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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  October 10, 2014 7:00am-9:01am EDT

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it is friday, october 10th, 2014. welcome to "cbs this morning." the cdc director called for action to stop ebola from becoming the next aids. >> malala yousef sigh makes history overnight as she's the youngest person to win the nobel peace prize. the ceo said what about women? >> but we begin this morning with today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >> we have to work so this is not the world's next aids. >> the call for action in the battle against ebola. >> at least 300 troops are on the ground in west africa
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distributing supplies. a joke onboard an airline turned into the real thing. a passenger sneezed and joked he had ebola. for the struggle against oppression of young people and children. >> north korea's king jong-un in question. >> he hasn't shown up for one of the biggest prescriptions. more protests following the shooting death of a teenager by an off-duty police officer. adrian peterson facing arrest again after he admitted to smoking weed before taking a drug test. how freaking stood stupid is that? >> jan hook of "saturday night live" died. >> has his halftime headliner.
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katy perry, you might have heard of her. usually criminals walk into their station. something else arrived in northwest england. a fumble . the colts win it. >> leave it to george to crash a panel at new york's comic-con. >> it is not lost on me that i am spending my honeymoon at comic-con. >> on cbs this morning. >> the president was attending a fund-raiser at the home of gwyneth paltrow. >> some tickets cost up to $32,000 per person. >> that seems considerably high especially considering the fact you can jump the fence and meet him for free. >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" presented by toy tachlt let's go places. captioning funded by cbs welcome to "cbs this
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morning." we begin with the development in the winding ebola crisis. the fifth person diagnosed is stable this morning. ashoka mukpo is being treated with an experimental drug in nebraska. a sheriff's deputy from texas who complained of symptoms came back negative. and a nurse is stable after she was infected. >> there are fears the disease could have spread to the uk. a british man suspected of contracting the disease has died. it's claimed almost 4,000 living. friend. leading the cause is tom he has a cal to action on thursday. >> tonal thing like this has been aids, and we have to work now so that this is not the world's next aids. >> chief medical correspondent dr. jon lapook is here.
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jon, good morning. >> good morning, norah. >> what do you think of dr. frieden's comments that this has the potential to be like aids? >> i understand. i was an intern when aids hit. it was the same sort of fear. a lot of the fear was irrational. you had these numbers increasing slowly and the sense of what are we going to do about it. i think one of the big differences is aids was able to spread when you were asymptomat asymptomatic. and in the case of ebola you're surviving or dead within weeks, so you don't have that insidious -- but, yeah, i think it's the same thing. have to stop it now. >> where are we in terms of having the latest vaccines in west africa? >> they're fast tracking. they have the first vaccines rolling out and they've been tested on a small number of people. so normally even though it takes years and years, you're seeing
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this fast track but nothing will be available for months and months. >> and ashoka mukpo, he got that blood transfusion from dr. kent brantly. when will we know that it's worked. >> usually an average of 16 days to being let out of the hospital. six days on either side, either way. this is an old treatment where you're giving antibodies where you can go and hopefully attack the virus. >> from what we've seen, are we learning anything more about how it can be transmitted or are there new questions about that? >> i think one by one we're starting to get the epidemiology of this. again, this new england journal review looked at this virus. it's behaving as all the previous viruses, which is good. there's a lot of talk. people are worried. i understand. it can change mutate, be
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different. it seems like it's behavioring the way it's behaved in the 24 epidemics before us the last 24 years. >> jon, thank you so much. and malala the nobel peace prize along with kailash satyarthi. malala was 17 when she was shot in the head on a bus. she's become known as a peace activist around the world. in an interview we asked her about attacks on terrorists including the ones that tried to kill her. is it true that when you spoke with president obama you talked about your concern that drone attacks are fueling terrorism? >> the first thing is that it is true that when there's a drone
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attack, that the terrorists are killed, it's true, but 505,000 more people rise against it and more. so i think the best way to fight against terrorism is to do it through a peaceful way, not through wars because i believe that a war can never be ended by a war. >> and you said that to president obama? >> yes, of course. >> malala continues to speak out believing the worst already happened. >> i'm not scared of the taliban at all. i might be afraid of ghosts and dragons and those things but i'm not afraid of the taliban. if you kill someone, it shows that are afraid of this person. why should i be agrade of someone who's afraid of me already? >> yousafzai is half as old as the previous winner. a 32-year-old won from yemen. the reverend martin luther king
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jr. is the youngest man. he was 35 years old at the time. she is the most incredible woman i've ever met in terms of her courage. >> absolutely. the interesting thing, both martin luther king and malala are in the tradition of gandhi who never won a nobel peace prize. they're asking turkey to present an isis massacre. they want turkey to let volunteers into the city on the turkish border. the u.s. increased air attacks but local observers say the tear terrorists contain c kobani. holly williams has more. >> it's not over but despite u.s.-led air strikes it's showing how limited those strikes are in combatting isis. isis is targeting kobani because it lies right on syria's border
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with turkey and it's a con due wit for weapons and fighters. turkey is a nato force and a powerful country and the u.s. wants it to play more of a role, in particular by allowing arab strikes from turkish territory. but turkey says it's actually strengthening the syrian regime and it wants america to do more. meanwhile turkey is coping with millions of refugees that are flooding over and it wants u.s.'s hope in securing a secure no-fly zone to stem the tide of the refugees but so far that's not something the u.s. is willing to do. >> all right, holly. thank you. the guessing game continue this morning. where is north
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jong-un. he's been out of sight for more than a month. seth doane has more. good morning. >> good morning. instead a basket of flowers was sent in his name and placed by low the statues of his father and grandfather. there's often lag time between when something happens and somethig is reported but the 30-something dictator has now been a no-show at a number of major events. this is the last time we saw him in public september 3rd, seating with his wife at a concert. it was this video from over the summer that really fueled speculation about his health. kim jong-un is seen walking with a limp. the accompanying narration on
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state tv talks about his discomfort and inconvenient body. the reports and rumors range from an unidentified source who suggests that he pull add tendon. another theory is he is suffering from gout. even an obsession of emmen thal cheese is suggested for his weight gain. the speculation can be almost humerus but this is serious. kim is a lead over a rogue state with nuclear ambitions and has threatened peninsula and the united states as well. he's been out of the public eye in the past, even for several weeks at a time, but, norah, never for this long. >> seth, thank you. for those wondering, em enthal cheese is a kind of swiss cheese. in a just released report, australian investigators say the boeing 777 went out of control,
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spiraled and went into the indian ocean. flight 370 vanished with 293 people onboard mar 8thet. it was headed to police say teenager was shot wednesday after opening fire on a white off-duty officer. they do not plan to investigate. his parents claim he was unarmed. the shooting happened near ferguson, missouri, where an officer killed michael brown. a protest is planned this weekend. nfl star adrian peterson is facing new trouble this morning. they want him arrested again, this time for alleged drug use. how a judge may get thrown off
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the kachltd case. vlad, good morning. >> good morning, norah. it was something he admitted while he was at the kourtdhouse is proof he should be behind bars. >> adrian lewis peterson. >> adrian peterson was arraigned wednesdayn't be didn't say much. he also took a drug test and that's what got the attention of district attorney. according to filings peterson told the contractor conducting the test he smoked a little weed. he now wants peterson's bond revoked and peterson arrested. a spokesperson said this morning he will respond when it comes before the court, but that will be a while because ligen is trying to get the judge kicked off the case.
