tv CBS This Morning CBS October 8, 2013 7:00am-9:01am PDT
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72 degrees in detroit. >> there we go. >> see you at noon. captions by: caption colorado comments@captioncolorado.com good morning to our viewers in the west. it is tuesday, october 8th, 2013. welcome to "cbs this morning." president obama accuses thespeaker of avoiding a vote to end the shutdown. a cbs news count reveals what the outcome of that vote w be. the shutdown may be responsible for a life-and-death scare. the desperate decision a texas couple made after being lost for days in the desert. plus a surprise announcement from tom hanks about his health. >> but we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >> speaker boehner, he doesn't apparently want to see the government shutdown end at the moment snop the president would rather default than sit down and negotiate. >> really? >> no compromise on capitol
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hill. >> social security could stop sending checks to millions of americans in a matter of days. >> yesterday, the pummeling of the dow, nasdaq and s&p. >> there's a lot of concern that washington is not in sync with the american dream anymore. >> al libi is being held aboard a u.s. navy ship as an enemy combatant. he can be held indefinitely without given his miranda rights. >> people have gotten sick from chicken from three california facilities. >> communities are cleaning up after a damaging round of storms swep through the northeast. strong winds brought down power lines. >> he said those high blood sugar numbers you've been deal with? you've graduated. you've got type 2 diabetes young man. >> a crane malfunctioned at a highway construction site. a seven-ton counterweight got stuck. >> the person working in the liquor score had just put up all these bottles. talk about mixed drinks.
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>> the dodgers are heading to the national league pchampionships! >> this is a lot of fun! >> curley to the pylon, he's in touchdown new york and it is good! the jets beat the falcons! >> and "all that mattered." >> what's it like to be the most hated man in america? >> your party has become the party of no. >> now that we've compromised the speaker won't take yes for an answer. >> i think they think they're winning. >> you have to get the people in a room and get a deal. >> on "cbs this morning." >> breaking news about the government shutdown. government, still shut down. >> this morning's "eye opener" is presented by toyota. let's go places. welcome to "cbs this morning." good morning, norah. >> good morning to you charlie. >> we begin in washington where no new negotiations are planned to end the week-long partial government shutdown. >> but cbs news is finding there are almost enough votes in the house this morning to reopen the
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entire government. bill plante is at the white house this morning. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. we expect to hear from the president again today urging the house to pass a clean debt limit bill. one that doesn't include his affordable care act. he keeps signaling he won't back down as pressure grows to keep the country from going over the fiscal cliff. president obama visited fema, the federal emergency management agency, which has had to furlough more than three-quarters of its workers. there the president accused house speaker john boehner of avoiding a vote to end the standoff. >> my very strong suspicion is there are enough votes there, and the reason that speaker boehner hasn't called a vote on it is because he doesn't apparently want to see the government shutdown end at moment. >> reporter: in the house, 200 democrats and 14 republicans tell cbs news that they would support a bill to fund the government. three more votes would be needed for it to pass. but speaker baner is refusing to hold a vote. his position -- the president
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should sit down with him and negotiate the republican bill which calls for defunding the president's health care act. >> really mr. president, it's time to have that conversation before our economy is put further at risk. >> but boehner and the president have a bad track record of working together. they tried in 2011 and 2012 to strike a grand bargain on the deficit, and both times they failed. in fact at the beginning of this year the speaker privately told house republicans he was done negotiating with the president. just last month, mr. boehner shot down the idea of shuttling to the white house for negotiations over the nation's borrowing limit. >> well, i'm not doing that. i'm not doing that. the house is going to pass a bill, it will be up to the senate to pass a bill and i would guess the president would engage with the majority leader over there if he so desires. >> reporter: yesterday the white house suggested for the first time that it is open to a short-term extension of the debt
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limit in order to avoid default. and cbs news has learned that senate democrats are meeting this morning to consider their own debt limit increase with no strings attached. a vote on that senate bill could come as early as friday. the object of course to put more pressure on the house. charlie, norah? >> thank you bill. the dow is down again this morning, another sign investors may be growing worried about a possible default. the dow jones industrial average closed under 15,000 yesterday. the assistant editor and columnist for the "financial times" is with us. welcome. >> thank you. >> how worried is wall street and other centers of the global economy? >> well, last week i think most money managers were saying surely congress wouldn't be so dumb. what's happened this week is they're starting to get quite concerned maybe this whole situation could spin out of control. overnight the chinese and japanese leader who are $2.4 trillion of u.s. government debt have started to say for heavens sakes get your act together.
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one thing to watch are the halloween bills. these are government bonds that mature after the october 17th deadline. and the price of those halloween bills, short-term government bills, is starting to tumble and that shows people are beginning to worry about what will happen. >> what do you expect happens today in the markets? >> i think you're going to see a gradual slide. it isn't panic territory but people are starting to say what if? you can see the way the stock market is behaving. >> what about pressure from wall street on congress? i mean we know bankers, business leaders are talking to members of congress. >> well i suspect the one thing that's really going to make congress get its act together and bang heads together will be if we see a replay of 2008 to the top negotiations. as you remember back then, when congress refused to act, the markets crashed and that panicked people. a lot of people are saying this time around we could require another kind of market crash to get real decisionmaking. >> it's bringing a recession all
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over the world. >> absolutely. if you look at the confidence numbers that came out this week you can start to see american consumers are saying is it a good time to do anything like buy that new sofa or car or whatever? we're starting to see confidence impacted in a meaningful way. >> we saw the standard & poor's 500 index to its lowest close in a month on monday. what's the ripple effect? you started to allude to it. for the average consumer. >> i think for the average consumer it's the feeling that at the beginning of this year we were beginning to see the economy getting better, people becoming more optimistic. once again, though we're seeing politicians get in the way and uncertainty creep back in. when you get uncertainty, what happens is a lot of people put their spending positions on hold and say we're not going to spend money this week we're going to wait for a bit, and of course that impacts businesses. >> we're not even getting the new unemployment numbers. great to see you. thanks for being here. >> thank you. we have a clearer picture this morning of a daring naval s.e.a.l. -- navy s.e.a.l. raid last weekend in somalia.
