tv CBS This Morning CBS October 6, 2016 7:00am-8:59am MST
7:00 am
good morning to our viewers in the west. it is thursday, october 6th, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning." hurricane matthew strengthens overnight. forecasters say it will slam the storm. florida faces what could be the largest evacuation in the state's history. >> another nsa contractor is accused of stealing classified u.s. secrets. the justice department says the theft could cause exceptionally grave damage to national security. >> we'll talk with donald trump's running mate, governor mike pence, and we kick off a new campaign 2016 series called issues that matter. senator lindsey graham is in studio 57 to focus on the
7:01 am
north korea. >> but we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener." your world in 90 seconds. >> get out. don't wait for an order. get out now. >> i've already been to three gas stations that are out of gas. >> hurricane matthew marches towards the u.s. >> lansdfall, landfall, landfall. that's about the worst case scenario. >> millions of people are under voluntary or mandatory evacuation. >> you can always repair property >> a contractor working for the national security agency arrested for allegedly stealing highly classified information. >> you think there are more snowdens out there serving in the u.s. government? >> i didn't think so until today. >> mike pence did an incredible job. and i'm getting a lot of credit, because that was my first hire. >> pence just bobbed and weaved because, after all, trying to defend donald trump is an impossible task. >> the momentous occasion for the obama white house, enough
7:02 am
agreement. >> this gives us the best possible shot to save the one planet we've got. >> the plane evacuated because of a supposedly samsung smartphone. >> we've got smoke in the cabin. >> spectacular launch. successfully tested its crew escape system. >> and touchdown. >> donald trump's been part of world teacher's day visiting a first grade class in las vegas. >> -- are boring. >> great. >> now the family is going to be the first one over the wall. >> and all that matters. >> what was the biggest perk of being a kid at the white house. >> hide and go seek. definitely. >> it seems like the secret service's worst day i would feel like. hey, just you guys know there's going to be 30 13-year-olds they're hidden all over the place. try not to be too skittish. >> on "cbs this morning." >> everyone is saying that mike pence did well. maybe too well. >> pence has such a solid debate performance last night. >> some people think that might not sit well with the boss. >> mike pence did really well.
7:03 am
top of the ticket. >> you look at him and you think world leader. and you did see the size of his hands? i mean, they are massive. they're massive. >> this morning's eye opener is presented by toyota. let's go places. welcome to "cbs this morning." hurricane matthew strengthens overnight and is on track to hammer florida later today. the powerful category 3 hurricane is bahamas right now with sustained winds of up to 125 miles an hour. here's a look from the atlantaous resort this morning where the gusts have been slamming the islands popular with tourists. at least 69 deaths in the caribbean are blamed on the storm. millions of americans have been told to evacuate. flights and train services are canceled. >> the storm is forecast to become a category 4 hurricane later today and move north along the southeastern coast of the united states.
7:04 am
the carolinas to florida and the bahamas. omar villafranca is in georgetown the bahamas to show us how matthew is dumping up to a foot of rain and whipping up a massive storm surge. >> powerful winds and relentless rain slammed the bahamas. making it clear hurricane matthew had arrived. snapshots showed the storm's power. homes damaged, streets covered in debris. trucks tossed on their side. the wind is slicing through the bahamas as the storm gets closer to the shore. beaches are empty. homes are boarded up. and here on exuma island most of the people are without electricity. as the storm approached from the south nassau resident jenny evacuated her home and headed to a shelter. >> so far i'm okay. >> the aftermath in haiti shows the devastating power of
7:05 am
buildings are nearly destroyed. many roofs were ripped clean off. in la cac people waded through knee high water in the streets. as others struggled to cross a river where a bridge used to be. the haitian government has suspended presidential elections that were scheduled for sunday. the u.s. government has sent experts to haiti to assess the damage and is offering $1 million in food assistance. along with another $500,000 blankets and temporary shelters for haiti, jamaica and the bahamas. american military resources from southern command also arrived in haiti late wednesday night to begin helping with the relief efforts. matthew decimated baracoa in eastern cuba leveling homes and filling streets with a mix of mud and debris. like many in the caribbean residents have now started a long cleanup process.
7:06 am
caribbean, folks here in the bahamas are going to start waking up and asissing the damage and seeing if they can start putting their homes and lives back together. gayle? >> omar thanks. more than 1.5 million people in florida have been urged to evacuate as the state prepares for a possible direct hit. overnight hurricane warning and watch zones expanded northward as rain began to reach florida. hurricane warning is in place for florida's atlantic coast and into georgia. a hurricane watch extends north manuel bojorquez is in florida with a rush to get ready. manuel, good morning. >> good morning. there is a state of emergency here and more than 2500 national guard troops have been called up to assist. already you can see the surf is getting rough. and the winds are picking up speed. matthew is expected to batter the coastline with up to 12 inches of rain and winds up to
7:07 am
storm preparations are in full swing up and down florida's east coast. >> thank you. this one, that's the reason why i'm just trying to make sure everything's good. >> reporter: store shelves are emptying, gas stations are running out of fuel. >> i've already been to three gas stations that have shut down because they're out of gas. >> reporter: and businesses are boarding up to protect them from the high winds, and heavy rain matthew is expected to bring. >> now that there's a little bit hit, you know, it is time to be 100% prepared. >> reporter: on wednesday, florida governor rick scott said the evacuation could be the largest florida has ever seen. >> you know you're going to evacuate, don't wait to evacuate. get out now. it could be the decision between life and death. >> reporter: the last time florida took a direct hit by a category 3 hurricane or higher was by wilma in 2005. a storm that caused nearly $17
7:08 am
azimuth approaches, air travel in south florida is coming to a halt. more than 2600 flights have now been canceled because of the storm through friday. >> thanks manuel. south carolina is expected to start feeling the storm's effects by tomorrow night. about a half million people have been ordered to evacuate. errol barnett is in charleston with the huge exodus and the preparations. errol, good morning. >> good morning. dave here behind me is one of the many local residents boarding up homes, and property. in fact, this has been a family owned business since 1890, and many of the business owners here are telling us they haven't taken these types of precautions in a decade. but still, people are heeding the governor's mandatory evacuation warning from 3:00 p.m. wednesday. in fact, governor nikki haley is making every effort to ease congestion along interstate 26,
7:09 am
and so state troopers have reversed the entire eastbound section. so you can imagine six lanes of highway, more than 100 miles long, now dedicated to allowing people to evacuate from charleston. more than 1100 national guard troops have been posted throughout the city, and state. and more than 10,000 sandbags have been filled and distributed, as well. they've also made a plan for those who do not have vehicles, a fleet of more than 300 school buses el the more than 30 shelters established all over charleston. this, with the news that this part of the state is foul within the hurricane watch and storm surge zones lets you know that people here are taking it every precaution they can ahead of hurricane matthew. >> all right, errol, thank you so much. cameras aboard the international space station show the massive scope of hurricane matthew over the bahamas. chief weather lonnie quinn of
7:10 am
good morning. >> good morning to you. while you were sleeping last night the storm got a bit stronger. let's get straight to the most recent information that we have from the national hurricane center. satellite imagery shows we sort of lost the eye but it's now starting to show signs of coming back. the storm is getting stronger. 125-mile-per-hour winds last night at 11:00115-mile-per-hour winds. it is 60 miles to the south/southeast of nassau. today a day for the bahamas. tonight, into tomorrow, it's all about the florida coast. and then it's the georg then it's the south carolina coast. and it looks like it makes this big drop down to the south. not even out of the realm of possibility it could do a loop de loop. possible land fall around west palm. hugging right along the shoreline, then like i said georgia, south carolina. pushing up somewhere around north carolina, it's going to be everything. the rain, it's going to be the wind. it's going to be the surge. six to ten inches of rain. the surge is going to be big. and the only saving grace here is the further you can get away from the shoreline, because the
7:11 am
along the florida shore. get out west of i-95 and you'll be at least better as far as the tough winds. gayle, over to >> lonnie. the national security agency is under scrutiny after another alleged security breach. harold martin is accused of stealing top secret information from the nsa. a complaint reveals the fbi arrested him in august. classified information. martin worked for the same government contractor that employed edward snowden. jeff pegues is in washington with the fallout. jeff, good morning. >> good morning. the investigation began in august after sensitive nsa information about u.s. hacking tools ended up online. even though they now have a suspect in custody, law enforcement sources say investigators are still not confident that all of the u.s. secrets harold martin allegedly stole have been accounted for and recovered.
