effect for the bay bridge so cautions across the span. southbound 680 loaded towards danville. also on 24 as you work your way westbound busy. 280 lots of brake lights through san jose. >> gianna, we have some low clouds and fog stretching onshore today. it is beginning to break up a bit in some of the valleys but even in toward the tri-valley right now, you have some low clouds and you can already tell, it's a thicker cloud deck outside. it's going to be slower to burn off meaning cooler temperatures. not that it will be all that bad, but well below average. still 70s and low 80s well inland. inside the bay cooler, 67 degrees expected in oakland. about 77 degrees in san jose. out toward the coastline it has been very damp this morning as we have had a lot of heavy drizzle at the beaches, almost 1/10" in pacifica. next couple of days, we are going to see more night and morning low clouds and fog, warming up though into the weekend. ,, ,, ,, several low level clouds here in man hat than this morning, weather on the 30s. i'm chris wragge. a lot of bad press or the government agency. a little girl saved a woodpecker from being eaten by the family cat. when a wildlife official found out about it the girl's mom was fined $535 for transporting the bird. we'll speak with the little girl and her mom. also ahead a lot of movie fans are ready for the "planet of the apes" prequl. the way they were able to do it, cutting edge computer technology, making those the most realistic apes we're hard to believe they're not real. the costumes and the makeup. first we turn to jeff glor standing by at the news desk. good morning. >> good morning to everyone at home as well. two nato service members were killed in afghanistan. they died in the eastern part of the country, one service member was shot and killed by a man wearing an afghan police uniform, the other died during an insurgent attack. in syria overnight opposition protesters say syrian police shot and killed six protesters in hama after syrian tanks took over the main square. congress man david wu officially resigned his seat. the 56-year-old oregon democrat quit after being accused of having an unwanted sexual encounter with an 18-year-old. he is the fourth congressman to step down just this year after a sex scandal. former football star turned actor bubba smith has died. for nine years he was a feared defensive end and won a super bowl with the colts, later became an actor known especially for his role as hightower in the "police academy" series. bubba smith found dead at his los angeles home yesterday, he was 66 years old. finally picture this one, two moons in the night sky, scientists think that's what it was like, the earth had two moons until 4 billion years ago when the moons apparently collided and merged which may be why the far side of the moon has mountains and the near side is mostly flat. 32 minutes past the hour, a little science for you this morning. >> thanks for finally clearing that up. i always wondered about the flat versus mountainous. >> it's confirmed. >> thank you, glor. >> sure. they are calling this the great heat wave of 2011 in the south. we've been telling you about it, frankly one of the worst weeks yet. >> marysol castro is in dallas now more on how people are coping with this blistering relentless high temperatures down there. hi, mary. >> reporter: hi you guys. it was hotter here in dallas yesterday than it was in new delhi, and hotter than damascus, just to put things in perspective. football is religion and those guys don't have any choice but to practice in this relenting heat and we stopped a few to see how they charge ahead. how long have you been playing football? >> since i was probably 6 years old. >> reporter: so at least ten years? >> yes. >> reporter: in those ten years have you ever experienced heat like this? >> i mean, i think maybe a few times but it was pretty tough but i think this is by far the hottest that it's been me being out here. >> reporter: what do the coaches do as a precaution? for you guys, to keep you protected from the heat? >> any point we feel just the slightest dizziness or anything down, drink some water, and we always have to drink water throughout the whole day even when ear' not practicing. the heat makes it that much harder. if you tell yourself it's not a big deal, you can do it and push >> thanks so much. that's your latest weather. back over to chris. >> marysol is that pamplona in the background, running of the bulls? >> reporter: absolutely running of the bulls. >> all right. yesterday we told you about an escaped peacock back at home. this morning another bird adventure began in june, a young aspiring veterinarian in virginia tries to save a baby bird. no good deed goes unpunished. . at her father's house june 13th, 11-year-old skylar capo saved a woodpecker from being eaten by her cat. her mom agreed she could nurse the bird back to health. >> she was going to take care of the bird for a day or two and let it go. >> inside the store a woman confronted them saying she was from the fish and wildlife service. under the federal migratory bird act it's a crime to take or transport a woodpecker. >> i was a little bit upset because i didn't want my mom to get in trouble. >> that's exactly what happened two weeks later. the capos the go an unexpected visit from the same officer they met at lowe's accompanied by a virginia state trooper. although the capos released the woodpecker, alison was issued a $535 citation. >> i feel harassed and i feel angry. >> alison refused to take the ticket because she was no longer in possession of the bird but last week more than a month after her confrontation she received a fine in the mail. according to the u.s. fish and wildlife service the citation was processed