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their target a leader of the terror group al shabaab who goes by the name akeira. the s.e.a.l.s came out of the indian ocean in small boats before dawn but were spotted moving toward a seaside compound. a firefight broke out and with the element of the surprise the s.e.a.l.s lost their chance to take him alive. the s.e.a.l. commander decided not to call in air strikes because of women and children in the compound. instead, he ordered his men to withdraw to a navy ship offshore. >> the aborted raid comes just two weeks after al shabaab launched an attack on a mall in kenya. senior correspondent john miller is a former fbi assistant director. good morning. >> good morning. >> what do we know about the man who is the object of this search? >> he's been around for a while, although he hasn't been high-profile like some other al shabaab or al qaeda leaders. but he goes back to the east africa bollingsmbings in 1998 with his association with the individual who was a bridge between
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al qaeda and al shabaab in somalia. he's an individual connected to the plot against the paratice hotel in 1998. this was an israeli tourist spot. that plot came with the attempt to shoot down an israeli charter jet in 2002. so you're seeing somebody who has been behind the scenes of a lot of serious plots, and this is somebody the u.s. wanted to neutralize because there are new plots afoot targeting places in ken kra. we saw the mall attack. there were plots against the u.n. headquarters and other targets. >> so there have been plenty of drone attacks in this area. however, the u.s. did not use the drone in this instance apparently because of the number of women and children civilians there. will the u.s. go back? >> so i wouldn't be selling him any life insurance policies anytime soon. they're not going to git hit that same location in that same way. they've exposed those tactics, techniques and procedures. but they have an array of options. drone strikes is one, air strikes another. it just depend where he's on the
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move, where they can find a clear on him. that won't be today or tomorrow but he'll be looking over his shoulder for a while. >> the possibility of these kinds of everies to capture these people cause them to drill down deeper and avoid detection? >> there's that old saying coined by muhammad ali. you can run but you cannot hide. these people, you know, in somalia may operate out in the open or may go into hiding but if you look at the osama bin laden case if they look for you long enough they will find you. >> the other thing, john and we touched on this a little bit yesterday, but the fact they didn't want him dead. it appears they wanted him alive. what do we think he knows? what do we want from him? >> he would have an awful lot of intelligence about al shabaab and al qaeda, how the money goes back and forth, but also planned attacks, past attacks. it would be worth capturing him alive, but i'm also fairly sure that part of the reason that they were going in with people instead of air cover was the idea that they understood there
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would be other people who could be collateral damage when you do it face to face you have more of an opportunity of a targeted strike twarld your actual intended target. >> and because of what you've reported on our show previously that they may be dabbling in chemical weapons. >> that's a frightening step for al shabaab. they have a research and development program ta the u.s. is concerned about. >> john miller, thank you. now to a health warning this morning. officials are urging people to cook chicken thoroughly after a salmonella outbreak sickened hundreds in 18 states. the government shutdown could be playing a role in the response. nearly all monitors of food-related illnesses at the cd are on furlough this morning. the usda traces the tainted chick on the three foster farms facilities in california but so far no recall is being issued. and the supreme court hears arguments this morning in a campaign finance case. it is the first of several major issues that justices will take um this term. jan crawford is outside the
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supreme court. jan, good morning. what's on the docket? >> reporter: well good morning, norah, charlie. this could be a term where there's a controversy for everyone. they may not be on the same level of some of the cases we've seen in past years like the one that ended up with the president's affordable care act law or the case that struck down bans on same-sex marriage but we have cases they'll be tackling behind these doors this term that take on some of society's most contentious issues like affirmative action abortion protests public prayers, and as you mentioned that case today involving campaign finance that could affect big money donors. all of these cases, of course could divide this court just as they divided society. think about the affirmative action case. that would be argued next week. it involves a constitutional amendment from michigan that voters passed. now, if the court upholds that constitutional amendment, which bans affirmative action and college admissions government contracting and hiring that can encourage other states across the country to pass similar
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bans. so these cases really could dramatically affect american life. >> jan, as you know what people consider liberals many the last session of the court, will that change in terms of the cut of these cases? >> reporter: well, you know that's right charlie. the health care case, that shocked everyone. i think this term though is going to be back on familiar ground. i would expect all of these cases to be wins for conservatives. the question, of course, is just how big these wins are going to be. and when we think about the court, you know, it's closely divided, you have to look at justice anthony kennedy, that key swing vote in the middle. he sometimes goes to the left on cases involving gay rights but on race and abortion he's a solid conservative vote. the case involving abortion protests, that involves the law that sets up a buffer zone around some of these abortion clinics. the court has upheld those laws in the past. i would look for it to strike it down as a violation of free
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speech this term. that's one example of the way i think the court will take a different approach this year. >> jan crawford thank you. and after more than two decades of breakthrough in a cold case murder involving a girl called baby hope her body was found 22 years ago in a cooler along a new york city highway. a source tells our new york station, wcbs that the mother of baby hope is now identified through scientific evidence. police received tip after posting flyers this summer. baby hope was believed to be between 3 and 5 years old when her decomposing body was found in 1991. police are not releasing the mother's name. thousands of school children in boston are looking for a ride to class after city school bus drivers went on strike this morning. parents were give nonadvance notice. boston says half the buss are running but the rest will be blay delayed or canceled. it's being called an illegal work action. and tom hanks made a surprise announcement last night about his health.
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his work as an actor may have predisposed him to a disease. don dahler is with us this morning. good morning. >> good morning. he was on the late show with david letterman to talk about his latest film but right off the bat he revealed he is now living with type 2 diabetes. >> you know him, you love him, you can't live without him. tom hanks. >> reporter: when tom hanks joined david letterman on stage he began the conversation with an unexpected announcement. >> i went to the doctor and he said you know those high blood sugar numbers you've been dealing with since you were 36? >> yes. >> well, you've graduated! you've got type 2 diabetes young man. >> reporter: the 57-year-old actor is known for taking on roles that require him to gain and lose weight. he packed on 30 pounds to play baseball coach jimmy du gan in 1992's "a league of their own." >> there's no crying! there's no crying in baseball! >> reporter: years later he
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dropped from 225 pounds to 170 pounds for "castaway," a dramatic transformation portraying a man stranded on a desert island. >> wilson, where are you? >> he'll have to watch what he'lls closely exercise regularly, but there's no reason he can't live a perfectly normal life. >> reporter: dr. holly phillips says those extreme weight fluctuations could play rho a role in his diagnosis. >> in dramatic weight gain or loss the equilibrium of the body is off so that might predispose him for developing type 2 diabetes later. >> reporter: he told letterman losing weight was not an option. >> my doctor said look if you can way as much as you weighed in high school you will essentially be completely healthy and will not have type 2 diabetes. i said to her, well i'm going to have type 2 diabetes. because there is no way i can weigh as much as i did in high school. >> what did you weigh in high school? >> i weighed 96 pounds in high school.
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>> good luck with that. type 2 diabetes is the most common form of diabetes. over 20 million adults in this country have it. with proper treatment, though, diabetes is controllable and there is no reason it will have an impact on tom hanks' busy schedule. >> he is incredible. he looks very fit. he looks like he's in great shape. it appears his schedule and really his work has -- >> the devotion to the craft, the way he loses weight and gains weight for the roles, they say that might have had some kind of -- >> and another good movie out. >> he does. i've heard it's great. haven't seen it yet. >> time for this morning's headlines. "the wall street journal" says power surges are causing meltdowns at an nsa facility in utah. it's said to be used for data storage. the surge destroyed hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of machinery that's delaying the opening of a facility by a year. >> the "minneapolis star tribune" looks at the 9-year-old boy who snuck onto a flight from minneapolis to las vegas last week. he has a history of trouble.
