tv CBS This Morning CBS October 15, 2014 7:00am-9:01am EDT
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good morning. it is wednesday, october 15th, 2014. welcome to "cbs this morning." a second texas health care worker is infected with ebola. captured by the taliban and rescued by the navy s.e.a.l.s. the vatican. cardinal timothy dolan is with us from rome. >> but we begin this morning with today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >> another has been diagnosed in texas, among those who worked on thomas eric duncan. >> they have interviewed the latest patient to quickly
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identifyny exposures and those people will now be monitored. >> it is not impossible that some of the other workers who were exposed will develop ebola. let me finish, please. >> two tornadoes touched down near atlanta. dozens of trees and power lines >> today the president participates in another high-level meeting with world leaders on isis. >> isis militants are still making gains. >> yeah, motars are coming in closer. >> in hong kong, they clashed. >> six were removed from the front line after video was prepared to show officers taking a protester and beating him up. >> credited with saving a woman's life nearly 24 hour after her car plunged into a ravine. >> 16 years ago that wouldn't have happen. >> a mass brawl between siberia and albania. >> the referee stopped the game.
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>> a woman's cell phone cashes fire in her hands while attempting to change her battery. >> michelle obama. >> turn up for what -- >> a krchc. masterpiece, it's . >> and all that matters. >> apple is paying for their female employees to freeze their eggs. yeah, they're being sorted in china where they're already working on iphone 7. >> the chur turns a 180. >> kind of like your conservative aunt. not completely on board but she does watch "ellen" every day. >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" presented by toyota. let's go places. captioning funded by cbs
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welcome to "cbs this morning." gayle king is off. ebola spreads again in texas. we learn overnight a second health care worker tested positive for the virus. that victim was isolated. she worked on the team that treated duncan. >> this morning's news coming on the heels of a scathing review for texas health presbyterian hospital. manuel bojorquez is in dallas where a nurse in that hospital continues fighting the disease. manuel, good morning. >> good morning. now that that nurse has testified positive, there are 75 other health care workers being monitored for symptoms. a new case also means that yet another dallas home is being de contamina contaminat contaminated. the process started there as soon as the diagnosis came down. the nurses at the hospital are nonunion nonunion, but now the nation's
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largest nurses union is speaking out on their behalf, fearing retaliation for what happened to their coworker. >> it shouldn't have happened to her, to mr. duncan, to anyone. >> in a conference calling tuesday evening, the union, national nurses united, read a statement and answered questions on behalf of nurses who they claim work at texas health presbyterian. they maintain the hospital was unprepared to treat the parent thomas duncan. >> were the protocols breached? the nurses say there were no protocols. >> there were numerous flaws with duncan's treatment, including leaving the parent for a number of hours in a nonquarantined zone, insufficient gear provided to hospital personnel, unmandated hospital training procedures and policies for handling patients with ebola.
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>> the message to the nurses was it's up to you. it's not up to the nurses to be setting the policies the nurses say in the face of a virulent disease. >> they say patient and employee safety is our greatest priority and we take compliance very seriously. we have numerous measures in place to provide a safe working find including mandatory traini training. nurse nina fpham says her condition has been stable. i am blessed by the support of family and friends and am blessed to be cared for by the best team of doctors and nurs in the world here at texas health presbyterian hospitals, dallas. >> that is a process that could go on for days. national nurses united did not identify the nurses who made those accusations.
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were unwilling to even say how many nurses were involved in the statement that was made. the hospital says it will continue to work with employees who raise concerns and the cdc says it acknowledging not acting fast enough in dallas and would not be surprised to see additional cases. charlie? >> manuel, thanks. secretary burwell joins us. good morning. >> good morning, charlie. >> is it simply we don't know that much about it or we're making too many mistakes. >> with regard to the transmission, at this point we haven't seen any alterations that gives us a concern that what we know after 30 years of treatment and containment of ebola, the treatments do work. we have put in additional steps with regard to the oversight to make sure the protocols are
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implemented. yesterday thomas frieden said nurses were on the ground doing peer-to-peer training. there will be taking the equipment on and arch aon as we adding a site. >> there's a statement that they were making up protocol on the fly in treats thomas duncan and the nurses have alleged that duncan's lab specimens were transported through the tube system rather than being separately seal and delivered, thus potentially contaminating the entire system. is that checked out? >> i think everyone knows we're in the middle of an investigation. to understand where there was a breach and understand how the first health care worker and then the second one contracted
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ebola. whenever there's something we see that we can improve upon and work with the hospital to do, that we will do that. our number one priority is the care of the patient as well as the safety of the health care workers i guess, secretary, we have been assured from the cdc that this is under control and we know how to handle ebola, but the nurses are saying they weren't followed and we have two health care works that are is sick at the hospital. one detail that struck me, of the four specialized hospitals, there are only eight beds. what if there are more patients. are we going to be ashl to treat them? >> with regard to the first part of your comment, we do know how to contain it. we've seen cases as recently as liberia as well as patient care in nebraska as well as atlanta. we've seen hospitals like
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charlotte well over a monday and a half ago. they took those actions. right now we will review and make sure we're doing everything both to make sure people are educated at that point of entry. health care workers across the country at point of entry need to know that they make sure to ask those questions that if there is a fever, the travel history. that's step one. step two, making sure the appropriate isolation is confirmed the patient has ebola. >> thank you very much, secreta secretary burwell. thank you. >> thank you. >> that's the bleak prediction from the world health organization. debora patta is in the capital of liberia. they're determined to eliminate the disease. >> reporter: good morning. while it's clear there's a great eer awareness of ebola it's not enough to stop the spread of
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disease. every week the statistics on ebola infection go up and once again the news from the world health organization grows grim. >> we've been hitting a thousand cases a week now. we're going to hit 10,000 soon unfortunately. this is ebola, an unforgiving disease. you've got to get to zero. >> reporter: they warn the disease has spread to more geographic locations within the three west african countries and the dealt toll has risen to 73%. here in liberia's capital monrovia, the lack of awareness and urgency is slowly being replaced with community action particularly the places like the sprawling slum of west point. archie is a local community leader who run as tight campaign to cap infections early and prevent disease from spreading.
