tv Sunday Morning CBS November 8, 2015 8:00am-9:30am CST
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>> osgood: good d rning. i'm charles osgood and this is sunday morning. a fighting chance is all anyone battling a serious disease could ask for. and a fighting chance is exactly what those with one such disease are now getting. this morning, lesley stahl has what for her is a very personal cover story. >> reporter: that't'my husband aaron latham. he and everyone else in this boxing class has parkinson's. >> come on, boom boom! >> reporter: it's a progressive neurological disorder that affects nearly a million americans. what does boxing do for you, then? >> it kinda gets your physical courage back and your mental courage seems to kinda come along. >> reporter: later on sunday morning, parkinson's disease sufferererfight back, in the ri. >> osgood: accomplished photographer has been reaching
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for a ride. >> for vincent laforet getting to new heights is only way to really capture a view of something different. no daredevil. >> i'm nervous when take the escalator up. for some reason in a helicopter hanging out 12,000 feet totally fine. >> what our lives down here look like officer a camera way up here. later on "sunday morning." >> osgood: actress jennifer connelly spends plenty of time in front of cameras, she picks up on one particular featutu as she tells tracy smith. >> it's real. >> ask jennifer connelly why she plays so many serious roles the answer you get is, actually, pretty funny. >> i tend to get cast more in dramas,. >> that's okay? >> my eyebrows.
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they're very serious. look very stern. >> those high browse get a work ououin her latest film. jennifer cly ahead this "sunday morning." >> osgood: carved in stone is the story about skill and tradition told this morning by michelle miller. >> you can find a work on some of our most beloved national monuments from the john n. kennedy gravesite to washingtonon d.c.'s world war ii memorial. everywhere on this memorial, everywhere we see a word, you do? >> yeah, i did all these. >> ahead this "sunday morning," a family whose legacy is carved in stone. >> osgood: tim axelrod talks with bernie sanders. seth doane is dispatchehe to corey a.
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steve hartman has case of lost and found. those story and more the headlines for this sunday morning the 8th of november, 2015. investigators in egypt are now 90% sure that a noise heard in the final seconds of cockpit voice recording is an explosion caused by a bomb. russian jetetner crashed lastt ekend flying oveve the sinai. all 224 people on board were killed. as you may have heard republican presidential candidate donald trump hosted "saturday night live" last night. here is small sample of what went on. >> mr. president. the president of the members ha cois here to see you. >> that's great. send him in. >> donalal >> enrique. > brought you the check for the wallll >> that's so wonderful.
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>> it's larry david, what are you doing? >> i heard if i yelled that they would give me $5,000. >> osgood: outside real demonstrators were protesting because ofne called his racial demagoguery. two police officers in louisiana are facing murder charges in the shooting death of 6-year-old boy. the first grader died after a car chase on tuesday. he had been in the front seat with his father who was wounded. california got a sunset surprise yesterday. when a brightt light streaked across the s s. law enforcement agencies got a flurry of calls reporting the light which turned out to be a missile test fired from the u.s. navy submarine off the pacific coast. sunday's weather. rain will fall along the gulf coast and up into the carolinas,
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northwest. wonderful most everywhere else. in the week a aad stormy in the southeast and oh valley. cooler in the northeast. but still lovely and mild. ahead, a bird's eye view. but first, fighting back against parkinson's. there are oceans and rocks. places where fish swim and birds fly. history is made. art is created. things happen that should always be remembered. heroes emerge. a woman sets people free. a man makes light. a leader steps forward. it can be a place, a fefeing, a stste of mind.
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i learar >> osgood: for a fighting chance against disease, people sometimes go to unlikely places. even it turns out to the boxing ring. our cover story is reported now by less see stall of ""60 minutes." >> come on, aaron. >> that's my husband, aaron latham withh his boxing coach. he and everyone else in the class has parkinson's. >> give me all you got. come on! >> it's a grow says sieve neurological disorder that affects nearly a million americans. you don't her about very many with the disease getting better. >> i think of parkinson's as being incredible striking
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disease, it doesn't't strike itself. >> i want to you reach up. >> aaron and fellow parkinsonians are part of this new program that aims to stop the shrinking if not reverse it. >> together. >> each exercise works on a symptom. >> give me ten. >> stretching is for their tness. it works for balance. punching to steady their tremors. shouting to counter their soft voice syndrome. and sparring for coordination. >> what does b bing do for you? >> boxinin ishe opposose of parkinson's. everything is designed instead
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rst of all you get to put on these great shorts. different attitude toward the world. you get your physical courage back and your mental courage. >> t t program called rock steady boxing, uses professional boxing techniques. maybe a little more gently. developed tin 2006 spread to over 50 gyms worldwide. when eye tannian born first saw rock steady at a medical conference. >> i just thought it was genius. why didi't i comee up witit i i i thought it was an amazing program. >> when she's not coaching, roberta is a reedge at the weill-cornell medical college in new york work on gene therapies for parkinson's. >> my main goal always been the quest for a cure.