7:12 am
determine whether anyone else was involved. when the fbi searched harold martin's maryland home they found hard copy documents, and digital information that contained highly classified material. according to the complaint released wednesday, martin first denied stealing the top secret service, but later said he knew what he had done was wrong. martin's wife deb was at the house. >> you know, he's a good man. and that's all i can really tell suspect's attorney said at this point these are mere allegations. there is no evidence that hal martin intended to betray his country. the 51-year-old served in the navy for five years before spending another three in the active reserves. martin was working at the nsa as a contractor after being hired by booz allen hamilton where according to cbs news analysts he would have had top secret service clearance. >> we must ensure whistle-blowers can act, again.
7:13 am
facing its second major black eye in three years after it hired nsa leaker edward snowden. in 2013, snowden released thousands of documents revealing the nsa's controversial surveillance program. after snowden's leak, booz allen strengthened their program for detecting insider threats. in a statement house intelligence committee member adam schiff called the latest security breach distressing. he said it is painfully clear that the intelligence community still has much to do to designed to protect and advance the nation's sources and methods from insider threats. john carlin is u.s. assistance attorney general. >> what can happen is you have amazing defenses to protect your intellectual property. but you forget sometimes to have a program where you're watching those who you trust. >> reporter: booz allen says it fired martin immediately once it learned of his arrest. and that it is cooperating with this investigation. martin's record shows a past
7:14 am
harassment in 2003, which was later dismissed. charlie? >> jeff, thanks. donald trump and hillary clinton are starting to focus on sunday's second presidential debate. both sides claim victory in tuesday's vice presidential debate but trump and his running mate mike pence say they got a bigger boost. nancy cordes has the candidates' reaction and looks ahead to this weekend's rematch. nancy, good morning. >> good morning. at the very least it's a psychological advantage for the trump campaign after one of in nevada trump said pence's performance showed how great his own judgment was for choosing pence as a running mate. >> didn't mike pence do a great job? >> some people think i won. >> reporter: mike pence and donald trump did a victory lap through three battle ground states wednesday. >> where i sat, donald trump won that debate. >> reporter: trump praised pence and himself.
7:15 am
because that's really my first so-called choice, that was my my first hire, as we would say in las vegas. >> reporter: in philadelphia, tim kaine laughed off critics who said his performance was a little too fiery. >> the debate was a little feisty. i mean, i got to admit, i am irish. >> reporter: though he admitted he might have gotten a little carried away. >> i got dinged a little bit even by my wife for like interrupting too much. okay. >> reporter: kaine acknowledged that pence's smooth style helped him dodge o >> i can't imagine how you can defend your running mate's position. >> reporter: he said pence refused to stand up for trump's positions. >> at some point i felt like both me and mike pence were debating donald trump. >> reporter: hillary clinton chimed in from a fund-raiser in washington, d.c. >> when your own running mate won't defend the top of the ticket i think that tells you everything you need to know. >> reporter: clinton campaign aides say there is no second-guessing about kaine's aggressive strategy. they argue their main goal was
7:16 am
mate can't back his views on muslims, on women, on foreign policy, and they feel, charlie, that kaine achieved that. >> thanks, nancy. and republican vice presidential candidate mike pence will join us in our next hour. donald trump is bashing hillary clinton by quoting her husband. campaigning in nevada, trump repeatedly brought up former president bill clinton's comment that obamacare is a crazy system. major carat is covering the republican nominee's campaign. good morning. >> good morning. you know donald trump is often described by hillary clinton's on giving. well now, trump world is saying the exact same thing about bill clinton. particularly his takedown this week of the affordable care act's reduced coverage, and higher premiums, for some middle-class americans. >> bill called it a system, a crazy system. and said that it's the craziest thing in the world. this is him. this isn't trump. this is bill clinton. >> reporter: donald trump on
7:17 am
health care law as if he wished it were his own. >> the people are out there busting it sometimes 60 hours a week wind up with their premiums doubled and their coverage cut in half. it's the craziest thing in the world. >> reporter: promising to repeal the affordable care act trump's offered few details about how he would replace it. >> there's only one way to stop obamacare, and that's to vote for donald j. trump. >> reporter: hillary clinton argued her husband was echoing he while bill tried to clean up the mess. >> it's been a tough slog for the last year for small businesses who were a little bit above the eligibility for any help from the government. >> oh, did bill clinton blow it. whoa did he blow it. >> reporter: for now, trump is reveling in the thought of bill in the doghouse. >> can you imagine when he walked home to that beautiful home in westchester, and said hi, hillary.