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>> physically in this house, five persons died last month. and it happened as a result of the fact they don't have the basic education to prevent themselves to people. >> reporter: his team goes door to door every day. >> we are offering a wellness message, we are basically educating them on the danger of ebola, trying to identify all of the sick, engage it by what we're doing. >> it's crucial to halting the spread of the disease. there have been pockets of success in monrovia, but the campaigns are not widespread enough and clearly not reaching the rural arias. it's going take a far bigger international response to stop the risk of infection from spreading. scharly? >> thanks. the united states government is accused this morning of with holding knowledge about chemical
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weapons in iraq. american troops were wounded by chemical weapons during the iraq war. they were hidden or abandoned. david martin is at the pentagon with new questions. good morning. >> good morning. this has to be one of the bitterest ironies of the iraq war. these are not the chemical weapons the u.s. went to war over, but old discarded weapons that iraq had manufactured with help from western countries including the u.s. during its war with iran during the 1980s. the pentagon has previously acknowledged that some old caches have been found. the soldiers are quoted by the times as saying that were told to keep their discovery secret
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and as a result did not receive proper medical care and did not receive the purple heart which goes to soldiers wounded on the battlefield. one former sergeant is quoted by the "times" as saying i feel more like a guinea pig than a wounded soldier, and to add insult to injury, some of the shells were found in the territory now ownby by isis. they're not sure if they can use them in the battle. >> that is very concerning. thank you so much. president obama says the u.s. and its allies will continue to attack isis from syria and the air. they met with military kmaernlds. one area of previous concern was anbar province. >> reporter: isis is fight hard now west of baghdad in anbar
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province. that's where so many american soldiers died in contact. we were taking a rare look. it's a four-mile drive across what used to be farmland, now december ertsed except for the occasional century. the general is taking us in his american hum fee viet to the edge. we're standing in the hotly contested anbar province. and this berm marks the outer rim of the area they feel is secure around baghdad. who controls it? >> da'esh is what they call isis. they controlled the area we're standing on. 13 miles from baghdad's main
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international airport, but they pushed them back. they're taking fire too. suddenly an isis mortar lands on the other side of the berm. the iraqis open up and send back a mortar of their own. it's not likely to do much damage but they hope it will keep them away. another group comes in. their aim is improving. it's time to go. we leave the soldiers to this dangerous stalemate and head to the new bark. life is bustling and feels perfectly normal except -- >> do you think that there are da'esh/isis spice all around us? >>. >> isis wouldn't dare show themselves here but there are
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sleeper cells everywhere. it's everybody's nightmare when they awake the result will be violent chaos. in fact, they're already reeking havoc with almost daily deadly bombings. all right. elizabeth. thank you so much. and overnight in hong kong some of the worst violence since pro democracy protested a week ago. >> seth doane is in beijing where the chinese government says the protests are bad for business. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. ads we've been reporting, protesters have talk on the the streets in hong kong to push for more control. they want to be able to pick on who's the ball let. right now the job is left to a committee who is bay jipg. protesters have been occupying part f os honk to prove their point.
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hundreds tried to protest. protesters used the umbrellas that have become a symbol of their movement. police tore down barricades used by protesters to block streets. 45 people were arrested. now this footage from a local broadcaster has emerged. hong kong authorities said the officers involved were being removed from their positions temporarily and that an investigation into excessive force would be launched. it clashes overnight where the most violence in september. police in riot gear tried to clear streets. while reporting in hong kong, we found that show of force backfired. >> it was the police crackdown that brought you all out.
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>> yeah. >> this morning they pushed protesters from tunds pass they were trying to occupied. the government has stepped up, demanding that they clear the streeting. calling it illegal. many of the news is making its way throughout china. the sensors do their job and the screen flips to blachlkt norah? >> thank you so much. blood money. that's how the parents described the $34,000 he tried to give them. pistorius shot and killed reeva steenkamp last year. the parents received monthly payments from the double am pew ta'u but know they plain h pay it back. a line of storms caused two
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tornadoes in the atlanta area. winds of up to 70 miles an hour knocked down trees and power lines. no serious injuries are reported. and toyota announced a recall this morning for more than 400,000 cars in the united states. it involves more than 1.6 million vehicles. toyota says it will need to fix fuel delivery pipes that could cause a fire. now to a deadly police confrontation on a highway. the freeway is back open this morning. connecticut police shot and killed a man stabbing people on the bus. two were stanned. their kchb is unknown. >> it's 7:19. ahead on "cbs this morning," flight
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an american prisoner gets a surprise from the taliban. now he is telling his story to chip reid. >> you were sobbing. >> yes. >> at one point. you had lost all hope. and what did your captors do? >> something completely unexpected happen. >> ahead, his terrifying capture and dramatic rescue. >> the news is back in the morning on "cbs this morning." stay tuned for you local news. just be gold plated. dt i had 3 different 401(k)s. e*trade offers rollover options and a retirement planning calculator. now i know "when" i'm going to retire. not "if." before we craft it into a sandwich.
