tv CBS This Morning CBS October 14, 2014 7:00am-9:01am PDT
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captioning funded by cbs good morning to our viewers in the west. it is tuesday, october 14th 2014. welcome to cbs this morning. an sfo airline emergency has the inside walls of a jet rip open mid flight. the cdc rethinks how to stop ebola as a 26-year-old nurse fights to survive. and you've been hearing about the woman with terminal cancer who plans to end her life in oregon. she sits down with us for her first tv interview. but we begin with a look at today's "eye opener." your world in 90 seconds. >> it was very traumatic to walk up and see the back of your house demolished. >> a deadly storm system slams millions across the country.
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tornadoes ripped across half a dozen states killing at least two people. >> i don't know how to deal with it right now. the shock of it. >> we are in an emergency. >> tense moments for passengers leaving san francisco when part of the interior wall of the cabin cracked and came loose. >> we said come look the walls are caving in. >> fears over the ebola outbreak are spreading. a man in kansas with in isolation with symptoms of the deadly virus. >> all this comes as a nurse in texas undergoes treatment for the first infection here on u.s. soil. >> one man is dead after a powerful earthquake. the 7.3 tremor struck off the coast of el salvador. >> more protests over the death of michael brown in missouri. >> more than 50 people were arrested. >> protesters took to the rams football game. >> he's back. kim jong-un has been out and about.
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>> the dramatic ocean rescue as the coast guard is called to save five people stuck on rocks in an oregon bay. >> johnson takes it in for a touchdown to steal a victory. >> ordinary day on a train until a man stands up and declares it's a dance party. wow! ♪ i feel good ♪ . the man says he just wants to spread happiness. whoo! >> and all that matters. >> the only job left to run for is united states senate. and let me just say this i would rather die. >> on cbs this morning. >> republicans are just six seats away from grabbing control of the the senate, a move that would change the face of senate leadership from this to this. >> this morning's "eye opener" is presented by toyota. let's go places.
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>> welcome to cbs this morning. gayle king is off. we begin with terrifying moments for nearly 200 people aboard a commercial flight. passengers thought the plane was coming apart in midair. one took this photo of a crack in the cabin wall. the american airlines 757 left san francisco yesterday bound for dallas. an hour into the flight the crew was forced to turn around. jeff is in washington where federal investigators now want to know what went wrong. jeff, good morning. >> good morning, and good morning to viewers in the west. the next time the passengers board a plane in san francisco this morning, many of them will be thinking about what happened yesterday on that american airlines flight. after takeoff, the passengers began to hear disturbing noises. that was the plane cracking and coming apart. >> we do have a potential problem in the back. i'll get back to you in a second. >> all the sudden pop, pop, pop, pop. >> on board american airlines flight 2293 frightened passengers looked on in shock.
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the plane seemingly coming apart in mid flight as the cabin's wall panels began tearing open. >> it was terrifying. we didn't know what was going on. we were all shouting for the flight crew, come look. the walls are caving in. >> the boeing 757 took off from san francisco around 1:00 p.m. monday headed for dallas. shortly after takeoff witnesses on board describe the body of the aircraft shaking violently as interior panels on both sides of the plane blew off. one passenger said nearly 45 minutes went by before the pilot decided to turn the plane around and head back to san francisco. >> let's clear the runway and have a look. >> the plane landed safely and none of the people on board were injured. american airlines said it was caused by a blown air destruct. adding no loss of pressure in the cabin and no oxygen masks
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were deployed. >> i was scared. i really was. i wasn't sure if we were going to make it. but a lot of prayer. we made it. >> the faa says they will be working with the airline to determine what went wrong before this boeing 757 gets put back into service. as for the passengers they're expected to fly to dallas later this morning. norah? >> jeff, thanks so much. more than 30 million americans face the threat of severe whether this morning. strong winds including possible tornadoes are forecast for the central and southern u.s. an outbreak of powerful storms on monday killed at least two people. danielle wilkerson is outside of atlanta. >> good morning. although we've had more than one inch of rain here so far in atlanta, it's the 60-mile-an-hour winds causing
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havoc. ch severe thunderstorms threatened alabama and killed a woman when it fell on her home. >> i heard it. he started screaming help help help, help. and everybody started running from over there and over there and across the railroad tracks and he came out of the trailer and the top of his head was split open, and the side of his face. he said, she's trapped, she's trapped. >> in nearby marion county they were struck by lightning and then caught on fire. no one was hufrt. a tornado in arkansas clocked winds as high as 135 miles an hour. this mobile home was torn apart, killing a man inside. his wife and two children were injured. in northeast louisiana, heavy winds overturned vehicles including the truck. at least 25,000 customers are without power across the region. in game three of the american league championship series was rained out due to weather in missouri that included nine
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inches of rain. the game will be played tongt. so far it has hit 11 states and this storm system will not let up until wednesday. >> daniel thanks. the cdc says it will start to rethink how it handles and treats ebola. the change comes after the first transmission in the united states. 26-year-old nina pham is fighting the disease this morning in dallas. >> she is nurse who treated the first ebola patient to die in the u.s. an ebola survivor is helping her battle. good morning. >> good morning, and good morning to viewers in the west. nina is in good spirits but officials say she's not been able to pinpoint the moment when she may have become infected. parishioners at the catholic church gathered to pray for one of their own.
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she is in isolation for ebola treatment this is her pastor. >> nina says she is fine. she is doing well. >> pham received a blood transfusion from ebola survivor dr. kent brantly yesterday as part of her treatment. jennifer joseph trained with pham at aknowing nina she would do it again. she's always willing to take on the difficult patients. >> yesterday hazmat crews took on the second phase of decontaminating her home. according to medical records, pham is one of about 70 hospital staffers who cared for thomas eric duncan. he was the first person to be diagnosed with ebola in the u.s. he died on wednesday. >> we're particularly concerned with the third process, taking off the isolation personal protective equipment. >> there are ongoing concerns about how pham became infected. the centers for disease control and prevention believe she may
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have made contact with nonsterile materials. >> if it is contaminated there's a possibility that a worker will contaminate themselves and become infected in that process. >> officials say the one person who had close contact with pham before she came to the hospital has not developed symptoms. >> thanks. topping ebola is a top concern for american officials. kennedy airport was the first in the nation to start enhanced screening. new york governor andrew cuomo tells us about the threat from the disease. >> the ebola crisis for us poses two separate problems. one is the medical public held issue. and the second is the panic anxiety issue that goes along with it. from a medical point of view it's a question of having the right protocols in place, making sure the hospitals understand the protocols. making sure personnel understand the protocols.