7:18 am
oh, did he suffer. >> reporter: trump wrapped up a brief western state swing with three stops in nevada. where he trails clinton by six points in the most recent poll. in reno, trump tried to school supporters on how to pronounce -- >> nevada. nobody says it the other way. it has to be nevada. >> reporter: it's actually pronounced nevada. and nevadans, i defend that pronunciation. trump is scaling back debate prep before attending a town hall tonight in new hampshire a state clinton has led comfortably since the convention. norah? >> major thank you for pointing that out. when i've mispronounced nevada on the air i've gotten a slew of e-mails and tweets about it. cbs news coverage of sunday's town hall debate between donald trump and hillary clinton will be at 6:00 p.m. pacific time right here on cbs. gayle and i will be there with major and nancy plus john kicker
7:19 am
>> now we all know how to pronounce it because major was one. i like that. he's a good source. why is it supreme court justice talking with charlie about kim kardashian? are you clutching your pearls? ahead, you'll hear justice stephen breyer explain how he used this week's multimillion dollar jewelry heist as a teachable moment. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by prudential. prudenti
7:20 am
7:21 am
announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by flonase allergy relief. you are greater than your allergies. you're choosing more complete allergy relief and all the enjoyment that comes along with it. when we breathe in allergens, our bodies react by overproducing 6 key inflammatory substances. most allergy pills only control 1. flonase controls 6. more complete relief means enjoyment of every beautiful moment. flonase, six is greater than one, changes everything. ? ?
7:22 am
miss monroe, eat a snickers. why? you get a little cranky when you're hungry. better? much better. this scene will never make the cut. when you have something you love, you want to protect it. at legalzoom, our network of attorneys can help you every step of the way. with an estate plan including wills or a living trust that grows along with you and your family. legalzoom. legal help is here. know how you earn the title ... world's best mom? by starting each day with a perfectly balanced mug of... mccaf? coffees brew a smooth blend. that's not too strong, but never weak. mommy's not a napkin honey. so you can savor every sip. mccaf?. ?
7:23 am
when it helps give a lifesaving vaccine to a child in need. ? thanks to customers like you, walgreens "get a shot. give a shot." program has helped provide 15 million vaccines through the un foundation. it's that easy to make a difference. ? walgreens. at the corner of happy and healthy. hey, jesse. who are you?
7:24 am
over time, your money could multiply. hello, all of you. get organized at voya.com. i have asthma... ...one of many pieces in my life. so when my asthma symptoms kept coming back on my long-term control medicine. i talked to my doctor and found a missing piece in my asthma treatment with breo. once-daily breo prevents asthma symptoms. breo is for adults with asthma not well controlled on a long-term asthma control medicine, like an inhaled corticosteroid. s. breo opens up airways to help improve breathing for a full 24 hours. breo contains a type of medicine that increases the risk of death from asthma problems and may increase the risk of hospitalization in children and adolescents. breo is not for people whose asthma is well controlled on a long-term asthma control medicine, like an inhaled corticosteroid. once your asthma is well controlled, your doctor will decide if you can stop breo and prescribe a different asthma control medicine, like an inhaled corticosteroid. do not take breo more than prescribed.
7:25 am
7:26 am
tomorrow look at which candidate is likely to benefit good morning- it's 7:26, i'm preston phillips happening today-- a heads up if you're flying in or out of sky harbor. the north runway will be closed for a month... which could cause some delays. the airport is renovating terminal three and is laying power cables under the runway. its suggested that you call ahead to check your flight status. says, "during am as well as 5pm to 8pm there may be arrival and departure delays of up to 30 minutes ."the runway will reopen november 6th...just in time for holiday travel.a check on your traffic now with kylee. 3
7:29 am
james p. walsh: to keep our community safe - we need a sheriff who will put fighting violent crime ahead of his own political agenda. paul penzone has been a decorated crime-fighter for over 20 years. a police officer, undercover investigator, and dea task force agent of the year. paul penzone caught murderers, put drug kingpins behind bars, and created award-winning programs that protect our community.
7:30 am
we are tracking hurricane matthew. here is a look at people in impoverished nation. >> top sustained winds near 125 miles an hour. now it is expected to arrive in florida late today as a category four storm. national hurricane center models show the short-term hugging the coast as it moves north and pushing out to sea late saturday. now, most of the coastal
7:31 am
warnings. this is a big deal. this is very, very serious. and so we are going to continue to bring you updates throughout the day. >> it's important to stress and i hope if they tell you to evacuate, you do. there is always somebody who says i can ride this out. take it very seriously. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? coming up, a samsung phone forces the evacuation of a southwest plane after smoke pours out in the cabin. passengers said the phone started popping in his pocket and it was turned off. how this raises questions about why would you mention justice stephen breyer and kim kardashian in the same breath? he used the robbery of her jewels to make a point during a supreme court argument pup you're going to tell what he told charlie about this ahead. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. "the washington post" reports that the paris climate treaty will go into force next month. the historic deal crossed a key threshold. it now has the backing of
7:32 am
world's emissions. 73 of 197 nations are on board. it will take effect november 4th. president obama calls it a turning point for our planet. the heroes because hall was a fan of them. >> may a such a part of our lives that this community shows the rest of the world what hope is all about. >> a 14-year-old is charged in the shooting which also wounded two others at the school. i thought it was so sweet. i saw his mother yesterday. >> she was dressed as robin. >> yeah. she wanted to pay tribute to her son. very sad but beautiful at the same time. the "los angeles times" reports on the capture of a suspect in the death of an l.a. county sheriff sergeant.
7:33 am
angeles led to a shoot-out. authorities say the man stole a patrol car and took two teenagers hostage appear the shooting. the victim was sergeant steve owen. he was a 29-year veteran who won the agency's highest honor for courage. records show trump, his family, and associates donated, in particular, to attorney general in new york. the money was given often when trump's companies had pending in these offices like getting approval for real estate deals. in total, trump has given about 140,000 to a dozen people. some of the recipients returned the contributions. the trump campaign did not respond to a request for comment. "the new york times" remembers songwriter rod tempton who died last week from cancer. he wrote dozens of songs that you know, including some of michael jackson's biggest hits
7:34 am
he also wrote "boogie nights." we will be paying rod tempton's songs throughout this broadcast to honor him. >> "rock with you" is one of my favorites too. >> it's danceable. federal investigators this morning are looking for noointoa samsung phone who overheated on board a southwest plane. kris van cleave is at reagan national airport outside of washington with the owner's troubling story. >> reporter: good morning. the federal aviation administration has been telling passengers if they have a samsung galaxy note 7 to turn it off when they are on a plane. the flight crew had just made this announcement on this baltimore bound southwest 737 when a passenger realized something was wrong. >> just smoke and popping and sizzling sounds. >> reporter: brian green says that noise was coming from the galaxy note 7 he had tucked into his pocket after trying to power
7:35 am
popping that sounded like a zip lock bag popping up and looked around to see what that was and there was smoke pouring out of my pocket and billowing out of my pocket. >> reporter: crews evacuated flight 994 as it sat at the gate at louisville international airport. the feds have long been weary of the danger of malfunctioning lithium ion batteries. a recall last month of about a million samsung phones in the u.s. alone and 92 reports of batteries overheating and burning 26 people and damaging property at least 55 times. >> we are moving aggressively to investigate this incident. >> reporter: the head of cpsc says it's looking into green's claim that the device that overheated was a replacement for the phone he turned in as part of the recall. green showed us the serial number, according to samsung's website is not among the list of affected devices.