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won a storage locker. found an old guitar. tracked down the previous owner. reunited them. hit the jackpot. the bold new camry. one bold choice leads to another. toyota. let's go places. and for many, it's a struggle to keep your a1c down. so imagine, what if there was a new class of medicine that works differently to lower blood sugar? imagine, loving your numbers. introducing once-daily invokana®. it's the first of a new kind of prescription medicine that's used along with diet and exercise to lower blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes. invokana® is a once-daily pill that works around the clock to help lower a1c. here's how: the kidneys allow sugar to be absorbed
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back into the body. invokana® reduces the amount of sugar allowed back in, and sends some sugar out through the process of urination. and while it's not for weight loss, it may help you lose some weight. invokana® can cause important side effects, including dehydration, which may cause some people to have loss of body water and salt. this may also cause you to feel dizzy, faint, lightheaded, or weak especially when you stand up. other side effects may include kidney problems, genital yeast infections, urinary tract infections, changes in urination, high potassium in the blood, or increases in cholesterol. do not take invokana® if you have severe kidney problems or are on dialysis or if allergic to invokana® or its ingredients. symptoms of allergic reaction may include rash, swelling, difficulty breathing or swallowing. if you experience any of these symptoms, stop taking invokana® and call your doctor right away or go to the nearest hospital. tell your doctor about any medical conditions,
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good morning everyone i'm ukee washington. we have a heavy rain system moving our way. here's katie in the weather center. >> we do ukee and this will be a storm system that brings in heavy rain, gusty thunderstorms, whole mixed bag but i'll tell what you looks can be so deceiving. isn't that a beautiful sunrise? you cannot get used to it, guys, trust me on this one, cape may and every where else, take your umbrella with you. when we go next to storm scan three- yeah soaking rain and we are talking about a wall of water basically heading our way. you might have a clear sky for now but it will not last ape those showers will pick up. turning to the heavier rain. gusty thunderstorms embedded and it the will be making its retreat by no later then midday tomorrow.
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much brighter day on tap by friday, torey. something to look forward to, good morning everyone. we're in the looking forward to your commute specifically on the schuylkill expressway, lets start because of an accident this accident has been out here for would i say close to two and a half hours. if you are traveling in the eastbound direction of 76, an accident is blocking left-hand lane approaching belmont out of the area of gladwynn. both sides of the schuylkill will be jammed within your western suburbs and if you are traveling trying to get to the schuylkill using southbound boulevard you're delayed there as well. expect usual on i-95 and new jersey on the 42 and 55, ukee. our next update 7:55. up next on cbs this morning, rescued by seal team sixix an american hostage tells their story, we're on the cw phill
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we have footage, a conclave of bishops at the vatican. watch this. there it is. ♪ how did they do that video? >> don't know. welcome back to "cbs this morning." ahead, we'll talk to cardinal timothy dolan about the changes in the catholic church, but first sunday morning's jane pauley is here. >> and good morning to you. >> go ahead. >> coming up in this half hour -- can we get organized with --
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>> a fight about what to do in flight. >> i wanted to say good morning first of all and then coming up in this half hour, a fight about what you can do inflight with the use of electronics taking off. cabin crews want something shut off. >> all right. plus, the dark side of a bright career. pop superstar kesha claims she's at the hands of a music power player. that is ahead. it is time to look at this morning's headlines. american crude is down 20% since june. thursday's -- tuesday's drop was the biggest for a single day in two years. one reason the high output of oil production contain add glut. the average for regular is now 3 $3.18un "houston chronicle" says abortion clinics are allowed to open.
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after the law passed, only eight facilities stayed open. abortion opponents say clinics put women's safety in danger. the "washington post" looks at how they're come bath ebola. the ceo and his wife are dough nads $25 million. he hopes the money can help responders on the ground in west africa. "time" says there's a new test forre enren enterovirus. the virus causes respiratory illness and is being investigated as the cause of at least six deaths. >> converse goes to court. 're suing for monetary damages. it wants the knock-offs pulled
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from storeshells. a taliban story is not one you usually survive to sell. he sat down with our chip reid. chip, good morning. >> good morning. dr. dilip joseph made ten lengthy trips to afghanistan over 4 1/2 years. he spent much of his time in rural villages and was well aware of the dangers by taliban but somehow he avoided any direct contact, that, is until his last horrifying trip. >> there are not a lot of situations where taliban holds you and you make it out alive? dr. dilip joseph is the medical director of a nonprofit group that trains health care workers in afghanistan. after spending the morning of december 5th, 2012, at a remote clinic, he and his interpreter
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and colleague were driving on the road returning to home base to kabul when suddenly a man with an ak-47 stepped out from a hiding place. >> when he shot the wanting shot, what was your reaction. >> the first thought that went through my mind was, crap, i can't believe this is happening. one from the back two from the front. >> you were surrounded. >> we were surrounded right away. >> they were driven to a nearby valley and hiked to the top of a valley where they demanded a ransom of $300,000. he knew that was impossible. >> i knew almost certainly i was going to die, so i didn't want to be, excuse the language, pissed off right before i die, so he decided to take a chance and talk to his taliban tormentors through his
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interpret interpreter. most responded with threats of violence but a 19-year-old wanted to talk. >> he opened up his story. all i've seen in my life is killing people. >> this 19-year-old boy treated you with some compassion but at the same time you described him as a killing machine. >> yeah. it was hard to come to grips with that. >> another young fighter cried because he objected to the kidnapping. >> even though these two young men in particular were members of a taliban group that was killing people and kidnapping for ransom, you still saw glimmers of more reality. >> glimmers of morralty and more that that, i saw a lot of hope where we don't necessarily see hope. >> but hopelessness soon returned. >> you were sobbing at one point. >> yes. >> you had lost all hope. what happened.
