and i can t imagine wrestling a girl in a competition. but this, joel, is about something bigger than wrestling, isn t it? yeah. definitely. respect. and what? yeah, and just and i m taking care of that s going to be somebody s wife some day. and caring for her and everything that goes along with that. sure. so it was worth you not being able to compete further into the tournament. by all accounts, people are saying you would have done really well but you decided to stick to your decision. yes, i did. i mean, i had a shot at doing pretty good. but my principles, i had to stand behind those. we understand. more important to me. we salute you. you re a winner in our book. we know some day you d like to, perhaps, go to law school.
joining us now for his first live tv interview is joel northrup, a wrestler at linn-mar high school in marion, iowa. we should point out that he s for the most part home schooled but does wrestle on a team. good morning to you, joel. good morning. all right. let s take you back a week. there you are, first round of the 112 pound category in the finals. and you were supposed to wrestle cassy herkelman, a girl, one of two girls in the tournament this year. what did you decide to do? and why did you do it? we know you forfeited. yeah. well, i mean, back in fifth grade, i made the choice if i d have to wrestle a girl or put up and get up in that situation, i would forfeit. why? well, wrestling is a combat sport and it gets violent at times. you get put in holds that are, you know, compromising and i
everything. i do believe that if girls want to wrestle, they should wrestle girls, other girls and boys should wrestle boys. uh-huh. ok, so we do have some opinion from cassy. she was the female wrestler that you decided not to go up against. let s listen to what she had to say. he has the right to make his own choice and like he made his choice. it s not like he did what he didn t want to do. let me ask you this, joel, you said you didn t want to wrestle her out of respect for her as a young girl or as a woman. some people might say that to respect her, you would wrestle her because you d be treating her as an equal. well, i don t believe that. i mean, her husband some day, i don t believe he would want me to wrestle her and i don t believe it s right. just for especially 16-year-old or 15-year-old shouldn t be doing that. yeah, i m with you. i think you re exactly right. i was a wrestler in high school
with we are watching people leave libya as fast as they can. u.s. is one of the several nations trying to get its citizens out before a bad situation gets even worse. i don t believe it. why this building? she is asking a question a lot of new zealanders are asking right now. agonizing wait to find out if friends and loved ones survived a devastating earthquake. he bowed to fight to the last drop of blood. now the eastern region of moammar gadhafi s country has fallen to protesters. this youtube video shows protesters in libya throwing shoes at the screen as gadhafi made that promise on television yesterday. now his interior minister has quit and his leading general is out and many senior generals have joined the opposition. opposition control of the east is a big development and this is where most of libya s oil production is located. still colonel gadhafi s threat of not going down without a fight can t be easily dismissed. the show of force as libyan state tv broadca
funded by cbs and welcome to the early show here on a wednesday morning. good morning, everyone. i m chris wragge. and i m erica hill. good to have you with us this morning. we begin with the escalating violence in libya. support for dictator moammar gadhafi seems to be crumbling. but apparently he has not gotten the message. he remains defiant, promising to fight until the last drop of blood. cbs news correspondent allen pizzey joins us from bahrain this morning with more. as you are monitoring things of course, also across the region this morning, allen. good morning, erica. well the sign of just how much control the libyan regime has lost, reports from benghazi where the revolt began, the local residents are handing in looted weapons to organizing committees but the fighting is still far from over. gun battles went on through the night in tripoli and there were reports of loyal army units and mercenaries hunting down protesters. the protests appear unorganized, but