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making sure they have the right equipment. and we're working through that. at the same time the dialogue on ebola is -- it's amazing how quickly panic can set in. a little anxiety can be healthy. but we have to watch what we say and how we say it because panic is never productive. >> we'll have more with governor cuomo in the next hour. he's written a book on filling the shoes of his famous father. >> and president obama meets with military commanders from more than 20 countries. they'll talk about how to fight isis. people on tnd ground say so far the efforts have done little to stop the terror group. holly williams is tracking the isis advance in iraq and syria. holly, good morning. >> good morning. isis militants have captured an iraqi army cam in western baghdad, as they edge closer to total control of iraq's anbar
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province. now iraqi goltvernment forces were forced to withdraw despite u.s. air strikes aimed at pushing the extremists back. they now control a swath of territory extending from the outskirts of baghdad to the border where psi sis is battling for control of the the town of koe ban knee. and there are new reports that the extremists are using suicide bombers as they try to advance street by street. now the turkish tanks and troops are at the border. so far they have not intervened. u.s. officials said they had allowed air strikes to be launched. but yesterday they contradicted the u.s. officials and said there was no deal. turkey's leaders claim the the u.s.-led strikes are talentening the regime and in return for the help in the coalition with isis
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they want the u.s. to set up a no flyson in northern syria. . >> north korea's official state media released new pictures. he was last spotted in public nearly six weeks ago. seth is in beijing after wide speculation. seth, good morning. zblf good morning. kim jong-un is not exactly camera shy. he has been to ha number of high profile events. in fact this was the longest stretch that he was out of the public eye since he took power. >> kim jong-un was all smiles on north korea state media today. he's seen making grand gestures appearing very much in control. the accompanying state media dispatch with the north korean flourish said kim, quote, too necessary steps with loving care. comrades pictured alongside the young dictator appear to be
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pleased too. they recently traveled to south korea for a high level meeting without kim. if that prompted speculation of a spour shift, this picture says no way. kim's 40-day departure from the public eye and these images sparked question about his health and offered plenty of fodder for late night tv. >> they really started to get worried because he didn't show up at the clooney wedding. speez >> supposedly he has a number of health issues. thankly his hair is still perfect. >> the north koreans may have doubled in a little creative photo shopping in the past. president bush's top adviser on north korea says all of these rumors and jokes about kim's health has a serious sides. >> if something happens to the
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leadership, it is not at all clear what comes next. >> and this is a rogue state with nuclear ambitions. they say as long as we're focused on his whereabouts, we're distracted from the bigger issues. >> fascinating. thank you so much. and a long weekend of anti police protests in st. louis ended with dozens of people in custody. and they kept going through the evening. the anger over recent police shootings is still high. vlad, good morning. >> good morning, more than four dozen people were arrested on what was doubled moral monday. the last four days were called ferguson october. it's not just in the st. louis area but nationwide. with their arms linked a four-hour long march in ferguson missouri on monday ended at noon in front of the city's police station. . members of the clergy offered to
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hear confession from police officers. o protesters were mobilized for two months following the killing of michael brown. last month's fatal police shooting has only increaseded what some call an emergency. >> i'm here because i'm a pastor and i believe that all lives matter and black lives matter. >> 13 people were arrested for peace disturbance. st. louis county police said in a statement to cbs news this morning, arrests were not made until protesters started bumping police officer shields. the protests made its way to the edward jones dome where the rams face the 49ers for monday night football. protesters organized to bring attention to the police involved death of john crawford iii, who was killed in august while holding a bb gun inside of a walmart in ohio. the grand jury declined to indict anyone involved. this man was dragged away. >> i was arrested because i was holding a banner up on the
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stairs. >> inside, a group called young activists united came up with a list of commands. they want all officers to wear body cams and independent investigations of all fatal police shootings. >> we will organize large scale civil action against city hall. now along with the the list of demands from the young activist groups, many of the protesters want the arrest of darren williams. here's the police officer who shot 18-year-old michael brown. charlie? >> vlat thanks. the fate of seventeens all facing charges with sexual assaults on teammates in the locker room. the suspects are between 15 and 17 years old but could be tried as adults. legal analyst rikki klieman is here. will they be tried as adults? >> i think they will. first of all, middlesex county, where is where this took place,
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goes forward to look for what they call waiver into adult status. 20% of the time the state averages 12%. well, there was a case screaming out for it it's this one. now we have to remember that there are differences here. >> why is this screaming out for them to be tryied as an adult. >> this crime is either an act of delinquency or crime has attract sod much national attention. you know norah it's like sexual assault on campus. now it's an epidemic as one in five women who are sexual ilyly assaulted. when you look at this case in this town a football town, what we find here is likely going on in other places around the country. at college, university and high school levels. so i would say as a prosecutor it's to set the example. >> what's the counter argument? >> well easily the juveniles will say, look, i didn't know
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this happened to me when i was a freshman. i didn't think i was doing anything bad. i was a victim of hazing so i went forward the same way. the difficulty is when you look at the facts of the cases. you have freshmen afraid to change in the locker room. pinned to the floor and kicked by others while they're swaully assaulted. >> so will others be charge? or some coaches or some in a soup visery position? >> jongs unless they were directly involved. however, we can go back and back and back. so the child whose lawyer is the most aggressive and is the first to the courthouse who says hey, wait a minute. may boy may have done this but it was done to him. so we can go back at least three years for the time he was a freshman. the more you give up, the more you're going to get. >> this is a big story. >> thank you. >> and it's 7:19.