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two weeks ago authorities say he stole a car. he also made his way into a water park without paying. his mother works at the minneapolis/st. paul airport. "the washington post" says an nfl official will meet with a native american group. it wants the washington redskins to change their name. it will nation says the name is painful. the owner of the redskins dan snyder, has vowed he will never change the name. "the wall street journal" says the pilots of the asiana jet that crashed while trying to land in san francisco are offering a new account. they say an automated speed control system didn't work properly. and the pilots claim that was a major factor in the july accident. the ntsb has not uncovered any mechanical or electrical problems. "the new york times" looks at a high-rise crane mall fupgs in midtown manhattan yesterday. a 14,000-pound weight dangled 30 stories above street for hours. eventually workers lowered it to the ground. the same high-rise was the scene of a crane accident during superstorm sandy. and "usa today" says the nfl
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will return to yellow penalty flags for next week's games. the league switched to pink on sunday for breast cancer awareness. that led to a lot of confusion. players, officials, and tv crews mixed up the pink flags with pink player towels. people in the northeast are cleaning up after some wild weather. high winds took down power lines yesterday in emerson, new jersey sparking a fire. 10,000 people across the state lost power. strong winds also slammed northeast maryland. treetops were ripped away. one witness says the storm sounded like a freight train and a helicopter together. no injuries were reported. from the kpix 5 weather center, good morning, everybody. plan on a cooler day today than yesterday. stepping outside, here is san jose with lots of clear skies. sure, we have an area of low pressure taking a nosedive towards the bay area. as it does so, cooler temperatures, a chance of raindrops tomorrow, just a chance. 64 in pacifica to 80 degrees inland. slight breeze today. once we get rid of the clouds on wednesday, we have a benign weather pattern thursday all the way through monday.
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accused of massive fraud ripping off millions of dollars in benefits a top disability lawyer first continue fronted by "60 minutes" faces lawmakers on capitol hill. and a desperate decision pays off for a couple lost for days in the texas desert. >> you want to be found. you don't want to die in a place like that all by yourself. >> the husband's gamble and how the government shutdown set off events. stay tuned for your local news.
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>> thank you, mr. president. >> your realtime captioner is mrs. linda m. macdonald good morning, everyone. 7:26 on your tuesday. i'm frank mallicoat. let's get you updated on some bay area headlines now. no injuries after a truck slammed into a san jose apartment building this morning. the driver fell asleep at the wheel. usda issued a salmonella health alert for foster farms chicken in 18 states including here in california. nearly 300 people have come down sick. and labor leaders from bart workers say they are not giving 72-hour notice for a second strike. the notice customary but not required. a bart spokesman says officials are now working hard trying to reach a settlement before the deadline. got your traffic and weather for your tuesday coming up right after the break.
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an accident on the guadalupe parkway northbound 87 by taylor street exit, slow behind it. 101 is solidly stacked from capitol expressway towards mckee. here's a live look at the bay bridge toll plaza. it is backed up to the foot of the maze this morning about 15 to 20 minutes to get you on the span and mass transit all good to go all on time. here's roberta. >> hi, everybody. gather around the tv set and get ready to sing happy birthday to this right there. coit tower 80 years old today. wow, lots of blue skies there. currently 52 san francisco. 41 santa rosa. upper 40s in concord to a high of 77. cooler today and additional cooldown takes place tomorrow under mostly cloudy skies. captions by: caption colorado comments@captioncolorado.com
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♪ surveillance video shows a would-be robber bursting into a new york state convenience store two weeks ago. he fired a shot into the wall behind the clerk but the worker keeps his cool. yeah. pulls out a large machete from under the counter. the clerk chases the robber who leaves empty handed. >> a wise robber. >> you don't often see a large machete under the counter. but it seemed to work. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour. "60 minutes" told you about allegations of massive fraud. the target social security with billions at stake. the lawyer accused in the case faces a senate committee. also a woman is rescued after more than four days in the texas desert. she had no food and little water. she and her husband might not have gotten lost if not for the
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government shutdown that's ahead. and new video of the biker road rage attack in new york city. several men can be seen kicking the driver of an suv while he laid on the ground. police say alexian lien is pulled out of his week. a good samaritan is shown stepping in to try to stop the assault. now the man who sparked the outrage breaking his violence. >> reporter: it was supposed to be a leisurely ride through new york city. in some in this group of motorcycles were intentionally slowing down other cars on the road so the rest could pass safely. kevin bresloff turned on his helmet cam shortly after the riders encountered the black range rover. >> speaking to him he believed what he saw was a water bottle come out of the sun roof of the
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car. >> out of the suv? >> yes. >> as if someone -- >> correct. >> reporter: what happened next is not in dispute, there was a collision. then a confrontation. suddenly, the black range rover peeled off, hitting some of the riders. a chase ensues until the suv, now with its tires slashed, gets stuck in traffic. some riders attacked the vehicle and eventually its driver. but that part isn't captured on bresloff's video. >> it was widely discussed after the video was posted on youtube, before the assault, the cameraman cut the camera off. is that what happened? >> we absolutely deny that allegation. we categorically deny that he in any way tampered with the video. >> or that there's any more after that. >> it's a shame, but that's when it died. the battery just stopped working, there's no more footage. >> reporter: bresloff told "cbs this morning," quote, based on the sole fact that i ride a
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motorcycle, the public has decided i am a thug or gang member. this is simply not true. i was a spectator of these unfortunate events that occurred. what's going through his mind is he saying should i intervene? should i get in the middle of this? does he think he's still rolling, is he standing there to record it? >> i believe he thought he was still rolling. from speaking to him, it happened so quickly. in other words it was shocking terrifying, never expected this to happen at all. and literally was just documenting it like you document it from the beginning to the end, in other words, i'm taping it. originally, it was i want the police to see that this man hit a motorcycle. ran over motorcycle riders. >> bresloff is not being treated like a suspect. he is considered a witness. and he doesn't expect to face any charges. and it's important to note his video is not the only one in
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this case. the chain of events was captured on surveillance cameras. highway cameras, cell phone videos, ipads and other bystanders as we saw before this piece. that wasn't bresloff's video of the actual beating, some of those pictures are starting to come out. >> what do make of the man who took the video. >> i sat with him last night for a while. i took him through his story. he seems like a guy who has fallen into this thing well over his head. i don't think he expected this. he shot that video, charlie, uploaded it to youtube. that's how he handled the video. it had 4,000 hit it's in morning. it's got 6 or 7 million now. this is not what he thought was going to happen here. >> do you believe that the battery went out before the attack was happening? >> you know that is the kind of thing that begs the question. but the police have executed a search warrant at his home. they've been through his materials, where's the rest
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there's no indication that it exists. >> let's go back. there's another new developments in the road rage case. a fourth person has been arrested. what do you know about that individual, or undercover cops of other witnesses? >> another arrest of one who actually led to the involvement of the assault. now, we have a situation where a detective has come forward. another police officer is getting ready to come forward. that didn't happen yesterday. there are two other police officers who were in the ride. society police department has not actually sat down and done the q and a with all of them. so this picture is unfolding more slowly than investigators would like. >> all right. thank you. >> thanks john. a senate committee is revealing evidence of fraud and abuse in the government's disability payment system. "60 minutes" reported the probe sunday night. the investigation focuses on an attorney and a judge in west virginia. as chip reid reports, the two men are suspected of working together too closely. >> reporter: eric c. conn said to be the third highest paid
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disability lawyer in the country stood before a senate hearing monday accused of perpetrateing massive fraud against the social security administration. four witnesses testified against conn and judge david b. daugherty, alleging they collaborated. a 168-page report lays out their alleged abuse. daugherty is said to have awarded an unusual number of benefits, $2.5 billion while conn would seek out doctors with suspicious credentials. melinda hicks worked for conn. >> he referred to those doctors as whore doctors. >> reporter: the report claims these doctors would sign a claimant's form pavg the way for daugherty to review benefits. 1 in 3 reviewed revealed identical paperwork.
