tv CBS This Morning CBS December 12, 2014 7:00am-9:01am EST
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good morning. it is friday, december 12th, 2014. welcome to "cbs this morning." flooding, destrul strulkstructid a home swept into the sea. a pioneering supermodel launches new accusations against bill cosby. beverly johnson shares her story with us. >> what's next for the embattled theme park. >> but we begin this morning with today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >> the park is 4 feet under. >> look at that car, dude. oh, my god. >> a powerful storm pummels the
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west coast. >> maybe the worst storm in decades to hit california. >> flooding freeways, toppling trees. >> hundreds of thousands of people lost power. the storm is moving through southern california with possible rain totals up to 5 inches. >> this agency did a lot of things right. >> the director of the cia defended the spy agency in response to the senate report on interrogations. >> but brennan admitted some officers went too far. >> mr. brennan would say, oh, yeah, we did things wrong. this is really wrong. >> shut down a verdict. the house narrowly approved a $1.1 trillion spending bill. >> this is not over yet. the bill is off to be debated in the senate. >> he's stepping outside. >> chaos on a california freeway. the father of four missing children and husband of a missing wife gets locked in a standoff with california highway patrol. >> he's in custody. both of the children are safe. both of the children are safe. >> embattled sony pictures banned all interviews on the red carpet as the studio deals with more from the massive cyber
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attack. >> a nightmare flight out of san francisco. >> they've finally reached their destination after more than a day of travel. >> it makes the grand canyon a little grander. the grand can downfilled with clouds. >> a miracle. >> arizona, boy, they find a way. >> and all that matters. >> cam newton spoke publicly for the first time after his crash with two fractures on his back. >> god's got his hands on me. i'm on someone's fantasy league and i think it's the m man upstairs. >> on "cbs this morning." >> i wanted the job, dave. abc -- what is it -- cbs didn't -- >> and you wonder why you didn't get the job. >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" is presented by toyota. let's go places. captioning funded by cbs
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welcome to "cbs this morning." gayle king is off. so jeff glor is with us. heavy rain is spreading to southern california this morning after leaving many northern areas under water. new mudslides overnight sent debris slamming into homes and cars. mandatory evacuation orders are posted in several neighborhoods in ventura county. >> this morning flooding is a big problem in many parts of the west. flooding took over this supermarket parking lot and blocked several roads like 101 in san francisco. john blackstone is in mill valley, that's just north of san francisco. john, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. well, in california, a fast-flowing muddy stream like this is mostly a welcome sight this morning even if it does bring some flooding. this storm -- after three years of drought this storm is causing some pain but it's delivering a lot of relief.
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>> the little league park is like 4 feet under. >> reporter: the powerful storm barreling its way down the west coast continues to dump record amounts of rain. in wet and windy san francisco, more than 3 inches was enough to flood freeways and turn roads into rivers. more than 500 collisions were reported. >> several lines down on the roadway, tree branches blocking the roadway. visibility is reduced. if you can, slow down. >> reporter: falling trees crushed cars and knocked down power lines across the bay area with winds gusting to nearly 80 miles an hour. nearly 300,000 homes and businesses in the region lost power. >> the tree fell on the power line and knocked out our power, so we're without computers and phones and copiers. ist's pretty hard to do anything. >> reporter: another home was washed away in washington state but huge waves continue to eat away at the ground.
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in oregon the storm proved deadly, including two. one teenager died after a tree fell on his car. this roof of a safeway supermarket collapsed. >> we're very lucky no one was hurt. obviously safety of personnel on the scene and people walking by is our concern. >> reporter: across the coast the damage was widespread. in santa cruz, a tree fell trapping an 11-year-old boy leaving him with minor bruises, and in portland the winds were strong enough to tear through buildings. in wine country rivers rose to near flood stage. and in the sierra mountains the storm became a blizzard bringing nearly a foot of snow and catching drivers unprepared. >> i didn't know it was going to be this freaking -- i don't know what this stuff is -- snowy, i'm from arizona. i never saw this before. >> but for some the high water was something to celebrate. in this town a flooded parking
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lot was turned into a makeshift water parke. here in northern california the rain is expected to return later today. it should dry out a bit over the weekend, but two more storms are predicted to hit the region next week. jeff? >> thank you very much. and surfers are taking advantage of rare impressive waves on chilly lake tahoe. one surfer said the waves are creating the best conditions he's ever seen there. evelyn is tracking this weather. good morning zbhood morning. we're still looking at rain and snow across california with the heaviest rain and snow expected to hit southern california for the remainder of the morning and afternoon hours as well. take a look at rainfall totals so far for northern and central california. very impressive. big sur, over 7 inches. carmel, 6 inches, yorkville, 6
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inches. we're expecting 1 to 3 feet of snow in the sierra once everything is done. as we continue you're going to see more rain and snow coming into southern california. we're looking at mud flow, debris flow certainly a possibility. already looking at flash flooding with highways shut down at the moment with burn areas of biggest concern. most of the rain and snow moving to the four corners. but we're looking at showers as we head to the first part of the weekend. >> evelyn, thanks. house members approved the bunt budget by a small margin last night. nancy cordes is on capitol hill. some say they added to the christmas bill for friends. >> the house passed this $1.1 trillion funding bill with hours to spare. for congress, that's an eternity.