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>> yeah. that was meant as a humorous joke. >> judge kelly case eventually said he was sorry but leggett says the remark could be negative. peterson was charged for whipping his 4-year-old son with a tree branch. he apologized for beating his child but insisted it was parental discipline, not child abuse. a hearing could be heard as early as next week. until that case is resolved his alleged violation of drugs can't be addressed yet. >> vlad, thank you. now to this story. it's not as easy as hitting backspace. the man at the top of microsoft is trying to do some damage control after his comments at a
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women's conference. one person asked satya nadella how a woman should ask for a raise. vinita nair talks about it. >> they were trying to get insight from the third ceo in microsoft's history but the backlash began when he suggested women not ask for pay rasz and instead trust the system. it happened when microsoft's ceosakya nadella was fielding questions about women in the technology field. he was asked a question about salaries and his response shocked the audience. >> for women who aren't comfortable with asking for a raise or sort of saying -- who aren't the younger you, let's say, what's your advice for them? >> it's not really about asking for the raise and knowing and having faith that the system will actually give you the right
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raises as you go along. >> nadella noted there's a quiet impact in not asking for a raise, a sort of super power. >> one of the additional super powers that, quite frankly, women who don't ask for a raise have because that's good karma. it will come back. in the long-term efficiency things catch up. >> the moderator, maria klave, a computer scientist and board member jumped right in and the audience agreed. >> this is one of the very few things i disagree with you on. >> the outrage directed at nadella was immediate. so what nadella said was women who want a raise take a height. satya nadella is trending, must be karma. he began backpedaling. on twitter he claimed his remarks were inarticulate and that our industry must close
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gender pay gaps. he said in part, i believe men and women should get equal pay for equal work and if you think you deserve a raise, squlould just ask. >> i think it was a surprisingly unvarnished moment. >> columnist molly wood. >> you have to imagine if someone at most was concerned about treatment there, they might be feeling a little more concerned now. >> only 20% of microsoft's global work force is women. satya nadella is in his first year as ceo. his salary is $1.2 million, but, norah and charlie, with potential bonuses, he could earn $5 million as the first ceo. >> vinita, what a story. that was a "take foot out of mouth." >> exactly. he is seeming to realize his mistake and take care of it with
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microsoft pleas as soup as possible. there were flash floods in phoenix yesterday. this van was nearly swallowed in the high water. the trapped driver had to be rescued. the storm is headed east. flood warnings and watches are being watched out. jan hook has died. she became famous for her impersonations on "saturday night live." that program allowed hooks to do what she did best. >> did you come in here? mrs. reagan seems to be having a hard time finding her way out. >> don't worry. this has been my home for so long. >> there are few things jan hooks wouldn't do. on "saturday night live" hooks stole the show as a first lady. >> e happen to be the co-president of the united states. and helped make tammy faye baker a household name. >> and i put my hands up and i
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said, i rebuke you. >> born in decatur, georgia, in 1957, hooks got her first break in film with "peewee's big adventure." >> okay. are there any questions? >> yes. >> where's the basement. >> excuse me? >> aren't we going to see the basement? >> there's no basement at the alamo. >> hooks joined seasonal in a show now considered the best in a 40-year history. >> i think it's a bloody shame that freedom is. >> she went on for other roles including "designing women" and "30 rock." she died at 57. >> i love her so much. >> she always had such a great time. perhaps the great years of seasonal. >> compared to aykroyd and bellusci, other greats. it's
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deadly efficiency helped land a drug lord on the "forbes" list of big areas. on the capture of the most wanted man in the world. >> the news is back if the morning here on "cbs this morning." stay tuned for your local news. before we craft it into a sandwich. the tender, slow-roasted turkey, the zesty cranberry mostarda, the freshly baked flatbread paired perfectly with our autumn squash soup. a delicious meal made just for you only at panera bread. ben! a delicious meal made just for you
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meteorologist katie fehlinger is in the weather center. umbrella necessary today? >> eventually. if you're out through the day height hours, can probably get away without t latest frontal boundary stalling out. see moisture starting to fire up here, off to the southwest. it is going to take some time for this all to actually move north, how much. so you will get most of the day in with really just view like this a loft clouds out there. that's certainly what we're phone g outside beach patrol headquarters and starting to take over the skyline for pretty much everybody at this point. so i would say, as early as late this afternoon, start to see the first raindrops falling from the steadiest of the showers, and they will get even steadier, and turn into
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just straight up rainfall. overnight into tomorrow morning, before it gradually clears away, tomorrow, around midday from northwest to southeast. sunday, so much nicer by comparison. and mild start to next week. tory? >> thank you so much, katie. good morning, everyone, we have delays out, there definitely 95, definitely the schuylkill expressway, soap, let's go right to 951st. if you are traveling on 95, in the southbound direction approaching the betsy ross bridge, we had earlier disable vehicle belonging one of the lanes, fell on the shoulder but take a lock at the rush you have out of the northeast, also, be delayed as you make your way approaching the mid-span down toward eighth and vine on the bend. head back to the desk. >> next update clock 55, cbs this morning continues on cbs-3. i'm natasha brown, ha