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>> something completely unexpected happened. one had a hand on my shoulder. three wiped my tears. >> theechb you were pretty sure they were going to kill you. >> i didn't know what to expect by then. you know, you want to grab onto hope but you wonder if you're dreaming. >> joseph recounts the story in his recent book "kidnapped by the taliban" including dramatic ending. >> first i heard a gunshot. >> did you hear your name. >> yes. is dilip joseph here. >> it was s.e.a.l. team six, the same team that killed osama bin laden but in this sense success was mixed with tragedy. 28-year-old first class nicolas checque was killed. >> he died to save your life. >> he died to safe my life.
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it's hard to live with the idea that someone died. the best thing you can do is honor him through your life. >> joseph said he will spend the r rest of his life by honoring him by using his medical talent and training to save lives. >> chip? >> thank you. you leverage something horrendous to -- >> to do great things. >> now to a court battle that could affect nearly every u.s. airline passenger. the nation's flight attendants want to pull the plug on allowing electronics during takeoff and landing. jeff pegues is outside the airport in washington. good morning. >> good morning. the faa has been clearing the way for wider use of cell phones on planes but now flight attendants say they could potentially become projectiles
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and should be put away just like your carry-on baggage. in the nation's sky, passengers have embraced the idea of having portable devices. sandra stravled. >> when we get on a plane, every minute is precious to us. >> they're now fighting to get the rules changed. they say last year the faa improperly cleared passengers to use small electronics during takeoffs and landings. they say they can distrakts passengers. >> ipods, tablets, any sort of portable device, laptops, they can become projection tills during timings of turbulence and during takeoff and landing,
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those are the most critical points. >> reporter: they called the flight attendants' case much ado about nothing. >> the projectile risks posed by cell phones are no greater than the risks posed by the books that everyone knows you can have out during takeoff and landing all along. >> they can have them in plaerp mode or connected to the in-plane's wi-fi. the didn't of transportation and the faa are now considering to go a step further and allow in in-flight cell phone calls as well. >> they declined to comment because it is pending lit gase. the judges still have to issue a ruling in this case. norah? >> jeff, thanks. fascinating. there's going to be an uproar if people aren't allowed to use their iphones and ipads. >> i don't see it going backward.
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>> exactly. the man behind music faces some explosive accusations. the lawsuit brought by pop star kesha over claims of abuse. that's next on "cbs this morning." yeah, enough for two. gosh. try four, buddy. hmm, i'll take a dark roast. chai tea, please. honey, text the man what you want. french vanilla, make it strong! the all new keurig 2.0 is here. brew for one, brew for all.
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star saying she was the victim of abuse at the hands of a big name in music in a lawsuit. kesha claims she suffered sexual violence and other physical and verbal abuse over the course of a decade, but jericka duncan shows how an entertainment giant is strongly refusing the accusations. >> these are strong accusations kesha is making and the man she's alleged them against is one of the industry's top producers. she's one of the biggest names in pop music. and he's the super producer
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behind some of her biggest hits. singer kesha and producer has been here since she was 18 but on tuesday she filed a lawsuit against her former mentor saying he sexually, physically, and verbally abused her for a decade. among other things he drugged and raped her and threatened to shut down her career if she told anything. >> she wants out. it's an unspecified amount but the main thing is she wants to separate from dr. luke. >> for some of the biggest names in the business including katy per perry, miley cyrus, and rihanna. >> you have that connection of a huge producer, you know, well
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known in the pop world who has basically mastered the pop single and smash and he has so many smashes he doesn't remember but now you see that and it really is damaging. >> in a countersuit filed the same day as kesha's, dr. luke accused her of making false accusations and claims she is only trying to get out of a recording contract. >> he says it's not true, she's extorting him and it's lies and it's now turned into a big ugly messy he said/she said. >> after kesha went to rehab in january because of an eating disorder, herr mother claims he belittled her over her weight. >> jericka, thanks. we all know about drones in the military, but this aircraft
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with ingredients like roasted hazelnuts, skim milk and cocoa, there's a whole lot of happy in every jar of nutella. spread the happy. a drone starts a brawl at a european soccer game. the two teams were playing. the two countries don't get along. when the drone flew in carries the albanian flag a serbian player grabbed the banner. an albanian took it back. then people ran onto the field. the game was called off. now to this story. is it a employ to make women work longer.
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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. a delicious meal made just for you and for many, it's a struggle to keep your a1c down. so imagine, what if there was a new class of medicine that works differently to lower blood sugar? imagine, loving your numbers. introducing once-daily invokana®. it's the first of a new kind of prescription medicine that's used along with diet and exercise to lower blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes. invokana® is a once-daily pill that works around the clock to help lower a1c. here's how: the kidneys allow sugar to be absorbed back into the body. invokana® reduces the amount of sugar allowed back in, and
7:54 am
sends some sugar out through the process of urination. and while it's not for weight loss, it may help you lose some weight. invokana® can cause important side effects, including dehydration, which may cause some people to have loss of body water and salt. this may also cause you to feel dizzy, faint, lightheaded, or weak especially when you stand up. other side effects may include kidney problems, genital yeast infections, urinary tract infections, changes in urination, high potassium in the blood, or increases in cholesterol. do not take invokana® if you have severe kidney problems or are on dialysis or if allergic to invokana® or its ingredients. symptoms of allergic reaction may include rash, swelling, difficulty breathing or swallowing. if you experience any of these symptoms, stop taking invokana® and call your doctor right away or go to the nearest hospital. tell your doctor about any medical conditions, medications you are taking, and if you have kidney or liver problems.
