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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  October 14, 2016 7:00am-9:01am EDT

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>> oh! captioning funded by cbs good morning. it is friday, october 14th, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning." donald trump says accusations of sexual misconduct are lies. a new poll shows him seven points behind hillary clinton. trump's running mate governor mike pence will be right here in studio 57. >> michelle obama says trump's view of women is cruel and frightening. why the first lady's fiery speech could be a defining campaign moment. plus, prince fans go crazy, celebrating his life and music. other big names honor the rock legend with a five-hour tribute concert. we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener." your world in 90 seconds.
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slander and libel was thrown at me by the clinton machine and "the new york times," as part of a coordinated and vicious attack. >> donald trump plays defense. >> no woman deserves to be treated this way. none of us deserves this kind of treatment. >> claim the mantle of the party of family values. and this is the guy you nominate? >> we do our job, then donald trump will stop being on the news every single day. >> our independence day is at hand and it arrives, finally, on november 8th. >> the man accused of planting bombs in new york and new jersey made his first court appearance. >> pleading not guilty in connection with the shoot-out with new jersey police officers when he was arrested. >> the ntsb released their first report on the deadly new jersey transit collision. the brakes were working at the time of the crash. nicole tore aacross bermuda with 115-mile-an-hour wind.
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>> the united states airlines suffered a system-wide flight delay issue. a spokesperson for the airline says the issue is now resolved. [ screaming ] >> i could watch this forever. >> all that. >> it's henry with the touchdown and the chargers have held on for a much-needed victory! >> the los angeles dodgers are headed to chicago. >> a little bit of an adrenaline rush there. >> and all that matters. >> if you love prince, make some noise! >> go crazy! >> fans of prince poured their hearts out last night for a tribute concert. ♪ purple rain purple rain >> on "cbs this morning." >> bob dylan was awarded the nobel prize in literature today. give it up for bob dylan. they said, dylan, he said this is the greatest honor i've ever seen or he may have said mrs. gravy on her possible steen.
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it's impossible to tell. announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places! ♪ welcome to "cbs this morning." gayle king is off to josh elliott of our streaming network cbsn is with us. the election is 25 days away. donald trump is defending himself against sexual assault allegations by launching a new attack against the accusers and the media. the latest national poll shows hillary clinton leading trump by seven points, 45-38% when third-party candidates are included. the poll also find nearly half of republicans would like someone else as their party's nominee. >> we watched donald trump, yesterday, tell supporters that reports of him groping or kissing women against their will are pure fiction and outright lies. major garrett is in cincinnati where trump fired up thousands of loyal supporters. major, good morning.
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>> reporter: good morning. in the heat of ballotttle and lacking any real evidence of sexual misconduct, donald trump, yesterday, in florida, blamed the entire controversy and the ensuing media fire storm on the clinton campaign and clinton sympathizers and corrupt and compliant media and trump didn't have any evidence for that either. by the time he got to cincinnati last night, trump said all of this should be focused on hillary clinton and he attacked her relentlessly. >> wow! this is a lot of people! >> reporter: in front of a rowdy crowd in front of 15,000 donald trump said what supporters have anklely chanted for months. >> she should be locked up. she should. facts mean nothing. third-rate journalism. >> reporter: earlier in florida, trump tried to smother numerous accusations of making you wanted sexual advances and abusing his celebrity power. >> these attacks are orchestrated by the clinton's and their media allies. the only thing hillary clinton
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has going for herself is the press. >> reporter: trump denied the claim against natasha stoynoff saying the following, quote. >> why didn't they make it part of the story? i was one of the biggest stars on television stars with "the apprentice." and would have been one of the biggest stories of the year. >> trump implied the writer wasn't his type and the core of many allegations against him. >> take a look. you take a look. look at her. look at her word. you tell me what you think. i don't think so. i don't think so. >> reporter: melania's trump attorney demanded an attraction and vaguely threatened a libel suit. despite days of criticism and negative publicity trump supporters said they couldn't
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care less. >> we are not electing somebody's husband. we are electing a president. >> save this country more than anything else. >> reporter: trump's campaign is moving field staff from virginia to north carolina, but denying its pulling out of virginia, a state hope to win. josh, the official explanation early voting in north don't recall but instead of admitting it's pulling out of virginia but admitting campaign malpractice and not having the people in right place at the right time. michelle obama is drawing a huge response this morning for a speech where she condemned donald trump for his comments about women. >> i can't believe that i'm saying that a candidate for president of the united states has bragged about sexually assaulting women. >> the first lady's hard hitting speech in new hampshire was just part of the clinton campaign's attack on donald trump