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finding a cure. lately the last couple of years i found this program i thought it wasasomething that i could go to right now in the present. >> two years ago she and her husband, alex montaldo, an actor, went to indiana to learn how to teach rocksteady. >> good job. >> they then approached the folks at gleasons in brooklyn a kind of grungy, n nfrills, ololschool gym wherere muhammad ali trained and deniro trained for "raging bull" gleasons donates a ring for them three days a week. >> it's kind of curious. i heard that muhammad ali got parkinson's from boxing. >> it's kind of counter intuitive. the difference is this, we do noncontact boxing.
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thth can fight against alex in the ring and they love it. >> they don't get it. hurt. they don't get hit. >> but, what about alex? >> i notice that you wear body armor. you get yourself all protected? >> i'm glad i have to. to hurt you? specifically, he's the very reason why i had to buy that. >> he hurur you? >> ittas good pain. because that showed me how -- >> honkie became. >> i hit him a little bit too hard in his ribs. and he got home and decided that it was time to get some body armor. >> you really smacked him one. >> more. >> was your right upper cut? >> the left. >> when les mills a new york teacher andym coach was diagnosed with the disease it
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hit h hard. >> he was not in great shape. both physically and psychologically. he was pretty depressed. didn't really want to do much. well, you should see him now. >> when i first started coming in i was not able to walk straight to the ring. i would have to wobble to the ring. it was very hard to walk. now it's a piece -- i don't want to say a piece of cake, physically made a big difference. >> everyone we spoke to in aaron's class said they have seen an improvement. part of the secret is camaraderie. and competition a a getting pumped up. >> harder! crush him! >> that's why the trainers act like drill sergeants. >> knock him out. >> they make you do what you're supposed to do not what you want to do. they push you so hard. a good habit. >> she particularly is a slave
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driver. come on, aaron, don't quit on me nono >> we're goingng to do push ups. >> l le in the army. >> come on. jump, aaron. >> does she yell at you? >> constantly. >> it's okay with you? >> well, i'm not sure about that. but it's not going to help me to complain. >> when he's not boxing, aaron is a novelista screen writer and playwrightht >> how bad is it to be terviewed by your wife? >> it gives youou the creep normally this hand is perfectly steady. >> because i'm interviewing you? >> yeah. >> don't just go -- you really work them. i could not believe how arduous the hour is. >> we need to show them how much they can do. because they don't know.
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>> what about watching your wife acting like she's a sergeant in the army shouting at these guys, what do you think of that? >> i like it. >> when they step in the gym being yelled at beta coach they nor longer a person with parkinson's disease. they're a fighter. they're a boxer. that's the difference. they didn't feel that disease any more.. >> stephanie combs-miller is the director of research at the university of indianapolis' college of health sciences, she conducted the first major study on the effects of boxing therapy on parkinson's. we studied people over a two-year period who participated in boxing and we didn't see any progress of the disease in the people that boxed. >> it arrested the disease? >> right. in fact inome cases they were better after t t two-year period of time. their function was better. >> the theory is that boxing generates a renewed growth of the kinds o& brain cells damaged by the disease.
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>> high intensity type exercise can what we call neuroprotective. that it enhances the up take of the dopamine in the brain. it can improve growth of neurons. >> and you're s sing it enhances, it goeoeto what t t problem is? >> right. all the evidence we have shows with exercise, particularly high intensity exercise we can improve strength. we can improve their walking ability and balance and quality of life. and likely we're also see can changes within the brain as well. >> she says one of the patients she study tom timberlake shows what rocksteady can do. >> he had parkinson disease about six years, had declined in health. almost a recluse. found rocksteady, started in, this gentleman nine years later you wouldn't recognize him. he is a fighter. and he is better today in 2015
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than before he was diagnosed with parkinson's. >> he's really better now than bebere he was diagnosed. >>t saved his life. >> nobody's saying boxing is a cure, just that people seem tim proof. feel more optimistic about your disease? >> yeah. my left arm used to shake all the time. my whole arm. >> wow. >> that's just from punching a bag and doing exercises. >> so do you get a sense of actually slowing the progreion? >> well, it's certainly showing the symptoms. >> are we ready? >> what aaron is doing is something inconceivable a year ago. >> get 'em!
