After the Singapore summit, Trump claimed “there is no longer a nuclear threat from North Korea”
Follow this link:
Top Dem asks intel chief if Trump’s North Korea claims are true
After the Singapore summit, Trump claimed “there is no longer a nuclear threat from North Korea”
Follow this link:
Top Dem asks intel chief if Trump’s North Korea claims are true
NORTH HILLS (CBSLA) — A family is in mourning after a mother and grandmother who worked as a mail carrier died during the heat wave that hit Southern California over the weekend. The Los Angeles County Coroner said Peggy Frank, 63, was found unresponsive in her mail truck Friday afternoon in the Woodland Hills area, where temperatures reached 117 degrees. “To have my mom 107 [degrees], humidity, carrying the mailbag around with no air conditioning in the car — yeah, I’m sure she’s probably gonna overheat,” Frank’s son Kirk Kessler told CBS2 News. After multiple attempts by paramedics to revive her, Frank was pronounced dead. She had been with the U.S. Postal Service for 30 years and was just a few years away from retirement. Residents in the area saw the activity of emergency crews but had no idea what was happening. “She was very nice,” said one man who was driving by the area Monday afternoon. “Now her face is coming […] in front of me, honestly, because I talked to her, and it becomes personal.” Frank is survived by her two children and several grandchildren. “She’s great, friendly, sensitive, always there for ya’,” said Kessler. The coroner said it’s not yet clear if the heat was the cause of her death. She had recently returned to work after having been off the job for more than two months with a broken ankle. USPS would not go into details about Frank’s death but said their thoughts and prayers were with the family. In Hemet over the weekend, an elderly couple was found dead inside their RV. Their air conditioner was not on when they were found.
Read more here:
Tragedy Strikes Family Of Postal Worker Delivering Mail In Extreme Heat
LONDON (CBSNewYork) – Serena Williams reached her 13th Wimbledon quarterfinal today, but she admits all that time practicing on the court forced her to miss a big moment in her daughter’s life. Instead of getting mom-shamed for it, many are coming to her defense on Twitter with their own missed moments, reports CBS2’s Alice Gainer. As the seven-time champion Williams overpowered the Russian Evgeniya Rodina 6-2, 6-2, the price of excellence was not lost on her. Serena Williams and her daughter Alexis Olympia watch the action during the first round of the 2018 Fed Cup at US Cellular Center on Feb. 10, 2018 in Asheville, North Carolina. (credit: Richard Shiro/Getty Images) She’s talked about her challenging pregnancy that left her bedridden for six weeks and her decision to stop nursing daughter Olympia after six months. But this weekend was different. “She took her first steps… I was training and missed it. I cried.” She took her first steps… I was training and missed it. I cried. — Serena Williams (@serenawilliams) July 7, 2018 Others tweeted in sympathy. “Ah Serena. I’m with you there. I’m in Russia at a World Cup. I watched mine take her first steps on a video, she’ll be proud of you when she goes up (I have to keep telling myself),” said @alibendertv. Ah Serena. I’m with you there. I’m in Russia at a World Cup. I watched mine take her first steps on a video she’ll be proud of you when she goes up (I have to keep telling myself) — Alison Bender (@alibendertv) July 7, 2018 “Neither of us remember my first steps, but the lessons I learned from the way she lives life are so appreciated,” posted @KashifPasta. Same. I remember my mom's trips, the toy cars she bought me from the Amsterdam airport when she was away for my birthday are still my favourite gifts. Neither of us remember my first steps, but the lessons I learned from the way she lives life are so appreciated — Kashif Pasta (@KashifPasta) July 8, 2018 A lot of parents say being a mother or father is hard no matter what, and for some working parents, there’s a constant guilt. “Sometimes you’re at work and wondering what your child is doing,” said Alfred Varela, a father and grandfather. In New York City Park, it’s easy to find a park full of nannies, people watching other people’s children while their parents are at work. They say they hear that bit of regret from the kids’ parents all the time. “Of course there is the guilt because the nanny gets to see everything,” said Norma Prsaed, a nanny who is also a mom. “The first word, the first step, the first word – everything.” “It was tougher than the scoreline,” Williams said. “I knew we were both moms, and I’m not sure how often that’s happened, if ever. So it’s really cool. You can be a mom, you can still play tennis and you can still be great.”