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yesterday. president obama and vice president joe biden also spoke out in appearances across the country. nancy cordes is in san francisco where clinton held a fund-raiser yesterday. nancy, good morning to you. >> reporter: good morning. michelle obama's speech is already being declared one of the powerful if not the most powerful speeches of this election cycle with added impact because no one really saw it coming. she was praised heavily by hillary clinton yesterday. and part of it is that she, like her husband, has no future plans to run for office. >> you claim the mantle of the party of family values and this is the guy you nominate? >> reporter: in ohio last night, president obama said the choice has never been so stark. a case his wife made earlier in the day in deeply personal terms. >> it has shaken me to my core in a way that i couldn't have predicted. >> reporter: the first lady devoted an entire speech to the mounting accusations against
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trump. >> the shameful comments about our bodies. the disrespect of our ambitions and intellect. the belief that you can do anything you want to a woman? it is cruel. it's frightening. >> reporter: word of her speech spread quickly online and on the trail. >> i hope you will see michelle obama's speech today in new hampshire. >> reporter: by the time vice president biden spoke in las vegas, a couple of hours later, supporters were chanting the first lady's favorite catch phrase. in san francisco, clinton urged supporters not to get discouraged by how crude this campaign has become. >> if we do our jobs, in 26 days, donald trump will stop being on the news! >> reporter: what is in the news every day? wikileaks with another 1,800
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hacked e-mails on thursday and one exchange about two years ago, campaign manager mook outlied the gop primary and involved moving the illinois primary out of mid march where they are currently a life line to a moderate republican and he writes time is tight and they need the help of democrats in both chambers of the state legislature but the clinton's won't forget what their friends have done for them. in the end, the plan never got off the ground and the illinois primary stayed where it was in march but mook didn't have to worry about that moderate rubbed candidate to win because the two top finishers in illinois were ted cruz and, in first place, donald trump. republican vice presidential nominee and indiana governor mike pence joins us now. good morning, governor. >> good morning. >> listening to that, do you understand that if these accusations are true and based on what donald trump said on the
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bus is very, very offensive to women? >> well, let me say, first, as a father of two daughters and as a public person, we take these kind of allegations very seriously, but donald trump made it very clear yesterday, he is categorically denied these allegations and these kind of unsubstantiated claims being given so much focus in the media at the time we have hard evidence flowing out of the clinton foundation, the clinton years. we had evidence this week, in fact, that while she was secretary of state, hillary clinton and her aides actually gave preferential treatment. >> we would like. >> treatment -- >> we would like to ask all of those questions. >> in haiti. >> we would like to ask all of those questions but -- >> the unsubstantiated claims are dominating the news. >> we have donald trump's running mate here this morning. second question. have you tried to find out from him in conversation whether any of this is true? >> donald trump has assured -- >> have you talked to him directly about this? >> absolutely.
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>> and he -- >> he told me -- >> you believe him? do you believe him? >> donald trump has asserted that all of these recent unsubstantiated allegations are categorically falls and i believe him. >> you believe him that the women are liars? >> the donald trump has i come to know and my family has come to know and spent considerable amount of time is someone who has a long record of not only, you know, loving his family and lifting his family up, but employing and promoting women in positions of authority in this company and i spoke this tome all the time and people who know him know this to be true. when i joined this race, charlie, honestly, you know, i left a job that i love, the state that i love to be able to step up as a candidate for vice president because i think this country is in a lot of trouble. >> you also brought to this -- >> america is facing new and unknown threats at home and abroad and a struggling economy. as i travel around the country
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quite honestly, in washington yesterday the 19,000 people in pennsylvania where i campaigned, last night they are focused on the issues at their kitchen table, safety, security, law and order and -- >> as well they should but also character is an important issue. is there a point in which you say my values, there is a red line and we have passes and i cannot stay on this ticket? is there a red line for you? >> charlie, we're in this campaign and we're in it to win this for the american people. i mean -- but you speak about the issue of character. it really is extraordinary that in the wake of revolutions and last weekend donald trump made it clear, he apologized for what he said 11 years ago. he showed humility, he showed heart. he focused that national presidential debate back on the issues that really affect the american people at home and abroad. yet, to be honest with you all due respect the avalanche of e-mails continues to emerge. hillary clinton advocating open
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borders when she was giving a speech in brazil, advocating socialized medicine when she gave a speech in canada. the haitian issue to me is the biggest one. $10 billion in aid contracts and we see despite her -- despite her statements to the contrary, that while she was secretary of state, the friends of the clinton's were given preference shal treatment for contracts for the reconstruction of haiti after an earthquake. that is kind of -- >> governor, i want to let my colleagues have a chance here. >> i -- >> i want my colleagues to have a chance. these are important issues and we would like to raise them with her and her running mate but we have you here this morning. >> let me ask you this. do you still believe the language that donald trump used in that tape that was released was locker room talk? do you still believe that's true? >> well, with i expressed myself on that. on that video this last weekend and i urged donald trump to apologize, which he did. >> let me -- >> not only on friday night but sunday night he went before the american people and he -- and he said he was embarrassed of what he said 11 years ago.