unintentionally and they apologized for the clerical error. skylar capo joins us now along with her mother, alison, good morning to the both of you. >> good morning. >> good morning. >> skylar quite a little controversy, huh? >> yes. what was it about this little woodpecker that made you decide you know what? i need to go out and lend some help. >> well, it was just first of all, it was a really, really cute bird and i just couldn't see my cat kill it and bring it up to my porch. >> did you have any idea though it was going to generate this type of controversy, you just going out and and helping a poor little bird? >> no. >> the u.s. fish and wildlife service show up at your door with a fine for over $500. >> um-hum. >> did they since retract that, and they called it a clerical error. at the time what were your thoughts? >> i thought it was the most ridiculous thing i heard and i thought it was sending a bad message to her because she had gone out and tried to do something she thought was a good deed and something that was natural to her because she's always loved animals and they were basically saying well if you do this, we're going to slap your mom with a $535 fine and a year possible jail time so she was pretty scared. >> we can only imagine what that does. >> i was scared. >> youñr both should be. what did she think you were going to -- >> i don't know, she thought it was going to be in a cage in our kitchen and family pet, i have no idea. i didn't want a woodpecker for a pet for sure. >> did you want to keep it for a pet? >> not really. i knew we had to let it go. i don't want big holes in my room in the drywall everywhere. >> that would not have been good. skylar, what were you thinking when this woman comes up to you and mom and says you need to do this, you need to do that. were you a little surprised? >> yeah, i was really surprised. because i've never run into that before. i've saved a few birds before, and no matter what i do, nothing's happened like that. >> now because of all this controversy, is that going to stop you from saving future birds? sounds like you're kind of a bird superhero. you're always in the proximity of a bird in stress. >> yeah, i probably won't stop doing it, because i know that it's saving something's life, i'd rather pay than let something die. >> well, we thank you guys for joining us. >> thank you. >> thank you. >> great to meet you. birds all over the place are thanking you. skylar and alison capo and now here's erica. >> i hear a bird in central park thanking her now. the new's" planet of the apes" opens tomorrow. cbs news correspondent bill whitaker found it's a combination of computer technology and a dose of movie magic. >> reporter: it's an animal uprising, army of apes battling humans in present day san francisco. big action and a big challenge. rise of the "planet of the apes" was made without a single primate. >> we would live or die how people perceived the apes. we needed audience to think those are real apes, orangutans and gorillas. >> reporter: back in 1968 it featured actors in suits, mask answer makeup as did the sequels that followed. the new apes have evolved and making a movie seemed totally through their eyes took a team of performers wearing motion captured gear along with 500 computer artists to morph their every move from actor to ape. >> we could have the photo realistic chimpanzees but they have the great actors underneath so it's acting opposite a chimpanzee with the best acting instincts possible. >> there have been no side effects associated with 112. >> reporter: james franco stars as a scientist who takes an orphan's chimpanzee into his home. the chimp, caesar exhibits extraordinary intelligence. >> taught him to sign? >> reporter: from smart toddler rebellious adult, caesar is played by andy circus, behind gore in "lord of the kings" and kong in "king kong." he's perfected the skill of acting without words. >> what it i love about acting the art of transformation. >> are you just pretending to be caesar or are you thinking of this all day i'm caesar? >> i'm inside the caesar when i'm playing caesar, no question. there's a period of deeply to the role and there's a period afterwards and you have to be able to do that. >> reporter: the film's motion capture actors went to school learning to ape the movements and expressions of their onscreen characters. >> you have to overanimate or pantomime the character, it's trusting the technology will be truthful because it's sensitive and subtly translates facial expressions the way it tracks your eyes. >> the whole advance of performance caption technology is allows for humans to become the puppets as well as the puppeteers. "avatar" allowed us to pull up the story. three or four years ago we could have never done this. jr. "avatar" created an entire world of computer generated characters from actors wearing tiny cameras mounted over their faces. >> i need your help. >> you should not be here. >> reporter: for this film, the special effects company behind avatar wetta digital studied the eyes, fur and skin created them in computer form. >> this has to be a huge amount of computer power. >> we finished about 1,200 shots for the film for your average ape shot, each ape could take about you know, an hour to three hours per frame to render. of course there's 24 frames in a second. >> per frame. >> per frame, that's right. >> reporter: a painstaking process. >> couldn't the other apes be apes, couldn't we get some of the supporting actors, to audition a few of them? >> save a little money? >> reporter: save a little money, there's no ape good enough to hit his mark and shoot over the shoulder? how much did this cost? >> i can't ask that question for cbs, are you kidding me? i know better than that. audiences, they