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the house voted to fund the government but only after a face-off that threatened to topple a carefully crafted compromise. this is a ransom. this is blackmail. >> nancy pelosi and her democratic colleagues were furious about two last-minute additions to the bill, one allowing wealthy donors to give $324,000 per year to political parties, ten times the current limit, and another to roll back a key financial regulation that limits banks from trading and risky limits with government backed funds. >> if you're a big bank, we bail you out but everybody else gets left out. democrats should not be endorsing that view. vote for future tax bailouts of wall street. >> the white house argued it was better to take a flawed deal now than wait until january. >> there's no doubt the amount of leverage the democrats have on capitol hill will be reduced as a result of the republican
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gains that were made in the last midterm election. >> it wasn't just democrats who had problems. a group of conservatives bulked because the bill does not do more. >> in the end both sides said yes to pass the bill by five votes. in a controversial move republicans slipped in a measure to block district of columbia from legalizing marijuana even though 70% of the voters approved the measure last month. a lot of d.c. measures are not happy about that. the senate could vote on this bill as early as today and congress can go home knowing that congress has fulfilled one of its most basic duties but somehow is the most difficult, funding the government. thank you very much. protesters over the deaths of
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eric garner and michael brown were present. they stood with their handlers in the air symbolizing the deaths of the two black men killed by police and then walked back inside. bob orr is in washington with an instant response from the report's chief architect. bob, good morning. >> good morning. it has reached a new low. as brennan was busy defending his agency, senator feinstein was firing off tweets calling into question much of what brennan had to say. cameras are rarely permitted inside the cia, so it was an extraordinary event when john brennan told a televised news conference that some rogue interrogators used brutal tactics in questioning al qaeda detainees. >> in a limited number of cases agency officers used techniques that had not been authorized,
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were an hornet, and rightly should be repudiated by all. >> he did not use the word "torture." >> there were numerous, credible, and very worrisome reports about a second and third wave of major attacks against the united states. >> reporter: brennan rejected allegations that so-called ingargs tech neegs used on dozens of detainees produced no actionable intelligence. >> it produced useful intelligence to thwart attack plans, capture terrorists, and save lives. >> reporter: but as brennan speak speaker feinstein was
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sending out tweets. she added those techniques don't work. brennan said there's no way to know if those techniques led to breakthrough intelligence. >> there was useful intelligence, very useful valuable intelligence that was obtained from individuals that had been at some point subjected to eits. whether it could have been obtained without the use of those eits is something again unknow snoobl he . >> the white house has given the chief a new vote of confidence. >> bob, thanks. the hackers who stole from sony pictures are getting personal. they're leaking information of dozens of sony employees and their families. meanwhile the co-chairman and hollywood producer are apologizing for their stolen e-mails. they used their personal e-mail to mock president obama.
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elaine quijano is here with more. good morning. >> good morning. with the barrage of leaks piling up by the day, it is trying to do damage control. the hacks have already fundamentally altered the way the company does business. thursday night's "the interview" was light on star power. seth rogan almost slipped by undetected. a highly unusual move coming amid fallout from the sweeping cyber attack that sent a top hollywood studio into crisis mode exposing everything from celebrity ayases to employee social security numbers. >> this is an attempt to destroy the company, confidential financial information and perhaps the most embarrassing, very candid e-mails. >> industry mega producer scott
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ruden and sony pictures co-chair amy pasqual discuss an upcoming event with president obama. michelle said should i ask him if he liked django? >> or "the butler." >> she said, "ride along." it was said it was racist. you can put a cherry on a pile of bleep but it don't make it a sundae. both pasqual and ruden are now on damage control. in a statement pasqual said i accept full responsibility for what i wrote and apologize to whoerch was offended. ruden also apologized saying the e-mails were meant to only be funny but in the cold light of day they are, in fact, thoughtless and insensitive. the revelations are more than just an embarrassment for sony. >> the studio wants to control
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the information but with its confidential financial information out on the blocks, that's no longer the case. >> and the lyrics might continue. a massive amount of information has been hack and only is a small portion leaked so far. pascal said she wouldn't wish this on her worst enemy. a california man is in jail this morning after a tense standoff on a highway bridge. daniel perez is considered a person of interest in his wife's dead. he disappeared a week ago with his wife and children. >> a s.w.a.t. truck just pulled up to the scene r a team of s.w.a.t. trucks and sharpshooters surrounded a toyota camry. inside the car, daniel perez and his four children who have been missing since last friday. >> where he stopped was our concern. our curb was maybe he was going to try to jump over the side and take some of the boys with him.
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minutes after the standoff two of the boys escaped running into the arms of the negotiato negotiators. he eventually emerged with the two other chirp. it looked like the kids were going to run back to the police but it seems like maybe the father was telling them not to. >> with no place to go perez look like he was going to jump before officers shot him with a bei bean bag and he was tackle odd to the ground. they chased him using the car's low jack system. their mother erica perez also had been missing. police confirmed her body was found in the trunk of another car belonging to the family. >> her case is considered a homicide. we can't release any information as to manner of death because it will cause a problem with the investigation. >> as for the four perez children, they have been reyou nighted with family members. bigad shaban, cbs news, los
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angeles. the british government says a higher rate of resistant infections could lead to 10 million deaths a year and cost $100 trillion. dr. david agus is in los angeles. good morning. >> good morning, charlie. >> tell us about these findings and how alarmed we should be. >> so the british prime minister cam ruopp brought in jim o'neill who used to be the head of goldman sachs. what they found is super bugs chrk are bugs that don't respond to antibiotics are a problem now. 23,000 deaths a year in the united states. but are growing and will be a remarkable problem over the next several decades unless we start to do something. >> how big a threat is this and what do we need to do? >> well, it's a real threat today. it's going to be a bigger threat. the problem is there aren't a lot of new drugs being developed or technologies being developed here. so unless we spend today, there's going to be problems tomorrow. we can't afford not to spend in
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this area. you look at ebola. ebola started off small and we didn't interview and now it's an enormous problem. >> david, merck paid more than $8 million for a company that has some promising new antibiotics. is that the answer here? >> it's certainly a bright spot in the field but unfortunately one of the few bright spots. there aren't many others. we need to start to invest now at the academic universities and do research, develop new technologies. because we're overusing technologies. we have to stop that. an amazing study came out a few weeks ago that showed later in the day doctors give out more antibiotics for the same symptoms as earlier in the day. they wear out. they don't have the energy to say we don't want to treat it