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>> he tped to continued to say just locker room talk. >> he made it clear it was just talk and the latest allegations came forward he has categorically denied them. >> let me get you to respond to the first lady. she said this wasn't locker room banter but a powerful individual speaking openly and freely about sexually predatory behavior. at the very least, does that make you uncomfortable? >> look. i have a lot of respect for the first lady and the job she has done for the american people over the last seven and a half years. but i don't understand the basis of her claim. donald trump -- >> you don't believe his language was sexually predatory? >> well, no. i already spoke about my concerns about the language he used in that 11-year-old video. but what he has made it clear is that was talk, regrettable talk on his part. but that there were no actions and that is he categorically denied these latest
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unsubstantiated allegations. frankly i think before the day is out the allegations will be questioned. the same reporters who wrote a similar story six months ago for "the new york times" have wrote this story and that story was completely discredited. >> what evidence is coming out? >> well, just stay tuned. i know that there is more information that is going to be coming out that will back his claim that this is all categorically false. >> will he be suing the reporters? >> well, i think melania trump has already made it clear that she has put "people" magazine on notice that the claims from 12 years ago on potentially actionable in a court of law so i'll leave that to all of them. but the thing is this campaign, what donald trump said yesterday, what i said in pennsylvania yesterday, and i'll say it again in florida today, we are simply not going to allow the slander and lies emerging from the clinton political
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machine and being propagated in the media to distract attention from the real issues affecting the american people which are the rise of radical islamic terrorism in the world, literally the wider middle east spinning apart in the wake of hillary clinton's failed foreign policy as secretary of state, and an economy in pennsylvania where i was yesterday that is truly struggling. families are hurting and all hillary clinton is offering is the same -- >> governor, we have limited time and i know you want to talk about the issues. so let me ask you about russia in particular. >> right. >> do you believe that they are trying to influence this election through state-sponsored cyber attacks? >> there is more and more evidence of that. >> will you condemn russia for doing that? >> i've already condemned russia for any potential involvement or compromise of the cyber security of this country, whatever their mof mofgs moefgss are candidly it should be troubling to the american people and i think the fact that the clinton foundation
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accepted tens of millions of dollars from foreign governments while hillary clinton was secretary of state ought to be being talked about in this campaign. >> governor, also in pennsylvania where donald trump, once again, invoked the notion that this election may be rigged, said that the election may be stolen from us. he asked people to watch other communities. >> right. >> and said that you know -- everybody knows what i'm talking about. what exactly, when he invokes a very dangerous claim is he talking about? >> well, i think -- i think the one person, one vote principle is at the very core of our american democracy and we talked about -- here about this a lot on the campaign trail. i think what he said is what i've said many times, is that -- and that voter fraud has been a problem in jurisdictions around the country. we are currently involved in a pretty vigorous investigation in the state of indiana over voter fraud. it is in the interest of everybody on every side of the
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spectrum to defend the one vote one principle. the way elections are managed at the state level is to become involved as a poll watcher and poll volunteer and we consistently encourage people to do that. i would say to the viewers republican or democrat, if you want to protect and ensure the integrity of the vote get involved in your precinct at a local level and provide that kind of accountability. >> thank you for coming. >> thank you for being here. >> thank you all. cbs news coverage of the third and last debate begins wednesday at 9:00 eastern, 8:00 central on cbs. a computer meltdown caused worldwide flight delays. passengers reported long lines overnight and evidence there you see at airports across the country. somewhere were forced to wait for hours as hundreds of flights were grounded. united said it identified the source of the problem and it has been resolved. the cause, though, is not clear. the pacific northwest is getting slammed by the first in a series of powerful storms. waves crashed aboard this
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fishing boat off oregon's coast and seattle area had 6 inches of rain last night and lashed by 80-mile-an-hour winds. the next round of severe weather is expected to hit the region starting tomorrow. in california, sierra nevada, wind gusts could reach 125 miles an hour. drones are helping to save lives in remote parts of africa. ahead we take you to rwanda to show you a
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announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by listerine. bring out on the bold. michelle obama says donald trump believes you can do anything you want to women. >> her speech yesterday is shaking up the campaign. a new report on how her personal and emotional arguments came together. the news is back in the morning right here on "cbs this morning."