Read the original:
Serena Williams Giving Voice For Mothers’ Missed Moments
LONDON (CBSNewYork) – Serena Williams reached her 13th Wimbledon quarterfinal today, but she admits all that time practicing on the court forced her to miss a big moment in her daughter’s life. Instead of getting mom-shamed for it, many are coming to her defense on Twitter with their own missed moments, reports CBS2’s Alice Gainer. As the seven-time champion Williams overpowered the Russian Evgeniya Rodina 6-2, 6-2, the price of excellence was not lost on her. Serena Williams and her daughter Alexis Olympia watch the action during the first round of the 2018 Fed Cup at US Cellular Center on Feb. 10, 2018 in Asheville, North Carolina. (credit: Richard Shiro/Getty Images) She’s talked about her challenging pregnancy that left her bedridden for six weeks and her decision to stop nursing daughter Olympia after six months. But this weekend was different. “She took her first steps… I was training and missed it. I cried.” She took her first steps… I was training and missed it. I cried. — Serena Williams (@serenawilliams) July 7, 2018 Others tweeted in sympathy. “Ah Serena. I’m with you there. I’m in Russia at a World Cup. I watched mine take her first steps on a video, she’ll be proud of you when she goes up (I have to keep telling myself),” said @alibendertv. Ah Serena. I’m with you there. I’m in Russia at a World Cup. I watched mine take her first steps on a video she’ll be proud of you when she goes up (I have to keep telling myself) — Alison Bender (@alibendertv) July 7, 2018 “Neither of us remember my first steps, but the lessons I learned from the way she lives life are so appreciated,” posted @KashifPasta. Same. I remember my mom's trips, the toy cars she bought me from the Amsterdam airport when she was away for my birthday are still my favourite gifts. Neither of us remember my first steps, but the lessons I learned from the way she lives life are so appreciated — Kashif Pasta (@KashifPasta) July 8, 2018 A lot of parents say being a mother or father is hard no matter what, and for some working parents, there’s a constant guilt. “Sometimes you’re at work and wondering what your child is doing,” said Alfred Varela, a father and grandfather. In New York City Park, it’s easy to find a park full of nannies, people watching other people’s children while their parents are at work. They say they hear that bit of regret from the kids’ parents all the time. “Of course there is the guilt because the nanny gets to see everything,” said Norma Prsaed, a nanny who is also a mom. “The first word, the first step, the first word – everything.” “It was tougher than the scoreline,” Williams said. “I knew we were both moms, and I’m not sure how often that’s happened, if ever. So it’s really cool. You can be a mom, you can still play tennis and you can still be great.”
Continued here:
Serena Williams Giving Voice For Mothers’ Missed Moments
MIAMI (CBSNewYork/AP) — Weather forecasters say Tropical Storm Chris is likely to strengthen to a hurricane by Monday but will remain well away from the U.S. coast for the next two or three days. The National Hurricane Center in Miami said Sunday that the storm has barely moved since Saturday. At 11 a.m. EDT, the storm’s center was located about 160 miles south of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina. Maximum sustained winds have reached 45 mph. CBS2’s Vanessa Murdock said the storm if expected to stay off the coast for the entirety of its lifespan, but it is expected to strengthen as it moves in a northeasterly direction. No coastal watches or warnings are in effect, but forecasters say swells along the coasts of North Carolina and the mid-Atlantic states could produce dangerous surf and rip current conditions. Meanwhile, Tropical Storm Beryl is expected to dump heavy rain over the Lesser Antilles at the end of the weekend. A tropical storm warning is up on Guadeloupe and Dominica, while a tropical storm watch has been issued for the French Caribbean territories of Martinique, St. Martin and St. Barts as well as St. Maarten, Barbados, St. Lucia, Saba and St. Eustatius. Puerto Rico, which was devastated by Hurricane Maria in September, remains under a state of emergency. (© Copyright 2018 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)
Link:
Tropical Storm Chris Could Become Hurricane
MIAMI (CBSNewYork/AP) — Weather forecasters say Tropical Storm Chris is likely to strengthen to a hurricane by Monday but will remain well away from the U.S. coast for the next two or three days. The National Hurricane Center in Miami said Sunday that the storm has barely moved since Saturday. At 11 a.m. EDT, the storm’s center was located about 160 miles south of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina. Maximum sustained winds have reached 45 mph. CBS2’s Vanessa Murdock said the storm if expected to stay off the coast for the entirety of its lifespan, but it is expected to strengthen as it moves in a northeasterly direction. No coastal watches or warnings are in effect, but forecasters say swells along the coasts of North Carolina and the mid-Atlantic states could produce dangerous surf and rip current conditions. Meanwhile, Tropical Storm Beryl is expected to dump heavy rain over the Lesser Antilles at the end of the weekend. A tropical storm warning is up on Guadeloupe and Dominica, while a tropical storm watch has been issued for the French Caribbean territories of Martinique, St. Martin and St. Barts as well as St. Maarten, Barbados, St. Lucia, Saba and St. Eustatius. Puerto Rico, which was devastated by Hurricane Maria in September, remains under a state of emergency. (© Copyright 2018 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)