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and explain it. >> jim o'neill talked about the economic consequences of this, a trillion dollar. >> ooh's the equivalent of taking the uk out of the economy in 2050. that's a tremendous impact. >> thank you so much. it is 7:19. ahead on "cbs this morning," a famous former supermodel details new accusations against bill cosby. >> well, i knew he was trying to take advantage of me, but i knew this goes above and beyond, you know, making a pass at a woman. you don't make a pass at a woman by drugging her. >> beverly johnson
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good morning, everyone, i'm ukee washington, let's get that friday forecast with fehlinger. katie is over in the weather center i finally come bearing some good, yep, come bearing some very much better weather news. i mean, just looking so much nicer for us. out there today still is transition day, so still finds some clouds out, there but there are breaks in that cloud cover, as the day goes on for at least some sunshine, it is still a little brisk, too, but not as harsh of a wind. high hits 40 degrees today. we drop back down to seasonable 31 tonight, still few clouds overhead, continuing to brighten one time. so the weekends looking good if you have got any holiday errands to check off your list, and it is also looking good for the army navy game and the eagles, that said, nice day as welcoming up on monday, maybe shower by
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tuesday, but otherwise, this is pretty nice and quiet forecast vittoria. >> very nice, thank you, katie. good morning, everyone, can i not say the same however that it is quiet on the northbound side of 95. dealing with a seven vehicle crash, northbound, nine, a right at cottman avenue. it is taking out the left-hand lane. only the right lane is getting by. so that means, one lane, you're out on the northbound side of 956789 major delays southbound dealing with rush hour, 16 is your average on the schuylkill, rush hour there, as well. if you are traveling the roosevelt boulevard northbound at devereaux, dealing with a tractor-trailer accident there. be minds full of that. ukee? >> thank you, next update at 7:55, up next on cbs this morning, chipping away at ahead end time capsule. for more local news weather traffic and sports we're on the "cw philly" o
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how's your how are the girls? who's got it better than we do, dave? i never liked rich kids in my life and now two of them are mine, dave. >> yeah. >> my kids are so rich when they watch "different strokes," they take mr. drummond's side. there were riots in brooklyn the other night and the royals show up, kate and what's his name. >> yeah. >> no better way to calm down angry black people than british royalty. >> he is so smart. he is so smart. >> i could listen to it all morning. >> i know. we're going to share some of his
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interview coming up. there's a great cameo in his new movie. >> somebody you know? >> somebody i know. somebody named charlie rose. >> a lot of fun to work with him. he's as funny off camera as he is on camera. >> welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up this half hour, bill cosby's newest accuser is a 1970 supermodel. ben tracy talks to beverly johnson who claims bill cosby put a knockout drug in her coffee. find out why she's coming forward nearly 30 years later. it's a new direction for seaworld. the ceo resigns after years of disputes the animal rights supporters. we'll tell you what else seaworld is doing to change course. that's ahead. "usa today" says ten major banks were fined more than $43 million for research violations. u.s. regulators say the banks promised favorable reports about toys "r" us to win an ipo of the toymaker in 2010.
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>> the wall street judge reports on a setback for the drugmaker actavis. they had planned to pull the drug early and switch patients to a new drug. they tried to eliminate gentlemen naerk maker. >> after the soviet collapsed the west tried to push them out of global politics. said, quote, it's not just about pride. it's a situation where people speak to you however they want, impose limitations, and so on. it's america calling the shots in everything. >> the "sydney morning herald" reports that passengers stranded on the tarmac in australia. they were diverted after debris was found on the sydney airport runway. this is what it looked like.
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they couldn't tay take off because the crew exceeded the amount of hours they could work. passengers were only allowed out onto a small part of a tarmac because there were no customs agents there. finally other pilots were flown in to get the passengers to sydney. >> my favorite story, "the new york times" on the pope's comment about dogs going to heaven. the human society was flood with calls after pope francis told a little boy that, quote, paradise is open to all creatures but they say he spoke casually. they say he was not making a statement on church doctrine. who in the world would think of church doctrine. >> it's nice to know barkley will be with you. >> exactly. will be with me. >> be with you in heaven. that's right. a well known face is accusing bill cosby of misconduct. beverly johnson rose to fame as a super mod the 1970s.
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this morning she said cosby drugged her at his new york city home. ben tracy spoke with her last night. good morning. >> good morning. beverly johnson is probably the most famous of the nearly two dozen women that have now accused bill cosby. she conquered the modelling world and she tried out acting when she met the famed bill cosby. >> he was bill cosby. he was charming and elegant and kind and he seemed very concerned and really willing to, you know, help me see my goals. >> reporter: in the mid-19 0s, beverly johnson was auditioning for a role on "the cosby show." she said bill cosby invited her to his townhouse to rehearse. >> he kept insisting that, you know, to have this cappuccino, it's the best coffee you'll ever have, and so i relented and, you know, i took the coffee. i took a sip of the coffee and i
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immediately felt strange and then i took another sip of the cappuccino, and that drug was so powerful it just -- it came on like a moving train and i knew i had been drugged. >> what did you think he was trying to do. >> well, i knew he was trying to take advantage of me, but i knew this goes above and beyond, you know, making a pass at a woman. you don't make a pass at a woman by drugging her. >> she does not think cosby assaulted her but she said she was nearly unconscious when he dragged her out of his house and put her in a cab. that was after she swore at him several times. >> i looked him dead in the eye and called him a name. >> what did you call him? >> i called him an m.f. i said you're an m.f., aren't
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you. >> but you used the words. >> yes, i did. and he was a little stunned. i wanted him to know i knew that he had drugged me. >> johnson was a well known successful model at the time. in 1974 she was the first black woman to appear on the cover of vogue. she says days after the incident she called cosby to confront him but his wife camille answered and johnson never spoke to the comedian again. >> why come forward now. >> it was the women that have come forward that gave me the courage to come forward. then to hear their stories that were very similar to mine, i knew that i had to say something. >> johnson says women tend not to speak out against powerful men and she feels that allowed cosby to continue his alleged behavior. >> now that i speak to other people in the business in hollywood, it's one of the best kept secrets in hollywood. i most certainly had -- i would
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have not gone to his home if i had known he had that kind of a reputation. absolutely not. >> now, bill cosby did not respond to our request for a comment about johnson's accusations but he has said they're baseless decades-old charges. >> the conflict between rebel fighters and forces loyals to assad has claimed nearly 200,000 lives. it's forced more than 3 million people to leave the country. one of the hardest hit cities here. a woman started a school to detract from fighting. >> reporter: there was no electricity, no running water, no food. >> translator: i remember on my