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ahead this morning, it's been called a seismic move by the vatican. how the catholic c from the kpix weather center. good morning everybody, we do have rain. it's moving this way. right now, out the door, this is san jose under a partly to mostly cloudy sky. temperature-wise, across the santa clara valley in the mid 50s. in fact mid 50s just about everywhere. we will also feel the difference today. cloud cover, breezy winds and much cooler 70s and 60s. light rain begins in the north bay. by the mid-afternoon hours, across remaining portion of the bay area this evening no rain -- >> announcer: this national weather report sponsored by prudential. every challenge is an opportunity. prudential, bring your challenges.
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a cancer victim plans to take her own life. this morning she wants you to know why. >> no one wants to hear that her daughter is going to die. no mother should have to lose a child. it goes against the grain of nature. >> ahead, britney maynard sits down for her first tv interview with our jan crawford. lt . >> stay tuned for your local news. "cbs this morning" sponsored by
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good tuesday morning everyone, 7:56. i'm frank mallicoat. here's what's happening around the bay area right now. a dallas nurse sick with the ebola virus receiving plasma from dr. kent brantly who recovered from the disease. 26-year-old nina pham is the first person to contract the i ebola virus in the united states. pham is the first person to contract ebola virus as i mentioned here in the u.s. thousands of people are expected to pack into downtown san francisco for the dream force convention. happening at the miss koany center today and all week. howard street between third and fourth street will be closed until saturday afternoon. and of course we have a ball game too. the giants are looking to go one up on the cardinals, it's game three of the national league championship series. and it starts at 1:00. game three at at&t park.
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after people find a dentist through us they often say. i wish i've done this sooner. don't put it off any longer call 1-800 dentist today. good morning, traveling out of valet toe looks like we're in recovery mode now. they finally cleared that traffic alert all lanes are now back open. westbound 80 approaching highway 37. that big rig has been righted and cleared out of lanes, unfortunately still seeing delays on 80 and 8:00 0. that's your late -- 680. that's your latest kcbs drive to work. robert that. in good morning everyone, currently we are in the 50s and 60s and later today we will all feel the difference with high temperatures in the 60s and 70s. rain develops to the north.
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♪ i am beyond thrilled to be here today today to support your next senator from iowa. our friend bruce bailey. you need to elect bruce bailey. leaders like bruce bailey. vote brucebailey.com. >> wow, a powerful endorsement from the first lady. it's definitely going to get bruce bailey's name out there whoever he is because the man running for senator is braley. it's an honest mistake. she must have missed the sign in front of her. she must have been distracted by the sign behind her. >> we all know we've
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mispronounced a name. jane pauley is in for gayle. good morning. >> i'll make no mistakes today. i made them all yesterday. good morning. coming up in this hour comedy star takes on a fast food giant. and the heartbreaking choice being watched around the world. brittany maynard sits down with her first tv interview with our jan crawford. she's battling brain cancer and plans to end her life. you'll also hear from her husband and her mom. it's time for the morning headlines. the washington post said microsoft will release a security for windows. a security firm says the hackers spied on nato and the ukrainian government. new york's daily news looks at another spying concern as we reported a chinese firm bought the iconic waldorf astoria
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hotel. now, the state department is reviewing the sale. the company allegedly has ties to the communist party. "the new york times" looks at what could be a dramatic shift in tone between gay people and divorces by the roman catholic church. bishops meeting at the vatican released a preliminary report. it calls on the church to welcome and accept gays along with anyone who divorced. the bishop said gays have gifts to offer the church. the report does not change church doctrine and could be revised. brittany maynard's birthday is five weeks away. she's not planning to see it. her story is restoring a national debate over medical aid in dying. jan crawford is in portland oregon, where maynard gave us her first television interview, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, brittany maynard thinks she may
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die before the end of the month. as certain as she seems to be about ending her life on her terms, there is a lot of sadness and also some fear about what's ahead. >> i don't want to die. if anyone wants to hand me like a magical cure and save my life so that i can have children with my husband, you know i will take them up on it. the. >> reporter: she's 29 years old. recently married and was hoping to start a family. now, brittany maynard is planning her death. choosing to end her life before cancer can destroy her. >> they can tell anyone who has walked a mile in my shoes and know what is they're facing have felt the -- just like bone splitting headaches that i get sometimes or the seizures or the inability to speak. or moments when i'm looking in my husband's face and i can't think of his name. >> reporter: maynard found out this spring she has the most
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lethal form of brain cancer. and said doctors told her she may only have six months to live. her medication has drastically changed her appearance. but she's decided to forego aggressive treatment and die as she puts it with dignity. >> did you have any pushback from your mother or family? >> i think it took my family a little while to realize that this is what makes sense because no one wants to hear that their daughter is going to die. no mother should have to lose a child. it like goes against the grain. >> and so many would say i just want one more day, don't end it before i have to? >> but my mother isn't selfish enough to say i want one more day where you're suffering. >> reporter: maynard was raised by her mom, a single mother in california. she had an adventurous spirit and loved to travel. with degrees in education she
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planned to be a teacher. >> the reason she's thinking about her death, part of the reason she's thinking about this is pause of the people her that she loves. >> early on i told her it would be my honor to take care of you. whichever way. if you need to be fed or diapered, it would be my honor. because that's what mothers do. >> you take care of your little girl. that was important for me for her to know. >> did you think, no i want her to be here as long as -- even if she's in bed sick i can lie down with her. >> there's absolutely that. the idea of wanting my wife to be at my side forever, that was the original plan right? but the reality that i guess, that feeds into the argument of
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quality of life versus quantity. >> reporter: maynard says she's choosing quality. after her diagnosis she moved to portland, oregon one of five states where it's legal for doctors to help terminally ill patients take their own lives. she decided to partner with the leading organization that's pushing other states to change their laws. >> i know that it's there when i need it. >> reporter: even talked about plans for a specific plan to end her life. november 1st. six days after her husband's birthday. so november 1st became kind of a date for me to almost like make it to. >> with a goal. >> yeah. >> not a death. >> that's the idea. that's a huge misconception, i feel people against this health care choice have died to make it to a deadline. and i may be alive on november 2nd and i may not. and that's my choice.