7:36 am
and has to be verif there has to be other remedies including a refund. >> reporter: dan ackerman calls the latest incident worrisome. >> if it is a replacement phone it shows the replacement models have a same or similar problem or may be entirely new problem. and that could happen when you rush so many replacement phones into the market in such a short period of time. >> reporter: for now, brian gr samsung phone. >> it's just scary to think that i could have been driving and this happened. someone could have had this in their luggage on the plane under the plane and it could have been a lot worse. >> reporter: in a statement to "cbs this morning," samsung says it's working with authorities and southwest to recover the device and figure out the cause but says because it has not examined the phone, it cannot confirm if it is, in fact, a new note 7. gayle?
7:37 am
meetings at samsung. it normally takes years for a case to reach a the supreme court this year's kim kardashian's case is in the highest court in the land. justice stephen breyer brought it up when a lawyer could not be accused of bank fraud. >> ed even if kardashian's overinsured so it's not theft. i asked the justice about that yesterday during a conversation here in new york. did you ever, did you ever, ever, did your wife, ever, ever, ever, think that your name would be in the same sentence with kim kardashian? >> this comes about through teaching, you know? when you're teaching, what you do is you want to give an example that the class is going
7:38 am
>> reporter: oh, no. >> i've said a lot worse things than that and it's because i want an illustrious point and not watch every two seconds what i'm saying but i want the lawyer to get the point that i'm making so i'll get an answer out of that lawyer. when you have a conversation going in a courtroom, and it is, you know, right on the merits, people not taking poses or positions, you can make a lot of progress. >> people will remember, charlie. >> they will, indeed. the point, obviously, was he views this interrogation of a lawyer as a teachable moment and he wanted to make the point that if, in fact, it had come up in legal argument, there was no loss. can there be a theft? and maybe in this case he was trying to say to the lawyers, thee insured jewels may have been insured and more, and, in fact, if that was true and there was no economic loss, was there a theft?
7:39 am
yes, my big ring is gone. there was a theft. that would be her argument. >> we have a bigger ring then. >> that is true. that is true. >> very one gigantic football team isn't so big, it is dominate. other teams are afraid to take field. >> i don't care what people say. it's our safety and concerned about that. >> how player safety string of forfeited games. take us with you on the go. that's right. we invite you to subscribe to our new "cbs this morning" podcast. you'll get the news of the day, extended interviews, and podcast originals. find them all on itunes and apple's podcast app. we are excited about our on podcast. >> i like it that people can get us all sorts of places. in case you got other stuff to do. make it easy for you.
7:41 am
if you've gone to extremes to escape your nasal allergies... try clarispray. from the makers of claritin. clarispray provides 24-hour, prescription strength relief from sneezing, runny nose, and nasal congestion. return to the world. try clarispray today. in a world that needs a hero, justice is spelled b-o-x. say hello to a powerful tool . ? oh, i'm tied to this chair! ? dun-dun-daaaa! i don't know that an insurance-themed comic book is what we're looking for. did i mention he can save people nearly $600? you haven't even heard my catchphrase. i'm all done with this guy. box him up. that's terrible. which you are you? be the you who doesn't cover your moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. be the you who shows up in that dress.
7:42 am
oriasis with stelara? just 4 doses a year after 2 starter doses. stelara? may lower your ability to fight infections and may increase your risk of infections and cancer. some serious infections require hospitalization. before treatment, get tested for tuberculosis. before starting stelara? tell your doctor if you think you have an infection or have symptoms such as: fever, sweats, chills, muscle aches or cough. always tell your doctor if you have any signs of infection, have had cancer, if you develop any new skin growths or if anyone in your house needs or has recently received a vaccine. confusion and vision problems these may be signs of a rare, potentially fatal brain condition. some serious allergic reactions can occur. do not take stelara? if you are allergic to stelara? or any of its ingredients. most people using stelara? saw 75% clearer skin and the majority were rated as cleared or minimal at 12 weeks.
7:44 am
a top high school football team in washington state is having trouble finding opponents. three teams in a row forfeited their games against archbishop murphy high school. they are concerned about the size of the student athlete and they say it puts their player at risk because these guys are they managed to win their last three games without even stepping on the field. the arch bishop murphy wildcard haven't lost a game or even given up a single point this season. the school says it's the result of hard work and dedication. >> we are not looking to hurt anybody in this game.
7:45 am
violent sport, but we play the game the right way. >> reporter: but the size and strength of arch bishop players has some schools and parents worried their teams will get crushed, literally. >> the kids were concerned about going against a team that was much larger, much more physical. >> reporter: granite falls high school forfeited tomorrow's game against the wildcats. it's the third team to bow out this season. >> i don't care what other people think. it's our safety and we are playing, not them. >> reporter:ra just one football player who weighs 250 pounds. arch bhishop murphy have six, including three who weigh 300 pounds. >>ic like putting a vw bug up against a mack truck. >> reporter: her son is asafety on the team. >> if those players get hurt, the rest are freshmen and sophomores. it's definitely a safety issue and strategic.
