tv CBS Overnight News CBS November 9, 2015 3:00am-4:01am PST
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>> when you write in a book that you have pathologic disease. it is not cured. maybe it is right. maybe it is wrong. those are pretty tough charges. >> trump's a racist. >> it's larry david. what are you doing, larry? >> trump made light of criticisms appearing on "saturday night live." >> ied they're if i yelled that they would give me $5,000. >> as a businessman i can fully respect that. >> saturday, marco rubio inching up in the polls, released two years of missing charge card statements. trump and gop rivals hit the florida senator over his messy finances. saying he irresponsibly used state paerd american express
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card for political and personal spending. the campaign says from 2005 to 2008, rubio spent $182,000. $22,000 were personal charges. personal expenses the campaign identified include $3,800 on tiling for rubio's home, rubio says he pulled out the wrong card. the campaign says rubio paid american express directly for personal charges and taxpayer funds were never used for any of the expenses. >> thank you very much. john dickerson will moderate the cbs news democratic presidential debate we mentioned that is saturday, november 14th here on cbs. u.s. intelligence officials now say it was likely a bomb that took down a russian passenger jet over egypt last week. they're not 100% sure because they haven't examined the evidence themselves. that could change now that russia formally requested the fbi's help. more now from allen pizzey. >> mourners filled the cathedral
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in st. petersburg to remember the victims of the downed russian airliner. the cathedral bell tolled 224 times. one for each soul aboard when the plane plunged into the sinai desert. russian and egyptian emergency workers held their own memorial ceremony at the crash site yesterday. a noise in the final second of the voice recorder they uncovered is reporting to a bomb on board. there was no indication of technical problem and no emergency call. piece of wreckage have been flown to moscow, the russians asked the fbi to assist in analysis. lax security for cargo handlers and stach with access to aircraft. led several air lanes to restrict tourists e vakt waited to carry on baggage only. security agents brought sniffer dogs to check nationals heading home. in response to the exodus, egyptian officials went on the defensive. complaining that foreign
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intelligence agencies hadn't worked with egypt or shared intelligence on the crash. this recent video from isis in syria congratulates its sinai branch for bringing down the plane in retaliation for russian air strikes in syria. on face the nation today, senator gillebrand who sits on armed services committee says if isis was involved. >> it would seem to bea different level of capacity we have not seen in the past. oft y that would cause grave concern for many of us who focus on >> worth noting not only did the sinai branch of isis claim responsibility. so far, none of the group boasts have been proven false. jeff. >> the first free national elections in 25 years were held in myanmar, known as beurma. official results tomorrow. the party will take power after spending most of two decades
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under house arrest. she leads berma's democratic opposition. cbs news learned details in the fatal shooting of a 6-year-old boy awe tisic boy. the boy's fine ral is tomorrow afternoon. two officers from marxville, louisiana have been charged with his murder. rancher >> reporter: the shooting happened in marksville. it ended on a dead end road. a third officer's bed cody came recorded the shooting. >> how key to this case its that officer's bed camera snu. >> the video is compelling. it gave us some clear information of exactly what we saw at the time. that they out litzed the gunfire. >> did you intend to kill the father and son. >> reporter: cbs news learned that both officers told investigators, christopher few tried to ram his sportage suv into their patrol car. this its the car. damage appears to be a 4 inch
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cut to the hood. >> doesn't look like they tried to ram the police car? >> there is nothing coming up saying based on why the officers affected the stop. not materializing right now. >> reporter: your word the i don't remember what they were, verbatim. something to the effect of jeremy martis did not deserve this. >> that little boy, 6 years old. >> i heard you say that little boy did not suffer? do you believe that? >> he did not suffer at all. and i'm thankful for that. >> reporter: state police investigators say christopher few didn't have a gun and didn't have an jut standing warrant for his arrest. stow why the officers tried or wanted to pull him over is unclear. >> reporter: were 18 shots excessive? >> if it is not justified it's excessive. >> reporter: in attempt to get officers' side of stoert we have tried to find out which attorneys are representing them. as of tonight we have not been successful. tomorrow morning, the officers,
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30 african-american football players at university of missouri say they're on strike. and they won't play again until the university president tim wolf resigns or is removed. the latest in protests against the school's handling of race relations on campus. >> reporter: university of missouri president tim wolf in the middle of a firestorm after
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a number of rashl lyrashl racia charged incidents. the team locking arms and he says he stand with his players. it comes a day after more than 30 black football players announced they will not participate in team activities until wolf its removed or resigns due to his "negligence towards marginalized students experiences." protesters say wolf has the not done enough to hear their concerns. in today's statement, wolf says his administration has been doing a tremendous amount of reflection on how to address these complex matters and wants to create the safe space for a meaningful conversation that promotes change. the same type of wording he used while talking to protesters last week. >> i want to talk. i want to understand this. i want to come up with a way we can get progress made on these particular issues. >> reporter: in response today the advocacy group, concerned student 1950 tweeted wolfe is on the wrong side of history.