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third day without food i was ready to collapse. i walked into an abandoned house into the kitchen. there were sugar containers and i started licking them like a wild animal. then after that we started eating grass and tree leaves. >> you were eating grass. >> translator: it was delicious. i would go out looking for grass. i would try to look at it in a positive way to forget the pain. sometimes the only way to go on living is to forget. >> to help the chin of holmes forget, she opened a school. she tried to make the kids laugh. >> bob simon will show you more of the siege of holmes including opposition fighters and fierce battles with syrian government
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forces. that's sunday night here on cbs on "60 minutes." >> looking forward to that. up next, a major shakeup at seaworldld. how activists pushed your attendance and revenue down. that's next. you're watching "cbs this morning." >> can you guess which musician made the most money this year? the answer is "d," dr. dre. her and $620 million this year and last year. see, this is why it pays to go to medical school. ♪ [instrumental music] ♪
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negative criticism. it's dropped 44% since the ipo last year but investors responded positively to the latest changes sending shares about 3% higher yesterday. vinita nair is here with more this morning. good morning. >> good morning. seaworld announced thursday that ceo's president jim atchison is leaving his post next month. with ticket sales slumping and seaworld stock in serious decline ceo jim atchison will step down in january and seaworld will be cutting a number of jobs. they've faced a flurry of criticism from activists and the public. a wail killed a worker in front
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of the public in orlando. >> they need to right the ship. you're going to see a ceo come in that probably has more experience in public relations, in branding, in the image because something does have to be done. >> he doesn't keep house. then he goes back into his little jail cell. that's his life. >> in 2013 the documentary "blackfish" chronicled the park's treatment of killer whales. last year seaworld hired a team of public relations experts to deal with the backlash over the film's claims. >> they have had a big impact. the stock has fallen. the revenue has fallen. they know they have to rebrand their image. >> earlier this year in a move to combat declining revenue and attendance at their parks, seaworld announced a plan to expand the size of their tanks for the whales. people for the ethical treatment of animals responded thursday saying public opinion has turned
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solidly against seaworld and the park can't turn back time. the only way to move is forward by fiemgd someone who can take the park in an innovative new direction. despite the shuffle at the top, atchison isn't going far. heal stay on at seaworld becoming vice chairman of the board and a consultant for the next three years. according to reports atchison is not leaving empty-handed. his severance package include $2/.4 million and an annual consulting fee of $400,000. >> not a bad good-bye gift. >> i want to be a ceo. >> vinita, thank you very much. we told you earlier this week how a referee's mistake knocked a football team oust the
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middle. he's seeing double and he can't figure it out. >> what the heck is going on here. >> what have you done to me? >> it's the first time he's come across twins and he doesn't know what to make of them. he turns from one to the other and you can tell by his expression, there's one baby on my left and who's this other person on my right. >> and they look the same. >> when my twins first met riley, they looked at her and they bawled, crying. who is this person stealing attention from us. >> he spends a moment on each one before deliberately -- >> that's adorable. that's adorable. it is game over this morning in a high school football controversy. on wednesday we showed you an oklahoma city team scoring a huge touchdown before time running out but the ref mistakenly bumped one away. the touchdown was taken an away knocking them out of the playoffs. they wanted a replay.
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the judge ordered no on thursday saying it wouldn't be fair and would leave a bad precedence. >> leave it on the field. coming up, a fascinating peak into america's early his. what's coming up in a time capsule left by sam adams and paul revere. and on monday, oprah winfrey with her new film. that's monday. you're watching "cbs this morning." people with type 2 diabetes come from all walks of life.
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this is cbs-3 "eyewitness news". >> good morning, i'm erica von tiehl. we want to get right over to katie and have good news for us, let's their. >> finally, right? it's been long time coming i think finally seeing our nor'easter, not only sort of break apart, and tear down, but also we're starting to see it retreat. high pressure can regain control, allow for some sunshine, granted, we do have some clouds as evidence here on storm scan3, right now, and we go out to our live neighborhood network, fleet of school buses crossing through here outside pleasant valley high school, and we will continue up in broad heads ville to see the cloud cover sort of thin out for a bit of sunshine, but that's generally what you will see in terms of sky coverage here, not just up in broads heads ville but everywhere else here today. so call it just partly sunny day. brightening up even more for
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the weekend, wind continues to calm down, so overall, this is a gold star weekend, certainly for mid-december standards. we'll take it. vittoria? >> absolutely, good morning, everyone, looking at live chopper three over the scene of multiple vehicle crash on the nor bound side of 956789 unfortunately it, has been out here for at least two hours, if you are traveling on the northbound side of 95 at cottman avenue, that is is this incident scene or where that incident scene is. it is taking out the left, as well as center lanes, the delay that lies behind t so if you are headed toward that area, be minds full of this volume. erika? >> all right, thanks, vet tore y next update at 8: 25, next on cbs this morning, shopping centers fighting on line retailers this holiday season. your local news
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my grandkids bought this nest learning thermostat. programs itself... connects to their precious phones. i don't like it. being cold builds character. walking back and forth to the thermostat builds leg muscles. when the internets come to life and all these gizmos turn on us, these kids won't be able to run away on those shriveled little calves. will they love their nest thermostat then? i don't think so. the nest learning thermostat. welcome to a more thoughtful home.
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it is friday, december 12th, 2014. welcome back to "cbs this morning." more real news ahead including the fight between malls and online retailers. see how malls are using high-tech sleigh rides and uber cars to bring back shoppers. but first here's a look at your "eye opener" at 8:00. >> after three years of drought this storm is causing a lot of pain but it's also bringing a lot of heavy relief. >> snow expected to hit southern california for the remainder of the morning and the afternoon as well. >> the house passed the $1.1 trillion spending bill with two hours to spare last night.
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>> as brennan was defending his agency, feinstein was firing off tweets. it is urgently trying to do damage control. a california man is in jail this morning after a tense standoff on a highway bridge. >> the officers rushed him. >> what it found is drugs won't react to super bugs. >> pope francis told a little boy whose dog had died that, quote, paradise is open to all of god's creatures. >> it's nice to know barkley will be with you. >> i'm proud to be a bible thumb per. it's a perfect holiday movie because nothing says christmas like passover. >> i'm charlie rose with norah o'donnell and jeff glor. gayle king is off.