7:46 am
bishop murphy to play in a higher division. critics argue the private catholic school has an advantage because it can draw bigger players around the region and something public schools can't do. >> we have kid that come here for a whole variety of reasons. we have great academics here and we have great programs and to be perceived as a school recruiting these huge kids, it's just not relate. >> reporter: wednesday, the wildcats worry their jerseys to a school press be suiting up for an actual game. >> really interesting story. carter, thank you so much. jeff bezos' latest rock test goes better than he
7:47 am
how about that? first, it's time to check your local weather. announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by tena. tena let's you be you. everyday millions of women worldwide trust tena with their bladder matters. thanks to its triple protections from leaks, odor and moisture. tena lets you be you
7:49 am
7:50 am
the most common side effects include redness, pain, itching, swelling, hard lump warmth or bruising at the injection site and headache. it's important to talk to your doctor about what situations you may need to avoid since zostavax contains a weakened chickenpox virus. remember one in three people get shingles in their lifetime, will it be you? talk you to your doctor or pharmacist about me, single shot zostavax. you've got a shot against shingles. (vo) stank face. an expression of disgust caused by inadequate litter tidy cats is the cure. with new guaranteed tidylock protection, you won't have to face one more stank face. tidy cats. every home, every cat. there's a tidy cats for that. people say,
7:51 am
"or something"? you don't just graduate from medical school, "or something." and we don't just pull smoked chicken, bake fresh foccacia and hand-slice avocado. there's nothing "or something" about it. ? >> liftoff. >> a super smooth ride for blue origal start-up led by amazon jeff bezos. yesterday's launch tested the escape system that rescues the crew in case of a malfunction. the capsule fell to earth safely and the booster rocket landed without a scratch. surprising everyone. last month, bezos predicted the booster would likely be destroyed in the test. >> it went okay too. a good week for jeff. >> yes, it has. >> we had a story where he is number two on the list of
7:52 am
>> and return. >> a success. congratulations, mr. bezos. vice presidential nominee mike pence is winning praise for his debate performance from donald trump. ahead, we will ask the governor about the apparent contradictions between some of his view and his running mate. you're watching "cbs this morning." we got a tempur-flex... and it's got the spring and bounce of a traditional mattress. you sink into it, but you can still move around. and now that i have a tempur-flex, i can finally get a good night's sleep. buy the most highly recommended bed in america for as low as $25 per month
7:53 am
the steaks have definitely been raised! we've taken our tender, center-cut sirloin, a crispy hash-brown cake, and topped them high with grilled shrimp on the barbie, or onion rings. hurry in... outback steak towers... start at just $ 15.99. ? ?you don't own me? ?don't try to change me in any way? ?oh? ?don't tell me what to do? elf? ?that's all i ask of you? the new 2017 corolla with toyota safety sense standard. ?you don't own me? toyota. let's go places. mastering the art of refinement. one dark chocolate rises above the rest. lindt excellence created by our master chocolatiers. pure, rich, elegantly thin. experience excellence with all your senses.
7:54 am
when you ache and haven't slept... you're not you. tylenol? pm relieves pain and helps you fall fast asleep and stay asleep. we give you a better night. you're a better you all day. tylenol?. my dad gave me those shares, you know. he ran that company. i get it. but you know i think you own too much. gotta manage your risk. an honest opinion is how edward jones makes sense of investing. attention! did you or anyone in your household work around asbestos-containing gaskets, packing, or equipment? if you or a loved one have an asbestos-related disease, you may have a right to vote on a plan to reorganize and pay claims in
7:55 am
industrial and maritime settings, including where steam, hot liquid or acid moved in pipes. votes must be filed by december 9, 2016 call 844-garlock or go to garlocknotice.com jon batiste has mastered new ways to play old classics. with chase atms, he can master new ways to deposit checks too. easy to use chase technology
7:56 am
good morning- it's 7:56, i'm preston phillips 3 a valley mother is facing charges this morning...police say she got high on heroin and left her three-year-old home alone. paige adams put her toddler down for a nap, then left her apartment, according to investigators.while adams was out, she was arrested for shoplifting.12 hours later, cops found the toddler crying inside a bedroom say adams admitted she was high on heroin.adams is now facing abuse charges. two-year-old boy is recovering after falling from a second-story window.it happened near main street and horne in mesa.police say the boy leaned against the screen of an open window and fell.a construction worker, turned good samaritan tells cbs5 he heard a ?thud and raced over to help. says, "there was a little boy bleeding out of his face...his ears...nose and mouth and i got down and stabilized his nect to keep it
7:57 am
8:00 am
morning to our viewers in the west. it is thursday, october 6th, 2016. welcome back to cbs this morning. there is more real news inb colluding the very dangerous hurricane matthew heading towards florida. the latest on the killer sto in coastal damage, but first, here's today's eye opener, 8:00. >> the wind is slicing through the bahamas. beaches are empty. homes are boarded up. >> matthew is expected to batter the coastline with up to 12 inch of rain and winds up to 100 miles an hour. >> people are heeding the governor's mandatory evacuation warning and have made a plan for
8:01 am
the wind, the surge. 6 to 10 inches of rain. >> investigator rs still not confident all of the secrets stolen have been accounted for and recovered. >> after one of truch's roughest week, he said pence showed how great his own judgment >> describe d by clinton's campaign as the gift that keeps on giving. >> federal investigators looking into a samsung phone that overheated and forced the evacuation of a passenger yet. >> an old proverb that says the old russian bear never dies, just hibernates. >> just could be the biggest trump campaign scandal since melania quoted the ancient proverbs of michelle obama. anct proverbs of michelle obama. announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by
8:02 am
the death toll from hurricane matthew is r the death toll from hurricane matthew is rising as the storm's outer bands begin to lash florida. matthew grew stronger overnight. the storm is on track to reach florida late today as a category 4 hurricane. forecast show it moving up the coast and reaching south carolina tomorrow. >> about 2 million people in florida and south carolina have been urged to evacuate. at least 69 deaths in the caribbean are blamed on this storm. the category 3 hurricane is with 125 miles an hour. it's delivering about a foot of rain and massive storm surge. in haiti t devastate iing storm levelled home, flooded streets and killed dozens of people there. >> our chief weather caster is watching the storm's past. >> good morning. we talk about the storm strength, right to the information from the national
8:03 am
125. moving to the northwest at 12 mile% hour, it's right now 30 miles or less to the south, southwest of nassau in the bahamas. tonight and maybe 2:00 saturday morning, all about the florida coast, then the georgia coast theb the south korcarolina coas. zoom in tighter because look at this. anywhere from west palm beach to jacksonville, a little wobble and you'd have a landfall. so where do you the wind field is about 40 mile frs the center, so you've got to get at least 40 miles. got to get to orlando or points west to be b out of the hurricane force winds and it does that big turn and pushes out to sea after it flirts with the south carolina coast and maybe portions of the north carolina coast. hurricane warnings are in effect for all of the atlantic coastline in florida and north of that, it's a hurricane watch, by the time you get up into portions of georgia. we've got our eye on this. back to you, charlie. >> thanks.