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>> osgood: november 8, 1 18. 131 years ago today,, the d d her mann rorschach was born in zurich, switzerland. he grew up to become a psychiatrist and creator of the inc. blot test that bears his name. rorschach would show his subjects ten inc. blots, one at a time, and asked them to describe what the images looked like to them. he believed their answers might provide a window into their socici behavioio although he dieddn 1922 at just age 37, rorschach's inc. blot test lives on. it became a staple of psycholog and of popular culture as well. artist andy warhol created series of inc. blot-like paintings in the 1980s. and the test played a bit part in the 1995 film "batman forever" when stata valilmer talked with a police psychiatrist played by nicole kidman.
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>> it's a rorschach, mr. wayne. an inc. blot. i think the question would be, do you have a thing for bats? >> >> osgood: the test has been the subject of controversy as well. many practitioners objected when the original ten inc. blogs were posted on wikikedia back in 2009. >> what do you see? >> i really don'tnow. >> they argued the images would lose their effectiveness if future test subjects saw them in advance. on another front, some skeptics question whether there's scientific proof that the test is even valid. here is the inc. bt test.
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>> osgood: behold the alphabet carved in stone. vermont red slate. master craftsman nick benson. michelle miller has story of unique american family. >> with a mall lot and chisel the slowest writer in newport, rhode island, averages just two letters an hour. even when nick benson breaks outut his power tools, he's not much faster. but for some stone carvers it's not about spe, it's about stapping the test of lime. >> you get into a runner's high with it, where it becomes this out of body experience. at the same time it's really cerebral. >> you can see his work across
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r monuments to presidential memorials. >> it's so who i am that it runs the gamut. i love it. i hate it, it drives me crazy. it is all. it's everything. >> his craft is among most ancient known to man. so perhaps it's fitting that the johns stevens shop wheree works dates back to 17070 tucked away on this quiet street for the last 310 years, it has changed ownership only once, in the 1920s when nick's grandfather bought it from the stevens family. who is that guy? >> that's my grandfather. all the time i'm working he's looking down on me to make sure i get it r rht. >> do you always gege it right? >> no. not always. >> to ensure that nick gets it right,e begins each job with calligraphy designing the letters free manned on brown butcher paper.
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the romance used to layout all of their lettering. >> can i try? >> absolutely. >> without any experience. >> whatsoever. twist a little bit. there you go. that's good. i like that. let it out a little bit. love it. >> a third generation carver, nick began his apprenticeship under his father at the age of 15. what was it like to have your dad as your teacher, your mentor? >> just like work, work, work, work. when i got further and further into it i realized, okay, i'm really capable of d dng this well. >> so well that in 2010, he received a prestigious mcarthur foundation fellowship, a so-called genius grant. the first and only stone carver to earn that recognition. >> pretty tight. >> john benson is nick's father and mentor.
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at 75, he is now retired. but in his day, he was a superstar. his work can be found everywhere from rockefeller plaza in new york city, to the national gallery of art in washington, d.c. >> a tremendous emotional appeal about a carved letter. it par takes of the substance of the building. >> aimed architect im pei commissioned benson to work on the museum of fine arts, boston. they didn't always see eye to eye. >> i remember having argument about where some lettering would go, we argued for 20 minutes. he wanted it in one place. i moved it. then he wanted to move it again. i dug my heels in. >> who won? >> i turned to him i said a a the end when i knew he wasn't g gng to budge, , said, well, mpei, it's your building. he said, yes, it is. >> perhaps his best known work is the john f. kennedy gravesite
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at arlington national cemetery he recalled the importance of it in the 1979 documentary "final marks." >> this is the biggest job of lettering that our time has seen. more people were going to look at this as aiece of lettering whether they were conscious of it or not. >> it earned him unique stature in american arts. >> for a tiny little period there i was unquestionably the best in the world at it. but there were only about ten of us. >> let the word go forth from this time and place to friend and foe alike that the t tch has been pasasd to a newew generation of americans. >> as if echo can john kennedy's words, for the benson family, you might say stone etching is engrained in its d.n.a. when did your grandfather design these inflips. >> he designed them back in the late '40s, early 50 was.