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>> reporter: her candor over death has revived a national debate over a national debate on dying. in a recent poll in the new england journal of medicine 67% say they opposed it as does the american medical association. many fear it can be abused in cases involving the elderly or disabled. dr. daniel sulmasy. >> if i were her doctor i'd certainly try to talk her out of it. i would try to tell her what the opportunities are for her to live to the fullest possible extent that she can even while she's dying. >> reporter: but maynard said it should be her choice how and when to die. >> so to people who would say, well, you're choosing to end your life that's suicide, you'd say no? >> no cancer is ending my life. i'm choosing to end it a little sooner and a lot less pain and
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suffering. >> do you ever feel like angry? >> i have at points. i have rested that now. it's mostly sadness. >> is it sadness of just everything you'll miss or is it specific things? >> yeah it's mostly -- i see most of my sadness around how much i wanted a family. and it feels like for me that was always like how you created a legacy was like through your children. and sort inadvertently to sharing my story, i've realized there's a bit of a legacy in creating this way. and i'm not ashamed of that. i'm not ashamed to attach my name to what i think is a right that should belong to all terminally ill americans, i really do. >> now brittany maynard says she doesn't know what she'll end her life. she's gotten a lot of comfort just knowing she can make that choice. you know the interesting thing is since this law took effect in
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oregon 17 years ago, more than 1,000 people have gotten prescriptions from doctors for drugs to end their life. just more than half have taken them. norah. >> jan, really incredible interview. charlie and jane and i are sitting here very touched by her decision. she's clearly very courageous. what about what she just talked to you about with her legacy now becoming part of this larger movement? >> well, you know some people have kind of almost criticized her somewhat. and the group, that's pushing for changes in these state laws. saying that this group is almost using her and using her story to try to make these changes. and i asked her about that she said, you know they may be using me to bring about the changes in the laws and to encourage wider acceptance of this practice and i'm okay with that. because this is something that i believe in. and this is something hour.
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fallon jimmy kimmel? >> jim? follow falon. >> reporter: this show is known for his wild man on the street interview us and contest. >> you win! >> oh boy. >> reporter: he shouts and yells. he's loud, he's funny. he's plain over the top. and now he's incensed over a burger king commercial he says copied his schhad tick. >> these are a $1.49 for 10. >> call it homage. >> reporter: he tweeted hey @burger king thanks for stealing my act in your new commercial except it's not funny and everyone knows you stole it. get your own ideas. >> name one christmas song that doesn't exist. >> reporter: eichner thanked his fans, as annoying to know burger
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king ripped me off your tweets are incredible. i have the best fans on the planet. see you at mcdonald's. that drew mcdonald's into the fray. the fast food giant tweeted, can't wait to see you, oh and bring elaine that. >> are you ready, elena? >> reporter: that is his on the street contestant. it's not the first time burger king has been accused of missing the target for its advertising. >> this is another example of i think, reaching. and it's not so much that they're using somebody else's idea. it's just that it's not very creative or entertaining. >> and, of course billy eichner didn't invent the man on the street interview as a comic device. you can see that anywhere from
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jay leno to jimmy kimmel. do know if chris christie from the kpix weather center. good morning everybody, we do have rain. it's moving this way. right now, out the door, this is san jose under a partly to mostly cloudy sky. temperature-wise, across the santa clara valley in the murder 50s. in fact mid 50s just about everywhere. 60 in san rafael. we will all feel the difference today. cloud cover, breezy winds and much cooler 60s and 70s. light rain begins in the north bay. by the mid-afternoon hours. across the remaining portion of the bay area this evening, no rain for giants' game. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored
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[donna]our tempur-pedic is the best thing in our house, 'cept for my husband. [lauren] wait,wait,where are you going? [announcer] visit your local retailer and discover how tempur-pedic can move you. . new jersey governor chris christie said he's still thinking about whether he'll run for president. he told the naacp over the weekend that he will never run for another office in new jersey especially one particular role. >> the only job left for me to run for is united states senate. and let me just say this i would rather die than being in the united states senate okay. i would be bored to death. could you imagine me with 99
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other people asking for a motion in the subcommittee? forget it. >> he knows himself. he knows himself well right? >> he does. >> i wonder if we'll hear from the other senators about whether they'd like chris christie -- >> especially from new jersey. you've seen chris hadfield take us on his personal space odyssey. you'll love what he captures when he turns the camera around. that's ahead on "cbs this morning."
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and good tuesday morning everyone, 7:56. i'm frank mallicoat. here's what's happening right now. a dallas nurse sick with the ebola virus received plasma from dr. kent brantly who recovered from the disease. 26-year-old nina pham is the first person to contract the ebola virus here in the u.s. overnight a u. n. working died in germany from ebola. and a woman is rescued after a car crashes down in san jose. some live pictures from down in the south bay here. her car overturned in the grass off mount hamilton road. she had to be airlifted by a helicopter. police say she is alert though and stable at this hour. and the giants are looking to get one up on the cardinals, game one is 1:00 this afternoon. at at&t park. series is tied at one game each. so go giants and that game
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good morning, unfortunately it's still a mess in vallejo. they long since cleared the vane of the traffic alert. -- scene of the traffic alert. it was by westbound 80. all lanes are back open but look at the jam-ups. into fairfield. so big delays there. southwest 680. your best -- as well as 680. your best alternate. here's a live look at the bay bridge toll plaza. still slow from pleasanton into the sunol grade on 680. that's traffic, here's roberta. in the 50s, good morning everybody. later today we will all feel the difference with the clouds and breezy conditions. 60s and 70s. wow, big cooldown. light rain cops in the north baby midday. a lingering shower wednesday. more showers by friday. insurance companies are spending millions of dollars trying to mislead you about the effects of proposition 46.
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well here's the truth: 46 will save lives. it will save money too. i'm bob pack, and i'm fighting for prop 46 because i lost my two children to preventable medical errors and i don't want anyone else to lose theirs. the three provisions in 46 will reduce medical errors and protect patients. save money and save lives. yes on 46.