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a massive system is moving into southern california after drenching the bay area with flooding rains. mudslides already causing problems around los angeles. several neighborhoods are evacuated. >> parts of northern california received up to seven inches of rain so far. hurricane-force rains ripped through. they were strong enough to blow out windows and tear bricks off buildings. cia director john brennan says a hard-hitting senate report on enhanced interrogation after 9/11 reached the wrong conclusions nchl a ra conclusions. in a rare news conference brennan said some officers went too far. >> we feared more blows from an enemy we couldn't see and things that we couldn't fathom. we were not prepared. we had little experience housing detainees and precious few of
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our officers were trained interrogators. whatever your views are on eits, our nation and in particular this agency did a lot of things right during that difficult time to keep this country strong and secure. >> as brennan spoke, dianne feinstein sent a string of tweets disputing his statements. a time capsule dating back to 1795 has been unearthed in boston. it was hid by revolution ware heroes samuel adams and paul revere. workers took extraordinary care to remove the capsule from the cornerstone of massachusetts's state house. jim axelrod joins us with what may be inside. good morning. >> good morning. even in boston, a city that has witnessed so much history, finding an artifact that's over 200 years old is still extraordinary. scholars are interested in what it might reveal about our formative years.
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it took hours to free the time capsule from its stone em plastered tomb. it was once again held by human hands. state officials say they have a good idea of what's inside. >> we have a list going back to the original 1795. we have coins, a paul revere plate and a number of things. the question is what condition are they in. >> reporter: perhaps the question is why midnight rider paul revere and founding father samuel adams left the time capsule behind more than 200 years ago. alan rogers saids the patriots wanted people to remember what they had accomplished. >> they knew they representing history, history that would not be forgotten, history that would be remembered as long as history stood. >> had it not had repairs done
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to the steps, history might have been lost. it will be studied, maybe even open. >> i can clearly see there are screws on the top which means hopefully it's not going to be horribly difficult to open if we decide to open it. >> reporter: when work on the state house is completed next year, officials will return the corroded green metal box back to where they found it. >> it's the history of america and it's very true. this is just other identified that. >> this is not the first time the capsule has been found. it was also retrieved in 1965. back then it was washed with acid raising concerns about the precious artifacts locked inside. >> it's such a great story. they might not have been found it. >> i mean it would have really been lost that time. >> you have to open it, right? >> you have to. >> al capone's vault. be careful. >> thank you, jim. this morning we're vrevealig
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took the liberty to send him home a bit early for the holidays. >> oh, goodness. that is so great. >> every time it's fresh. >> every time it's fresh, i agree. >> sergeant robert van den berg had been deployed in afghanistan for almost a year. he had never seen his younger son travis but wednesday night that changed thanks to a surprise reunion at the anaheim ducks hockey game. >> can you imagine? wow. what a wonderful reunion. >> keep watching it, right? >> yay. >> don't take that away. >> a reminder when a soldier goes to war, his family goes to war too. >> all those gifting online mean shopping centers are in a life and death business. 15% of u.s. malls are expected to fail or convert into something else in the next decade, but ben tracy shows us how some are reinventing themselves in the face of a cyber blitz. >> one, two, three, santa claus.
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>> janine sabin and her three kids came to see santa at the glendale galleria near los angeles. what they got was something you'd find at an amusement park. not something typically next to the food court. a sleigh ride to the north pole, an interactive snowball fight and a visit with the jolly old man himself. >> so what was it like in there? what did you think? >> i thought it was really cool because the sleigh ride was really fun. >> i have to admit this is our first time in ten years that we've ever been to santa. >> so their plan worked. >> yes, exactly. >> the plan is to do just about anything to get shoppers offline and back inline at the mall. mall visits declined 14.6% in the u.s. during the 2013 holiday shopping subpoena and this year consumers are expected to do a
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record 44% of their holiday shopping online, up from 31% five years ago. >> so what pack ands am i going to be gift wrapping for you. >> reporter: to win your businesses malls are offering free gift wrapping, and so you don't have to carry all those heavy bags, they'll even deliver the gifts to your front door. some malls are delivering the shoppers to the stores. >> hello. welcome to the grove. >> reporter: at the grove in los angeles, you can get a free uber ride and they'll then take you home if you spend at least 450 bucks. rick caruso owns the grove and says many typical malls will be gone within a decade. >> i think the future of a traditional indoor mall, i think they've got big challenges. somehow they have to create a real different experience. how do they differentiate themselves? you've got to wrap it around experience, wrap it around service. >> reporter: the experience here already includes live music and
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roasted chestnuts, and this is the one place in l.a. where it snows every night. in new jersey where it actually is frozen, the disney movie atrakds was enough to get samantha wittek to drive to the mall. she'd already done her shopping online. >> if i had known about this earlier, i probably would have waited and done my shopping and had my husband here and stand in line while i spent money. >> reporter: but malls are offering if they offer a little sugar and spice, you'll find this is mean nice than shopping from home. for "cbs this morning," ben tracy, los angeles. >> i think that's nice, especially for kids. i tell you, if they promise to wrap my gifts, i'm there. >> seriously. >> yes. charlie, how about you? you're an online guy. >> yes. i am. >> okay. you're not going to wrap my gift this year? >> i'm going to give it to you
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personally. >> okay. >> wow. wow. good morning. >> oh, no. don't you think it's nice to give it in person. >> okay, thank you, santa. ahead, dramatic moments in a chilling trial. i'm richard schlesinger of "48 hours." this courtroom outburst is not the only thing that's strange about the todd winkler murder case. that's coming up on "cbs this morning."
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tomorrow night "48 hours" explores a sensational murder case in california. todd wing ler erupted in a dramatic outburst after facing charges for stabbing his wife. was it a mental breakdown or a trick by a mysterious man? here's a preview of richard schlesinger's report. >> this is the case about a mastermind, a manipulator, a murderer, this is case about todd winkler and how he brutally murdered rachel marie winkler, his wife, mother of his three small children. >> reporter: todd winkler's murder trial in placid, california, barely got under way when it was brought to a halt by an outburst by the defendant.