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receiving $1.5 million in lawyers fees. jennifer griffith and her co-worker sarah carver also testified monday they processed disability claims in huntington west virginia. in 2011 they filed a federal lawsuit against conn and daugherty under the false claims act which allows whistle-blowers to get a portion of money recovered in fraud cases. >> with judge daugherty and eric conn what i've seen is 100%. if you look at that statistic alone, what's the likelihood that every claimant that walks in your office is disabled. >> reporter: exact"60 minutes" tracked down conn. you can't track down your alleged disability and work in court? >> well, that's tempting. >> reporter: at monday's hearing he was even more restrained. >> i would respectfully assert
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my constitutional right not to testify here today, sir. >> reporter: he left the hearing before he was called to testify. more than 11 million americans receive disability insurance. that's up 20% in the last is sick years. senator tom coburn who spearheaded the investigation said that this case is just one example of widespread abuse. >> some in congress refuse to acknowledge that the system is broken and in dire need of oversight. people will pay the price of our dithering. >> reporter: analysts estimate that the disability fund could be bankrupt in just 18 months. for "cbs this morning," chip reid washington. >> getting a lot of attention there. and a husband and a wife got lost in the wilderness. they make a risky decision he goes for help while she stays behind. >> this is so surreal. i mean one minute you're alive, the next you could be dead. >> how they made it
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a story of survival this morning. a couple get lost in the texas wilderness along the rio grande. they spent days wandering big bend ranch state park. now they're talking about the ordeal from a hospital room. anna werner is with us. >> good morning, charlie, cathy frye and her husband love hiking the big bend national park. they got married there. celebrated their anniversary there and just last week were there camping but the park had to close due to the government shutdown. they moved to a nearby state park but lost their way and soon found themselves in a life or death situation. >> it got to the point where
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i -- i was starting to have trouble. you know we had not eaten in several days. >> reporter: when cathy frye and her husband rick mcfarland arrived at big bend ranch state park last wednesday they set out for what was supposed to be a day hike. but by night fall they were lost and in deep trouble. >> we discovered that there had been quite a bit of rain and what looked to be flash flooding that had knocked a lot of the trail markers out of the way. >> reporter: tired and out of water, the couple had no choice but to spend the night outside. the next day, they tried but failed again to find their way back, after another night in the elements hypothermia began to set in. by day three, frye told her husband she could barely walk. >> that's when i made -- i told him, i thought he needed to go and to leave me. >> one of us has to go, if we stay there, we're going to die. there's just no way around it. and we said our i love yous you
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know, to each other. she wanted me to tell the kids to make sure to let them know she tried. >> reporter: exhausted dehydrated and growing delirious. mcfarland wandered for hours, passing out several times to find help. next thing i knew a dozen guys were there. i don't know where they came from. >> reporter: nearly 40 rescuers were involved in the search. as they looked for any sign of frye, the 43-year-old was hanging on for life. >> i was pretty much just incoherent. i had taken my clothes off. i don't know where they were. i was right out in the elements in the sun. >> reporter: it would be two days before search teams finally spotted frye a little more than a mile from where the couple had started out all those days earlier. >> we stopped and just looked. we looked down and there was
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cathy, about 50 yards down below us. >> reporter: fernando rincon was among the first to reach her. >> they took their own clothes. put their socks on me they put their shirts collectively on me and it was just a surreal moment. >> they told me she's alive. just like -- i gave them a big hug. and i'm not a hugger. >> reporter: a helicopter airlifted frye to the hospital where she's still recovering from her incredible ordeal. >> you want to be found. you don't want to die in a place like that all by yourself. >> she's alive. and i won't have to be without her. and i get to take her home. >> mcfarland said he used the zoom on his camera to help find his way back. he's a photographer. she's a reporter. both for the arkansas democrat-gazette, both are award winning and have been with the same newspaper since the '90s.
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>> wow. >> what a story. >> if you've been out to that terrain out there, this is really rough terrain. they wound up with no water, no food. a tough situation. >> i'm from texas. i don't know that area. thank god she's alive. >> they've been in the area before. they got in the state park different from the national park. >> you can only imagine that you're going to die alone like she said. >> so scary. >> the other pat of this because of the government shutdown, as you said they chose this other park. >> right. they went off on another trail, ought it was from the kpix 5 weather center, good morning, everybody. plan on a cooler day today than yesterday. stepping outside, here is san jose with lots of clear skies. sure, we have an area of low pressure taking a nosedive towards the bay area. as it does so, cooler temperatures, a chance of raindrops tomorrow, just a chance. 64 in pacifica to 80 degrees inland. slight breeze today. once we get rid of the clouds on wednesday, we have a benign weather pattern thursday all
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the way through monday. the teenage girl targeted by the taliban is about to reach a milestone. the new interview malala use yousafzai tells the world why she's not backing down. that's ahead on "cbs this morning." tell people how to finish strong with a fresher bum. can i talk to you about... bums? your nerves kick in, you've got to go. is toilet paper enough? no you want that. and you want that in every port-a-let. you need the dream team. combo! imagine how great it would feel on your bum. mmmm... yeah that's the face isn't it? mmmmmm... [ cherry ] nothing leaves you feeling cleaner and fresher than the cottonelle care routine. so let's talk about your bum on facebook. off to my next destination.