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a drone operator learned it can be territorial. he was flying his quadcopter when he hit a bird in the air in massachusetts. the drone went tumbling down. both the hawk and the drone are okay.the hawk and the drone are when flying a drone, be very careful. >> make sure there are no hawks in the way. >> look out. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up this half hour we'll take a look at underground tunnels of a drug lord. how he was finally caught. he unveils the model d. elon musk shows us how he's trying to take the electric car in a whole new direction. that's ahead. "the new york times" looks
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as a mysterious explosion at an iranian military base. it may have been sabotage. iran produces missile parts and other munitions at the base. sunday's blast apparently killed several buildings. four years ago in carrying out a cyber attack on iraq, it wiped out suber fujs. >> he calls it a jarring thing to deal with twitter. takes heat for giving voice to terrorist. the sites should block materials like those videos showing executions. after the calls for costolo's assassination, he shut down some isis accounts. >> "the boston globe" takes a look at type 1 die bee teat. he produced pancreatic cells that produced insulin from stem cells. it became part of his two kids' lives. he hopes to start testing in a
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few years. i got the chills. >> one more example of how advancements are used with stem cells. "the wall street journal" says dairy queen was hacked by the so-called back-off malware. homeland security says in august more than 1,000 american companies were affected by the malware. d.q. says it's fixed the problem. and "usa today" says katy perry will perform at half time at super bowl 49. she reportedly beat out cold play and rihanna for the gig. there was a rumor they wanted them to be played to play but she report red cently she's not that kind of girl. they'll be playing. >> there will be fireworks indeed. she was no door course in the
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competition. >> like a teenage dream? >> yes. like a teenage team. we're big katey perry fans. >> yes, we are. an alleged drug cartel was arrested. vicente carillo fuentes. this sunday "60 minutes" correspondent bill whitaker takes us inside the capture of one of the biggest leaders. the man called el ka powe. >> they had transportation, manufacturing, dough memestic a local distribution channels. >> very sophisticated with shipping lanes, 747s, railcars. the drug cartel was run like a fortune 500 company. >> he employed some very sophisticated counterintelligence operations to milwaukee sure if law
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enforcement was getting close they would never get to him. >> el chapo had genius plans. he packed drugs into produce. but the thing he worked hardest on was making sure he could always get away. chapo was the first to hire architectures and engineers to build tunnels to ferry drug under way to the u.s. border and he used them as escape routes for his hideouts. >> very tight, very hot, very close. >> we went down through an elaborate tunnel. this was one of the ways chapo was able to elude capture tomb and time again. the americans thought he was being tipped off by corrupt mexican officials, but the mexicans bristled at the accusation they could not be trusted.
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>> so there were suspicions on both sides of the border. >> absolutely, yes. >> so what was different this time? >> the u.s. government and the mexican government basically said enough is enough and we actually, you know, rolled up our sleeves, got in a room, argued a little bit, put all the intelligence on the table, shared wit the mexicans, and ultimately grabbed chapo. >> bill whitaker joys us now in washington. good morning. looking forward to watching this whole piece. he was the most wanted man in the world? >> the most wanted man in the world. now, in the annals of modern-day bad guys chapo is one of the guys that's the worst. he's responsible for putting more drugs on the streets of american cities, more me methamphetami methamphetamine, more cocaine, more marijuana than anyone in history and in his quest to dominate the mexican drug trade, he triggered a drug war that took the lives of tens of
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thousands of mexican citizens. so this was a bad guy. >> he was also a guy that built a huge operation as you point out. the drug cartel would have been a fortune 500 company. how big was it? >> by selling all these drugs on -- to -- purring them across the border to the united states he was a billionaire. he was listed in "forbes magazine" as one of the richest men in the world. and when we went down we saw he lived rather modestly if you see the house as the he built but we also found out he was plowing much of that money into his elaborate escape network of tunnels that went under the still of coolly can which were his headquarters in the state of cena low na. miles of it that went through the cities so he could drop down
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in one, pop up in another and he did that time and again for 13 years. we'll tell you sunday how they caught him. >> looking forward to your first piece. >> congratulations. >> what a theme, bill, what a theme. sunday on "60 minutes" see how they track down the notorious drug lord. that's here on sunday night on cbs. the amazon is going back to the future. "the wall street journal" says the giant will open its first physical store. in 2012 founder jeff bezos talked about the idea on my pbs program. >> are you headed to brick and mortar? >> you know, i get asked this question a lot. the answer is we would love to but only if we can have a truly differentiated idea. we want to do something that's uniquely amazon and if we can find that idea -- and we haven't found it yet -- if we could find that idea, we would love to open official stores.
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>> welcome. >> thank you. >> what's going to be unique about it. >> we don't know. what's surprising is that they're doing it at all. what we suspect is they're going to showcase amazon products. it will be a place where you can pick up. what's unique it's the first big store. >> you say it's like arsonists going to the fire department. >> its entire life has been putting brick and mortar stores out of business. look at bookstores. midtown manhattan had been crawling with bookstores. they're all gone in large part because of amazon. amazon is opening a store. it's very different from what they've done. >> apple has been successful, haven't they? >> i've heard amazon is a big bully. a, do you feel that way and what's the difference between a smart business move and do you see it as a smart company and do you see it as a bully.