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the racial tensions on campus started earlier this year. most recently, a swastika was found in a residents hall drawn with human feces. students reported having racial slurs yelled at them in two incidents. that led the chance lr to plead for an end to racism on campus. >> it is not. let's stop this. let's end hatred and racism at missou. >> butler doesn't think enough has been done the he went on a hunger strike last week saying he is willing to die unless wolf steps down. the two met last night. on twitter today, butler says he is extremely unsatisfied. he still has the no true plan for change. >> reporter: the team did not hold practice today. the missouri athletic director put out a statement saying the focus is on the health of jonathan butler and don't want to return until but low starts moving. tigers have three games left in
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the sea sop. including one scheduled saturday against brigham young. thank you very much. in california fishing season for the crab has been delayed due to high levels of a neurotoxin. an environmental problem. crab is a $60 million a year industry. >> reporter: in november, this are bar south of san francisco should have boats scouring the ocean. their pots filled with dungeoness crab. >> we spent $40,000 getting everything ready. >> reporter: a season that commercial fishermen know is in jeopardy. >> this is by far the only year we have been in the parking lotto polot, opposed to catching crab and eating them. >> reporter: eating them now is out of the question. finding high levels of domoic acid in crabmeat. if pacific waters stay warm, the
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crab is poisonous. if the water is cool the toxins will naturally dissipate. the season could be salvaged. >> this is out of the fishermen's hands. we have to wait until the product is safe. i have kids. wouldn't want to bring the pro de duct home. >> the pain extend past the fishermen to here. the fresh crab served is from alaska. that season is all most over. this time of year, the big draw is the dungeoness crab and it is revered. >> tradition in the city. crab at christmas. even if you have turkey. you will have crab. >> holiday dungeoness its bread and butter for fishermen. accounting for half of their income. >> there is going to be a financial impact. thanksgiving comes around. a big money making event.
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and it's gone. >> reporter: if the ocean waters stay warm. >> could mean us losing all the stuff we have. having to sell off our boats. >> never had a situation, where the grab, 400,000 pounds of crabs in the restaurant. >> predicted torrential rains haven't arrived. but el nino may have california in its claws. up next in this news job market, what companies are daug to keep workers from leaving. -- what companies are doing to keep workers from leaving. well, things in the bedroom have always been pretty good.
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>> tow employment is up 130,000. as a result when they polled h.r. managers. the number one thing is retension. 78% of firms said we have got to keep emplyies on board. >> the" how they are keeping the employees then? >> salaries number one. flexibility is huge. it's number two on the list. and there is sort of a weird race in a lot of come president tiff fields to -- competitive fields to keep the people employed. technology which is competitive right now. they're saying, salary. flexibility. but they're also saying parental leave. we are seeing places like apple and facebook say, hey, women you can freeze your eggs here for flexibility. gone are the day has the perks that keep you chained to your desk, free food, fooz ball tables, they're off the mainstream list. >> you mentioned perks, big businesses are bringing in.
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tech companies. smaller employers can't afford them? >> they can't afford them. they can afford something probably more meaningful to m ployies. called engagement. how psyched your people are to show up at work. so, when we look at the polling by gallup. a third of m ployies now are engaged. what does it moon to be an engaged employee. means according to m ployiemplo trust my boss is going to appreciaty, help me advance, going to give me tools to succeed. will give me goals i can achieve. these are the things that are building two way loyalty and relationships long lasting. i think this is the next wave of employ employer/employee relations. >> jill, thank you. >> thank you. >> still ahead here, ground opens up and swallows cars. at a pancake house.