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oak, business news here at cbs over the weekend. it's announced that i'm renewing my contract here at the television. yeah. [ applause ] here's what it came down to after talking about it and talking about it. you know how you roll things around in your head? a lot of hand-wringing and stuff? >> sure. >> my family decided they wanted to spend less time with me. >> i see. [ laughter ] ask your gastroenterologist about humira adalimumab. humira has been proven to work for adults who have tried other medications but still experience the symptoms of moderate to severe crohn's disease. in clinical studies, the majority of patients on humira saw significant symptom relief and many achieved remission. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal events, such as infections, lymphoma or other types of cancer have happened. blood, liver and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions and new or worsening heart failure
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a truck crashes into an apartment building on donna lane and camden avenu your realtime captioner is mrs. linda m. macdonald. good morning, it's 7:56. i'm michelle griego. a truck crashes into an apartment building on donna lane and camden avenue in san jose. the vehicle has a logo for j drains rooter service. the owner of the company says the driver fell asleep at the wheel hit a few parks cars before crashing on the lawn. the usda issued a salmonella health alert for foster farms chicken in 18 states including california. nearly 300 people have been sickened but the chicken is still being sold right now. no recall has been issued. foster farms says they are now taking new safety precautions. stay with us, traffic and weather in just a moment.
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good morning, brake lights across the san mateo bridge. westbound 92 a rake on the decline section of the span. traffic suddenly backing up now. looks like from the pay gates all the way out towards the flat section. we are seeing delays out of hayward. also, this is a new crash westbound 580 by he will claro involving a motor signing -- by el charro involving a motorcycle. slow through the livermore valley. more than a half power between the altamont pass and 680. that's traffic. here's roberta. >> thank you, elizabeth. good morning, everybody. stepping out the door today, a little bit of a chill in the air. it's one of the coolest autumn mornings so far this season. hazy towards mount vaca. 50 in concord, cooler in santa rosa, 50s in the south bay, going up to 75. 64 to 80 the temperature span today. a couple of raindrops possible on wednesday.
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♪ ♪ ♪ good morning, to you. it's 8:00 on the west. welcome back to "cbs this morning." we are now in week two of the partial government shutdown. nearly half of the lawmakers in the house say they are ready to support a funding bill without any changes to obama care. a nurse blogs about her life as a breast cancer survivor. holley jacobs tells us why she never stopped looking for the silver lining. and world famous architect frank gary says art was his salvation. this morning he shares his note to self. first here's today's "eye opener at 8." never been a president in history that did not negotiate other the debt limit, never, once. >> he keeps signaling that he won't back down as pressure grows to keep the kuncountry from
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going over the fiscal cliff. >> surely congress wouldn't be so dumb. once again, we're seeing politicians getting in the way and uncertainty creep back in. >> we have got cases. they're going to be tackling cases this term that take on some of society's most contentious issues, affirmative action, abortion protests public pray zblers what do you make of the man who took the video. >> i saturday with him and took his story. he seems like a guy who has fallen into this thing way over his head. >> kathy fry and her husband loved hiking. they lost their way and found themselves facing a life or death situation. >> she wanted me to tell the kids to make sure to let them know she tried. >> hangs was on the late show with david letterman to talk about his new film. he says he's living with type
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two diabetes. >> people are giving up their citizenship. today obama was like are you sure i wasn't born in kenya. >> this morning's "eye opener at 8" is presented by benefiber. i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. the federal debt limit is getting closer. president obama is calling again for an up or down vote in the house to reopen the government. republican leaders say they want budget negotiations first. >> this morning cbs news finds there is almost enough support in the house to pass a spending plan. bill plaptnte is at the white house. good morning to you. >> reporter: good morning. the president signals he won't back down. he wants the house to vote on a so-called clean debt bill. yesterday he accused speaker boehner of not wanting to end the government shutdown.
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in the house 200 democrats and 14 rev cans tell cbs news that they would support a bill to fund the government. three more votes would be needed for it to pass. president obama visited fema the federal emergency agency which has had to furlough more than 3/4 of its workers. there the president accused house speaker john boehner of avoiding a vote to end the standoff. >> my very strong suspicion is that there are enough votes there and the reason that speaker boehner hasn't called a vote on it is because he doesn't apparently want to see the government shutdown end at the moment. >> his position, the president should sit down with him and negotiate the republican bill which calls for defunding the president's health care act. >> frankly, by refusing to negotiate, harry reid and the president are putting our country on a pretty dangerous path. >> so what have you got? neither side wants to be the first to blink, but as the deadline gets closer the white house is suggesting for the first time that it is open to a
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short-term extension of the debt limit in order to avoid default. charlie, gail norah? >> bill thank you. and a husband and wife philanthropy team is promising $10 million to keep head start programs open during the shutdown. laura and john arnold stepped in after programs in six states shut their doors. the shutdown affects 1,000 children in bridgeport connecticut, and their teachers. >> they don't have alternatives to turn to. you know it's going to get cold pretty soon. they don't have a way to care for their kids. give me a break. what can we do? >> head start officials say the $10 million donation will help more than 7,000 kids. >> that's great news. with no end in site to the shutdown, some are looking to a higher power to end the stalemate. long-time senate chapman barry black is leading the charge for divine intervention. nancy cordes is on capitol hill with that story. nancy, good morning to you. >> reporter: good morning. the job of the senate chaplain
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is to open each day's session with a prayer as he did about an hour ago, but in situations like this one where so many people are being hurt,'s not above instilling a little fear of god. >> save us from the madness. >> reporter: 64-year-old barry black began calling out his wayward senate flock just before the shutdown started. >> deliver us from the hypocrisy of attempting to sound reasonable while being unreasonable. >> reporter: the increasingly exasperated senate chaplain has begged the almighty to give lawmakers the same courage as capitol hill police officers who are currently protecting them without pay. >> bless them with the courage to stand for something less they fall for anything. >> reporter: black is a former
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navy chaplain and rear admiral who has served as senate chaplain for a decade. he doesn't take sides. >> my position is nonpartisan and nonsectarian. >> reporter: but he isn't shy about scolding congress during self-inflicted crises like the debt limit fight in 2011. >> lord help them to comprehend the global repercussions. >> reporter: or the government shutdown today. >> remove from them that stubborn pride. we need a humility that will at least think maybe i'm wrong or maybe the other person has a viable point of view. >> reporter: but it hasn't been enough to break the impasse and so chaplain black has begun to pray first and foremost for millions of government employees who, like him, have no guarantee they'll get paid when the government reopens. >> remove the burdens of those
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who are the collateral damage of this government shutdown. >> reporter: i asked chaplain black, who has seen so many of these standoffs, did he ever get so frustrated that he wants to raise his voice at these lawmakers. he told me norah, charlie, gayle, he thinks there's enough of that going on around here. there is some sign that the lawmakers are listening to him. several have gone to the senate floor to say that they feel chastened and they'll try to do better. >> what a great story. barry black. i think they all need to get in a room with barry black. >> his voice is so powerful and strong, just when he says save us from the madness. >> what a line. >> somebody needs to listen to him. >> absolutely. you know one year ago malala yousuf was shot in the head while riding a bus. the 16-year-old is releasing her autobiography worldwide, there is a new threat this morning. the taliban says they are
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renewing their vow to silence her. a spokesman tells brittain's "telegraph" that anyone who campaigns against our religion and criticize sz our religion is our enemy. she was criticized for criticizing the taliban's stance and educating girls. last night on the bbc the teenager made a vow of her own. >> reporter: a year after she was nearly assassinated in pakistan for supporting girls' education, she said the attack only strengthened her convictions. >> once the opportunity of going to school this ride was snatched from us. we have seen terrorism. we know that education is important and we know that the power of education, that's why they stopped us from going to school. >> reporter: but malala remains unstoppable. her story gained worldwide attention and gave the teenage activist an international stage.