8:04 am
cbsn. they'll be up through the storm. you can get it on your mobile devices through the news app. also on apple tv and play station. donald trump says mike pence won the vice presidential debate. he took credit for his running mate's performance, hailing his own judgment in choosing pence, but some of pence's responses so comments made by trump don't hold up. >> donald trump and i would punished women who made the heartbreak eing choice to end a pregnancy. >> the answer is that there has to be some form of punishment. >> for the woman? >> yes. >> donald trump has said it. deportation. they want to go house to house. school to school. business to business. and kick out 16 million people and i cannot believe -- >> going to have a deportation
8:05 am
>> he never said that. >> you have no problem with japan, south korea having nuclear weapons. >> at some point, we have to say you know what, we're better off if japan protects itself against this maniac in north korea. we're better off frankly if south korea is going to start to protect itself. saudi arabia, absolutely. >> governor pence is with us from gettysburg, pennsylvania. good morning, governor. >> good morning. at your performance, praised your performance in the debate and said that the strategy was to deflect, to deflect, rather than defend, your running mate. >> well, first, respond, let me thank you for all the attention that this program and the network is pay iing to the approaching hurricane. our hearts go out to those families who lost loveded ones in haiti and our hearts and
8:06 am
encourage people to support the red cross and other efforts that are likely going to have to step forward in the hours and the days ahead. but i will tell you, charlie, i was very humbled, honored to be on that stage to tell the story about donald trump's vision to make america great again. it was my great privilege to go out and be honest with you, i know as some have said that i won the debate. i'll leave that to other, but i believe that donald trump won it was ddonald trump's vision t america great again. donald trump's aspirations for this country, the policies he's been articulating that i carry forward. >> he said it was his -- >> draw a contrast in this debate and as i said, it was a privilege for me to be there. >> governor pence, he's claiming credit, he said it was his good judgment in choosing you as his first hire.
8:07 am
good judgment and are you giving him any pointers? people say you could give him pointers this sunday night. >> well, look, i honestly, obviously, i'm very humbled by his esteem and by the kind word of other, but i think the reason why has built an extraordinary business, career, is because he has had the judgment to make it through tough times. you saw those tax releases from 20 years ago. he faced enormous losses in his business. he led an drawing around him, women and men of extraordinary ability and enterprise and i think it's exactly the kind of judgment and exactly the kind of people that he's going to bring around him if we have the privilege of serving in the next administration. >> governor, you said in the debate, you were speaking about donald trump's vision, however, you guys differ on a number of policy issues. let me ask you about those. specifically on the topic of
8:08 am
mr. trump said he has supported a deportation task force. do quou support that? >> well, that came up in the debate. it was quite strike iing to me t this all this talk about a deportation force, we have a deportation force in this country. it's called immigrations and customs enforcement and for the first time in the history of immigrations and customs enforcement, their union endorsed donald trump to be the next president of the united states of america because they know he has a, he has a plan to beginning with border security, strengthening internal enforcement through immigrations and customs. identifying and remove frg this country criminal aliens bringing violence and crime to our streets. removing people from this country that the law requires leave after they overstay their visa and then saying once we've done that, let's then reform our immigration system and i'll tell you, there's no daylight between donald trump and i on that.
8:09 am
i truly do elieve the american people long for us to end illegal immigration. we've talked about it for decades. let's do it and in the order that donald trump describeded. >> aleppo. they say their situation is dire. there are 100,000 children trapped inside without food, water or aid. would you support using u.s. warplanes to enforce a zone, a no fly zone, so that aid trucks could get in? >> well, donald trump and i have consistently called for the establishment of safe zones under you know, under the umbrella of international approval and we have to act. i mean, the fact that you have the assad regime with the russ russians in the wake of the failure of the russian reset by hillary clinton. they're literally on the edge of aleppo and you point straight to
8:10 am
100,000 children. we have to act now to gliestabl and protect those safe zones. when i was talking the other night in the debate, i said look, we absolutely should be prepared the use military force to establish and preserve the safe zones and the ability for people safely evacuate out of those areas. we cannot stand idly by why this humanitarian crisis unfolds before the eyes of the world. >> your running mate has s this, quote, i would have stayed out of syria. you guys have a different position on this issue. >> well, i think donald trump's been very, very clear about his view of the syrian situation. that what we have is an administration that first said we were going to have a reset with russia. that's within a total failure under hillary clinton's leadership as secretary of
8:11 am
draw a red line if syria ever used chemical weapons against its citizens that there would be consequences. the assad regime did and there were none. >> just to be absolutely clear -- >> and don't need to mention that isis is headquartered in rack kai. >> i just want to be clear. you and donald trump agree that you would use u.s. military force, you have said to bomb assad forces and to enforce a no fly zone. there's absolutely agreement >> well, where there's absolute agreement is we have to establish safe zones for people to be able to get out of harm's way in aleppo. and if you don't back that up with military resources and our allies in the region, then you can't really guarantee that people in those hundred thousand children are going to be able to get out of harm's way. syria has imploded into a civil war.
8:12 am
it's all the weak fekless leadership of this administration. >> so we understand you exactly, whether it should have been in syria or not, this is a humanitarian crisis a. no fly zone is one thing and a safe zone is something else. which are you suggesting that you do not favor a no fly zone, by favor a safe zone? >> well, two dichbt things. donald trump has been consist b ebt in saying we should establish a safe zone in the region working with our allies in the region, so that people have a way to get out of aleppo and out of harm's way in syria. and whether that's you establish a no fly zone or whether you go beyond that with military force, i think that would have to be a realtime decision by our commander in chief. but we cannot stand idly by the way america has, moving red
8:13 am
russia, wringing our hands, saying as the secretary of state recently said, that we're just out of talks with russia. all the while, here we have the leader of russia you know, flexing his muscles, expanding his influence in region. the united states of america needs to be there for those suffering families in aleppo and at the same time, we need to continue to focus our resources as donald trump has on destroying isis at its it's headquartered in syria. headquartered in raqqah and when donald trump becomes president of the united states, we're going to put the safety and security of the american people first, but we're also going to be there to provide humanitarian relief and support for people that are coming under the brutal, brutal results of this kind of action. >> all right, governor pence, we thank you. we're going to have to leave it there. unfortunately, we're out of time. senate armed services committee member lindsey graham
8:14 am
8:15 am
8:16 am
if your sneezes are a force to be reckoned with... you may be muddling through allergies. try zyrtec? for powerful allergy relief. and zyrtec? is different than claritin?. because it starts working faster on the first day you take it. try zyrtec?. muddle no more?. ? ? ? one smart choice leads to the next. the new 2017 ford fusion is here. it's the beauty of a well-made choice. ? how do they make starburst taste so juicy? they use wicked small fighter jets to shoot the juiciness into every starburst. [ pilot ] it's about to get juicy.