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the stage. >> live from the cbs broadcast center in philadelphia. this is cbs-3 "eyewitness news". good morning, i'm rahel solomon. two teenage remembers dead and police investigation underway after a late night car crash on the boulevard, police say, suv crashed into hyundai at roosevelt boulevard and front street at about 12:30 last night. the teenagers were riding this is the hyundai. both of the drivers are in stable condition at einstein medical center. looking at the forecast with katie. looks like it could be nice little fall forecast. >> absolutely next several days looking phenominal here in the delaware valley, starting things off on chilly note it is october after all. thirty-six not out of the question to be starting off out here in kutztown at kutztown area middle school. one of my personal favorite shot we have, because you get such a gorgeous sunrise, on days like this, virtually, no wind though. so very calm and again very crisp day. that's unfolding. the next too days look just as
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nice, little milder, and it will continue that warming trends in the next week, as we flirt with 80 come wednesday, but we have some showers to dodge on monday. meisha? >> looking great. katie, thank you so much. and the sun is up. a lot of the camera shots, we had accident here moving in the northbound direction at girard pulled off to the shoulder, you can see it there with the flash willing g lights, overall still looking busy on south 95. that is back up shot moving in the northbound direction toward the accident just heads up on that, construction nine at traffic shift, northbound lanes at cottman, starting 8:00 p.m. tonight until mid-morning tomorrow. >> thank you, next update at clock 55, up next on cbs this morning, revolutionary drones
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♪ we are at the pentagon! and i'm going to spend the day with secretary of defense ash carter. >> this is a direct line to president obama. >> no way. >> yeah. want to prank him? >> president barack obama, this is vladimir putin. we are secretary ash carter and will not be giving him back. >> you'll never hold me! >> he is getting away! please don't let him jump on my horse! oh, no! this is very bad! >> up here, my portrait. >> did you pose for that one? >> sure. >> can i try to guess the nuclear code? >> sure. >> 1-2-3, 4, 5? >> we need to change the nuclear code. >> that is really funny. >> well done by both. >> yeah, by both.