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>> nick's grandfather desesned the letters on the marine corps r memorial, which honors americans who captured the island of iwo jima from the japanese. like grandfather, like father, like son. it was nick who carved the letters on the martin luther king junior memorial with its old proclamation. >> we will b b able t to out of thee mountain of despair of the soul of home. >> his work is also found one the world war ii memorial. it took nick and his team ten and a half months to complete these inscriptions. 2,885 characters. so, is this the quote? and for those wondering what happens when you m me a mistake. >> we misspelled the word presence, it was early on we hadn't gotten very deep but i
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of thik and respell it correctly. so if you run your hand across you can feel very subtle dish here in the word presence. but no one can tell. i've just outed myself though. >> but noo matter the magnitude of the job, whether a monument on the washington mall or a simple headstone, in the end, a memorial is an honor and a dedication. >> a legacy of 300 years of responsible and well made work is enough for anybody. very few people can have that. and i can claim that. i can claim to be connected to something which has survived in diverse societiess through war and peace, in the same ridiculously limited little town
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and that's amazing. >> here. >> osgood: jennifer connelly won oscar for role in the 2001 film "a beautiful mind" quite a different role from the one she plays in her latest film. tracy smith has our sunday profile. > in the new movie "shelter" oscar winning arc press jennifer connelly is a homeless heroin addict on the streets of
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new york city. dirty, emaciated, desperate and almost too believable. how detailed do you get when you're getting into a character. how much do you need to know? >> i was very specific about like, you know, i think as for character like hannana has this habit, her world is reduced to getting her daily fix. and it's very much revolved around her kit, her, you know, her drugs, her gear. the bag, what kind of bag and what kind of needles, more information than you want. >> in this case it was so authentic that when you were out on the street panhandling, you know, with your cup people actually were giving you money like real knockers were stopping giving you money >> i had that happen. it was really uncomfortable. i felt terrible. >> the film is a love story
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about two of the city's estimated 60,000 homeless. and when jennifer connelly takes on a role, there's no off switit. >> go! >> stop thinking about what's coming up. >> does it keep you up at night? >> sometimes. >> are you a little obsessive about it? >> just a little -- a little bit. >> her dedication made things easier for the crew, the first time that paul bettany had ever directed a film or for that mattereris wife. >> she has to go to these dark places in the film, i'm pretty convinced she trusted me because she knew she could just beat the hell out of me for the next 25 years if i got it wrong. >> no worries there, jennifer connelly has spent a lifetime making directors look good. >> worked really hard for that house. >> she's at her best as the
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woman defending her home. or the loyal wife keeping it together while the world crashes down around her. >> you don't do a lot of comedies, why not? >> i've done a few. i don't know. i dodot get cast in them very often. >> are you funny? >> probably not. >> you don't think so? >> probably not. i don't know. but i tend to get cast more in dramas. >> that's okay? >> i think it's my eyebrows. they're very serious. look very tern. >> all about the eyebrows. i look a l ltle bit cro. can't help it. it's my face. >> that face has opened a few doors.
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this, it's kind of meditative. >> she was born in upstate new york. and spent part of her childhood climbing trees here in the little town of woodstock. >> i was kind of a tomboy. >> tomboy or not she did clean prerey well. connnnly started modeling in grade school. then that led to her being cast at age 1 in the 1984 epic "once upon a time in america." did you have any idea how incredible that was at the time? >> no clue what i was doing. not that i do now. but i really had no clue whahai was doing. ere were soany first things. facetime on movie set, first time out o america we filmed in italy. my first kiss. i had to kiss this boy in the scene. and it's most chaste thing you've ever seen, but i was just mortified that it was in a movie
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larger than life and magical, you know,eally magical. >> not all of her roles after that were quite as magical b. her turn as a desperate drug addict established her as a serious actress. >> i'm wondering, mr. nash, if i can ask you to dinner. >> this one would make her a household name. >> yououo eat, don't you? >> how emotionally draining was that movie? >> it was very demanding in that way. but also i was so -- i was just so grateful to have the opportunity. i remember, reading the script thinking, god, if they'd give me this job. i'd love -- another good job again, i promise.. i shouldn't have made that promise.
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i was really -- felt very grateful to be there all the time. >> this is real. >> for her role as wife of john nash, jennifer connelly came away with an oscar it turns out whole lolomore. >> maybe just better with the old -- >> you may recall that paul bettany was also in the movie they never shared a scene they caught each other's eye. director ron howard knew something was up. >> on the very last day of shooting, paul was kind of playing his guitar and he's a pretty good musician. i felt like she was n n just listening totohe song i thoughtht she was really connecting. my director's eye was telling me that i -- there's something. some connection going on. a little extra here. >> you brought a guitar? and there was a spark there.
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you're going to marry up, guitars work, okay? that's for all the boys out there if you're intending on marrying up. they falalfor t t guitar thing. >> is that true? was there -- >> i knew. >> a moment? >> i knew the moment. >> neither acted on it. until september 11th, 2001, when paul was in italy and saw that new york city, jennifer's city, was under attack. >> like so many people in that moment my life changng. i went home to thihi house and spent two days trying to ring this woman in new york city that i sort of really barely knew. and i thought, why am i -- i couldn't get through. body could get through to new york. why am i ringing this woman up that i barely know for, you know, the last 48 hours? oh. i sort of realized i was in -- in love. and i fine low got through to
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her i said, i'm coming over; let's get together. and she said, yes. which was surprising. >> they were married new year's day 2003 and have two children together. shelter their most recent baby. >> just a little bitf money. st a little bit moror time and i'm going to be home. >> she may h he that stern look on her face, but jennifer connelly says bind it all is a grateful h%brt. >> i'm really blessed. i love my job. love going to work. i just love it. i love getting it -- i love preparing for it, the whole process. i love the whole ritual, i love beinin onset. very lucky.. lucky girl.