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>> you only want to destroy. >> reporter: this explosion isn't the only thing strange about this case. todd winkler admits he killed his wife on february 27th, 2012. he claimed they were arguing when she came at him with a pair of scissors. >> it was a long, long, long protracted struggle. she's a very strong girl. >> reporter: was itself defense or murder? either way, how could this marriage end in such violence? rachel married todd winkler within a few weeks of meeting him. he was a former air force fighter pilot and a successful pharmaceutical executive. they settled in cameron park, california, one of a handful of communities for pilots where private planes share the streets with cars. but after seven years of marriage, rachel wanted a
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divorce. her father don hatfield believes winkler may have killed her to protect some of his secrets. >> he wanted to shut her up. she could probably make his life very difficult. >> reporter: it turns out this outburst is not the first strange episode in winkler's life. when he was in the military stationed in the far east with a scad ron known as the fighting samurai, he ended up with a psychiatric discharge, and dr. frank lossi, a psychiatrist hired by the defense believes he suffers from two neurotic disorders made him genuinely fear his wife could kill him. >> do you think he meant to kill his wife? >> in a sense i do. >> do you think --
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>> todd winkler is not crazy. he's a cold-blooded killer. >> richard schlesinger is was. what does that mean, he killed before. >> it turns out she was not his first wife to die. his ex-wife died in a car crash. he was in the car -- it was a truck. she died. he escaped without any injuries. it was ruled as an accident but the prosecutor wants the jury to know about that when they hear this case. >> are there other secrets? >> there's a lot going on. i em going to it's one of the more complicated cases. >> you can watch his full report "the two faces of todd winkler." that's on "48 hours" at 10:00, 9:00 central here on cbs. ford's sheryl connelly is
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here in studio 57 how driving >> good morning, i'm ukee washington, authorities in camden county hope you can find a woman missing for a week now. this is 58 year old susan johnson, has seen leaving her gloucester township camden county home december 5th. 5 feet eight, 120 pounds, investigators say she could be driving near or near 206 saturn. if you see johnson please contact the police right away. >> your forecast with katie over in the weather center. >> good morning, everybody, very happy friday being sent your way. we have much nicer weather news to report for you, from here, right through at least monday, as we see high pressure set until for nice long stretch of days. at the moment, on storm scan3, really just left with some cloud cover. you will find that when you walk out the door. but i promise you, you will see at least some sun today.
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really just sign every things to come. still little brisk, we sit between systems, but we will take it, dry day for everyone, high hits 40, we drop to 31 later tonight link earning, we keep the 40's around, we tack on few additional degrees with every passing day to the point that we're above average, monday, tuesday and wednesday. flirting with 50 all day, obviously, and our next shot for wet weather doesn't even come until tuesday, so, enjoy the break, it is look being like nice couple of days, vittoria? >> folks are hitting the brakes because of multiple vehicle crash that we've been dealing with for quite some time, northbound side of 95, near the construction zone of cottman avenue. seven vehicles involved in the crash, many tow trucks coming. with that said delays will only continue to build by the time they get the accident cleared out of the way. so your northbound 95 delay, stemming all the way back toward the vine st. vest way and growing, 14 on the
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well, it's friday. that's why we're playing that song. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up this half hour, ford futurist cheryl connelly predicts consumer trends as far as 20 years out. she's here in studio 57 and her findings and what they mean to the car industry. plus, al green. he has his rewards and his own ministry. what keeps him wanting more. that's ahead. right now time to show you some of this morning's headlines. the "new york post" says a new jersey girl is taking her parents to court again. she wants her parents to pay her
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tuition at temple university. they're ignoring the request to pay $16,000. her father says they won't give anything until she reaches out to them and starts to heal the family. a rare phenomenon at the grand canyon. thick clouds fill the canyon. warm air prevents clouds from rising. it happens every several years. and look at this. one kid was scared bad guys would get in the school so the chief spent the night in school dressed as a superhero. they found him aslim in his costume in the morning. he said he'll do whatever he can to make the kids feel good and safe. >> who knows what the world will be like in 10 or 20 years or even next year. sheryl connelly is manager of ford's global super trends. her job has lit toll do with cars.
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she looks for trends that will influence or lives. in 2013 she was named one of the most creative people in business. sheryl connelly, welcome. >> thank you. >> tell us the future. >> the future looks very bright. we always have to look at the horizon. it always takes us about three years to bring a vehicle to the market and we have to anticipate what consumers will want, long before they do. >> you've been called a collar clairvoyant, a soothe sayer. >> henry ford once said if i asked what people wanted, faster horses. that dilemma still exists. what can i do three years, five years or more from now? i for one don't know five days from now. we can't predict the future but we look to trends and we think those trends give us inside about what consumers are going
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to want. >> what are the trends? >> we put together a collection for 2015. it's the third year we've given people a glimpse of our innovation process. >> one of the biggest trends, make way for gen >> it's never too late to start paying attention to them. >> gen zs aren't car-buying types. >> no, but they will be. if you have kids, you already know they have a really strong voice. >> but even millennials aren't buying as many cars right now or driving as much, so what does that mean for a car company? >> indeed millennials do drive a little less. they don't look at it as a status symbol as baby boomers did but they look at lifestyle
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things. when they do buy a car, they buy ford, allowing you to connect your cell phone. yesterday we announced our third edition, synch 3 which will act like a smartphone so it will be voice activated so you can access your apps while behind the wheel? is all of this trying to figure out what ford can do to change and meet the market or does it have some greater value? >> you know, it's really about trying to understand consumer society. once you dig deep you start to realize politics, economics, technology, environment are all together. when you pull on one string the entire fabric changes. what we use this information for is to better prepare ourselves. >> let's talk about health because a new study saying more than a third of the americans are obese. how do car companies adjust to that? >> we first have to try to understand the nature of why that change is happening. so you have the quality of food in terms of nutrition. even in emerging markets are so poor and you have an influx of
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technology that's leading to a more sedentary lifestyle. >> how does ford use that information? >> first we have the physical forp. we have to think about design, how will that change the dynamics of the vehicle but we want to find ways to enable it. so we have things like a heart monitor chair that can help test the quality of your health when you're in your vehicle. >> how powerful is the aging population? >> oh, the aging population is probably the single most important challenge that the world will face. if you're a car company, you have to ask yourself, if people are going to surrender their car keys at 83 thinking they'll live to be 85, what happens if they think they'll live to 105, so our challenge comes from the independence of operating and owning your own vehicle. >> can you imagine living to 150?