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good morning, i'm erika von tiehl. >> let's get to kate which that forecast, that storm ace arriving today, right. >> it is moving on n so if you got woken up with some sunlight, gleaming through your window this morning, you cannot bank on that sunlight all day to day. you can see action over my shoulder. lets take storm scan three full screen and show you what is up. basically, bits of rain heading our way. it is obviously coming down very heavily. radar 101. brighter color more intense that rainfall. it is just a matter of time before any sunlight we do have have gets blocked by the clouds. showers will pick up. heavy rain then takes over. it turns over to gusty thunderstorms for some of you. that win will be heavy at times. so we're talking about a half inch to up to an inch plus in, a lot of spots here out of
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this. today still very warm because the the cold front has yet to cross but when it does the temperature start to take a hit and we will get reenforcement this weekend too, vittoria. good morning, everyone. traveling on i-95 north bound right around the area of 320, we are dealing with an incident and situation as you will notice it right here taking out the left-hand lane adding a lot have of volume if you are heading out of delaware and into delaware county on that south wound side, i-95, you have delays as well. watch out for schuylkill expressway accident. still eastbound, blocking the left lane, right as awe approach belmont avenue, erika. >> thanks, torey. coming up next your update at 8:25 and next up on cbs this morning, new vatican document could spell major change, your local news, weather and traffic continues with us on the cw
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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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good moing. it is wednesday, october 15th, 2014, and welcome back to "cbs this morning." more real news ahead including a new ebola case in dallas. a hazmat team is at the victim's home right now, but first here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. now that a second worker has testified positive, there are 75 other health care workers here being monitored for symptoms. >> we're in the middle of the investigation to understand how the first health care worker and the second have contracted ebola. >> chemical weapons were discovered by american troops inside iran. >> this earth berm has been built by the iraqi army to mark the area that they feel is
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secure. a deadly storm system is hitting the northeast this morning. it barreled through the south. >> the whole house is shaking. >> then i heard my name, is dilip joseph here, and that kind of hit me, boy, this is a rescue. >> they could potentially become projectiles and should be put way. >> these are serious accusations that kesha is making and the man she's leveling them against is considering one of the industry's top producers. >> as much as i love american, as a person of faithal that really matters to me is the position of the catholic church and that has always gone guy on girl, a little weeping and -- >> this morning's "eye opener" at 8:00 is presented by walgreens. >> i'm charlie rose along with norah o'donnell and jane pauley. gayle king is off. a second health care worker
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has testified positive for the disease. he was the country's first diagnosed victim. the worker went to the hospital last night with a fever. that employee is now in isolation. a hazmat cleaning team is on the job cleaning. crews are in the process of deacon tame nating the scene. meanwhile 26-year-old nurse nina pham is now in good condition. she also contracted ebola from thomas duncan. the dog belonging to nina pham has a new temporary home. the nurse watched pictures of her spaniel being moved to a quarantine. her family says pham was happy to learn bentley was doing fine. as we reports there was an uproar in spain when a nurse's dog there was euthanized. this morning a meeting of roman catholic leaders faces roman revolt. conserves say it's unacceptable. the preliminary report outlines
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positive aspects of civil union and collaboration. it offers ideas for caring for families, quote, wounded by divorce. there's also a discussion on, quote, welcoming homosexual persons." they call it a working draft that will be revised. cardinal timothy dolan will be attending the meeting in vatican city. good morning. >> charlie, norah, jane, good to be with you. how are you? >> it's afternoon here. let's hurry up. my pasta's getting cold, all right? >> we have some suggestions for you. first, this is an important time in the church and the question is this an example of pope francis trying to take the church in new drengzs, open it up without changing or assaulting doctrine? >> yeah, that's a good way to put it charkserly.
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i'd say you're on to something. namely how to be true to the timeless unchange teaching of the church but yet trying to put fine invigorating ways to present it. pope francis has captured the imagine of the world in trying to do that and this would be a good example. yeah, thing you're onto something. >> how big is the division over what he is trying to do. >> i know the remarkable backing and the attempt to teach. there's eun namety there, charlie. there might be some good deep discussion, you bet there is, on the way that's being expressed. this was a draft document, a first stage of what's going to be the result of our two good weeks here in rome. all of this is almost like
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antipasto for the pope to teach the timeless teachings of church and family i read through it. it's 11 pages. i want to go specifically to the parts that have become so controversial. there is a section that says welcoming homosexual persons and it says this. homosexuals have gifts and qualities to offer the christian community. are we capable of welcoming these people, guaranteed to them a fraternal place in our communities? how groundbreaking is it for the catholic church to raise even that question about whether the catholic church should welcome gay people into their communities. >> look. you're talking to the archbishop of new york, i find it news that some people still consider this news. you know this as well, yourself,
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norah. you're aware of beautiful dioceses and parishes in new york who are already doing this, come on in, welcome here, this is a community try their best to respond to jesus christ, open themselves up to his grace and to seek his mercy when we can't. it's a tribute to pope francis that he's affirming this positive embrace of the church and calling on us to make it even more dynamic. >> why has your friend and colleague cardinal burke had says this entire document is confused, erroneous, than whole thing should be grabbed? >> well, i think he's right. he's picked up on a sign that a lot of bishops including myself feel that it needs major reworking but i can assure you he would be part of the enthusiastic unity to think of anything they can do to welcome people into the church, anything
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to do and invite them here again to hear the saving invitation and conversion of heart that comes from jesus christ, let's do it. so he's for that. he's got a good point and he's speaking for a good number of people saying, boy, this document is a rough draft. does it ever need major revision and that's what we're doing. you always take that initial document and rework it. we've been -- we've been laboring hard over the last two days, norah to do that. and so thanks for paying attention to the first draft. i hope you give as careful consideration to the next one that comes out in a couple of days. >> this seems to go rather significantly further than what layperson may describe as a mere freshening. >> one of the major obstacles we got today is the caricature, the stereotype being out there constantly saing, no, no, no.