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>> they thought that the bullet would silence us but they failed. >> reporter: in july she celebrated her 16th birthday by addressing the united nations in new york. >> i'm here to speak out for the right of education of every child. >> reporter: she is also among the front-runners for this year's nobel peace prize and today her autobiography will be sold in 21 countries including pakistan. malala continues to receive threats from the taliban there but she dismisses them and she says one day she plans to return to her country. >> when we are trying to make our future brighter then we must do something for it. in the taliban some people think that a girl cannot do it and she cannot move forward, and i think that i can move forward and i can do it. >> you know pakistan continues to be one of the worst places to be a woman.
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malala's own mother is illiterate. more than half the girls in pakistan receive no education. >> i can't get enough the blockbuster film "gravity" is being praised for its realistic looking effects, but here's a question. is hollywood leaving the truth back on earth? science versus fiction ahead on "cbs this morning." ♪ ♪ ♪
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>> announcer: this morning's "eye opener at 8" is sponsored by benefiber. better with benefiber. so you can feel free to add it to anything. and feel better about doing it. better it with benefiber. [ female announcer ] now you can turn pillsbury crescents into an easy dinner with crescent dogs. just separate, add hot dogs, cheese, roll 'em up, and bake. lookin' hot, c-dog. pillsbury crescents. make dinner pop. hello, these are our ocean spray 100% juice blends and light 50 with just 50 calories, both with no added sugar. with so many tasty flavors, it's like a fruit stand in every bottle.
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with a total home dvr and play them back in any room. [ female announcer ] so call now to choose a u-verse triple-play bundle for just $79 a month. get the same great price for two years. plus switch and get a total home dvr included for life. why wait? call today. [ male announcer ] choose at&t and build your bundle. it's whatever works for you. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ architects are known to get people talking, but creating the foundation for his own life was not easy. gary's note to his younger self
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ahead on "cbs this morning." ♪ >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by usaa serving the financial needs of current and former military members and their families. sponsored by usaa serving military and their families. [ male announcer ] once it's earned, usaa auto insurance is often handed down from generation to generation because it offers a superior level of protection and because usaa's commitment to serve current and former military members and their families is without equal. begin your legacy. get an auto insurance quote. usaa. we know what it means to serve. ♪ ho ho ho ♪ [ female announcer ] at 100 calories, not all food choices add up. some are giant. some not so giant. when managing your weight, bigger is always better. ♪ ho ho ho ♪ ♪ green giant ♪ no matter how busy your morning you can always do something better for yourself. and better is so easy with benefiber. fiber that's taste-free, grit-free and dissolves completely.
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♪ at 84 frank gehry remains one of the world's leading architects. his unique and modern designs can be spine from los angeles to spain. but he may have found his most important project looking in the mirror. the cals he faces growing up in his "note to self." >> my younger self probably would fought like to listen to what i have to tell him. deer frank, i guess the most important advice i have to give to you is to keep a copy of "don quixote" and a copy of "alice in
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wonderland" at your bedside forever. the world san upside down place and you have to make your own logic out of it. believe in yourself and be curious. follow that curiosity every day in everything you do. you were born frank owen goldberg in canada in a climate of anti-sem metettism. you'll be the only gift in elementary school. you can't change this you can't change who you are. so you got to stay the course. in your family your mother and father will be tough on you. your father will be worried that you're a dreamer, and you won't amount to much. your mother will compare you to her friends' children, and in her eyes you'll always fall
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short. but understand, this is their version of love. they had many many of their own obstacles to overcome. watching them struggle through these hardships and survive it pick themselves up get to work. this will give you a model of courage, you'll carry with you your entire life. as you face probably larger and more complicated crises. ♪ your mother will introduce you to the art gallery of ontario where you will develop your life long love of painting and sculpture. he's also take you to massey hall to hear classical music concerts that will ignite your soul. you know that art will be your salvation. in college, you'll figure out how art plays into your life.
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glen yukon your ceramics teacher will introduce you to architecture and open up the world to you. you'll find a profession that makes sense to you and it gives you a sense of personal pride. you'll be tested again and again. you'll have a teacher tell you that this ain't for you, frank. find another profession. man, just get pissed off, ignore him and vow to prove him wrong. once you find your passion for architecture, work your tail off to understand and build expertise on every facet of the profession. no matter what you do however big or small, make it the best thing that you can because you'll be judged on everything you do. make sure everything you design
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and build adheres to your highest standards. push back on people who try to dilute this mission and partner with people who support the best. take every crisis as an opportunity to do better work. and finally, create buildings in places that engage people. it doesn't mean pandering to historical models of the past. question everything. be curious forever. and never forget that life is about people. so make buildings for people. and always use natural light because it's free. >> wow. >> amazing man. >> he is. >> i've done about 15 hours of interviews with him. there's a great film by the late sydney pollack about him.
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you get a sense of how he ♪ ♪ ♪ turn around ♪ ♪ every now and then i get a little bit hungry ♪ ♪ and there's nothing good for me around ♪ ♪ turn around ♪ ♪ every now and then i get a little bit tired ♪ ♪ of craving something that i can't have ♪ ♪ turn around barbara ♪ ♪ i finally found the right snack ♪ ♪ ♪ [ female announcer ] for real cinnamon taste that's 90 calories try new fiber one cinnamon coffee cake.
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>> >> your realtime captioner is mrs. linda m. macdonald good morning. let's check the headlines. >> at least two homes in petaluma have been evacuated after an explosive device was discovered inside a home there. this is all hang on quarry street. the bomb squad is on the scene disposing of the device. usda issued a salmonella health alert for foster farms chicken in 18 states including california. nearly 300 people got sick. consumers are urged to cook chicken thoroughly. bart negotiations resume this morning with encouraging signs of a little bit of progress. labor leaders from bart workers say they are not giving a 72- hour notice for a second strike later this week. the notice is customary, not required. a bart spokesman says they are
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look at them with that u-verse wireless receiver. back in our day, we couldn't just move the tv wherever we wanted. yeah our birthday entertainment was a mathemagician. because if there's anything that improves magic, it's math. the only thing he taught us was how to subtract kids from a party. ♪ ♪ let's get some cake in you. i could go for some cake. [ male announcer ] switch and add a wireless receiver. get u-verse tv for $19 a month for 2 years with qualifying bundles. rethink possible. good morning. we're watching some breaking news in san jose. san jose firefighters are working a lumberyard fire on monterey in san jose. monterey highway, the 1800 block, multiple structures are burning. so again, there may be streets closed in the area. main lines of the freeway also very busy on 101 and 280 in the south bay. here's a live look outside.