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>> no. >> having to sit here with me -- >> i hope to sit here with you for a long time. but i do hope to live to 105, yeah. sheryl connelly, so interesting. thanks for joining us. do you like al green? >> who doesn't. >> that's right. music legend al green shares a moment that changed his life. >> did you ever ask yourself why it happened then that night? hmm-mm. i was scared to ask why it happened to me that night because i didn't want something to change. i said whatever your will is for me, i'll accept it. >> anthony mason is in the toyota green room. hi, anthony. he's going to bring us a rare interview with the reverend and
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for years, jim's medicine tied him to a monthly trip to the clinic to get his blood tested. but now, with once-a-day xarelto®, jim's on the move. jim's doctor recommended xarelto®. like warfarin, xarelto® is proven effective to reduce afib-related stroke risk. but xarelto® is the first and only once-a-day prescription blood thinner for patients with afib not caused by a heart valve problem, that doesn't require regular blood monitoring. so jim's not tied to that monitoring routine. gps: proceed to the designated route. not today. for patients currently well managed on warfarin, there is limited information on how xarelto® and warfarin compare in reducing the risk of stroke. xarelto® is just one pill a day taken with the evening meal. plus, with no known dietary restrictions, jim can eat the healthy foods he likes. don't stop taking xarelto®, rivaroxaban, unless your doctor tells you to. while taking xarelto®, you may bruise more easily and it may take longer for bleeding to stop.
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xarelto® may increase your risk of bleeding if you take certain medicines. xarelto® can cause serious bleeding, and in rare cases, may be fatal. get help right away if you develop unexpected bleeding, unusual bruising, or tingling. if you have had spinal anesthesia while on xarelto®, watch for back pain or any nerve or muscle related signs or symptoms. do not take xarelto® if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. tell your doctor before all planned medical or dental procedures. before starting xarelto®, tell your doctor about any conditions such as kidney, liver, or bleeding problems. jim changed his routine. ask your doctor about xarelto®. once-a-day xarelto® means no regular blood monitoring, no known dietary restrictions. for information and savings options, download the xarelto® patient center app, call 1-888-xarelto, or visit goxarelto.com.
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the kennedy center honorees represent is best in culture but this year it's al green. anthony mason sat down with him in memphis. ♪ >> reporter: at 68 his voice still seduces. ♪ what about the way you love me ♪ >> do you do anything to keep your voice as good as it still sounds? >> no. >> nothing? >> no. some people's voices change as
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they get older and stay the same. i can hit higher notes now. yeah. all you have to do is step on my foot. >> reporter: one of the great soul singers of his time, the reverend al green's career has taken him from gospel to r & b and back, win him the 11 grammy awards that decorate his church office in memphis. >> now we're getting this kennedy honors coming up here now. >> it's a pretty big honor. >> i never thought i would get this far. >> reporter: the son of an arkansas sharecropper, al green grew up in grand rapids, michigan. >> you pretty much always knew you wanted to be a singer. >> oh, from my heart. >> reporter: after his father kicked him out of the house for playing jackie wilson records, he formed a group.
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♪ back up the train >> reporter: al green and the soulmates had a modest hit with "backup train" in 1968. ♪ i've got to take my baby >> reporter: then green's voice call the ear of willie mitchell. >> he said i wonder if you can come down to the studio. i said no. >> why didn't you go? >> i didn't know what he wanted and i didn't see the vision that he saw. >> mm-hmm. >> he discovering ed al green. i didn't. i was trying to sing like wilson picket and james brown and all these other folks. they were great people to me. not al green. al green, who's al green. come on, man. ♪ >> reporter: but he changed his mind and went down to royal studios in memphis where mitchell would push his protege. >> then he goes, al. i say, yeah?
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you're trying too hard. relax and sing al green. i said, but see, i don't know how al green sounds. said, what do you want me to sing? i'm not going to try to put no emphasis in it at all. he said, okay. ♪ i said ♪ i'm so in love with you whatever you want to do ♪ >> reporter: it was 1970 and the next four years would be al green's golden era. he and mitchell would score eight gold singles ♪ i'm so tired of being lonely >> i mean you had it all then. >> yeah, but i wouldn't accept that. i didn't want it all. that scares me. >> what scares you? >> i don't want to feel accomplished, like i've accomplished everything and so i don't have nothing to worry about. no, you've got to stay hungry all the time
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♪ how can you mend a broken heart ♪ >> at the peek of his success after a concert in disneyland in 1973, green had a dream and woke up born again. >> did you ever ask yourself why it happened then that night? >> hmm-mm. i was scared to ask why it happened that night because i didn't want nothing to change. >> yeah. >> i said whatever your will is for me, i'll sep it. >> reporter: so for nearly 38 years now the baptist bishop has been preaching to his memphis congregation at the full gospel tabernacle church. but he never gave up recording, and after eight gospel grammys, he finally won his first for r & b in 2009. that year he also filled in at the last minute with justin timberlake after rihanna and chris brown canceled.
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♪ you make me feel so brand-n brand-new ♪ >> me and justin did "let's get together" and we saved the world. not really, but, you know, we like to kind of fluff on it and think, yeah, we did help out a little bit. >> do you have another album in you? >> yeah, i'm going to make another one. i'm writing one now. >> are you. >> yeah. >> a gospel album, he said. after that, al green wants to go back to the american songbook. >> you want to do american class classics. >> yeah. >> that would be cool. ♪ those autumn leaves drift by my window ♪ ♪ those autumn leaves are red and gold, yeah ♪
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>> al does that a lot in the interview. he just starts singing. it's kind of amazing. >> you're right. his singing would be a big one. >> yeah, it's cool. one thing we didn't mention but i always loved it. every one of those '70s was recorded on the same microphone. it's microphone number 9. he doesn't even know what mike it is but it's the only mike he'll record on. >> still to this day. >> yeah. >> that's awesome. >> you bring us the stories of music. >> al green and all the recipients of the kennedy center honors on december 30th right here on cbs. up next, the most unforgettable moments of the week. you're watching "cbs this
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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.
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here's how: the kidneys allow sugar to be absorbed 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.
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tell your doctor about any medical conditions, medications you are taking, and if you have kidney or liver problems. using invokana® with a sulfonylurea or insulin may increase risk of low blood sugar. it's time. lower your blood sugar with invokana®. imagine loving your numbers. ask your doctor about invokana®. well, that does it for us. for news anytime anywhere log on to cbsn. you can watch theew 24-hour news network by visiting us at
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cbsnews.com. as we leave you, let's take a look back at the week that was. have a great weekend. there are probably a lot of americans who say these guys were responsible for killing thousands of americans. i really don't care if they were waterboarded. >> we're a country that doesn't do this. >> some of the tactics from the senate intelligence report were brutal. >> program not effective? not true. cia lied to congress, lied to the white house? simply not true. >> what it does is endanger every one of our people overseas. >> we were able to protect the homeland and that is the bottom line. >> luke's father is quite angry and that his son would still be alive if the u.s. had not tried to save him. >> a massive typhoon slammed into the philippines. >> that right there, one of three homes hit by that plane. >> the studio reeling from the barrage of leaks piling up by the day. >> perhaps the most embarrassing, very candid and brutal e-mails.