More:
Tropical Storm Chris Could Become Hurricane
GOLETA (CBSLA/AP) — A fast-moving brush fire in the Santa Barbara County community of Goleta has damaged or destroyed 20 homes and structures and was threatening scores more Saturday morning, as thousands of people evacuated to safety. (Santa Barbara County Fire Department spokesman Mike Eliason/Twitter) The Holiday Fire started as a structure fire sometime before 8:45 p.m. on North Fairview Avenue, above Goleta, and quickly spread to nearby brush, the Santa Barbara County Fire Department reports. The fire had burned at least 60 acres as of 8 a.m. Saturday morning and was only 5 percent contained. Total calm Saturday morning replaced the 50 mile-per-hour gusts and forward progress of the fire was stopped, Santa Barbara County Fire Capt. Dave Zaniboni said. “It’s really given us a good opportunity to get in there and get some work done,” Zaniboni said, cautioning that critical fire weather warnings would remain in effect until the evening. An excessive heat warning was in effect until 9 p.m. for Santa Barbara County, the National Weather Service reported, while a red flag warning was in effect through 6 p.m. (Mike Eliason/Twitter) Evacuations were in effect for about 2,500 people. They applied to areas north of the Cathedral Oaks neighborhood to West Camino Cielo Road, and from La Patera Lane, west to North Patterson Avenue. All roads going north from La Patera Lane to Patterson Avenue, along Cathedral Oaks, were closed to the public. (Santa Barbara County Office of Emergency Management/Google Maps) An evacuation center was set up at Goleta Valley Community Center, located at 5679 Hollister Ave. 350 fire personnel were battling the blaze from the ground and in the air, with water-dropping choppers and air tankers. There have been no reported injuries. California Gov. Jerry Brown declared a state of emergency for Santa Barbara County Saturday morning. As some houses smoldered, a few residents who hadn’t left or had managed to return surveyed damage that seemed random: destroyed homes next to others completely intact. Eric Durtschi stood outside his destroyed house, where a burned-out car stood in the driveway and kids’ bicycles were strewn about. Durtschi, his wife and six children had left Utah and moved in just a few weeks ago. He said he hadn’t yet told his two oldest children their home was gone. He managed to collect his severely burned vintage guns, hoping to salvage them. Meanwhile, a neighbor across the street saw his home spared. The man had stayed through the night spraying down other people’s houses. The area is west of where the Thomas Fire, California’s largest in history, raged last December . That blaze destroyed more than 1,000 buildings in Ventura and Santa Barbara counties. (© Copyright 2018 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)
Go here to read the rest:
Brush Fire Rips Through Goleta; At Least 20 Structures Destroyed, Thousands Evacuated
PYONGYANG, North Korea (CBSNewYork/AP) — North Korea said Saturday that high-level talks with a U.S. delegation led by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo were “regrettable” and accused Washington of trying to unilaterally pressure the country into abandoning its nukes. The North’s statement came hours after Pompeo wrapped up two days of talks with senior North Korean officials without meeting North Korean leader Kim Jong Un but with commitments for new discussions on denuclearization and the repatriation of the remains of American soldiers killed during the Korean War. Before departing Pyongyang, Pompeo told reporters that his conversations with senior North Korean official Kim Yong Chol had been “productive,” conducted “in good faith” and that “a great deal of progress” had been made in some areas. He stressed that “there’s still more work to be done” in other areas, much of which would be done by working groups that the two sides have set up to deal with specific issues. More From CBS News The North provided a much harsher assessment of the talks. In a statement released by an unnamed Foreign Ministry spokesman, the North accused the United States of betraying the spirit of last month’s summit between President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim by making “one-sided and robber-like” demands on “CVID,” or the complete, verifiable and irreversible denuclearization of North Korea. It said the outcome of the follow-up talks was “very concerning” because it has led to a “dangerous phase that might rattle our willingness for denuclearization that had been firm.” “We had expected that the U.S. side would offer constructive measures that would help build trust based on the spirit of the leaders’ summit … we were also thinking about providing reciprocal measures,” said the statement, carried by the North’s official Korean Central News Agency. “However, the