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they've heard me say often and popes, john paul ii and benedict x xvi, this church isn't about knows. it's everything these good and liberating in the human person. that's the message we're trying to get across. the nurses and some nag, some skoel always saying it. we're here to emphasize it and strengthen it. >> cardinal we'll see you. thank you. how some of the biggest names in entertainment are coping with h a problem
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have you ever had this job perk? two major companies are paying for women to freeze their eggs. we eek loot at the changing demands and benefits offered women in the workplace. that's next on "cbs this morning." a hi.ty? i'm new ensure active clear protein drink. clear huh? my nutritional standards are high. i'm not juice or fancy water. i've got 8 grams of protein. twist my lid! that's three times more than me. 17 vitamins and minerals. and zero fat! hmmmm. you bring a lot to the party!
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here is paris like you have never seen before from the back of a white-tailed eagle. it takes off from the summit of the eiffel tower. the eagle plunges over the heart of paris and comes in for a landing. the group freedom is talking about the flight of the eagle. >> we were talking about this, putting gopros on animals. it's just spectacular. beautiful. >> aren't you waiting for it to splash into a pool like
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yesterday? >> yes. women working for silicon valley giants got a bump in their benefits. they're offering to freeze female employees' eggs for nonmedical reasons. is this a nice benefit? >> it is. it's recently gone from being experimental to actually being a procedure that people say, okay, this may work. so i think if you want the option to do i, it's great if your employers will pay because it's $20,000, which is expensive, especially if you're young and you're not ready to commit to having kids yet. >> what about the counterargume counterarguments, offering this benefit is band aid in lieu of child care and flex care. >> i think there's an advantage to offering those benefits too.
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i think what we're seeing here is sort of the new technological development that's going to really impact young women's lives and i actually thing this is going to be one of those gifts parents want to give their kids on graduation. i'm not necessarily saying it's a good thing, but there's been so much panic around them. i think parents are going to say, well done, you've gobts your degree, now freeze your eggs. i have had several people in my office freeze their eggs and actually it wasn't that work was such a tierney. it's because they hadn't found the right march to have children with so this makes women feel they have a bit more time. >> that wasn't a benefit. they had to pay it. >> they well did. it's an expensive benefit.
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if you're a woman and decide you don't want children and one in five are making that decision, can you say, well, i would like the cash instead. >> i'm wondering about -- you're not a doctor. this is not a medical question. but it is a fact that delay eed parenting is one of the factors that does correlate with the incidence of autism, older parenting, mothers and fathers. are companies offering the same benefit to male employees to freeze sperm? >> it's a good question and i'm not sure. of course, the irony is the best time to freeze your eggs is as yurk as you can do it which is why it's a good graduation gift. a lot of people won't be in the management structure where you get a benefit like that. >> tot to get into it, it's not
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as expensive to freeze sperm. >> it takes a toll on a woman's health, too. you injection them, you harvest eggs. there's a term. about this? >> i think this is a serious debate. >> well, no. we haven't touched on this idea that women can have it all and somehow people are saying, wait a minute, this is one more effort to try to address that question. >> i think anything that gives women more choice over the ability to have children is a good thing and i also think women who have slightly woken up to the fact that fertility doesn't last forever and we're sending the wrong message if we're saying you can have a kid in your 40s. it's difficult. there's a big shortage of women working in silicon valley companies. >> jane is right.
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there's more of a risk with sperm. >> thank you. a car crash sends a woman over the clip and out of sight and how a police officer saved her with some modern thinking. that's next on "cbs this morning." >> announcer: cbs "morning rounds" sponsored by campbells. mm, mm good for four generations. get recipes at campbellskitchen.com
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dose of antigen... for a stronger immune response. fluzone high-dose vaccine is approved for people 65 and older. 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. down a hill and likely owes her
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life to a police officer.es her ben tracy shows us how one piece of technology picked up where another left off. >> melissa vasquez was driving down a san jose roadway when her car plunged 5 hund yards into a ravine. she was thrown from the car lying face down unable to call for help. >> i could imagine it would be extremely lonely, scary, a difficult position to be in. >> reporter: about 12 hours after the wreck she was reported is inning by her family. onstar sent a signal that her chevrolet cruise had been involved in a crash. they sent hoe two locations but they were unable to find vazquez or the car. >> i asked her stepmother if she had an iphone r he went into the family home and was able to
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crack into her ipad. >> i made an educated guess made on a series of passwords anded on the third attempt i was able to get in. >> he use the find my phone app to pin poircht the location. 19 hours after the crash she was found. crews had to cut through thick brush to get to her. rescue crews plucked her from the hillside. she was hoisted to a hospital and flown to san jose medical center. officer cameron says technology has changed his line of work. >> 16 years ago that wouldn't have happened. it would have been phone calls and guesses and maps. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning" ben tracy, los angeles. >> incredible story. >> he has a good idea about technology. >> let someone know your passwords too. why kids seth. ahead we'll talk to a town
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shaken by a sexting scandal. hi, good morning, i'm ukee washington. new this morning camden's new grocery store opens up its doors filling a big void for shoppers. new price right on mount evefram avenue is filled with shoppers. story places pathmark that closed last year. price right is only grocery store in the city of camden and the first, new one, in almost 40 years. shoppers should have their rain gear that is for sure here's katie. >> very good advice for sure. have something ready to go, umbrella, slicker, whatever you want when that mess over my shoulder starts to move in. it is really coming down out there, between harrisburg and state college where it is heavier rain moving in here. this is just a leading edge of the potent cold front we have been talking about all week