don't really care what a movie costs. they care if it makes a movie. >> reporter: filmmakers hope to turn this monkey business into box office business. bill whitaker, cbs news, holly wood. >> it is incredible the way they can do that. >> you almost lose sight of the fact the actors have to act with that equipment on, the apparatus on the head and arms. >> i know. >> it's amazing bill was talking to the gentleman, fans of movies really don't care how much they cost. the critics do. >> it's true. >> if it bombs and costs its 200 million. >> "waterworld." >> ouch. just ahead, food for thought, there's a new exhibit which shows what people across the world eat every day. >> some of it could look a little foo to familiar. this is "t,,,,,,,,,,,,,, a fascinating new book "what i eat" around the world in 80 diets shows what the world eats in various cultures. >> taryn winter brill shows us it is drawing impressive crowds in boston. >> i like the spreads and the salami. >> 9-year-old evan may be from rhode island but his diet is just like this master butcher from germany. >> seems like it's doing so much work but this is what i would have for breakfast. >> reporter: nigel can't imagine surviving on 800 calories a day like this herder from kenya. at boston's museum of science a new exhibit called "around the world in 25 diets" has years of all ages exploring the daily diets of people across the globe. >> ham, bologna, gouda cheese. >> people are reading everything in this exhibit. that's mind-blowing. >> what's the secret? >> i wish i knew. >> reporter: david radkin is responsible for bringing this slice to beantown. >> it's a radically different diet. >> reporter: this camel broker from egypt who lives on 3,200 calories of goat meat broth, fava beans and tea and cigarettes. or a mountain farmer from ecuador who eats cheese and banana and machika, toasted barley and wheat flour toasted with hot water. what is it about this photo that resonates with museum goers? >> you look at a binge eater, maybe there's a certain amount of fear this could happen to me or it's just shocking. >> reporter: if you could describe a picture of what you eat in a day what would it look like? >> well, i had pan aches this morning and then we had pizza, no key plan for tonight. >> reporter: now this 400 pound sumo wrestler might not be eating pancakes but eats the same number of calories as this 144 pound bread queen from germany but this exhibit isn't just a snapshot of calorie count it highlights the disparity and consumption between cultures. what surprised you the most from looking around? >> i guess how people eat every day, that surprised me. >> reporter: taryn winter brill, cbs news, boston. >> joining us now is frances largeman-roth from "health" magazine. good to see you. >> good to see you guys. >> what are these diets really saying about the people who are eating them, about the cultures? >> what's so interesting, it's always revealing to see how much food a person eats during the day but also lets us know how westernized a culture has become and the relative wealth of that person. >> is the old adage you are what you eat relatively in line? >> if you are eating close to the earth, whole grains and beans and fruits and vegetables you're healthy. eating packaged, processed foods, not so much, they're low in actual nutrients. >> you mentioned the snapshots show how westernized and wealthy people are. >> right. >> which is interesting, in a lot of cases being more westernized eating things not as healthy for you. >> that's true and it's kind of the state of the world that we're in today but unfortunately american food means affluence to a lot of people, and if we are -- >> mcdonald's really means affluence? >> in other countries it really does especially pranbrands like starbucks. it was really interesting to see the images that showed sort of the diets that were half western and half traditional. you can see where the culture is at. >> where it's moving in and the western and american fast foods are starting to infiltrate which was something that was probably much better for people before the things arrived. >> that's right. >> how does the kenyan farmer survive on 800 calories a day when the normal daily recommended allowance is about 2,000 calories a day? >> i would say she would probably say it's not ideal, that was taken during drought time so they were on limited rations. your body can adapt and adjust and your metabolism adjusts. we saw the trucker or i saw the photo of the trucker who takes in about 4,600 calories a day, a sedentary job he doesn't need that, so it is very interesting to see what people subsist on around the world. >> a lot of paenchs. beverages. >> what else can we take from this? we talked about how maybe our food culture is morphing into someone else's. can we take some cues from them and bring them into our diet? >> absolutely. i talked about eating closer to the earth. we've kind of lost even though we're fascinated by cooking shows we've lost the culture of cooking and everything is on the go, sippy cups for kids to you're in your car and there are holders for everything. >> on our strollers. things are moving all the time. >> exactly. >> i'm guilty, everything is on the go. >> we're on the go but we have to make a concerted effort to do some cooking and eating at home and sit down. >> sit down. i need to do that. >> sit down once in a while. >> make sure you work it off at some point. >> that's right. >> thanks so much guys. nice to have all of you with us this morning as well. hope you enjoy the rest of your day. see you back here tomorrow morning. stay tuned, your local news is next. >> bye-bye. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,

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