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>> i do think it's a smart company and has elements of being a bully and gets pleasure out of other's pain. you can see real relish in crushing the publishing industry. that's what amazon is. on the other hand amazon is an amazing company that's gotten stuff to people cheaper. is it going to succeed? it's very complicated but don't bet against amazon. >> how does this change the way we shop? people who go into his brick and mortar stores, they spend twice as much as they do online. is that what you're hoping for? >> it could be. you start online and you realize, wait a second, people want glasses and clothes and they want to try them on. you open a store. they may feel the same about its phones and tablets. people need to touch them. the phone has not been
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successful. maybe having the store will help them. on the other hand they've had massive efficiencies. now they have to have stores and employees and shop listers. >> location, location, location. it looks like they did a good job. >> it's cheap there. >> good to see you. >> nice to see you, nicholas. tesla motors says the new car will shock the world. find out what everybody can so you don't have to. coming up on "cbs this morning."
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the auto world is charged up this morning after a dramatic presentation by tesla motors. the electric car company announced a new version of its original model. carter evans talked to tesla's ceo who wants drivers go really, really fast. >> all right. >> reporter: if anyone still
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thinks electric cars don't have any pickup, those notions were put down by elon musk and his tesla motors team thursday night when they unveiled the latest upgrade to their latest model sedan. >> we wanted to show the electric car could be the highest performance car in the world. >> the "d" stands for dual motor. >> reporter: he unveiled this. time to unveil the "d" and something else. >> you have for the first time in the model s where wheels are providing traction. >> reporter: two motors means more speed. you hinted that there's something else. >> yes. something else is auto pilot. now it will change lanes for me and then brake. i'm not touching anything. >> reporter: the new tesla uses a combination of sensors and cameras to help the car steer,
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accelerate, and brake all by itself. your company prides its on being ahead but your competitors have had this on their cars for years. >> for years we were catching up, now we're leapfrogging. >> reporter: now it comes with a premium. $14,000 above the sticker price which is nearly $100,000. people are going to love the features but what they're not going to love is this is not affordable for most people. >> yes. it's true. the model s remains an expensive car. >> what is affordable in your eyes? >> the number we're talking about is $35,000. >> reporter: until then he's keeping hype like this up and wa betting people will wait for the prices to come down. >> when he was doing the demonstration, he said the
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speeds were fast, sport, and insane. >> that's a great. i'm telling you this is the wave of the future with cars. in three years if they come out with a car for $35,000, that's going to change the whole world. >> elon musk is someone you want to invest in. >> are you making suggestions? >> as an individual. >> on all levels. ahead, key & peele, i see them. they just entered the green room. returning to studio 57. >> i just want to thank you for your continued faith in my ability. >> we won! >> that's my anger translator luther. >> whoo. yes. what's up! >> that imitation is so dead on. so good. >> reporter: yes. president obama and luther are back for another day. we're looking at you two, keyey
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here's a question. is your kitchen making us fat? he says having year y'all out on your counter can make you 20 pounds heavier. put the honeynut cereal away. >> he has plans to make you slim. that's ahead on "cbs this morning."
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this is cbs-3 "eyewitness news". good morning, i'm erika von tiehl. made it to fridayment hoping for decent day. katie, how is it looking? >> depend on when you are planning to be out, when your outdoor plans take place here. we are starting to see the clouds already thicken. we have seen a glimmer of sunshine so far this morning. but that will quickly get skewed by the developing and thickening cloud cover out there. you can see the wet weather, starting to already pop up here, just south of dc and it is cents matter of time before woe begin to see some of the showers as, well. but you have most of the day, where you don't need the umbrella generally it is toward evening, that any wet wet letter likely start to pick up, but the rain does get steadier with time overnight into tomorrow morning, it will be at its heaviest, which frankly if it has cents to happen at all the best time we could hope for i would say. sixty-two at best for tomrrow's high, gradually with
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time, through midday basically, skies will start to clear out and sunday looks a lot better, tory? >> something to look forward to. thanks, katie. good morning, everyone, not looking forward to your commute. that's for sure, on this friday morning, we have an accident if you are traveling on 476 northbound just beyond mcdade. and unfortunately, even though this is on the shoulder, you're running into more traffic, heading further north, because of earlier disable vehicle, we added broomall. not going to be fun. also, you're going to feel the heat on the roosevelt boulevard making your way to the schuylkill on the schuylkill 95 headed into downtown and watch out for this accident in horsham. no delays for mass transit. erika? >> thank you, next update at 8: 25, much more ahead on cbs this morning. local news w weather and traffic continues with us on the "cw philly" on these
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it is friday, hall friday, october 10th, 2014. there's a new enemy, taking on ebola. our troops are headed to west africa, but first here's a look at today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds at 8:00. >> malala yousafzai is the youngest nobel peace prize winner in history. >> as the deadly siege continues despite u.s.-led air strikes it's showing just how limited those strikes are. >> a hear on whether or not the judge should remain on the case
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is expected as early as next week. until that matter's resolved, the issue of adrian peterson's alleged violation can't be addressed. >> the backlash began when he suggested women should not ask for pay raises and instead trust the system. >> this is one of the very few things i disagree with you on. >> when we went down, we saw that he lived rather modestly. we also found he was plowing much of that money into his elaborate is escape network. >> you hinted there was something else. >> auto pilot. it will change lanes for me and brake. i'm not touching anything. >> king jong-un has been out of the public easy but never for this long. >> meanwhile new yorket korea is being run by the second in command, satan. >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" at 8:00 is presented by walgreenwalgreens.
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>> i'm charlie rose along with norah o'donnell and gayle king. tom frieden says ebola could become the world's next aids. he said the world must act now to contain the spread. the virus is no joke. a passenger sneezed on a flight and then he teased about having ebola. a hazmat team escorted the man off the plane when it landed. >> so not funny. meanwhile dozens of u.s. troops are on the ground in liberia this morning. six plane loads of marines arrived yesterday. some think american forces can help wipe out ebola. it's killed over 4,000 people out of 8,000 cases. >> and those marines are just the start of a military response. more than 4,000 troops will head to west africa in the next coming weeks. it's a united assistance. jim axelrod is there as they prepare. jim, good morning. >> reporter: 700 soldiers from here at ft. campbell in kentucky
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will be in west africa by the end of the month which is making for great deal of urgency here. typically they have at least six months to prepare for deployment like this one. now it's two to three weeks. army sergeant anthony maddux who s preparing for a different kind of enemy. >> ain your 15 years in the arm, have you had a day like this before? >> negative. >> maddux and the soldiers spent four hours thursday learning safety measures and receiving protective gear to protect them from a new adversary, the deadly ebola virus. >> it can kill you, but this one isn't so much -- you can't see it. you know it's there but you can't see it. >> troops were taught to put on protective pieces, hazmat-like suits, the yellow for standard protection, the white for more dangerous environmentals.