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♪ good morning to our viewers in the west. it is tuesday, october 14th, 2014. welcome back to "cbs this morning." more real news ahead, including our candid interview with new york governor andrew cuomo, how he came back from political pitfalls. but first, here's a look at today's eye opener at 8:00. >> after takeoff the passengers began to hear disturbing noises. that was a plane cracking and coming apart. so far it has hit 11 states and this storm system will not let up until wednesday. tina pham has been able to communicate but so far she's not been able to pinpoint the moment when she may have become infected. isis captured an iraqi army
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when they edged closer to total control of anbar. they point out as long as we're focused on his whereabouts we are distracted from some bigger issues. seven new jersey high school players rest with the prosecute there morning. to the people who would say, well, you're choosing to end your life, that's suicide. >> no, cancer is ending my life. ground one, question oh, be quiet! $1.49 per can. >> call it an homage somebody else might call it thievery. >> hate mail here. >> i'm sorry? i know this is a joke because they don't deliver mail on columbus day so i know that's not my hate mail. >> no, i wrote these. this morning's eye opener at 8:00 is presented by walgreens. i'm charlie rose with norah
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o'donnell. gayle king is off. an airline passenger thought the front of their plane was falling off because the walls inside were coming down. american airlines flight 2293 left san francisco yesterday for dallas. it turned around an hour later when the emergency began unfolding in midair. one person took a picture of the plastic panels pulling away from the walls. the plane taxied back to the gate with almost 200 people onboard. >> no one was hurt but the scare left many onboard in shock. >> all the interior plastic panels insulation started ripping out from the sides of the aircraft. in the same row, both sides and up on the top. it was terrifying. >> american set up another plane to fly passengers to dallas this morning. the cdc calls the spread of ebola in america. 26-year-old nurse fights the disease. nina pham treated an ebola patient in dallas me died last
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week. authorities are checking up on 50 people found may have made contact with. >> the nurse received a plasma transfusion from dr. kent brantly. he survived the disease in august. a medical work for the united nations lost his fight with ebola this morning in a german hospital. the 56-year-old man worked in liberia. he tested positive last week. local skepticism of ebola and treatment are only helping the virus spread in west africa. new numbers show 8900 cases worldwide. the virus killed nearly 4500 people so far. we are in the liberian capitol of monrovia where doctors are working to reduce fear. >> good morning. shock and denial are slowly changing in monrovia. communities get directly involved in the fight against ebola. crucial to halting the spread of the disease is extracting those infected from their communities and getting them to treatment centers as quickly as possible. these extraction workers are on
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yet another run. they've been called to the sprawling slum of west point where a spike in ebola deaths this past summer led to a brief quarantine of the entire area. walking through the narrow alleys these men perform one of the most dangerous jobs in the battle against ebola. this man shows symptoms of the disease as he's placed in the ambulance, anxious eyes take notice. he is then taken to the doctors without borders ebola treatment center. the center has 250-bed capacity and is run under strict rules of hygiene and protection. many of the staff working here are lieberians who offer the services to rid their country of this terrible virus. >> the training never really ends and it shouldn't. there needs to be on going training and need to always be hypervigilant. >> reporter: this doctor is one of the world's top viralists. he used to work in the ivory
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tower of georgetown university, the far cry from the makeshift doctors without borders treatment unit to which he has volunteered his time and skills. he can't praise his liberian colleagues enough. >> it's incredible bravery and you know also they're helping to protect me. everyone has to trust everyone else. >> reporter: amidst the horror slivers of hope. these two survivors placed a handprint on the wall to mark their incredible recovery. dr. lucy tells us about a family of three that he treated and ended up walking out of the clinic ebola free. at first he thought the 3-year-old child would not make it. >> mom and dad were here but they were both quite sick. then they recovered adequately and took turns. the mom and dad took turns helping the 3-year-old daughter and now today it's one of the best days of my life because they're here. >> reporter: psychologists are on hand to assist even doctors
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deal with grief, but more importantly they are there to help patients with ebola who often end up dying alone. and for those lucky enough to survive, they help reintegration into commune youities who are sometimes at stra out cast. a school bus is one place you expect your kids to be in safe hands. that was bltn't the case yesterday on a hue we utah highway. a school bus with nearly 70 elementary children onboard for a field trip. the driving was so erratic one of the adult chaperones called 911 from inside the bus. >> she can't stay in the lane. she's crossing the double lines. and it's -- the adults are getting scared. >> okay. i am obviously shaking at this point. >> wow. well, police arrested the driver martinez. officials say she took prescription drugs before the trip. no one on the bus or the road
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editor in chief liz is here along with our own dr. holly phillips. good morning, both of you. >> good morning. >> the doctors that you polled say that they welcome their patients' e-mails within reason. really? >> i don't know a single doctor who will accept my e-mails but we talked to one surgeon for example, who said i want you to feel comfortable heading into surgery. if you have 30 questions, send me 30 e-mails but don't expect 30 e-mails back and may call you and answer all of your questions. >> holly, isn't that a distraction for a doctor to be fielding e-mails all day? >> jane for some things it's efficient. never e-mail your doctor about something urgent because he might not get to it until the end of the day. it's good for specific things, maybe follow up from an a pointment, if you're asking questions about a medication. it is not the place to list all of your symptoms and hope to come out with a diagnosis. >> liz you also found out doctors said they're not worried about a google search. what do you mean? >> yeah, i thought that doctors would roll their eyes when you
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walk in with three inches of every study that affects every one of your simp. tom s symptoms. they say that's an informed patient and that means they're going to have a good conversation. >> what don't doctors like? >> they don't like when you're on your phone texting. and they don't like when you're late to the appointment and they often are late themselves but there's usually a good reason for that. >> wouldn't it be better in a waiting room where we're all waiting, waiting room waiting in the waiting room for an appointment at "x" o'clock that doctors should find a way to say, sorry for the delay. we had an emergency. >> that's a good point, jane. an explanation, a heads up or explanation. one doctor said if i'm in the next room and i'm talking to a teenager who just admitted that she might have suicidal sentence difficults i'm going to spend an extra 15 minutes with you. and i'm not going --
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>> people would understand that. >> and if you're somebody who has never gone double the time with your doctor you're at one of the will uky ones. >> also, that's a good thing. when your doctor's waiting room is packed it's a pain if you're the one waiting. on the other hand, you want the type of doctor who is going to take the extra time with you if you're the one who needs it. >> tell me how to address the second opinion question. >> i love second opinions. i have to say, i don't -- i've never experienced it as something where doctors are undermining each other. you know two sets of doctors' eyes on a difficult case is better than one. i often seek second opinions myself. if i have a difficult case one of the first things i do, i call it the phone a friend option. i pick up and i call a colleague. >> you're a doctor. do you think you represent the majority opinion? >> i do think most doctors phone each other, ask for advice. if you do it within reason and you're open about it i think most doctors would welcome second opinions. >> that's what you found in your survey?