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>> my heap right over there. >> osgood: barris created a macabre rolling funeral home for "the munsters." the back woods rattle trap for "the beverly hillbillies" and fully loaded crime fighting car for "the knight rider." >> to the bad mobile. >> osgood: perhaps most famous was george barris who transformed 1955 lincoln futura into tv's bmobile. cost him $15,000. he sold that car at auction in 2013 for more than four and a half million dollars.
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>> osgood: next. high art. >> osgood: the photographer who captured these images is reaching new heights every time he reaches for his camera. with lee cowan we'll watch him at work. >> at first glance, his images look more like circuit boards, nerve centers surging with energy.. but while these are hubss of activity, they're not the kind in our computers. these are the world's great cities, photographed the way the heavens see them. sparkling spectacles below. someone says you watch the avenues up and down you feel arteries of blood flow of the city. you literally perceivehe depthth and thrhr d dension and you see businesses in a different manner.
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>> vincent laforet has taken aerial photography to new heights. his images have transformed the spaghetti bowls of l.a.'s degree way. the glittering strip of sin city, las vegas, made london's big ben look more like a big jewel. >> it was almost an out of body experience, because it's just so beautiful from up there. >> they're just a few of his god-like glimpses. that he's publishing in a new book, fittingly called "air." >> since i was 13 years old like everyone else i look out at the windows of commercial aircraft and i'm fascinated by it. i see every little intersection, the police cars, the stadiums, you wonder what is going on down there. you can see incredible die ram ma of activity. >> spent a lot of time in helicopter but not the way you might expect. doesn't just hover a few hundred feet above as you do in most choppers.
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vince asks his pilot to take him up to nine, ten, 11,000 feet and higher. altitudes helicopters rarely fly. >> they're just not comfortable. first time i sent up it was scary, because i've never been that high in an open window or door in harness leaning out you see planes going right underneath you. your heart skips a beat. >> see when he asked us to join him on recent flight over the city of miami, well, how could we resist. >> best seat in the house. we took off just before sunset headed east. with a brief stop hovering over a couple in a pool. >> i'm looking down there trying to make order out of chaos. looking for patterns, geoeotry, color. what's it like when you're
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literally leaning out over the edge of the chopper? >> you forget about it a@ter awhile. you're so focused on getting that image. ever think about the fall? >> the only time i thought about it was at high altitude over new york. >> that's when a physicist explained that fall from that high up could last terrifying 41 seconds. >> what's how long the fall would be. >> thanks r telling me, now i know. way too long. once it got dark, we started going higher. helicopters can be like flying blenders, vince has to try to hold the camera stead he kyle shooting at very low shutter speeds often as the chopper goes into steep b bking turns. >> perfect. beautiful. that almost made me sick.
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>> the hot florida ergot cool and crisp as we climbed even more. until we were about 8,000 feet. nothing between us and downtown miami, except air. >> as a photographer as a visual communicator you try to find images that no one has seen before. that's your goal. that's a pretty tall order in 2015 when everyone has cam are on their phone. >> he's used to breaking ground, all those he's usually on the ground to do it. back in 2008 he was one of the first to shoot video on 35 millimeter digital camera. his mini movie called "r,verie" was something few had ever seen. but that's just him. ever since he was a childl something about the visual just clicked. >> when i was 15 i asked my father who was a photography can i borrow your camera. i picked up this cam remarks i took a picture, i was done. i was like, that's it. >> he was rarely without a
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camera after that. he soon became the youngest staff photographer ever hired by the "new york times." >> i would always say, i want to find something that either people can't see or don't want to see. >> once scaled the antenna on top of the empire state building, sans safety harness, mind you, just to get a shot like this. >> about 1475 feet up. >> in the days after the attacks of 9/11 he was dispatctcd to pakistan much totois surprise. >> i was not a war photoapher. >> you didn't want to be on the front line? >> no. when bullets fly i hit the grou and stay down. >> but staying downturned out to be his secret capturing not so much the war but the victims of it. >> these were real people. just as afraid as people back in the states. >> laforet shared the pulitzer prize for feature photography that year, he was only 27. that and katrina are the two stories that formed me as a
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>> when you see what happened in new orleans to americans, in our country, that really shakes your foundation up pretty seriously. >> so seriously that laforet needed a change. he quit his job as a photojournalist decided to pull away from it all, for awhile. now you're doing something where there aren't people and perhaps emotions in your pictures any more? >> something very odd that happens when you go up in the air that ironically it's intimate. i can't explain it. >> vincent laforet has always pushed the envelope but for him, it's not about being a daredevil. it's about findidi and capturing what we oftennose on the ground, a sense of peace and perspective. i think when you take a step back from anything you see& things more clearly. in a visual way air is representation that have,
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>> osgood: young girl to experience very first tears of joy. steve hartman has case of lost and found. >> whoever companied the phrase "military brat" obviously never met the angelic daughter of army stafff sergeantt nicholass p pgam and his wife jen. mckenzy is three. if you look closely at pictures over the years you'll notice something. that giraffe which she calls raffe is in almost every shot. >> she wants to go to bed with it. it's her friend.