tv-commercial
8:17 am
arburst. unexplainably juicy. this is lulu, our newest dog. mom didn't want another dog. she said it's too much work. lulu's hair just floats. uhh help me! (doorbell) mom, check this out. wow. swiffer sweeper, and dusters. this is what i'm talking about. look at that. sticks to this better than it sticks to lulu. that's your hair lulu! mom, can we have another dog? (laughing) trap and lock up to 4x more dirt,
8:19 am
? new rules will require prepaid debit card issuers to be more transparent about fees and offer better security and must now standardize the card's for cash withdrawals and reloading the car and offer liability protection similar to credit cards. shannon pettypiece is from bloomberg news and joins us at the table. what is the difference between these kind of cards and a credit card and who uses them? >> they are not a gift card either. these are the prepaid reloadable cards. they look just like a credit card and visa, mastercard and unlike debit card not attached
8:20 am
and when you add funds and like a credit card you don't get a statement. you put a set amount of money on there there. 23 million americans regularly use one of these prepaid cards right now. >> are they a good alternative to bank accounts? >> it depends on who you are. a lot of people who use them either can't get a bank account or have had issues with a bank account in the past like with overdraft fees or running up credit card bills. some way to stay within your budget and avoid overdraft fees or running up your credit card. for other people, though, a traditional bank account might be best. just really depends on your financial situation. >> why do they need new regulations? >> so right now, even though these look and act like a credit card the big thing if you lost them, you weren't guarantee -- and it was stolen or fraudulent charges were made you weren't guaranteed to get that money back. these new rules are going to provide protections to limit the loss on these cards. some people are putting their
8:21 am
card is stolen and it happens to pretty much everyone in this country at some point and you can lose thousands of dollars and protection is there and more disclosures about the fees. these cards can have a lot of fees attached to them so now there are more clear disclosures. >> good information. thank you, shannon. ahead a potentially surprising benefits of small talk. you're watching "cbs this morning." s driving performance? it's not a weekend hobby. you have to live and breathe it for 50 years. it's the sound... and the fury. and it's hanging on for dear life. that is what amg driving performance means. and this is where it lives. the 503-horsepower mercedes-amg c63 s coupe. picking up for kyle. here you go. you wouldn't put up with part of a pizza. um. something wrong? so when it comes to pain relievers,
8:22 am
8:23 am
8:25 am
in countries like syria, russia, good morning- it's 8:25, i'm preston phillips right now... a police detective in kingman, who was shot, is out of the hospital and recovering at home this morning.his department released some video, showing 57-year-old dennis gilbert, leaving the hospital with a cheering crowd around him. gilbert was shot while serving a search warrant last week.he and another officer fired back, killing the gunman. part of the loop 101 is back open this morning after year-old man was walking when he was hit and killed by a semi truck.it happened near the indian school overpass above the loop 101.the driver of the semi did stay on scene. here's ian with traffic and weather.
8:28 am
sheriff paul babeu was headmaster at desisto school in massachusetts. a boarding school rife with abuse. a lot of things went down that probably shouldn't have. this isn't about abuse or neglect, because none of this was found. except these records show the state found it, students and parents testified about it, and a judge ordered it to stop. the cornering, the sheeting, i didn't know how to live and function as a normal human being.
8:29 am
switch to centurylink and get up to 40 megs of high-speed internet for just $20 a month. that's the speed you need to stream... ...game... ...connect on social media... and more with fast in-home wifi. so call 844-565-link. get up to 40 megs of high-speed internet for just $20 a month for one year when bundled with a qualifying home phone plan. speed may not be available in your area. call today.
8:30 am
8:31 am
57. we will get his take on where donald trump and hillary clinton stand on challenges that the u.s. faces from countries like russia and iran. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. "wall street journal" stays the controversial blood testing company announced layoffs. more than 40% of its employees will be let go, about 340 people. they will close all of its blood testing facilities. earlier this year federal regu i followed questions about the company's blood testing operations and operations and they will focus now on developing products that can be sold to outside labs. "time" reports on the first wound transplants from living donors. four women used uterus transplants last month in dallas. despite the setbacks the head surgeon calls it a breakthrough.
8:34 am
their nuclear program and the world blaming us. >> senator lindsey graham has been critical of both presidential candidates. the member of the senate armed services committee is with us now. good morning, senator. >> good morning. what are you trying to put issues in this campaign? >> well, there has been a lot of folks on personality. >> really? >> let's talk, first, you heard our conversation earlier with governor pence. >> yeah. >> on the issue of syria. what is the best hope to try and save the people of aleppo? what should the united states be doing? >> there are three things. how do you stop the flow of people out of syria. one being slaughtered and going to europe and eventually coming here. a safe haven or no-fly zone. i think they are the same,
8:35 am
people don't get slaughtered, they can go somewhere where they would be protected so here is the test of us. if if we say there is a safe haven there what happens when in a syrian helicopter comes toward it? do we shoot it down? >> a difference in it because is there a difference in terms of creating safe havens away from a place in terms of like aleppo and the turks and everybody else say we want safe zones. >> i think the issue is -- >> too. >> i think the enforcement. planes flying over syria to enforce that? will the obama administration has said no. governor pence has suggested he would do that but unclear what senator kaine -- >> hillary clinton said she would have a safe zone. look at this way. charlie, a safe zone has to be enforced so if a syrian helicopter or russian jet comes into this region bombing what they consider to be terrorists and we consider to be victims if
8:36 am
down, you're not right. what i heard today was new to me quite frankly and encourage. it seems that donald trump and mike pence are more robust when it comes to getting involved and protecting people and creating safe zones inside of syria meaning they would take on the russians and -- >> and shoot down russian air plains? >> you're not willing to do that it's not a safe zone. the russian we believe would not bomb. it's all about attitude. the one thing the next president has to deal with is north korea. i think the next president would be poorly viewed in history if they allowed the north koreans to develop a missile that would hit our homeland. >> what considers you mow, north korea? >> north korea and missile program concern me the most. two unstable regimes. one has nuclear weapons and one is trying to get them. what would happen in terms of game-changer if theyed the capability to hit the homeland. i think the next president needs
8:37 am
that could hit the west coast of the united states, we will stop you. we need to tell the iranians if you continue to developed icb technology in violation of u.n. resolutions we will not not only sanctions. the worst possible thing is allow rogue machine and unstable elements to deliver weapons. >> you say the next president of the united states should be willing to attack north korean nuclear facilities? >> yes. >> if they continue with the program? >> because if n to do that, then you're going to allow flnorth korea to have the ability to attack us. who in their right mind believes that kim jong-un should launch a missile to the west coast of the united states or maybe even deeper? i think that is a nonstarter for the united states and here is the good news. if he believed we would knock out his program, he would stop. if iran believed we would reimpose sanctions or come after them if they tried to keep
8:38 am
they would stop. if the russians believe we would actually shoot their planes down, they wouldn't bomb the safe havens. >> you're saying they don't believe the united states would do that? >> nobody does. >> nobody would use force? >> yeah. i think hillary clinton would have a more -- would believe her and i hope what i heard today is encouraging from the trump/pence side but i believe that hillary clinton would use military force to protect a safe haven inside of syria and today what i heard >> can i take a step back from the encouraging conversation we are having at "the new york times" first raised this issue vladimir putin is taking advantage of the presidential election knowing that there won't be action in order to continue what he is doing in syria and in other places. what do you see about putin's threat to u.s. national -- >> between now and january when the next president is inaugurated i say land grab in syria and the complete destruction of aleppo and we want peace after they get
8:39 am
i wore the next few months you'll see an all-out assault on aleppo and maybe some of the baltic areas might be under threat. the iranians and the north koreans can't develop the technology i'm talking about between now and january but in the next president's term, in the fedex four years between 20 and 24, if the necks president doesn't put iran and north korea in a box in terms of their missile xant, we will live to regret it. >> what should be the u.s. position with vladimir putin? during the debate, we heard mike bullying leader and we have heard donald trump indicate he would like to work with putin and things that he actually likes vladimir putin. >> all i can say is that schizophrenia you see is a little bit disturbing to me. i see putin as a dictator. he has destroyed every semblance of democracy in his own country and the biggest weapons supplier to ayatollah in terms of air capability. what i would do it putin is say you will be judged by your behavior and i would take him on in syria.