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who does he think he is, charlie rose? >> i got you. >> no, no, you don't have me. >> in the middle of fear and panic. people stepped up to help one another. >> good morning from the top of the new one world trade center. >> well are going to give you the first look at the spectacular views from the tallest building in the western hemisphere. >> people always say they love their fans. there really is something special about you and your fans. >> you and i have been friends for a while. >> i'm thinking so far, so good. >> welcome back to cbs this morning. >> said it would be a good morning. >> best ever. >> no one has ever had a better year. >> i'm star struck to be here. >> yes, that's fantastic. >> i'll behere every day. >> we are in good company with this one. >> oh, oh. >> cbs, everybody. >> hello. >> hello. ♪ ♪
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>> cbs in the morning, so y'all keep watching. a. >> a car chase in santa ana, california. after leading police on a slow speed chase. at one point firing a gun. a suspect refused to get out of his vehicle. a s.w.a.t. team moveden used a smoke bomb to end the standoff. suspect apparently threatened to commit suicide. he was safe low arrested.
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government officials say the mysterious flying object seen in the southwest last night is nothing to be concerned about. a missile, unarmed. test fired from a submarine off southern california. many floated wild theories about the light seen as far away as arizona. clean-up continues in meridian, mississippi following a frightening collapse. the ground suddenly gave way as you can see in the parking lot of an ihop, swal led a dozen vehicles. no one was hurt. officials say not a sinkhole. haven't said what it was. trip to the mall ended poorly for an alligator in texas. this weekend. he was captured. as you see. before he made it across the parking lot. in sugarland, texas. the gator, 12 feet, 800. believed to be 50 years old. >> coming up, tattoo artists and their bodies of work up for auction. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
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finally tonight. tattoos may no longer be rare. find them in every segment of society. they're heading into a rare new world. the exclusive art world. and the auction block. michelle miller has the story. >> reporter: often misunderstood. tattoos have been used as cultural tradition all over the world. brought state side by servicemen post world 2 they came to signify, rebellion, badge of courage and everything in between. >> when i cam up the only people who wore tattoos were people who lived on the utsd simentd of the tracks or in the navy. now they're getting the attention of sophisticated art dealers and auction executives, president of gurnsey's auction house. >> i wasn't familiar with the
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motion of tattoo art on anything other than the body. when i viewed the material for the first time. i saw a coffee table looking book featuring an artist. >> the famous horioti, iii. ettinger called and asked for a copy. >> they called me back and said which one do you want. there are ten of them. if the makes it very, very clear there are enormous followings. >> reporter: over 100 pieces of original tattoo art from some of the world's most prominent ka too artists. the eye taking visual are painted on canvas, board, paper. >> some are colorful. >> it includes works from american traditional artist, bob roberts. swiss artist, phillip lu. and the notorious. >> this is the top of the game. >> this one.
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>> this artist. >> according to a survey. one in five u.s. adults has a tattoo. even with the increase in popularity, it is still uncertain to who will be bidding in this auction? . >> it's always a surprise. >> another surprise. the price. >> there are a numb were in the tens of thousands. $30,000. $40,000. >> i bet you 50% of the work will get sold to people who don't hatch tattoos. but see the excitement, beauty in some of the works. >> you are saying, you are starting something. >> we are starting something, maybe something big. >> michelle miller, cbs news, new york. >> that's the overnight news. for some the news continues. check back later for the morning news and chris this morning. from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm jeff glore.
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this is the "cbs overnight news." welcome to the "cbs overnight news." i'm jeff glor. lineups set for the republican debates. it will look different. donald trump and ben carson center stage. surrounded by john kasich. jeb bush. marco rubio. ted cruz, carly fiorina. and rand paul. four candidates in the polls will join an earlier debate. lindsay graham and george pataki were not invited this time. latest poll of likely gop voters shows donald trump, leading carson by two points. 25% to 23%. carson is fighting off charges he embellished part of his life story. including whether heave was offered a full scholarship to west point. he sat down with john dickerson
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of face the nation. >> dr. carson. wanted to start with back and forth that took a place in a note in your autobiography. being offered a spot at west point. here's something you said at a press conference friday. >> i never said i received a full scholarship. wait a minute. don't lie. i never said that i received a full scholarship. nowhere did i say that. >> full scholarship is how west point refers to the tuition program. you told scharly rose about a full scholarship back on october 9. let's listen to that. >> i was offered a full scholarsip to west point, meet moore. my pathway would be medicine. >> straighten all this out for us. >> i said it was offered. i didn't say i received it. it was, in the process of a -- a banquet. a lot of military officials there. they were very impressed with my
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incredible rise to city executive officer. faster than any one had every undt that before. and said, well we would be able to get you a full scholarship to west point. i said, that's wonderful. and i was very flattered by that. but i had already determined that i was going to go to -- onto college and onto medical school. so, you know, that's what happened. i said i was offered that. that was not something that i wanted to take. i have tremendous admiration for west point. which is why i included the story. tremendous admiratn for the people who served in our country. but, you know for people to try to take this and twist it. and make it seem look something dishonest. it seems like dishonesty itself. >> the scrutiny you are receiving. senator obama received some about his autobiography. hillary clinton got things wrong in the stories she told. this seems to be a -- something
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that happens to candidates. do you think you are getting a special scrutiny with, with these investigations that you referred to? >> there its no question i am getting special scrutiny. because, you know there are a lot of people who are very threatened. and then, you know they seem recent head to head polling against hillary. and they're worried. no question about it. and every single day, every other day, or every week. you know they're going to come out with you said this when you were 13. you did this. you did. and the whole point is to -- distract the populous. distract me. you have a real scandal. something that is really important. let's talk about that. you know. yesterday, "the wall street journal" comes out and says, well he reports in this book he took the psychology course. we want to yale. no such course. there was no such scam.