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>> jen says this friend has been kenzy's constant thrhrgh their many moves has been he is ecialsly comforting during nick's deployments. >> when he's go for weeks and months at a time she still has this one thing. >> and? one thing. it got lost during their most recent move. >> raffe is her lifeline. >> one of the things that she has all the time. >> i understand, to some this may seem like much adue about nothing. but cruising a lovey like feeling like a very big deal. >> where are you raffe. >> mcconcern see first noticed raffe was missing right before their move from washington state to pennsylvania. >> i want to take him to pennsylvania. >> her parents assumed he was in a box somewhere. but for 11 long days mckenzy had to live without her soul mate until finally athe very end off thth their unpacking. >> as soons jen found it she cut open the box, let me record
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we have to get this. >> they hid raffe in the refrigerator. she was delighted to be reunited. but in this moment mckenzy made another even more surprising discovery. that very strange thing happened when y y're really,y, really happy.y. >> my eyes are watering. >> you're happy. >> in all of her life she's never been so happy that she cried. >> it's got to feel weird the first time. but surrendering to this quirky human trait can be one of life's greatest joyce as i'm sure some of you now at home can attest. >> osgood: next, democratic
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and later -- the forgotten heros. that were just totally pitch black. those things had to change. we wanted to restore our lighting system in the city. you can have the greatest dreams in the world, but unless you can finance those dreams, it doesn't happen. at the time that the bankruptcy filing was done, the public lighting authority had a hard time of finding a bank. citi did not run away from the table like some other bankers did. citi had the strength to help us go to the credit markets and raise the money. it's a brighter day in detroit. people can see better when they're out doing their tasks, young people are moving back in town, the kids are feeling safer while they walk to school. and folks are making investments and the community is moving forward.
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what makes thermacare different? two words: it heals. how? with heat. unlike creams and rubs that mask the pain, thermacare has patented heat cells that penetrate deep to increase circulation and accelerate healing. let's review: heat, plus relief, plus healing, equals thermacare. the proof that it heals is you. candidate bernie sanders is riding a wave of support that may be surprising to a lot of people. but perhaps not so surprising to
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wilmington, vat vat, where jim axelrod caught up with him. >> before you said it i said, don't underestimate bernie. >> best of luck. >> thank you very much. >> did great. >> striking thing about bernie sanders is not that he's a man whose time has come. >> i'm bernie sanders. i'm running for congress. >> he's been waiting so long -- thank you! >> for his time to get here. >> from the decent standard of living. >> when you were talking about in 1988 and in 2015 it's the same thing. >> more and more americans are catching on to what i have been
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talking about for decades. we need to radically change the priorities of this nation. do you feel a little bit of satisfaction like suddenly people are listening? >> yeah. were you waiting for america to catch up with you? >> well, i'm glad that it happened. >> bernie sanders! > after 40 years of trying to gain traction with his message, sanders, the 74-year-old democratic social list senator and former mayor of burlington, vermont, is suddenly dancing with ellen. >> i don't have a super pac, i don't have a backpack. i carry stuff -- >> being parodied byarry david. >> i have one pair of underwear, that it. some of these billionaires they got tee, four pairs. >> were you watching "saturday night live"? who told you this -- >> who didn't tell me.
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it's a mess. >> he's running neck and neck with hillary rodham clintonn revolution. >> only way we tnsform america and do the things that the middle class and working class desperately need is through a political revolution. >> political revolution. that's a big term. >> in the last election, jim, 63% of the american people didn't vote. 80% of young people didn'ttote. big money is increasingly buying political elections. a political revolution means that we involve tense of millions of people in the political process today to stand up and fight for their right to stop the disappearance of the american middle class and say that our government belongs to all of us and not just a handful of wealthy campaign ntributors. >> i'm just wonderingng if you're misreading what american people want.