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>> yeah. they do. it either validates what i've done and gives the patient more confidence or i've learned something. >> it's not a vote of no confidence? >> if it's a different path then it might be -- we have to have more of a conversation or maybe i just didn't know enough or i didn't -- this wasn't my area of expertise. >> it's probably helpful for the patient to explain to the doctor what is it about the second opinion that they think would help them. it's not an insult to the doctor. it is just my own ability to understand and feel better. >> doctors get involved. if there's something where the case doesn't feel like it's going the way it should, sometimes i will actually suggest a person for them to see as a second opinion or as a specialty referral. it's not -- it's not that you have to do it in secret. your doctor can help you with that process. >> this is helpful. really great piece. really enjoyed it. thank you. and polls show most americans support medical aid in dying but most doctors don't. the cancer patient's choice is
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sparking conversation and debate. we'll talk to one of the world's leading cancer experts, our own dr. david next here on "cbs this morning." cbs morning rounds sponsored by move free ultra. just one tiny pill a day for more comfortable joint movement. day for more comfortable joint movement. free. just one for more comfortable movement.
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♪ as we've been showing you this morning, 29-year-old brittany maynard is starting a national conversation about choosing the way to die. maynard has terminal brain cancer. she moved to oregon where doctors are allowed to help patients end their lives. in her first television interview maynard explains her choice to jan crawford. >> i don't want to die, if anyone wants to hand me like a magical cure and save my life so i can have children with my husband, you know i will take them up on it. but we haven't been able to find that. and the way that i would die, just according to this disease is terrible. the availability of being able to take a medication that allows me to slip into a sleep inside
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minutes and pass away most likely within the half hour sounds a lot better to me just as a human being. >> our dr. david agus is director of the west side cancer center at the university of southern california. he's treated patients with the disease. good morning. we obviously want to hear your comments about the controversy on how to handle this. but what does she face medically and psychologically. >> maynard suffers from disease of the brain. as the disease progresses and it gets larger there's symptoms ranging from seizure, and the inability to be your yourself performing the activities that we do in our life and losing our dignity many times. >> dr. agus brittany speaks so eloquently
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saw the mri in the piece. that disease is say good portion of her brain. and it's just getting larger exponentially. the disease will win here. i don't think that's disputable. >> dr. agus there are currently five states that aid in dieing is legal. in other states what do they offer for patients who are terminally ill? >> well we can alleviate many cancer. we can take away pain. we can take away the symptoms that you may have but at the same time we can't restore dignity. and it's very important to distinguish those two. i look at the brittany. again, she's a hero for what she did because she brought this to
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the national discourse. i look at this an indictment a failure of the medical system two-fold. one is we can't treat this horrible cancer. and the second is she and most cancer patients don't trust physicians to be able to alleviate most of the symptoms at the end of life and restore dignity. >> so knowing what you know if you were a doctor in oregon and she came to you, and said this is what i want to do what would you tell her? >> first, i'd go through what i could do to sa leaveev alleviate her symptoms but it's her value system. and makes the decision based on her value system. it's not up to the physician to tell a patient what to do. it's a partner system based on the value system and what she believes in, she needs to make the right decision for her. >> thank you dr. agus. the battle grows to martha stewart's not so subtle glance at gwyneth paltrow.
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virus is receivi good morning, it's 8:5. i'm michelle griego. a dallas nurse sick with the ebola virus is receiving plasma from dr. kent brantly who recovered from the disease. 26-year-old nina pham is the first person to contract the ebola virus in the united states. thousands of people are expected to pack into downtown san francisco for the dreamforce convention. it's happening at the moscone center. howard street between third and fourth street will be closed until saturday afternoon. and the san francisco giants are looking to get one up on the st. louis cardinals. game three of the national league championship series starts just after 1:00 today at at&t park. the series is tied at one game each. stay with us, traffic and weather in just a moment.
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thank you! dedicated bankers born to go the extra mile. you've been such a big help. it's what i like to do. so you can choose a bank where helping people comes first. chase. so you can. good morning, unfortunately we have a lot of slow traffic out the door for some pretty brutal commutes. including on 780 both directions now. just the crashes we're watching the latest in benicia. several cars and involved and also involving a big rig. eastbound 780 at military west and the fatal crash westbound 780 still partially blocked that connector to eastbound 80. a live look at a super crowded san mateo bridge. jammed solid behind the toll plaza back up to 880 and obviously very heavy delays along the flat section of the
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span getting out to foster city. and northbound 880. this is pretty tight spot as well. 40 minutes is that drive time between 238 and the macarthur maze. here's roberta. what a difference a day makes, let's head to the beach where currently mostly cloudy skies at ocean beach. we have areas of patchy fog as well. and much cooler temperatures. now from the beach to the ballpark, 1:00 game time. 63-degrees. a bit on the breezy side. as the giants play host to the cardinals. it looks like currently we are in the 50s and 60s and everyone will notice a difference today with the clouds. 60s and 70s across the board. light rain showers develop in the north baby the mid- afternoon. -- bay by the mid-afternoon hours gradually sliding to the south. will not interfere with today's banal game. meanwhile -- baseball game. meanwhile a lingering shower on wednesday. cloudy cool. breezy thursday and more rain on friday. then again on monday. make it a great day. go giants!