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long here. so already we have seen the clouds start to thicken. we have seen a few rain drops falling through our western most counties but it is still warm enough to get you to the upper 70's. tonight we will hit 63p in between there heavy rain, gusty thunderstorms will start to roll in through here because of the frontal boundary itself and then starts to clear out through the the course of the relevant i morning there will be lingering showers if not steady rain or thunderstorms but we will dry out and as a result friday is looking very nice indeed, vittoria. >> thanks very much. >> you need something to look forward to because right now on the majors we are dealing with heavy delays and incident, that are very serious. taking a look at live chopper three, this is the pennsylvania turnpike eastbound an accident that is compromising left-hand lane in one of the lanes you head toward the toll plaza it looks like they are blocking one of the shoulder as well to maneuver and take care of that incident. if you are traveling in that area, downingtown stretch all the way through that incident is jammed and watch out for a
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, even with deep pockets, super rich homeowners in california can't buy their way out of this problem. we'll show you how the severe drought is quickly drying up the water supply in this high-priced d zip code. plus this chef. we'll learn about tips for the home cook and the vegetables that he thinks are underrated. that's ahead. "the new york times" looks at what might be behind the locked future. here it is. the august smartlock letting you open the door of your smart home instead of a key and unlock the
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door for anyone when you are aw away. the system costs $250. >> hopefully not for a burglar when they get your home. a custom beach house was built in the wrong place. it was constructed on the neighbored lot. turns out the surveyor made a mistake. now the builders are trying to work out a solution. >> "the huffington post" says forget black friday. macy's will open its doors to holiday shoppers at 6:00 p.m. on thanksgiving night. that's two hourser earlier than last year and mohs locations will stay open until 10:00 p.m. black friday. joseph randle was arrested for shoplifting. he was picked up monday night in a suburban dallas store. he originally took a test f ore cologne and some underwear. he's a pro. this year his salary is
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$495,000. and "time" says bono is sorry to dump a new u2 album onlts your am device. >> i'm sorry about that. i thought it was a beautiful idea. we got carried away with ourselves. artists are prone to that kind of thing. >> apple says 26 million people downloaded "songs of innocence." >> we've been telling you about the soaring number of kids involved in sexting. one study finds 30% of teens admit they texted a sexual image of themselves. 4r5% say they've received one. the atlantic takes a deeper look in its november summer story, why kids text.
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good morning. remind me. this was a virginia community and it's not nothing special about it. this is stuff happening almost everywhere. >> very middle american, this community. community, working parents, lots of kids, and they woke up one morning and there were pictures of them that showed up on a public instagram page. that's what parents woke up to and police woke up to. >> what did police have to do with it? >> they described a sexting ring. it's something we associate with sinister happenings like it's being controlled. police got immediately involved, went straight to the school and started interviewing the kids and what they found was rather surprising. do you know of anyone else who has naked picture on their phone. what is it? child pornography. it was dozens, maybe hundreds.
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they left with bins of cell phones. not everybody but many. >> i heard some kids were asked why they do it and they said it's being sexual without being sexual. >> that's an interesting concept. they're busy. what the kids would say to me, some the kids, this would be my way of being intimate. i would send a picture or he would. >> what did you think of that? >> that's sad. that part makes me think seth more. no part of me said let them hang out and do it the right way. >> they're worried about what their kids are writing back to other teenagers and what they're sexting. and what you're talking about is sending pictures. >> yeah. naked pictures. i think if you find a seth on
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their phone, i think of it this way. it doesn't create sexual dynamic dynamics. consider yourself lucky and find out more information who is your child sending the seth to. how old, what is the picture like. you shouldn't immediately say give me your phone, i'm taking it away, because then you just lost an opportunity. >> what did you find about the girls who are more likely to say they have felt some pressure to do this? >> there's a big pressure in the research between what they define as pressured sex ters who make up the minority and the other category. the other category is i have a boyfriend, a girlfriend, part of the mating ritual, let's same. but for the pressured sex terte they're wants a picture.
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they want them to be their girlfriend or girlfriend. >> is there any price to pay if you don't? >> yeah. some people are strong enough. girls say no way and they say a much funnier way than i can say on the air, but, you know, some girls feel that there's the pressure. they feel like, look, if you're teenager, your life is on the line, on instagram and twitter which is where the kids in the school basically live and conduct their arguments and friendships. so you sfeel like you'll disappear. >> later they were posted on instagram. >> there should be a big distinction between boyfriend and girlfriend exchange pictures with each other and with nobody's consent they post your picture. i think we as a society should focus on that. that is not okay. >> absolutely.
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thank you, hannah. >> thank you. california's punishing drought is entering its fourth year. reservoirs are only 36% full. one area that's running out of watt iris home to oprah winfrey, tom cruise, and ellen degeneres. >> reporter: it's paradise on the pacific. wealthy homeowners here lack for nearly nothing except for water. >> so this used to be all green. >> yes. very fresh, very green. >> it's a large sized polo field. his grass is now dead, ponds are now empty. >> reporter: i'm sure you're aware there are people who don't feel too sorry for people who can't water lawns. >> the big tragedy is we invested a lot of money in our shrubs and so forth. it will all have to be replaced
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at some point. >> if he uses too much water, he gets fined. >> most work harder so they don't get fined and those that can are importing water. >> reporter: the trucks roll in early each morning. some people are paying as much as $600 for a truckload of water. tom moseby running the month see doe area. he's handed out fines to those who haven't been allowed. >> i imagine you haven't been the most popular guy in town. >> it's been difficult. we've had many people coming to us with appeals asking for more water. >> m oontecito has almost no groundwater. the lake is 30% full. if the drought continues it could be empty next year.