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rubber glorchs and gas masks to protect their faces. >> you can turn to your buddy and check. >> reporter: they checked and double-checked that everything was in its proper place and to help decontaminate each other to take their suits off. that's when the majority of contaminations occur. their co nick guran is their commander. >> have you heard them say they're worried about it? >> i haven't heard them express that. they want to know about it, learn about it, and deal with it. >> reporter: 300 are already there with more expected at a cost of almost a billion dollars. they will help with logistics and build 117-bed medical centers but the soldiers do not expect to come into close contact with the disease. >> it's very unlikely that one
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of our sold yours would actually encounter ebola or be infected. >> still soldiers like sergeant maddux are not taking anything for granted. >> it makes you more cautious, feed off of it. it makes you want to be that much more careful when you're dealing with this particular threat. >> and you're looking at a decontamination tent that some of the soldiers are training with. of course, that represents the worst-case scenario. no one is saying how long this deployment will last but the men and women we spoke with yesterday say they're thinking in that nine-month to a year range. charlie? >> jim, thanks. isis is gang ground near kobani in syria. the united nations envoy said, quote, hypowe will not see people bee headed. warplanes attacked isis targets thursday but they say the strikes do not make much of a difference.
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this sunday's "face the nation" guests, leon panetta and representative michael mccaul on sunday morning on cbs. detroit city attorney says a 17-year-old shined a laser pointer at the players during sunday's game against buffalo. the buffalo quarterback kyle orton complained to officials during the game. the laser flashed right in his face and then the teenager went and bragged about it on twitter and said i did it. we have a couple of bonehead moves, the guy who jokes on the plane and the teenager banned from the stadium. >> there are repercussions for that. all right. ahead, he's called the sherlock holmes of food. brian is in the green room. can he predict your
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>> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" at 8:00 sponsored by walgreens, at the corner of happy and healthy.
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it looked like a mob hit. ahead "48 hours" with an interview you won't see anywhere else. >> i'm peter van sant in tucson, arizona. it was a shocking murder in 1986. a local businessman who was blown up in his car, a man who had famous and powerful friends. now the woman at the heart of this case, the woman, his ex-wife, speaks out for the first time. that story coming up on "cbs this morning." of your daily routine. so why treat your mouth any differently.
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the new lunch double burger from chili's lunch combo menu, starting at 6 bucks. fresh is happening now. so it's good to know that mazola corn oil has 4 times more cholesterol blocking plant sterols than olive oil. and a recent study found that it can help lower cholesterol 2 times more. take care of those you love. mazola makes it better. that story coming up on "cbs that story coming up on "cbs that story coming up on "cbs
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losing weight without dieting. a new book says you don't need willpower. you just need to change your surroundings. it's called "slim by design." brian wansink runs the famous cornell food lab. you're making me feel bad about
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myself. i do everything wrong starting with going to the restaurant. attacking the bread like zombies. i have been there. you say depending on where you sit determines the food you eat. >> what we did is analyze lots and lots of orders. if you sit near a window, you're more than 80% more likely to order a salad. in a dark booth, you're going to order dessert. >> are booths fat tables? >> the best tables are elevated. you sit up strart. more likely to order chicken and seafood and less likely to order ribs. >> what about the food traps in our own kitsch snn. >> they're a legion. you end up eating 44% more snacks than in the same kitchen that's clear. >> you say people who leave their cereal boxes on the
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counter, they're heavier. >> 20 pounds more heavier than the neighbor next door that doesn't have any. >> that's a correlation. >> that's an observational study. we went into about 230 homes in syracuse, new york, weighed people, and that's what we found. >> what did you find out about shopping skinny. >> chew gum. you don't feel the cravings. it's an easy thing to do. when you're hungry also, you don't buy more food, which is what a lot of people think. you buy worse food, snack food. the problem with that is it curses you for the entire week. >> you've got great strategy for buffets. people say eat all you can. you say eat everything you've got. there's strategy. i learned buffets are not a friend. >> we've analyzed all these diners across the country, went to chinese buffets. skinny people do things much durchlt than heavier people.
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they sit 16 feet farther away. they don't realize it. they're more likely to face way from the food where the heavy people face the food. >> hello, my name is gayle and i want to see the buffet. you say the skinny people circle the buffet. the fatty mcfat fats just eat. you say you eat less if your plate is a different color than the food. >> the contrast mean as lot. if you're serving white rice on a yellow plate, you don't see the difference. you put 18% more on. if you see a darker plate, you eat less and serve less. >> the size of the plate matters too. >> this is a 9-inch mate and a 12-inch plate, which is more the size that most people have. what we find is people serve 22% more on a bigger plate because it doesn't look like very much. >> these are all important tips
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but at the end of the day, it's calories in, calories out. >> so you can mindlessly eat better. >> don't rely on willpower. change your surroundings. thank you, brian. for more on "slim by design" and to take a quiz, go to cbsnews.com. and key & peele are on the field for more provocative comedy. >> santa monica college. >> benedict cumberbatch, oxford university. >> nyquil lis day roy, lsu. >> business mow pun, florida state university. >> mango. >> oh, my goodness. >> it is -- it is funny. we'll see how they're taking their gloves off this season. key & peele. they're on "cbs this morning."
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a well connected tucson, arizona, man dies in his car when a powerful bomb explodes. "48 hours" respondent peter van sant has the first exclusive interview with his wife.