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>> an officer shot a stapping suspect. >> this feels like a hurricane out here. it's really cold. >> this visit is a test of popularity here. >> it's really refreshing. >> david letterman's retirement will complete a transition from the old guard to the new -- >> not yet. >> great. he won 52 academy awards, but can he wear them? >> ho, ho, ho. i'm the big elf. >> a tiny bet. >> ooh, ooh, ooh. >> is that a strong one? >> it has a nice kick. >> what's the worst thing about being a victoria's secret model? >> nothing. it's an amazing job. >> and that's the truth. >> so you've never played a role where you've murdered someone? >> i can't think of any where i shot someone. >> you would put women in the
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bass of the bus. >> but you almost poisoned someone in "nine to five,". >> well, i did. >> you said because he was such a prick. >> instead of saying you have a nice suit. he said you have a nice slut. so that didn't come out well. >> who will guard the guards? charlie? >> we're trying to figure out where rodney is and the tracker says -- >> right in columbus circle. >> rodney, where are you? >> i'm in columbus circle. you guys found me. >> it's a fantasy of mine, being surrounded by such women. >> and it came true today, yay. >> you should see them. they seem like a classy couple. >> americans seem more intense. >> mark, watch out. world coverage can be dangerous. >> gayle, how thrilled are you to have mark at the table? >> i was going to say, everyone
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knows i'm i've been babysitting these kids for years. there's like eight of them - eight? maybe three. i don't know whatever. it's like really hard to keep track of them. it's a pretty big house. anyway, that's why i really love this nest protect smoke and carbon monoxide alarm. it tells you which room the smoke is in
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good morning, philadelphia police say they've caught a manna tack ago woman in university city. investigators say, that a penn grad student was walking near 41st and pine last night, when that man hit her in the head with a bike lock, and then nearly robbed her too. now police looking into other connections to attacks in that neighborhood. >> we check in with katie. it is your friday, more good news for us. >> absolutely, finally seeing the retreat now of our nor'easter, that has been just bugging us for days on end. all that's left more than anything some clouds. starting to see some breaks in the clouds, i promise you'll
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see some sun out there today. still little brisk inbetween systems, bundle up, but hey it is dry out there. we can expect to see the daytime hyatt about 40 degrees. we drop down to 31 tonight, very seasonable, right on with where we should be day normal low for this day of the year. we look forward in the forecast notice the temperatures will tack on few additional degrees of every passing day, to the point that we hit 50 by tuesday, that is also going to mark the potential at least for a new round of showers here in our area. vittoria? >> thank you so much. katie. good morning, everyone, so if you are traveling on the eastbound side of the platt bridge, we do have disable vehicle, that is right here, blocking the right hand lane, so anyone traveling in to southwest philadelphia, you have a little bit after problem. now, headed into northeast philadelphia, you have a big old problem. that is this delay here, earlier this morning, occurred seven-vehicle crash at con man, cleared out of the way, all lanes open, unfortunately, delay still stemming back toward penn's landing, southbound 95 you have rush hour. speed censors in the teens on 95, in and out of the northeast and center city not
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pretty. thirty-two your average on the schuylkill, 55 on the blue route. however, if you are traveling in new jersey, haddonfield road closed as a result after accident at walt whitman boulevard. best alternate burnt mill road. erika? >> thank you, vet tore y that's "eyewitness news" for now. talk philllly coming up at noon on cbs-3, i'm a man who doesn't stand still. but jim has afib, atrial fibrillation
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an irregular heartbeat, not caused by a heart valve problem. that puts jim at a greater risk of stroke. for years, jim's medicine tied him to a monthly trip to the clinic to get his blood tested. but now, with once-a-day xarelto®, jim's on the move. jim's doctor recommended xarelto®. like warfarin, xarelto® is proven effective to reduce afib-related stroke risk. but xarelto® is the first and only once-a-day prescription blood thinner for patients with afib not caused by a heart valve problem, that doesn't require regular blood monitoring. so jim's not tied to that monitoring routine. gps: proceed to the designated route. not today. for patients currently well managed on warfarin, there is limited information on how xarelto® and warfarin compare in reducing the risk of stroke. xarelto® is just one pill a day taken with the evening meal. plus, with no known dietary restrictions, jim can eat the healthy foods he likes. don't stop taking xarelto®, rivaroxaban, unless your doctor tells you to. while taking xarelto®, you may bruise more easily
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and it may take longer for bleeding to stop. xarelto® may increase your risk of bleeding if you take certain medicines. xarelto® can cause serious bleeding, and in rare cases, may be fatal. get help right away if you develop unexpected bleeding, unusual bruising, or tingling. if you have had spinal anesthesia while on xarelto®, watch for back pain or any nerve or muscle related signs or symptoms. do not take xarelto® if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. tell your doctor before all planned medical or dental procedures. before starting xarelto®, tell your doctor about any conditions such as kidney, liver, or bleeding problems. jim changed his routine. ask your doctor about xarelto®. once-a-day xarelto® means no regular blood monitoring, no known dietary restrictions. for information and savings options, download the xarelto® patient center app, call 1-888-xarelto, or visit goxarelto.com.
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>> if it's happening we e covering it on the doctors friday news feed. reeth whitherspoon, addiction. jennifer aniston, chronic pain am doing arreally well. >> illnesses that are earning hollywood leading ladies oscar buzz. >> plus. >> our baby was not well. >> what they did next changed their lives forever. >> this is a miracle. >> that's what it does, gives people hope. >> i have a large growth on the back of my thigh. >> wait until you see the explosive surgery surprise. [ audience oohs ] ♪ ♪ doctor, doctor gimme the news ♪ >> we have a star-studded friday news feed but first i want to acknowledge "time magazine"'s personhe year, the yearly acknowledgement that highlight idea or thing that has had the most influence over the year's events and of tha
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