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>> in other words, you wouldn't have a water supply. >> without lake atchoo ma we're going to have to look water supply that currently doesn't exist. >> you've got a big brown spot over there, and over there. it used to be green. >> his was cut by 6 07. he spent nearly $200,000 ripping up his landscape installing drought-intoll subsequent grass and trees. his groundspace is now artificial. >> we know that there's a limited amount of water but yet we all used water as if there was an unlimited supply. >> he's praying for rain and that montecido does not become a loss to the drought. >> it would be nice to see the rain. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning," ben tracy, montecido, california. >> gosh. i sure hope they get some rain
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in north carolina more than 100 sharks led a feeding frenzy. they attacked a school of blue phish. some of the sharks beached themselves and the surf pushed them up into the sand. they thrashed around as they struggled to get back into deeper water. look at them. >> yeah. that's incredible. all right. an israeli-born chef. he's written three "new york times" cookbooks along with his partner resulted in the james beard award-winning jerusalem. his newest contribution to the gastronomic world. the follow-up to "plenty more" is "plenty," the book that made vegetables sexy. thank you for making vegetables sexy. you say we're in the middle of a
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vegissance. >> vegissance. i didn't say that but that sounds load. you have all the stuff that grows in the ground and they're looking for very exciting things to do with them. and i'm part of that and enjoy doing it. people are looking to eat less meat, less fish. to turn it sexy is kind of a mission of mine because for many years poont didn't have the imagination. they usually boiled their vegetables. >> especially americans, peas and carrots. >> brits are not much better. i live in london and what i see sometimes are horrifying. >> what kind of vegetables are we talking about? >> any vegetable. people think of many. they think there's not a lot you
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can do with leeks and all those kinds of individualables. . >> what are the three most underrated vegetable? >> turnip i don't think anyone would say had sexiness. you can enhance it with so many flavors. what i do is use spice and herbs and marinate and grilling, which gives you a smoky flavor in order to take a very modest turnip and turn it into something sensational. the same with leeks. people think of leeks as something to turn into soups. >> so true. >> vegetables become sexy because you do sexy things to them. >> yes. it's easier with meat because you can take a good cut of meat and you're almost there. vegetables need a little bit of help. >> you're not a vegetarian. >> i'm not a vegetarian and i
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love them and i think we eat too much meat and i'm happy to take some of meat off my plate when i can. >> i want to know. in your book "plenty more" is there a particular recipe that's autumn n autumn autumnal that you might turn us to? >> sweet powe tayer tos. >> i'm such a fan of swiet poee potatoes. >> it's good. it takes you into winter. it can go on your christmas holiday table easily and it is a fantastic thing. try it because of the thickness of the reduced oranges and juices. >> i can cook but i have to work
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on reduction. >> it's a technical term. leave it there till it's sticky and gooey and then you know you've got reduction. >> it's as simple as that. >> yauchlt people are intim date. once you stuck them in the oven with olive oil and spices, you've got all the sex you need. >> well, not really. let's talk about your business partner because you are israeli, right? >> mm-hmm. >> and your business partner is palestinian. >> that's correct. sammy is palestinian. not only are i jewish and he's palestinian, we both grew up inner is use lem, we were both born in the late '60s and we've collaborated the last few years and make iing it. >>political? >> we're not political animals.
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people look at our work and draw from that. >> it's a beautiful book. yotam recommends it for beginner cooks. go to cbsnews.com or visit our facebook page. and may the force be with you to keep the rain away. a new invention that could meet the el mrchts next on "cbs thih morning." 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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this is where i met your grandpa. right under this tree. ♪ (man) some things are worth holding onto. they're hugging the tree. (man) that's why we got a subaru. or was it that tree? (man) introducing the all-new subaru outback. love. it's what makes a subaru, a subaru. old hat thanks to gancht that uses jets of air to keep you dry. the air umbrella is a wand-like device that create as force field of air to block the rain. online supporters have pledged nearly $30,000. the chinese creator say the air umbrella should be available by the end of next year. >> we can't wait, can we?
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good morning i'm quarter von tiehl. we have pneumonia following breaking news all morning long, another, hospital worker in dallas has tested positive for ebola overnight. woman is second worker infect with caring for ebola patient thomas eric duncan. decontamination work has begun at woman's dallas apartment. officials have not identified her but she lives alone and has no pets. meantime nina pham the first health care worker infect by duncan is improving this morning. she was upgraded to good condition. lets get latest on our forecast with katie and we are watching that storm. >> we are. right now, it is generally bringing heavier rain at least as far as we're concerned to central pennsylvania, portions of maryland at this point where we have started to see
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flash flood watches go into effect. is there a possibility, you see here, as of yet, nothing to tell but in terms of the size, watches or warning but this is all heading our way with the moisture as you can see funneled from the south. this will come through as a swab of rain but pockets of heavier rain and gusty then are storms. seventy-eight is our high. we will see rain and storms continue in the night with the low of 63 and early tomorrow morning, back edge of this front is starting to clear way. day progressively gets better and better and wind will taper off. friday right new looks really nice, torey. >> we need something to look forward to because right now you are jammed, anyhow you cut it. ninety-five, schuylkill, 476, pennsylvania turnpike it is slow. also slow on 476, because of an accident southbound out of the area, and, this incident here, as i see this incident moving beyond it. this is affecting turnpike, northeast extension, you will give yourself more time. take a look at speed sensors
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>> 3, 2, 1. >> camera ready. >> here's what's coming up today on the doctors. >> when you are watching this, know i am in a better place. >> the brave young mother keeps her baby alive while she's losing the war against cancer. >> here's what's breaking in today's news in two >> dr. phil: >> how ebola is affecting one of ica's favorite foods. >> what the rapper did to upset his fans. >> a controversial amerdetail. >> [ applause ] ♪ doctor, doctor gimme the news ♪ >> one simple switch in your bedtime routine can help you lose weight, boost your sex life and reduce yeast infections. first, would you believe it's now legal to take photos up a woman's skirt in
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