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what happened to reporting. because we were able to find the article. and it will be coming out in the next day or two. showing what happened with that psychology course. why do people put this stuff out there t. to make the accusation to try to make somebody seem dishonest. when it is disproven. oh. let's talk about something else. you said this in kindergarten. give me a break. so many important things need to be talked about. >> let me ask you a question about a popular facebook you wrote. answering questions, supporters had brought up in terms of your political experience. you said, the signers of the declaration independence, people were not professional politicians on the list. the presidents were men in public life. commanded troops. or they had been in the cut and thrust of public conversation for a long time. where would you point your supporters for that experience
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in your background? >> i would say we all have different experiences in life. and that our country was designed for citizens, statesman, not career politicians. and i have had, lots of experiences in life, growing up, experiencing every single economic level. a whole multitude of different jobs. appointed neurosurgery at a young age. it wasn't on the map. working very hard over the years to establish it as a very important program. and in the united states. so by 2008. u.s. news and world report ranked it number one in the nation. experience on corporate boards. international. busine business. domestic business. starting a national scholars program which is active in all 50 states. reading room program that have won national award that are only given to one organization.
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in the country. out of tens of thousands. thament tea a lot sxuf peer yens. and in terms of the two and three --:00 in the morning phone call. make a life and death see wigs. i am sure i have had more of that than any beaver else running combined. >> let me ask you a but a question in new hampshire. wmur poll showed the bisest problem facing the state. according to voters. 25% of the people thought drug abuse and drug addiction was the problem facing voters there. as the a doctor what is your sense of the side of addiction. where doves it come from? how should it best we treated? >> there are all kind of addictions. usually addictions occur in people who are vulnerable. who are lacking something in their lives. we have to really start asking ourselves, what have we taken out of our lives, in america,
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what are some of the values and principles that allowed us to ascend the ladder of success so rapidly to the very pinnacle. and the highest pinnacle any body had reached. why are we in the process of throwing away values and principles for the sake of political correctness. now, let me specifically talk about a type of adekttion that is going on. that is very alarming. heroin addiction. there is a, a transportation of heroin through our southern borders that its unimj inable. down there with the sheriffs. showing me the stashes. and how easy it is to get the stuff through ther. that's why the price has gone down so low. you can purchase it so ease. this is not a good thing for us. we need to not give up on the war on drugs. certainly not to facilitate it. we can do this. we need to have the national will to do it. >> dr. ben carson in puerto rico
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for us. thank you so much, doctor. thank you so much, doctor. >> always a pleasure. i absolutely love my new but the rent is outrageous. good thing geico offers affordable renters insurance. with great coverage it protects my personal belongings should they get damaged, stolen or destroyed. [doorbell] uh, excuse me. delivery. hey. lo mein, szechwan chicken, chopsticks, soy sauce and you got some fortune cookies. have a good one. ah, these small new york apartments... protect your belongings. let geico help you with renters insurance. the in-laws, the type-a it'scousins, siblings and back seat chefs have all assembled
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park insons is a debilitating disease that rouge yael gets worse over time. there is a new way to attack parkinsons to give people a better life. lesley stahl reports for sunday morning. >> that's my husband, aaron with his boxing coach. he and everyone else in the class has parkinson's. >> give me all you got. come on! >> come on. boom, boom. >> reporter: a progressive neurological disorder that affects nearly a million americans. you don't hear about very many with the disease getting better. >> i think of parkinson's as being the incredible shrinking disease. it doesn't shrink itself.