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they believe he cshe conspired kill her husband. >> it was a beautiful wedding. we had a wonderful relationship. i was very in love. very, very in love. >> reporter: pam phillips and gary triano married back in 1986. he was a wheeler dealer, made a lot of money, ran indian casinos. she made some big money in commercial real estate, but all that glitters is not gold and after seven years and two children, the marriage broke up. gary's businesses went downhill and he apparently owed a ton of money. >> your husband, he owed a casino in las vegas several mill dunce, $1.8 million to an ex-wife, $91,000 to an attorney, hundreds of thousand dollars to a group of mexican invest whoers people said were involved in criminal activity. >> probably.
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>> reporter: in 1996 someone murdered gary tri ano at a country club. >> gary tree a noe playing a round of golf at a country club, walks to his car and there's an explosion. >> there's some kind of explosion and massive fife. >> everyone looked at that and said that's a signature mob hit. >> reporter: we're on the mountains of new mexico. over the hills about 40 miles ago is where they dead nated the first atomic bomb. these aftf agents worked the triano case and came up with crucial cruise. they recreated the blast for "48 hours." >> two, one. you must have asked who could have killed gary. >> i immediately thought who is it that he hadn't paid.
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he had life threats. i had life threats. the children had life threats. we're talk about mexican mafia people you don't cross. there were serious, serious things going on. >> reporter: and many fascinating thees of the crime. but there were always some nagging suspicions. >> did pam ever talk to you about gary's business associations with organized crime? >> never. >> never. >> never. >> she was one of your closest friends, no talk about mob-related people. >> never. >> threatening phone calls at the house. >> that's absurd. >> do you believe pam would have done anything for money? >> well, yeah. >> peter van sant is here. good morning. >> well, yeah. she would have done anything. >> a killer story, i'll tell you. >> why did this take so long to investigate? >> so many twists and turns, allegations of the mexican mob, area nation people, mobsters in the united states, a local millionaire, criminal in tucson who allegedly had a hit list
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with gary tree a noe on the top because triano lead dangerous life and he owed a lot of money to a lot of bad money. >> this happen add long time ago. she's never spoken to you before. how did you talk to her? hey, i'm with "48 hours." >> i'm in town. >> yeah, i'm in town. >> we would have face-to-face discussions with them and make our case and i think pam in many ways helps herself in the course of this hour to hear her version of this and what her life was in this home where her husband had death threats, carried a gun, threatened her. she flees to aspen for safety and eventually this car blows up. was she behind it? we shall see. >> she flees to aspen for safety. >> that's one reason to go there. >> thank you, peter. you can see peter's full report
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on "48 good morning, everyone, i'm natasha brown. we head right over to the eyewitness weather forecast. meteorologist, katie fehlinger, tracking everything. rain, katy? >> rain eventually. not out there yet, that the tasha. but clouds definitely telling the story of things to come here. we had at least little sunshine out, there you can still see little sliver of it here on the skyline, but south of washington, d.c., just matter of time before the showers lift north. you will get most of the day in here around most of the region, without anything other than clouds. it is mainly toward evening, at the earliest, that the showers start to build in. and it will turn over to
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steady rain through the overnight, and early tomorrow morning, especially, before it gradually starts it taper offer by midday tomorrow. so again, friday overnight, sunday morning, generally when you will see the worse of the rain move in. and then we head into sunday with much nicer conditions, expect some sunshine, 64 degrees, and temperatures that warm up nicely by monday tracking a fresh potential for some showers. vittoria? >> thank you so much, katie. good morning, everyone, if you are traveling on the walt whitman bridge, we do have accident blocking the left-hand lane, the westbound direction. so if you are commuting from new jersey, into pa, and you want to take the ben franklin bridge as alternate, you will find delays there, too. so the best thing do would be to wait it out. we'll let you know it clears out of the way. traveling actually 476 right around the area of mcdade. blue route is loosening up, but it doesn't mean you won't have traffic. you will have little volume around route one in both directions, 95, southbound, slow going into the city, we also cents have accident in swenksville. it is a vehicle fire rather. seventy-three at planning road. so give yourself more time there. and this is an accident
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montgomery county huntington valley section at philmont avenue hillside avenue. so try to avoid that stretch if you can. no delays for mass transit. >> thank you, next update 8:55. continue to watch us on these it's about getting to the finish line. in life, it's how you get there that matters most. like when i found out i had a blood clot in my leg. my doctor said that it could travel to my lungs and become an even bigger problem. so he talked to me about xarelto®. >>xarelto® is the first oral prescription blood thinner proven to treat and help prevent dvt and pe that doesn't require regular blood monitoring or changes to your diet. for a prior dvt i took warfarin,
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, key & peele are with us at the table and already hilarity has ensued. their comedy has been watched 600 million times. not 600 million people but they're watching it a lot. >> right, right, right. >> that's what i'm trying to say. but why they had to say no to the most powerful man on earth. that's ahead. right now it's time -- you said yes to charlie. he didn't say no to charlie. >> exactly. >> that was blast. that was blast. >> okay. before we get to you, we're going to do some morning headlines from the papers. "the new york times" magazine examines what kids around the
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world eat for breakfast. american kids are likely to start their day with sugary cereal. japanese kids often enjoy a fermented soybean dish. and in turkey, they love their cheese, pastries, and olives. >> guys, please way in. rolling stone says it's time to vote on the next year's rock and roll hall of fame. it includes green day. meanwhile sting is honored for his solar career. comments? >> when did green day become u2? >> that's true. that makes you feel good. that they can be nominated. >> in the same breath as u2. >> sting, no question there. >> the "washington post" says a man want add raise.
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he copied the note to 200,000 co-workers. tyrell oates. >> he says my proposal is $3 billion, just a small fraction of what wells fargo pulls in annually and raise every employee's annual salary by $10,000. tyrell had an idea, didn't he? >> do you think tyrell still works there? >> very good question. we are thrilled to welcome key & peele back to studio 57. the fourth season of their peabody award -- >> peabody? >> yes. they won a peabody. they were there. they and charlie rose have something in common. they have a lot of impressions including the commander in chief. >> nice to meet you.