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this is the san mateo bridge westbound 92, pretty stacked up still from the pay gates all the way towards the high-rise section of the span. that's why we're seeing big delays with earlier debris, a rake in lanes is the only thing we saw in the chp reports. a quick note, this accident is another cleared westbound 580 approaching el charro in pleasanton. that is your traffic. for your forecast, here's roberta. >> hey, elizabeth. this is panning out to be one of the coolest mornings this autumn season. blue skies visibility unlimed and air temperature of 52 degrees in san jose. otherwise, pretty much in the 40s across the board. 76 the high in santa rosa which is cooler than yesterday. 68 degrees in san francisco. that's down from 76 degrees yesterday. and out of the 80s to the upper 70s in throughout the tri- valley. now, we do have a very slight chance of a couple of raindrops on wednesday. otherwise, it's a seasonal weather pattern from thursday through monday.
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♪ the segment is msnbc, that clears it up. zblk on. >> msnbc that clears it up. i hope this does clear it up. take a look. >> the problem is -- you ask fewer questions. >> it's negotiated by republicans. >> and he says that -- >> the money needs to be spend -- >> john boehner -- >> and the indebtedness of the government -- >> and the president was re-elected in 2012. [ applause ] >> you'd like to think that really didn't happen but it did. >> really? >> yes, it did. >> i heard the 2012. that was all i got out of that. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour only six actors have played james bond. only search authors have brought
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him to life. the newest writer jim boyd is in the green room. we'll see what he has in store for the world's most dashing spy. "the washington post" says north korea accuses europe of what's committing serious rights abuse. the reason the company failed to sell ski lifts to the north is because of sanctions. north korea is working feverishly to build its first resort. "the wall street journal" says how often you use the word "i" says a lot about you. people who repeatedly use "i" are less powerful and less sure of themselves. we like that don't, don't we? and bryan cranston is making his broadway debut. he'll play president lyndon johnson in a new production "all the way."
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dallas cowboys owner jerry jones sat down with scott pelley. >> only 7% of nfl fans have ever been inside an nfl stadium. just 7. not 70. and so it's television. and that's how people participate. so as far as our game is concerned and all of our fans in the united states a team playing in london can be viewed and be entertaining and be competitive and be very much a part of the nfl. >> when asked if he supports international growth jones told pelley he is quote, going for the pie but not voting. san francisco and the jaguars play in london october 27th. >> they say the audience is huge in london. the film "gravity" is off to an astronomical start you may
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say. grf is facing criticism from another group of experts. will whitaker looks at why some are some are giving the film a reality check. >> reporter: on a shuttle mission to repair the hubble space telescope, catastrophe strike ngts form of space debris sending everything spinning out of control including astronauts played by sandra bullock and george clooney. jpl astrophysicist kevin frazier is scientist expert for the film. >> the debris is now putting the space shuttle in jeopardy. they've been told by houston they have to get home and they have to get home right now. >> reporter: so this is scientifically sound? >> yes it is. >> reporter: all in dazzling 3d. audiences can't believe their eyes. neither can many scientists. neill degrasse tyson criticized the movie as scientifically inaccurate.
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in a twitter rant sunday he said the astronauts couldn't think of getting to the international space station or iss. it's nowhere near the hubble in space. they're in totally different orbits. grazer said filmmakers immersed themselves in the sight. >> they knew in the real word you cannot get from the hubble telescope to iss but so what. we're not doing a documentary. >> reporter: tyson had more complaints he tweeted when bullock released clooney, he drifts away. >> a single tug brings them together. >> and bullock's hair wouldn't remained perfectly puffed tyson tweeted. mysteries of "gravity" why bullock's hair will be float around her head. >> welcome to the space station. >> when i looked around the theater, people weren't going, they were going -- i think we
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have it. >> i can't see you anymore, do it now. >> the first thing that happens in outer space -- what would have happened -- >> she would have had pleasant dreams as she drifted off. >> so a short movie and a unsatisfying movie. >> reporter: whether "gravity" is scientifically accurate or not, audiences found it very satisfying indeed. for "cbs this morning," bill whitaker, los angeles. >> you don't want to give away the details of a good story. >> i haven't seen it yet and i like neil degrasse tyson very much. weren't ke just go to the movie and enjoy the movie. you might have to look very hard to find a silver lining from a cancer diagnosis, but writer and registered nurse hollye jacobs found in her own journey with breast cancer. she began learning what he
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learned on her website called silver pen. a very popular book will be published by simon schuster. it looks so great. >> thank you. >> i think your story is fascinating to so many people. you had gone had a regular check up everything was fine. a month later you woke up in excruciating pain. >> i did. >> pain in my right breast. and as a nurse, i assured myself that this was probably not breast cancer because breast cancer doesn't typically hurt. but i decided to have it checked out just to be sure. and i knew enough i started down the road -- >> and you were 39 and had no history. >> i'm primarily vehiclegan, i run mayer that rons. just how of the blue. >> what kind of cancer did you have. >> i had stage 2b.
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i had a double mastectomy and reconstruction followed by chemotherapy and radiation. >> why did you want to blog about it. >> i started to blog to keep my family and friends apprised of what was happening to me. unexpected in a short period of time, the blog just spread like wild fire. literally, i had people from all over the world wright to me in response to it. so what started as a way to communicate with family and friends became a source of information that describes the breast cancer experience. and i sort of unconsciously wrote about my personal experiences through the lens of my professional experiences as a nurse and a social worker. >> why do you think it resonated so well? >> well part of is that as i was developing it i thought to myself, i don't want to either write about or read about cancer every day.
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>> you don't want the gloom and doom. >> gloom and doom. so i thought i'm going to write about all parts of living with cancer. so on particularly bad days i would write a fashion post for example. or i would write about what i was reading. or a clinical experience that i had. >> you know what's fascinating to me about you, hollye you are a nurse and you thought of nurses as being nurturing. you said you had to nurture yourself. all the advice you were giving to people you had to see for yourself. >> it's a very different experience being a caregiver on the side of the bed and moving to the hospital bed. in a very short period of time i had to learn how to contend with both the physical and emotional aspects of having cancer. everything from becoming a human pin cushion because you literally get stuck every other day. to dealing with the sadness and the fear and the anxiety. and what i learned is that you really can't teach these things
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in med education. it's only when you experience them first hand. >> so is it a survivor's manual in part? >> it is. it is. it's part memoir and part experience. when i write on the blog every day, i write about my experience how i handled it going through. and then i offer practical tips and suggestions to help people either learn from things that didn't go well with me. or what went write. >> like never use chemo -- you said never use chemo and only in the same sentence. i thought i was saying a good thing, hollye. >> no, it's true. in the blog i write about not only my experience from a patient's perspective, but for everyone's whose life is touched by breast cancer or any type of cancer for that matter. and i offer suggestions like that. i think what you need to know not to feel bad, it's things that you wouldn't necessarily --
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>> i will never say that again. >> yeah as somebody who heard that multiple times, i knew it was coming from a multiple place. but the reality of the way it sinks is very different. >> how is your hot? >> he is my husband of the year now four years running. he's doing great. really great. our kids are terrific. it's wonderful. we're in a great place now. >> and he happens to be a hotty, too. >> yeah. >> congratulations. >> thank you. he is the new man behind james bond. author william boyd is in our green room.