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it shrinks you. >> i want you to reach up. >> aaron and fellow parkinsonians. part of the new program aims to stop the shrinking if not reverse it. each exercise works on a symptom. >> come on. give me ten. up. >> reporter: stretching is for their stiffness. foot work for balance. >> ready. boom. come on. >> reporter: punching to stead their tremors. >> go, ha! >> shouting to count their soft voice syndrome. and sparring. for coordination. what does boxing do for you? >> just the opposite of parkinson's. every designed instead of the shrink. designed to pump you up.
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you get to get on the gloves. gives you enormous -- different attitude towards the world. you get your physical courage back. and your mental courage. >> reporter: the program called rock steady boxing. uses professional boxing techniques, maybe a little more gently. devil offed in indianapolis in 2006 it spread to 50 gyms worldwide. >> come on! >> reporter: when italian born roberta monague saw her at a medical conference. >> i thought it was seenous. why didn't i come up with it. >> when she is not coaching. she is a researcher at medical college in new york working on gem therapies for parkinsob's. >> but lately in the last couple
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year, i told them of something missing. when i found this program. i thought it was something i could do to help now in the present. >> left, right. come of on! >> reporter: two years ago, she and her husband, alex montaldo, an actor. >> right. >> went to indiana to learn how to teach rock steady. they then approached the folks at gleason's in brooklyn. a kind of grungy, no frills, old school jim where mohamed ali trained and denear toe trained. lisa donates a ring for them. three days a week. >> it's curious the i heard that mohamed ali got park insonning from boxing. >> when you say it, it is counterintuiti counterintuitive. >> yes. we do now contact.
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if they don't tie against each other. >> they don't get hurt? >> they don't get hurt they don't get hit. what about alex. >> body armor. >> get yourself all protected. >> i'm glad i have it. >> is it going to hurt you. >> one of our boxers, specifically, reis the very reason why i survived that. >> he hurt you. >> a good thing. that showed me how -- >> yeah. >> incredible. >> i think i hit him too hard in his ribs. got home and deep sided it was time to get it. >> was it right uppercut. >> left. i think left. >> when less mill, a new york city teacher and gym coach was
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diagnosed it hit him hard. >> when he first came. he was not in great shape. physically, psych lodge cakely, he was pretty depressed. didn't want to do much. you should see him now. >> come on. >> i first started coming. i was not able to caulk straight off to the ring the i would bobble to the ring. hard how to walk. now it is, i don't want to say a piece of cake. physically it made a big difference. >> everyone we speck to, part of the secret is camaraderie. and competition and getting pumped up. that's why the trainers act like drill sergeants. >> now, come out. >> they make you do what you are supposed to do, not what you want to do. push you so hard. it becomes a habit. a good habit. she are tiparticularly is a sla
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driver. come on, erin. >> dent see a jump from erin, we will do pushups. >> look in the army. >> jump. aaron. >> does she nell at you. >> it is okay with you? >> i am not sure about that. not going to hear me complain. >> reporter: when he is not boxing, he is a novelist, screenwriter and play right. >> how bad is it to be interviewed by your wife? >> give you the courage. >> because i am interviewing you. >> don't just go, go, ha, ha. ha, ha. >> you really work them. i could not believe howard was the hour is. >> we need to show them how much thigh can do. they don't know. >> come on. with me. come on. come on. ha, ha. >> there you go.
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>> what about watching your wife like she is in the army. shouting. >> i like it. >> when people with parkinson's step in and yelled at by a coach they're no longer a person with parkinson's disease. they're a fighter. they're a boxer. that's the difference. they don't feel the disease any more. >> the director of research at the university of indianapolis's college of health sciences. she conducted the major study of effects of boxing therapy on parkinson's. >> we shouldy people over two years. participated in boxing. didn't see any progress of the disease in people that are boxed. >> arrested the disease. >> in some cases they were better after the two year period. >> the theory is that boxing generates a renewed growth of the kind of brain cells damaged by the disease.