8:40 am
train people to fight back against assad because he is a butcher of damascus and no arab will allow assad to stay in power because he is a proxy of rein and if assad stays in power -- we will take a rocket back from isil and they are going to go after assad and if you bomb the people we train, we will -- that will be a confrontation between us and russia. if you're noil the people you train -- >> be more specific. >> okay. >> what would you do if, in fact, they are bombing the people that we support? because they are doing that now. >> i would shoot them down. >> beyond that? >> the plane is down but what else would you do in terms of confrontation with russia? >> we keep protecting the people we train. two threats in syria that matter to us. assad being in power gives yet another arab capital to the iranians.
8:41 am
ends if he stays in power because no arab nation and the people in syria will not accept him as their leader. so if the russians and iranians bent on keeping him in power i side with the syrians. get a regional force together to go after assad and after you destroy isil. >> do you believe the history will judge this administration hashly because of what happened in the middle east? >> i think they are giving the next president a lot of headaches. nothing i said i sorry. i know two things about syria for sure, that to destroy isil you have to take the land away from them and hold it. the people we are training, the kurd do not have the ability to destroy isil and rocket syria because they are not arabs. i know this. there is no military pressure on assad at this moment to make him leave. i want to create military pressure so a political solution and without military pressure
8:42 am
changes. >> you said earlier in the campaign choosing donald trump or ted cruz would be like getting shot or getting poisoned. we are now here with donald trump. what are your thoughts in one sentence? >> oh. >> shot or poison? >> how do you feel? >> too early. >> it's too early? >> it's too early to tell whether it's shot or poison. here is what i do know. if he ding sgoing to be president of the united states he needs to up his game. putin is not our friend but what i heard about syria is encouraging. i wish you would clinton this question do you still support a no-fly zone and would you use military force to stop north korea for developing a missile that hit our homeland? ask trump and clinton that at the next debate. would you use military force to stop the development of a missile by north korea that could hit america? because i'm dying to hear what they would say about that. >> thank you, senator graham. >> the people of south carolina. >> i pray for the people in south carolina and florida and everybody else. >> small talk with a stranger.
8:44 am
sheriff paul babeu was headmaster at desisto school in massachusetts. a boarding school rife with abuse. a lot of things went down that probably shouldn't have. this isn't about abuse or neglect, because none of this was found. except these records show the state found it, students and parents testified about it, the cornering, the sheeting, i didn't know how to live and function as a normal human being. i'll end with that, thank you so much.
8:47 am
>> golf. stock market. dave matthews. >> what es? >> small things. peas, ball bearings, dimes. >> no. >> that adds to a conversation. >> sex. >> sex always works too. gave us unique ideas for small talk. research indicates such banner could have advantages. "wall street journa "wall street journal" published small talk and it can contribute to day-to-day well-being and greats sense of belonging and happiness. on the elevator the other day, ten of us and nobody is saying a word. when you're talking about interactions what do you mean? >> the research shows that small and, you know, just talking with your barista or the person next to you on the train or the guy who walks their dog at the same time you do every day those small interactions contribute to our well-being.
8:48 am
>> no, not a long conversation. the researchers looked at strong ties with relationships we have if our families and compare it to the small interactions and these make us such as happy. >> why is it important for our children to see us having these conversations? >> children learn kindness and empathy not how we treat the people closest to us but how we treat strangers they are not invisible and we appreciate the waitress and say thank you to the bus driver and it opens up their circle of compassion and >> being a good listener is essential. it shows people you're paying attention to them. >> that is right. one of the tips experts gave us don't be a backboard. we are taught to regurgitate what we hear. work like a trampoline and add depth to the conversation if you have time. >> 10/5 rule too? >> it's used in hotels. they are ten feet away make eye contact and five feet away, say
8:49 am
>> you say ask interesting questions? >> yes. a way of making people of small talk think it's boring or useless. but you can ask interesting questions. you can -- don't talk about yourself and what you know. find something out that you don't know. >> amen. >> and if you're sitting on the train and next to somebody who works in energy you could say i have no idea how wind power works. talk to me about that and you can learn them talking. >> that could be a long conversation! >> you have interest in that, right? >> exactly right. >> finally, on this note. how do you exit gracefully? >> instead of saying nice to meet you, okay. you can send a signal since we only have a couple of minutes left, i want to ask you one
8:58 am
sheriff paul babeu was headmaster at desisto school in massachusetts. a boarding school rife with abuse. a lot of things went down that probably shouldn't have. this isn't about abuse or neglect, because none of this was found. except these records show the state found it, students and parents testified about it, and a judge ordered it to stop. the cornering, the sheeting, i didn't know how to live and function as a normal human being.
tv-commercial
8:59 am
if you've been diagnosed with lung cancer, explore your treatment options with a team of specialists at cancer treatment centers of america in phoenix. one of only six hospitals in the country to be recognized by the joint commission for lung cancer care. we have a well-orchestrated team to help patieieieiens be treated well. we havtrendous technologies that allow us to treat patients in a very accurate fashion.
9:00 am
138 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
KPHO (CBS)Uploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=251588330)