attitude and stance the United States showed in the first high-level meeting (between the countries) was no doubt regrettable,” the spokesman said. “Our expectations and hopes were so naive it could be called foolish.” According to the spokesman, during the talks with Pompeo the North raised the issue of a possible declaration to formally end the 1950-53 Korean War, which concluded with an armistice and not a peace treaty. It also offered to discuss the closure of a missile engine test site that would “physically affirm” a move to halt the production of intercontinental range ballistic missiles and setting up working-level discussions for the return of U.S. war remains. However, the spokesman said the United States came up with a variety of “conditions and excuses” to delay a declaration on ending the war. The spokesman also downplayed the significance of the United States suspending its military exercises with South Korea, saying the North made a larger concession by blowing up the tunnels at its nuclear test site. In criticizing the talks with Pompeo, however, the North carefully avoided attacking Trump, saying “we wholly maintain our trust toward President Trump,” but also that Washington must not allow “headwinds” against the “wills of the leaders.” Pompeo said that a Pentagon team would be meeting with North Korean officials on or about July 12 at the border between North and South Korea to discuss the repatriation of remains and that working-level talks would be held soon on the destruction of North Korea’s missile engine testing facility. In the days following his historic June 12 summit with Kim Jong Un in Singapore, Trump had announced that the return of the remains and the destruction of the missile facility had been completed or were in progress. Pompeo, however, said more talks were needed on both. “We now have a meeting set up for July 12 — it could move by one day or two — where there will be discussions between the folks responsible for the repatriation of remains. (It) will take place at the border and that process will begin to develop over the days that follow,” he said as he boarded his plane for Tokyo. On the destruction of the missile engine plant, Pompeo said, “We talked about what the modalities would look like for the destruction of that facility as well, and some progress there as well, and then we have laid out a path for further negotiation at the working level so the two teams can get together and continue these discussions.” Earlier, Pompeo and Kim Yong Chol both said they needed clarity on the parameters of an agreement to denuclearize the Korean Peninsula that Trump and Kim Jong Un agreed to in Singapore. The trip was Pompeo’s third to Pyongyang since April and his first since the summit. Unlike his previous visits, which have been one-day affairs during which he has met with Kim Jong Un, Pompeo spent the night at a government guesthouse in Pyongyang and did not see the North Korean leader, although U.S. officials had suggested such a meeting was expected. State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert said no meeting with Kim Jong Un had been planned. As they began their talks on Saturday, Kim Yong Chol alluded to the fact that Pompeo and his delegation had stayed overnight in Pyongyang. “We did have very serious discussions on very important matters yesterday,” Kim said. “So, thinking about those discussions you might have not slept well last night.” Pompeo, who spoke with Trump, national security adviser John Bolton and White House chief of staff John Kelly by secure phone before starting Saturday’s session, replied that he “slept just fine.” He added that the Trump administration was committed to reaching a deal under which North Korea would denuclearize and realize economic benefits in return. Kim later said that “there are things that I have to clarify” to which Pompeo responded that “there are things that I have to clarify as well.” There was no immediate explanation of what needed to be clarified, but the two sides have been struggling to specify what exactly “denuclearization” would entail and how it could be verified to the satisfaction of the United States. Pompeo and Kim met for nearly three hours Friday and then had dinner amid growing skepticism over how serious Kim Jong Un is about giving up his nuclear arsenal and translating the upbeat rhetoric following his summit with Trump into concrete action. On his flight to Pyongyang, Pompeo said both sides made commitments at the Singapore summit on the complete denuclearization of North Korea and on what a transformed relationship between their two countries might look like. One hoped-for breakthrough on this trip would have been the return of the remains of U.S. troops killed during the 1950-53 Korean War. North Korea committed at last month’s summit to the “immediate repatriation” of remains already identified, but that hasn’t happened yet. (© Copyright 2018 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)
Go here to read the rest:
North Korea Calls Most Recent Talks With U.S. ‘Regrettable’ After Pompeo Says ‘Progress’ Had Been Made
Clifford Rozier, who played college ball at North Carolina and Louisville and went on to be the No. 16 pick by the Warriors in the 1994 draft, died after a heart attack. He was 45.