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daniel craig is james bond if "skyfall." in 1952 british journalist ian fleming set out to write what he called the spy story to end all spy stories. a year later what would become one the world's most famous characters. >> bond, james bond. >> swagger familiar with james bond ian fleming intended him to be what he called an uninteresting man. but when his first novel "casino royale" debuted in 1953 writers embraced debonair spy. >> remarkable. >> reporter: beautiful women, fast cars and fantasy came the cornerstone of 007's success. fleming went on to write a total of 14 bond books. and in 1962 the character made
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his on-screen debut in "dr. no." sean connery was the first of six archers to play bond in one of the largest franchises in history. also one of the most profitable worth more than $6 billion. this year james bond turns 60. there have been 24 bond books translated into over 40 languages since ian fleming's death in 1964. the latest solo novel was written by william boyd handpicked by fleming's estate. >> william boyd, welcome to being here. >> nice to be here. >> so why you? what was it you think that you brought to them that got their attention? >> it's very hard to say. because it comes out of the blue. you can't audition for this job. you can't volunteer for it. i think i've written two spy novels myself.
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recently. one set in world war ii one said in world war i. so i sort of was in the genre. and i as knew a lot about ian fleming himself. i had written about him. i put him as a character in one of knew novels. >> and you read every ian fleming book didn't you? >> yes once i got the job, i thought i had to steep myself in it. i did that as a teenager. i read all the books, chronological order, taking things an litically things that would be useful for me. >> like what? >> i was looking for his inner life, actually. he's not a blunt instrument, bond. he is a man of feeling. fleming gives him a lot of interior thought and sensizations. i was looking for those. also the plenty
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of pages left in 007's passport. i doubt his creator could have done it better. wow. >> high praise. >> it's a wonderful gift because you write your own novel, but you're a gift of the central character. >> you so something different about this james bond. number one, you show a more vulnerable side. for instance not to get too graphic because people are eating honey nut cheerios. at one point in the book he throws up. at another point, he cries. all of which were unbelievable at the time but it's so unlike james bond that we though. >> you see bond filtered through the movies. you go back and see bond he sees something unpleasant or gori he often -- you know. >> yeah. >> but, no he's a complex, troubled man with a dark side with melancholy far from the
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cartoon character. >> who's your favorite actor? >> well in three the films i've written. i sean connery and pierce bronson. and bond is like the singer carmichael. sean connery does look a bit like the young carmichael. >> that who you would pick? >> i don't know. i know them all as actors. i think i would pick another actor, daniel day-lewis. >> ooh. >> you don't like the phrase "bond girl." why? >> again, it's from the movies. and bond's relationships with women in the novels are again quite complex. he's often been attracted towards damaged women in the way she's slightly damaged himself.
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and his wife who he was married to he saved from committing suicide. >> why is he damaged? >> he's solitary. and bond his traits and sentiments and complexes, so the bond that emerges from the novel is rather like fleming. fleming was a damaged man. >> being famous john kennedy announced that he'd been -- what are you reading? he said, ian fleming. >> i know. >> do you know how he became bond james bond? >> yeah i think the legend is that fleming was looking for a very simple short, very english name. he was in jamaica where he had a house. there was a book called jamaican birds, bird-watching written by james bond. and of course the name
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resonates in the most incredible way. >> it does. >> it doesn't work for all names like o'donnell, norah o'donnell. king gayle beginning. >> row charlie rose. >> and an orrenologist. >> yeah. >> and do you know where in jamaica? >> thank you. >> "solo" goes on sale today. change for a hundred. a $100 bill. this is what happens when you work here they give you money on the set. and the new book "kamacamelot"camelot's court" inside the kennedy white house. that's tomorrow on "cbs this morning."
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♪ you have heard the new $100 bill goes into circulation this morning. it looks like counterfeiters will have their work cut out for them thanks to new high-tech features. they include a blue security ribbon woven into the front of the c-note. what's that? that's charlie rose's phone? who's calling charlie? who's calling? we're on the air. >> you know what it is -- i misplaced my ipad. this is an alert. >> there it is. >> turn it off, please. >> sorry when the bill is tilted images in the ribbon appear to move. copper ink while under the feather contains the liberty bell. i want to know who's calling.
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your realtime captioner is mrs. linda m. macdonald good morning, 8:55 your time. i'm frank mallicoat with your kpix 5 headlines on this tuesday morning. a truck crashes into an apartment building on donna lane and camden avenue in san jose. the vehicle has a local for jdrains rooter service. the owner of the company says the driver fell asleep at the wheel hit parked cars before crashing on the lawn. usda issued a salmonella health alert for foster farms chicken for 18 states and here in california. nearly 300 people got sick but the chicken is still being sold. no recall is issued. foster farms did put out a statement saying that they are taking new safety precautions. and labor leaders for bart workers say they are not giving 72 hours' notice for a strike. the notice is customary but not
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required. a bart spokesman says officials are working hard to reach a settlement before the deadline this week. here's roberta with the forecast. i think the a's are playing today, too, right? >> yes, 2:00 against detroit tigers in detroit. game time temperature 68 climbing to 72 degrees. go, a's! weather there very typical of what we experience in oakland at this time of the year. looking out towards oakland, looks like we have an area of low pressure taking an inside slider route increasing our clouds tonight but until then cooler. 64 at pacifica. 72 degrees oakland. mid-70s in san jose and in santa rosa to the north, and 80 inland. west-northwest winds five to ten. the extended forecast that area of low pressure will produce a chance of a couple of raindrops on wednesday. otherwise, thursday through monday, plenty of sunshine. that's a look at your pinpoint forecast. we have elizabeth coming up with traffic next.
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good morning. checking the ride on the san mateo bridge, it's still slow but improving right now on westbound 92 heading out of hayward. here's a live look. the drive time is down to about 20 minutes out of hayward towards foster city. also, seeing some improvement on east bay, especially down the eastshore freeway. and the bay bridge is clear.
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wayne: i get to pick a box i get to pick a box! jonathan: it's a diamond ring. wayne: bringing sexy back to daytime. jonathan: it's a trip to the bahamas! (screaming) - this is so crazy! - "let's make a deal" coming up let's go! jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal." now here's tv's big dealer wayne brady! wayne: hey, america, welcome to "let's make a deal". i'm wayne brady, we're goingke a deal right now with a couple. who wants to make a deal? i need a couple. let me see, a couple. you better be in love. mardi gras i think you're mardi gras. yeah, you two, come over here. come over here. big john, hello. and you are alana, come on up here. where are you going? where are you going i'm here and you're running away. - i'm
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