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♪ according to new estimates adult halloween costumes will outsell kids' costumes by $320 million this year. [ cheers and applause ] even crazier, adult costumes use half the fabric. [ laughter ] >> that is so good. i just say, my costume i think costs twice as much as my kids' costumes. >> do you want to tell us what it is? >> no it will be revealed. >> i'm going as a 64-year-old woman. it's my birthday. welcome back. coming up in this half hour astronaut chris hadfield is in the green room. he's bringing us back to earth with stunning images. >> all right. have you finished?
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we have governor andrew cuomo in an interview that you'll see only on "cbs this he opens up about his father's legacy. we also learned how personal setbacks shaped the man and the candidate he is today. that's ahead. right morning, time to show you some of this morning's headlines. the new york post looks into a bizarre smoke bombing. it shows a man crawling out of a subway hatch. he threw two smoke bombs. it gets stranger. a rival restaurant denies playing a role. no one gets hurt. crumbs bake shop went under this summer 48 locations closed but saved from bankruptcy by a businessman and the chain plans to open 16 stores. and it will also introduce a line of ice cream in the
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supermarket. >> jane when crumbs went under, gayle was despondent. i think she went to the store and got the last black and white cookie. she's on vacation but she'll be singing. there's a future between martha stewart and gwyneth paltrow. the huffing post said stewart fired a shot saying conscious couples is a perfect crust. cbs san francisco says 49ers quarterback colin kaepernick -- >> speaks of your faves. >> he's a nice looking man. he got into hot water for wearing his pink beats headphones it's got tape on the beats logo.
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a week ago he wore the same phones and was fined $10,000. the legal restricts the wearing of the unlicensed brand. and police in michigan forced police to replace its license plate. the old plate on top was voted the world's best by the automobile license plate collector association but it features bright colors and bright letters. police say they're too hard to read. the new plates have a more muted background and black letters. and "the wall street journal" listed a growing problem in china. bus riders relocating bus stops. sometimes, it's businessmen who move the poles indicating a stop. they want buss to let off near their shops. other times, folks don't want to walk so far. for the bus drivers, it's a real headache. buses are the main way china's 1.4 billion people get around. >> that's entrepreneurship right? move the bus stop.
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u.s. governor and drewrew cuomo leads the election by 31%. the democrat learned about political power at an early age. andrew cuomo's first run for office ended in a collapse. it was followed by a public divorce divorce. and the new book "all things possible" i spoke with governor cuomo in his first interview about the book. >> i had a blessed youth in many ways. and in my career i was doing great. i was in washington. i was one of the youngest cabinet secretaries. i was in the white house, i was flying around on air force one. everything was great. and then it seemed back -- >> married to a kennedy. >> yep, it seemed like one day i woke up and all of a sudden everything was terrible.
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it was living my nightmare. i came back. came to new york after a great time in washington. and i ran for office. the same office that my father held. with distinction for 12 years. and it was a disaster. >> you had to withdraw. >> right. >> his book governor andrew cuomo documents his rise and fall in politics and in life including his unsuccessful bid for governor in 2002. and a year later his separation from wife kerry kennedy. you didn't want a divorce? >> no. >> you believed you could work it out you believed you had problems as many marriages have problems? >> you know denial was a powerfuls for. i just literally blotted it out. i was sure that i could fix it. up until that point i had always been successful in fixing things. and i was going to fix this. and my wife at the time kept saying i want a divorce. but i just couldn't hear it.
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and it became real when a reporter said i'm reporting ton, and it's going to be in the newspaper. >> you knew what politics was like from your father and his life because he was a politician. away from home. away from home at crucial times for you. do you repeat that yourself if you're a politician so you're not there and you're distracted and you're not devoting as much time to home as you probably do now? >> i did repeat it early on. and that was a mistake. my girls were born while i was in washington. i was in the company cabinet, and we were working all the time. i took too much time from my family. i took too much time from my marriage. and i paid for it. i have not made that mistake the second time around. >> how do you know? >> because i have spent so much time with my daughters that they say please go to work.
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please, don't you have something to do? you're a governor. can't you please find something to do and leave us alone. >> governor cuomo also has a line in year relationship with sandra lee of television's food network. >> to find another woman helps you come to grips with what happened as well? >> yes. now running as a second term for governor andrew cuomo is re-establishing a family dynasty in new york politics though he's had to get rid of criticism of his leadership style. >> while you micromanage, you should delegate more. >> right. and you're not transparent, they say. >> yeah, i know. >> and they say, you don't suffer fools. >> yeah. >> and you push too hard. >> yeah. >> you micromanage. >> yes. all of that. do you plead guilty or not guilty? >> you can't have one without the other. i plead guilty. i work very hard. >> you know you say to people
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if there's something about andrew cuomo you don't like andrew cuomo, the governor of new york says it is only because i am the way i am that we've had the success we've had. that's what you said. >> yes, i believe that. i believe that. i'm not sitting on a beach in south of france saying go ahead, guys you run it. good luck. i'm a delegator. >> that's where you come from. that's your tradition. >> that's who i am. that's what i told the people of this state. >> of course he's up for re-election. do you think he runs for president? >> i think he would like to be president. i think it's in his blood. we talked about his father who made a decision on the tarmac not to enter the new hampshire primary. and many people thought he would. and he was a front-runner at that time. clearly thinks about it. it's in his blood. he also talked about some of the political issues the commission that he had created had
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cancelled and he was embarrassed by that and wait it was perceived. so,en interesting man. >> charlie, had his father written a book? >> he has, yes. >> i mean before -- what i'm getting at do you write a book because you're thinking about your future in the white house? >> people do it becomes the campaign narrative. hillary clinton just wrote a book about her previous four years. >> sure. >> what's interesting is the relationship between the two of them. they still talk all the time yet, they very different people. >> yeah great interview. great interview. you might have heard that song before well astronaut chris hadfield is in our
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>> look at what happened at motocross in west virginia. a biker slid control and the man in the orange shirt. he nimbly walked away without injury and without interrupting his cell phone call. >> perfect timing. >> perfect timing. >> he's lining up a date for the night. he didn't want to hang up. he's like, i'm making plans. >> wow. all right. it may look like expensive abstract works of heart. but these images are actually
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the breathtaking photos of our planet taken from space by colonel chris hadfield. he's one of the most accomplished astronauts in history. and his new book reveals a visually stunning tour of earth from his adventures aboard the international space station. it's called "you are here around the world in 92 minutes." chris hadfield welcome back to studio 57. >> thank you. >> first of all, it's everybody's dream to see the world from outer space, these images. how many pictures did you take? >> nasa doesn't give us time to take any pictures. they just felt that the views should be compelling. when i should have been sleeping i took about 42 dozens of pictures. cameras don't last long because of the radiation up there. we keep about eight cameras near the window in the big belly of
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the space station. >> how does this change you? >> i think it gives you a real understanding of the world. not your own part of the world, but sort of a percolated view of the rest. but you see the whole thing unanimously, uniformly, in 92 minutes, as it says in the book around and around, and that starts to seep into you the fact that we're all into this together. >> you don't see the same shot over and over again because your orbit changes? >> our orbit stays fixed sort like a ball on a string. and every time you come around you see something new. we were there halfway around the sun so the seasons changed in the world. it's like the world revealed itself every time it came around with a new view. >> it's interesting that the most common request a person would make take a shot of -- >> my hometown. that delighted me. my son sent me a note dad, ask everybody what they want you to take a picture of?