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come on, come orngs come on. feel that? >> emily george. >> nice to meet you. >> daryl stokes. >> come on. what's up, man? how you doing. never forget about that because that's all we got. >> nice to meet you. all right. o', bring it in, bring it in. >> nice to meet you. all right. all right. nice to meet you. all right. >> one-eighth balm. >> come on. bring it in there. >> i'm in there, i'm in there. >> i love that. keegan-michael. >> when he's saying other things to black people, they're so cryptic. you know we couldn't do that. >> starting from the bottom that we're here. >> there's a psychic connection. >> yes. you don't even have to speak. i love that.
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what's happening, fam. >> see, that's the thing you can do that nobody else really can. you just take racial issues and you dive right in. things that make people so uncomfortable. >> we're mixed so that let's us get away with a couple of things. >> you're both by racial. >> our favorite thing to do is do sketches where it has nothing to do with race. we love doing the "les mis" sketch. we're just french revolutionaries. >> as if you're white. >> that's the beauty of doing a show. you can have a taupe cal issue like race and follow it up with something silly and fun. >> so they asked you to help with a sketch to sell the affordable care act. why did you turn them down? >> they said they're busy. >> we have contracts. >> that we have to fulfill. >> to deliver a show. >> no. we love the president obviously.
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we're big fans. question got to meet him. we got to see him essentially perform the sketch live to us. >> what does he think about you two, keegan? he mufrt get a kick oust you. >> then you have a person confirming what you do. >> yeah. he's like -- >> when we met him, he said to us, gentlemen, gentlemen -- >> i made a blooper. >> so, you know, there's -- i think he enjoyed the show and he made the point when he met us to tell us, it's not just the obama stuff. i watch -- we watch -- it's all the sketches. >> jordan? >> you know, michelle watches the show too, and she -- you know, she -- she -- she controls the remote, so the first lady watches it. pleased to meet you, pleased to meet you. pleased to meet you. gayle? what's going on. you know, girl. >> start from the bottom that
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we're here. >> you know it. >> this is a funny thing in "entertainment weekly." if you can get something to be so stupid, it's not even smart. it's the smartest kind of comedy. you have examples of that. >> i think what it is is a lot of times when a person wanting to sketch has no idea what's going to happen, our favorite thing, we want everybody to watch the sketch and get up and watch the couch. you want them to go, that's the dumbest thing i've ever seen. why would anybody ever do -- i're gotten to walk it off. you put the dog on the leash and get outside for a second. so i think what happens is it's the surprise. it's because we're improvisers. so a lot of the sketches, the writing has to go out the window and you have to just let us go organically. >> and on that issue of improvising, the new issue of "vaity fair," they alternate balance and catch each other like trapeze artists and together they conquer. you met in improv and you
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immediately connected? >> i'm going to change the show to wallenda. when we met, we watched each other's comedy and appreciated it and then we had an opportunity to work with each other on mad tv. so much of it was. so there is a tell pathic connection, as a matter of fact. a >> and improvisation, especially with african-american artists, improvisation is a kbrgrowing f of -- growing art. so many improvisers, we go into hip-hop, freestyle rap, and now we're seeing this movement of adanlting this chicago style improvisation that keegan and i fell in love with. it's cool. >> what happens when you don't have a black president? >> then we're out of a job. >> then we're done, then we're done. >> movies. >> that is true. >> what is it? >> where is it in your stage of development?
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>> we have draft written. we're going to keep it as close to the time -- the time we shoot it -- >> it will be the last thing, the last thing we shoot. >> hillary and luther together? >> she'll have to have her own translator. bill clinton was the first black president. >> that's true. >> maybe bill should be her translator. >> or she could be his translator. i don't know. how does it work. >> and keegan and peele, before we go, what's on your kitchen counter? you know it could make you fat. >> cereal. >> dark chocolate-covered acai berries. >> let me be more specific. >> good to see you guys. bravo, bravo. >> thank you. and key & peal airs wednesdays on "comedy central." ahead, american gladiators at the world's most famous arena.
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>> i'm michelle madison square gardens.
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spectator sport since the days of the arcade, but that concept is getting a 21st century reboot online. michelle miller shows us how a website named twitch is reforming gaming. >> may take a lot of fire. >> oh, man. >> i just need a couple more rounds. >> like many fathers and sons, bill and 18-year-old jason munkel often play games together. >> great power. >> enormous responsibility. >> this isn't a game of catch. for several hours a night, six nights a week they stream their video games live over the internet. >> reporter: he's done. >> reporter: they call their channel father son gaming. >> how did this notion come about? >> i used to watch people do it. i said, i think this would be a great to start a channel. he said sure. he's always been like that. >> sometimes they broadcast their game sometimes to thousands of people a night via
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the gaming platform twitch. >> twitch is an onlime video gaming platform in which essentially people watch other play video games. it dunld sound that exciting but it's really blossomed into this vibrant and apparently economical viable sub culture. >> economically viable because they can make money through ads and subscriptions. essentially they earn a living at it. >> living -- you know, it's profitable now where it wasn't before. >> but there are some gamers who do make enough to quit their day job. >> reporter: several of the game players make six figures. >> it's interesting when they quit their job as carpet cleaner that they didn't really like and become a professional game streamer. >> reporter: more than 60 million are tuning in to twitch each month. that's up from over 3 million when the site was founded 3e
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years ago. >> it took us six months to realize, oh, wait, no. we have a real phenomenon on hand here. >> amazon bought twitch for nearly $1 billion in cash. these so-called g-force events are watched by thousands live and millions online around the world. >> oh, there it is. joanie, i'm looking at you, buddy. >> now. >> reporter: for channels like father son gaming the real-time interaction they have keeps their fans tuning in. >> a lot of people don't watch us play, they come in to chat with us, see how they're doing. >> don't they wonder, my core audience, don't they have better things to do? >> absolutely. our family is why are they watching you? couldn't they do something else? i think it's because we're so personal. >> i've had conversations with people in the chat about --
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you're got to have a nice balance. go out and do things you enjoy doing. it's a big world out there but then come back and watch snus that was good, man. >> you like that? >> yeah, i like that. >> michelle miller, elizabeth, new jersey. >> it's a totally different world, but apparently it's working. as we all notice, he looks like bob newhart. >> he did. he looks like bob newhart. up next, our favorite, the most unforgettable moments of the week. you're watching "cbs this morning."