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>> high intensitier exstiz can be neuroprotective. it enhances the dope mean in the brain. improve growth of neurons. >> it enhances. it goes to wt t t e problem is? >> right. all the evidence we have now. with hive intensity exercise we can improve strength. walking aability, their balance. quality of life. likely aulgs seeing changes within the brain as well. >> reporter: she's says one of the patients she studied. tom timberlake shows what rock steady can do. >> had parkinson's, six years. wasn't getting out. found rock steady. started in. this gentleman. nine years later. you wouldn't recognize him. he is a fighter. he is better today in 2015 than
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before he was diagnosed with parkinson's disease. better now than before he was diagnosed. it saved his life. >> nobody is saying boxing is a cure. just that people seem to include. >> does this make you feel more optimistic. about your disease? >> yeah. my left arm all the whole arm. it should really go. >> was. wow. >> that's just punching a bag. and doing, extra sizes. >> do you give a sense of slowing the progression. >> certainly slowing symptoms. >> what aaron is doing -- is something that any conceivable a year ago. >> whoa. >> you
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it's a highly thercontagious disease.here. it can be especially serious- even fatal to infants. unfortunately, many people who spread it may not know they have it. it's called whooping cough. and the cdc recommends everyone, including those around babies, make sure their whooping cough vaccination is up to date. understand the danger your new grandchild faces. talk to your doctor or pharmacist about you and your family getting a whooping cough vaccination today. well, things in the bedroom have alwaysyeah, no complaints. we've always had a lot of fun, but i wanted to try something new. and i'm into that. so we're using k-y love. it's a pleasure gel that magnifies both of our sensations. right, i mean, for both of us, just... yeah, it just takes all those awesome feelings you usually feel and it just makes them... rawr... dare to feel more with new k-y love.
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disagree with their mother once or twice before. a rare disagreement with their father. reluctant to say anything negative when his son was in the white house not as reluctant any more. >> at age 91, the 41st president is getting a few things off his chest. donald rumsfeld, his son's secretary of defense is an arrogant fellow with a lack of humility. dick cheney, is an iron ass who just became very hard line and very different from the dick cheney i knew and worked with. >> i have had much worse said about me. >> cheney seemed amused. rumsfeld said in a statement, bush 41 is getting up in years and misjudges bush 43 who i found made his own decisions. >> george would say, this is, this was under my watch. i was commander-in-chief. >> reporter: jeb bush weighed in from new hampshire and said he didn't share his dad's opinion. >> as it relates to doick chene
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he served my brother well and served my dad well as secretary of defense. >>bush said rumsfeld served the president badly. i don't like what he did. and i think it hurt the president having his iron-ass view of everything. >> george h.w. bush and donald rumsfeld did not look each other for 40 years. they were comcompetitors. >> he wrote a biography about bush. there could be several reasons heap is breaking his silence now. >> is the older father thinking i want to protect my son by making it clear there were maligned influences. >> if you were the son you don't want your father to say your administration was affected by bad influences it moons you were weak fwere -- means you were weak. it moons you gave in.
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what can cause a young girl to experience tears of joy? steve hartman reports on a heart warming case of lost and found. >> who ever coined the phrase military brat. >> paper towel. >> obviously never med the daulg daughter of nicholas and wife jen. mckenzie is three. if-up look at her pictures over the years, you will notice something. that giraffe, raffe in every spot. >> it was a lovy. go to bed. when she is six she wants it. like her friends. she acts. >> jen says this friend has been mckenzie confident and
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comforting during dough mroiments. >> he is gone. she still has the one thing. >> had this one thing. >> it got lost. during their recent move. >> it is her life line. >> one thing she has at all times. >> this might seem like much adieu about nothing. but losing a lovy can feel like a very big deal. >> where are you, raffy. >> this home video shows she lost her right before moving to pennsylvania. her parents assumed he was in a box some where. for 11 days mckenzie had to live without her soul mate. finally end of the unpacking. >> jen found it. cut open the box. let me record this. >> we have to get this. >> they toeltd mckenzie to get a drink. she was delighted to be
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reunited. but in this moment, mckenzie made another, more surprising discovery. that a strange thing happens when you are really, really happy. >> oh. >> because you are happy. >> in all of her life she has never been so happy that she cried. it's got to feel weird the first time. but surrendering to this quirky human trait can be one of life's greatest joys. and i'm sure some of you at home can now attest. that is the "cbs overnight news" for this monday. for some of you, the news continues. for others check back later for the morning news and cbs this morning. from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm jeff glore. ,,
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captioning funded by cbs it's monday, november 9th, 2015. this is the "cbs morning news." protests over racial incidents at the university of missouri grow. now members of the football team are calling on the president to step down. the 6-year-old louisiana boy killed during a police pursuit will be buried today. and the eagles soar. a 41-yard touchdown pass gives philadelphia an overtime win and sends dallas to its longest losing streak in 26 years!
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