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i asked, hey, everybody -- my hometown. >> it's not just narcissism but the fact that people are proud of where they are from. but how does that fit in and how do they look in perspective to the rest of the world. that was revealing to me. >> you can see like the lights of manhattan can you see the city that's lit up? >> eastern seaboard of the u.s. is so distinctive it's even clearer than the daytime. >> what does it look like? >> it looks like -- there's a difference between day and night. you can see central park so clearly. the naked eye does so much better job than the camera. you can pick out the statue of liberty. >> how many tens of thousands of feet? >> 1.3 million feet. about 270 miles, something out there, depends. >> asking you know your favorites, but, i think you saved the best for last.
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south america, the south america section, is just page after page mind-boggling. >> i think part of it is you don't fly across south america in airliners on the way to anywhere. going somewhere. going back. for a lot of people that look in a book they're not familiar with what that part of the world looks like from the air. we crossed it thousands of time in the variety from the glaciers to the huge expanses of the farmland. and the dryness of chile it's gorgeous, and the amazon. >> would it be possible to have a camera 92 minutes, what it looks like what you can see from your eyes? >> we have that from the space station now, charlie. but the difference is a person with a camera can be going, wow, catch a glimpse of the sun for just a second as it flashes by. or shadow is so important, dawn picture. if you're looking at manhattan, if you catch it at dawn the
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tall buildings are shadowed on a river. or you can pick out the dune us of australia. the colors very much depending on the time of day. the trained eye makes a big difference in not just recording the world but seeing it. >> you were a professional photographer train photographer, you produce mine art? >> the people at nasa would despair for you to say i'm not a trained photographer. the world is so beautiful, you do your best to take pictures of. >> what did you think of the movie "gravity"? >> i enjoyed it. but the visual -- they're the most compelling visuals of any space movie ever made. i've been out on two space walks, sort of like on the cover of the book. and that sense of not being on the world looking at the universe but being in the universe, with the world, that parallel bottomless huge vast
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>> i lucky dog went from the streets of puerto rico to an internet doggy sensation. model july january schratter adopted the stray. more than 16,000 instagram followers keeping track. >> man, having an owner who's a model who appears to not have a shirt. >> all right. that does it for us be sure to tune into the "cbs evening news"
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good morning everyone, it's 8:55. i'm michelle griego. a dallas nurse sick with the ebola virus is receiving plasma from dr. kent brantly who recovered from the disease. 26-year-old nina pham is the first person to contract the ebola virus in the united states. overnight a u. n. worker died in germany from ebola. a woman is rescued after her car crashes in san jose down an embankment. her car overturned in the grass off mount hamilton head. police say he is alert and -- she is alert and stable. the san francisco giants are looking to get one up on the st. louis cardinals. game three of the national league championship series starts just after 1:00 today. at at&t park. the series is tied at one game each and roberta, good baseball weather today. it will be good baseball
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weather today. michelle the rain will hold off for that game. good morning everyone, let's head outdoors right now. this is the scene in mount vaca. wow, beautiful view. today we have cloud cover and some areas of patchy fog. temperatures 50s and 60s currently. later today for that gable became if you're lucky enough to go, game time temperature in the 60s with the clouds and some breezy conditions. go giants. meanwhile, today's numbers coming down. 60s and 70s south and southwest winds up to 25 miles per hour. light rain develops in the north baby mid-afternoon. a lingering shower early on wednesday. more rain friday and monday. that's your weather. elizabeth with traffic up next.
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good morning, it's still a pretty brutal commute out the door. more and more accidents continue to come in and this one for a while was blocking all lanes coming into daly city northbound 280 at hickey boulevard. they just reopened one lane. traffic is jammed though from san bruno. also out the door, southbound 880 approaching 238. there's a tweet from kcbs. letting noway it is slow pushing through 238 possibly still blocking all lanes. ♪ i thought it'd be bigger. ♪
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wayne: time to be rich! you won a car! you're going to miami! (giggling): man, how you doing? jonathan: it's a designer watch. (screams) - oh my gosh you're so beautiful. - i'm going to go for the big deal! jonathan: it's time for “let's make a deal.” now here's tv's big dealer wayne brady! wayne: hey, everybody, welcome to “let's make a deal,” i'm wayne brady. thank you so much for tuning in, a special “let's make a deal,” why because this is our breast cancer awareness show. so thank you so much for tuning in. and thank you for all of our friends for showing up. much love to all of our survivors in the home audience and also here. let's get down to it. i'm looking for a woman-- well, hello. but one who can't say no. (cheers and applause)
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