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♪ this flu season... remember this. your immune system doesn't work the way it did when rock was young. so we made fluzone high-dose vaccine... for people 65+. fluzone high-dose vaccine has a high high higher... dose of antigen... for a stronger immune response. fluzone high-dose vaccine is approved for people 65 and older.
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it's not for anyone who's had a severe allergic reaction to any vaccine component, including eggs, egg products, or to a prior dose of any flu vaccine. tell your doctor if you've had guillain-barré syndrome. side effects include pain, swelling and redness at the injection site; muscle aches, fatigue, headache and fever. other side effects may occur. if you have other symptoms or problems following vaccination, call your doctor immediately. vaccination may not protect everyone. so if you hopped around the clock, ask your health care provider about fluzone high-dose vaccine. fluzone high-dose vaccine. it's great to end the week with a lot of laughs, isn't it? >> key & peele put you in a good mood. >> that does it for us. be sure to tune in to the "cbs
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evening news with scott pelley." as we look back at the week that was, have a great weekend. >> take it easy. >> ebola is a top national security priority. >> thomas eric duncan is being remembered as a good man and his death is raising questions whether more could have been done to prevent it. >> the only thing like it is aids. we have to work now so that this is not the world's next aids. >> before the passengers leave those countries, they'll get a second round of screening. >> the town of kobani has been under siege by isis for three weeks. >> if they seize that border town it could give isis greater access to smuggled weapons. >> only on cbs news we're learning from an american and european now fighting. >> they're my brothers and sisters. who am i not to fight. >> will you fight back? >> of course, i'll fight back. >> d-68. most victims are kids. >> it's turned to sadness and death. >> the investigators have
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learned more about the 31-year-old and his alleged plot. >> i can only describe his actions as pure ee vial. >> hong kong has asked the protesters to clear the streets. >> the study does say, the more we have to focus on talking to the car, the less we're focused on the road. >> a couple claims officers tasered and arrested one of them for no apparent reason. >> an endurance athlete is safe this morning. >> someone kicked my bubble. ♪ >> the two marsupials slugged it out for five minutes. >> it's the whole idea of wanting to be the dom management male. can you imagine? >> can you? that's the question. can you, charlie rose? >> charlie, don't get us started. in southern california a hot air balloon made an emergency landing with an engaged couple on board. >> it must have been a heavy
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proposal. every week the teams have to pack up and move for the weekend. >> that's a size 18. >> wow. that's like my arm. look at that shoe. >> this is a total lunar eclipse. it's called the blood moon. >> does it do something to your mood? >> oh, yes. ♪ here we go feel it in my soul ♪ ♪ you can feel it, feel it >> how much do you smoke pot? >> i don't know. as much as i want to. >> is steven nervous about what you say? >> when we're doing an interview, i say, steven, watch it. i'm writing this book. >> my producer told me to do it. >> your wife. >> the countdown, only 79 days until christmas. and there's a new -- who did that? >> charlie. when you wake up with him in the morning you don't see things you don't normally see. >> charlie knows how that goes
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with the two of you sitting beside him. >> he's in good company, james brown. ♪ with tom corbett, things keep getting worse. september 16th. budget deficits force pennsylvania to borrow $1.5 billion dollars just to keep the lights on. three days later, pennsylvania's unemployment rate goes up for the second straight month. under tom corbett, we've fallen from 9th to 47th in job creation. and on september 25th, pennsylvania's credit is downgraded for the fifth time in two years. why would we give tom corbett four more years?
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in is cbs-3 "eyewitness news". good morning, i'm erica von tiehl. following breaking news this morning. police are searching for two suspects, who taze add person in the neshaminy mall parking lot. it happened around 3:00 this morning, and the victim is an employee of the bar louie bar and the restaurant at the mall. that's in bensalem, bucks county. the victim was not seriously injured but the two suspects stole their car. that car was later recovered in northeast philadelphia. all right, made it to friday, hoping for good friday, and good weekend hour, are we looking? >> unfortunately i can't promise you completely weekend what is coming, but seeing clouds thicken across the board, limits temperatures, a, b sign of the fact we've got wet weather on the move.
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already see some of that, few speckles evergreen out there. not really producing too much at this point across sus sex county, delaware, but the combination of the next system that will move in here which is stalled front combined basically with an area of low pressure. that will bring in some steadier rain, especially, by later on tonight. and first raindrops really probably don't even start to fall until late today at the absolute earliest, by tomorrow, midday or so, things are starting to dry out from northwest to southeast. sunday looking so much nicer, definitely the better of the two weekends days. vittoria? >> thank you, good morning, everyone, definately not looking so hot on the majors, but heaviest might be the ben franklin bridge, leading to the point this is what you will run into speed censors dropping on 95, pretty short delay, though, than what we are used to seeing, but still slow approaching the betsy done through to the vine in the 20's on the schuylkill expressway, 50's traveling 476. we have wrapped up that delay quite nicely. traveling mass transit no
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delays but do you want to watch out for this accident here, line lexington road at cow path road. give yourself more time. we head back toutiesting. >> thank you, that's eyewitness fuse for now, talk philly is coming up at noon on cbs-3. i'm erika von tiehl. hope you have a great weekend. ♪
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♪ doctor, doctor gimme the news ♪ [ applause ] ♪ >> hello, everyone. and welcome to the doctors friday news feed. for months now we have been speculating that the ebola virus would reach the u.s. and it has. >> north texas report, a patient possibly infected with a deadly ebola virus. >> the first confirmed case is in dallas. >> the epidemiologist will check on anybody who may have had contact with the patient. >> thomas duncan, the first person diagnosed with the ebola virus in thu.s., has died this morning from the u.s.. >> as the president said, we are not just facing a health crisis but a e tional scruter -- security priority. it's