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>> i know how much you love conventional wisdom. i'm going to do this, conventional wisdom holds -- >> he's a fringe candidate. not going to get any traction. >> here we are it looks like you got a little more traction than the experts thought you would. >> yes. >> why? >> because you and the corporate people have slew of the world which i think is very out of touch with what the american people are feeling. >> you don't like us? >> you're a very nice job. corporate media is very often deflecting attention away from the most significant issues facing our country and givinin us entertainment all the time. i get upset that media by and large is more interested in dumb things that somebody says or how much money i'm raising. no one cares about. that we got to focus on the real issues facing mesh. >> how are you doing? >> if sanders is the junior
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of fact style is all brooklyn. where he was born and raised among working class immigrants, manynyf them jews like sim self whose families had fled discrimination in europe. >> economic inquality your reason for being. i'm wondering why that -- >> i will tell you where that came f. when you're five or six years old you hear your parents arguing, sometimes pretty fiercely it's very disturbing for a child. >> over money. >> almost always. my father came to this country from poland at the age of 17 without a nickel. he always had aj never made a lot of money. we were very poor but never whole lot of money. >> you could have said, i'm going to medical school and make money. but you didn't. >> i didn't. from an early age, what i cannot tell you, you asked the fair question i just don't know the
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>> it is the rare politician who will admit he doesn't have all the answers. but uncommon long been one of the more foe light descriptions of sanders. after all how many have disclosed they have five-figure credit card debt. >> you have to become an open book the way you've never been before. >> for instance, between 25,000 and 65,000 in credit card debt. >> my wife handle, is that. we do fine financially. united states senator makes a good living. >> how do you get that much credit card debt? >> i actually don't know. i think we've made it all off. >> is does that make you more relatable to the average american? >> maybe. but that wasn't the intention i am sure. >> he's been with his second wife jane for 34 years. they have seven grandchildren between the two of them.
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take off so quickly. unbelievable. i said to him, we were talking whether he should run, is there another way you can get the issues out? >> this is the ultimate i told you so moment. >> it is. >> jane sanders knows better than anybody her husband is going -- always going to do it his way. >> not really into the stage craft. we do try to point it out that he needs to pay attention. >> but he fights you every step. >> oh, yeah. he is all policy still. >> how many are looking forward to college? how many worry about cost for college? >> as this campaign evolves the extent to which you need not to change your message but to change the delivery mechanism so that it's not "ate your peas." you run the risk of being too serious. >> i plead guilty. >> you hate the question. >> i know how to do this stuff. i thoroughly -- i know you're
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too dumb to want to listen to a speech beyond three minutes. all going to be brief. everybody else is terrible. have a nice day. i don't do that. >> if we stand together there is nothing that we cannot accomplish and that is exactly what this campaign is about. >> can't be politics as usual. with hillary clinton starting to expand her lead in polls nationwide, the stakes are growing ever higher as bernie sanders prepares for the democratic debate cbs news will host this saturday. you are not running just to get a good speaking slot at the democratic national convention. >> no. we are running to win. i fully admit we are the underdogs. we started this campaign at 3%a% in the polls nobody thought this we could win in new hampshire,
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18 inch alloys. you remembered. family fun. everybody squeeze in. don't block anyone. and non-stop action. noooooooo! it's the event you don't want to miss. it's the season of audi sales event. >> osgood: for three years in the early 1950s, troops from the united states had a very costly war in korea. the battle to keep communist north from conquering the south sometimes referred to is at forgotten war. but u.s. sacrifice is far from forgotten as nation our troops helped to save. seth doane has a dispatch from south korea.