Read more:
Rozier, ex-Warriors 1st-round pick, dies at 45
KINGS PARK, N.Y. (CBSNewYork) – A barber on the North Shore of Long Island wants to make sure people with special needs get comfortable haircuts. She’s teaching other barbers and hairdressers how to work with people on the autism spectrum, like her son. Angela Blanchet spent years cutting her son’s hair at home. Benjamin has autism and, like many young people with sensory disorders, struggles at the barber shop. “There’s buzzers, there’s hair dryers, there’s bright lights, there’s wet hair, there’s sprays, aprons around them — all these things combine together and they get into a fight or flight syndrome, and it’s a nightmare,” Angela told CBS2’s Clark Fouraker. Through training webinars and a barber toolbox, Sensory Haircut Solutions aims to improve the experience for young people with autism, Down syndrome and other disorders. “It was when they put the buzzer in my hair,” Benjamin said bothered him most. The main goal is keeping kids distracted, and the toolbox has a number of things, like fidget spinners or squeeze balls, to help with that. “Sometimes we suggest they turn the chair around or give them something else visually to be looking at,” said Angela. Kings Park Barber Shop will be the first place trained by the group to give kids with sensory issues haircuts. They’ll have the toolbox in their barber shop as well. “They often have a lot of motion. They’ll be stimming with their hands, clapping or wiggling around,” Angela said. Barbers say the tools help them by keeping young people still and, thus, avoid bad haircuts. Another tool is a unique scissor that cuts hair the same way a buzzer would, but doesn’t make the noise. “It’s more about educating, training and having them equipped and ready for when children with these needs walk in,” said Angela. She said the training and toolbox will cost about $500. They’ll have their first training session later this month. The group conducted a non-scientific survey that found one in three parents who have children with sensitivity disorders cut their children’s hair at home to avoid a bad haircut experience.
Follow this link:
Group Trains Barbers, Hairdressers To Give People With Special Needs Comfortable Cuts
NORTH HILLS (CBSLA) – Authorities are searching for a driver who struck and killed a 54-year-old woman as she was crossing the street in North Hills early Friday morning. The victim was struck a little after midnight on Plummer Street at Sepulveda Boulevard, according to Los Angeles police. The suspect vehicle, a black BMW, did not stop and fled, police said. The woman died at the scene. According to police, the woman was crossing the road outside of a crosswalk. Police did not immediately release a description of the driver. The victim was not immediately identified.
Read the original:
Woman Killed By Hit-And-Run Driver In North Hills
NORTH HILLS (CBSLA) – Authorities are searching for a driver who struck and killed a 54-year-old woman as she was crossing the street in North Hills early Friday morning. The victim was struck a little after midnight on Plummer Street at Sepulveda Boulevard, according to Los Angeles police. The suspect vehicle, a black BMW, did not stop and fled, police said. The woman died at the scene. According to police, the woman was crossing the road outside of a crosswalk. Police did not immediately release a description of the driver. The victim was not immediately identified.
Read the original:
Woman Killed By Hit-And-Run Driver In North Hills
The U.S. has imposed tariffs on $34 billion worth of Chinese products and China retaliated with tariffs on American goods. This comes as Secretary of State Mike Pompeo travels to North Korea for talks on denuclearization. “Face the Nation” moderator and CBS News senior global affairs correspondent Margaret Brennan takes CBSN through the latest developments.
Original post:
Trade war escalates between U.S. and China as Pompeo visits North Korea
The U.S. has imposed tariffs on $34 billion worth of Chinese products and China retaliated with tariffs on American goods. This comes as Secretary of State Mike Pompeo travels to North Korea for talks on denuclearization. “Face the Nation” moderator and CBS News senior global affairs correspondent Margaret Brennan takes CBSN through the latest developments.
Continue reading here:
Trade war escalates between U.S. and China as Pompeo visits North Korea
Chicago band The North 41 gives a dynamic rock/funk/jazz performance Saturday, June 16, in downtown Winnetka at the second annual Winnetka …
Continued here:
Winnetka Music Festival welcomes thousands back for year two