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of land extending out of asia's mainland. a nation not much larger than our state of minnesota. >> on june 30th, 1950, five years after word war ii ended, america went to war again. u.s. ground troops were sent to korea, where forces from the communist north aided by the soviet union and then china, were threatening the pro-western government in the south. the three-year conflict over shadowed by the second world war, is often called the forgotten war. and these are its forgotten victims. the families of nearly 8,000 men, still classified as missing in action. >> mia is a very difficult term
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>> it's hard to put closure when you don't know. >> felt like an orphan, was an orphan. >> john zimmerlee's father, an air force captain disappeared while flying a night mission in 1952. >> he wasn't known to be killed in action. he wasn't known to have died in prison camp. he was just missing. >> a fade shared my many men, lost in areas difficult to access. some inside north korea. in may, these siblings, spouses and children of two dozen u.s. service members who never returned from the battlefield were invited as guests of the south korean government to visit the country where their loved ones were last seen. for most it was the first time they had ever come here. the trip was organized by volunteer sunny lee, who was born near seoul during the war. why does the south korean
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government spend this sort of money to bring the families of veterans here? >> to pay back. to show them how much we appreciate it. >> and to introduce korea to the families who sacrificed so much. showing off the music. it's dances. even its fashion. families paid for half of the flight. everything else was picked up by the south korean government. >> it's overwhelming. >> suzanne shilling's dad, marine pilot whose plane was shot down over north korea in 1952 was honored as a hero. >> we all thought it was a tour of korea, we see battlefields, see memorials. had no idea that they were going
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that they did. >> memorial services were held at the national cemetery. as a military base and near the demille tar rised zone that divides north and south. families found the names of their loved ones inscribed on the walls. robert warren's father disappeared during reconnaissance mission behind enemy lines. >> i've never seen him memorialized or commemorated or anything that have nature in the united states and to come all the way to korea to see his name on the wall was a shock, a surprise and something i was not emotionally prepared for at the time. >> morin was also not prepared
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appreciation for america's role in a war fought more than 60 years ago. >> the authenticity of their gratitude is astonishing. i mean they could not possibly fake what we're experiencing from people here. there aren't that many good actors in south korea. >> when you look at these names, you know some of the families. >> oh, yes, many of them. >> sunny lee, who now lives in utah, first pitched to the korean government the idea of the trips for these families of those missing in action. why do you take this so personally? why do you feel so deeply? >> well, it's like if you're in a burning car, somebody came to save your life, don't you feel that they're your hero toe-back for the rest of your life?
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>> when the armistice was signed in july is the 5, south korea lay in ruins, people were starving, millions were dead. but within 60 years and with the help of foreign aid money south korea transformed itself into the world's 14th largest economy and 6th largest exporter. in part due to the popularity of korean brands in lewding samsung and lg, kia and hyundai. economists refer to it as the miracle on the han river. a miracle that south koreans inist in part resulted from the american sacrifices that earned them their freedom from communism. this trip was a celebration of that sacrifice for what john zimmerlee calls, war orphans. >> i'm here with other war
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all have that camaraderie, you all those pictures just arose in one line behind me, it was like all the guys that were missing were here, it was emotional. it was the most emotional i've gotten about this whole issue. i have had emotional moments over the past. all of a sudden it made that. >> finally finding a sense of closure. more than 60 years later. widespread pain slowed me down. my doctor and i agreed that moving more helps ease fibromyalgia pain. he also prescribed lyrica. for some patients, lyrica significantly relieves fibromyalgia pain and improves physical function. with less pain, i feel better. lyrica may cause serious allergic reactions or suicidal thoughts or actions. tell your doctor right away
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if you have these, new or worsening depression or unusual changes in mood or behavior. or swelling, trouble breathing, rash, hives, blisters, muscle pain with fever, tired feeling or blurry vision. common side effects are dizziness, sleepiness, weight gain and swelling of hands, legs and feet. don't drink alcohol while taking lyrica. don't drive or use machinery until you know how lyrica affects you. those who have had a drug or alcohol problem may be more likely to misuse lyrica. fibromyalgia may have changed things. but with less pain, i'm still a doer.
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>> osgood: here's a look at the week ahead on our sunday morning calendar. monday, president obama meets with israeli prime mibster benjamin netanyahu at the white house, their first meeting since the iran nuclear agreement. tuesday is world science day, promoting the benefits of science. this year, the focus is on science for a sustainable future. wednesday is veterans day. a day for honoring all who have served in our armed forces. it's also day of free entry to all of america's national parks and monuments. on thursday, actor daniel radcliffe of harry potter name, is honored with a star on the hollywood walk of fame. friday is friday the 13th and, odd day 11-13-15. it's the sixth and final time in
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consists of three consecutive odd numbers. 11, 13 and 15. and saturday sees the second democratic presidential debate to be broadcast here on cbs. "face the nation's" john dickerson is the moderator. and speaking of john dickerson, here he is now to tell us what is coming up on "face the nation." good morning, john. >> dickerson: we'll talk to the men at the top of the republican poll, draft ben carson and donald trump and also have discussion about latest news on that bomb on the downed russian airliner. >> osgood: thank you. we'll be watching. next week here on "sunday morning" -- >> how are you doing? >> osgood: lee cowan with sylvester stallone. still fighting the good fight. and tears in my eyes. and so many little things that we learned
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>> dickerson: with the election one year from today one republican front runner basks in the spotlight. the other feels the heat. donald trump spent last night hamming it up on "saturday night live." we'll talk to him this morning. >> used to call me on the cell phone. >> dickerson: clearly not losing any sleep over challenge to his front runner status. now it's ben carson's turn to feel the pressure of being at
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