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very funny. welcome back to "cbs this morning." this half hour, more on michelle obama's stinging condemnation of donald trump. the first lady said she has been shaken to her core by his behavior. julianna goldman shows us the story behind the dramatic and personal attack. plus, an african nation is joining forces with silicon valley for life saving technology. drones are delivering blood to a remote area. how a single text message ahead can save a life. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. the star ledger reports the man accused of planting bombs in new york and new jersey is pleading not guilty. >> mr. rahami, sir, can you hear me? >> yes. >> ahmad rahami is charged with five counts of attempt murder against new jersey police officers. he entered his plea by video from a hospital bed. it was the first time he was
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seen publicly since his shoot-out with police in september. "usa today" found that children die in gun accidents more often. the government knows. a thousand shooting incident in two and a half period ending last june. 320 minors were killed. the federal government missed one-third of those cases says the paper. "the washington post" reports on the widespread risk of deadly bacterial infection to heart surgery patients and linked to a device during their operations. more than 500,000 patients who had surgery since 2012 could be at risk but only around 28 cases were detected in the past year. patients, in fact, may not develop symptoms for months. "wall street journal" finds out what airlines plan to do about the growing risk of mobile devices that overheat. planes are being stocked with fire containment bags. there have been nearly two dozen cases of smoke, fire, or explosions this year on planes or in airports. an airliner was evacuated
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earlier this month when a flyer's samsung phone started billowing smoke. michelle obama's attack on donald trump could be a defining campaign moment. the first lady told hillary clinton supporters that trump's comments about women are so demeaning, she cannot stop thinking about them. >> this was not just a lewd conversation. this wasn't just locker room banter. this was a powerful individual speaking freely and openly about sexually predatory behavior. it reminds us of stores we heard from our mothers and grandmothers about how, back in their day, the boss could say and do whatever he pleased to the women in the office. we thought all of that was ancient history, didn't we? and so many have worked for so many years to end this kind of violence and abuse and disrespect, but here we are in 2016 and we are hearing these exact same things every day on
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the campaign trail. we are drowning in it. and all of us are doing what women have always done. we are trying to keep our heads above water, just trying to get through it, trying to pretend like this doesn't really bother us. no woman deserves to be treated this way. none of us deserves this kind of treatment. and -- and i know it's a campaign, but buildithis isn't politics. it's about basic human decentsy and about right and wrong and we simply cannot endure this or expose our children to this not any longer. not another minute and, let alone four years. let's be very clear. strong men, strong men, men who are truly role models don't need to put down women to make themselves feel powerful.
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>> julianna goldman at the white house has new information on why the first lady gave this speech. julianna, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. well, this is quickly becoming not just one of the most notable speeches of the 2016 election but also michelle obama's time as first lady. now we have learned that she nixed her standard stump speech she has been delivering to spend the first half talking in emotional and personal terms about donald trump's language. you can hear her voice quivering. she minced no words about what it's like for a woman to hear that tape. now the speech really was the first lady's idea and michelle obama played a bigger role in crafting the remarks than usual and aides say as of a couple of weeks she wanted to focus more on women's issue but the more personal speech really took shape after that tape surfaced last friday. it, obviously, had more resonance coming the same day as reports from women alleged that trump had assaulted them but she
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would have delivered that speech regardless of the latest reporting. aides said she felt the need to special to passionately after that tape came out because michelle obama has spent her life trying to empower women and girls and donald trump's remarks on that tape crystallized what she believes is now at stake in this election. now as for donald trump, we know that he is wanting to counterpunch and yet to respond to the first lady's speech. but the white house has issued this morning, a spokesperson said i can't think of a bolder way for donald trump to lose even more standing than by engaging the first lady of the united states. >> certainly quite a moment. julianna, thank you for that. revolutionary approach to health care is launched in the african country of rwanda. drones developed by silicone valley engineers are used to drop urgently needed medical supplies to isolated areas. that dramatically reduces the wait for patients in need in the remote west of the country.
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debora patta is just outside of the rwandan capital. >> good morning. dubbed the country of a thousand hills, we are in a remote rural part of rwanda. the road here are extremely poor and become impassible during the rainy season and makes access to health care really difficult and that is where this remarkable drone technology comes in. >> 3-2-1! >> reporter: the sight of a drone hurdling across the rwandan skies usually is fear on the african continent but it's regarded as an instrument of death. but instead of destroying lives, this drone is here to save them. >> what this represents is an opportunity, a, to leapfrog over the absence of roads and prov e provide, you know, first world level medical care to every single person in the country, regardless of where they live. >> actually, this has way -- >> reporter: he is the cofounder
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of zip line a california-based tech company that uses engineers with experience in nasa and boeing. to build better drones capable of accessing remote areas, dropping blood instead of bombs. half of the 65,000 units of blood currently delivered by road each year, are used in life saving transfusions for women who lose too much blood during childbirth. this doctor tells us in his rural hospital, it can take hours for the blood to arrive. the forward thinking rwandan government wants to change this and the first african nation to sign up with silicon valley to bring cutting edge technology to a country that's infrastructure is far more third world in places. >> from this distribution center, we can serve thousands of help workers and doctors and for those individuals, the experience of the system is super simple. send a text message, receive the product you need to save a
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patient's life. >> reporter: each package is attached in a cardboard box and secured and on its way to the life saving mission using gps coordinates. this took 30 minutes to deliver blood to a clinic 33 miles from the blood bank. the launch of the drones today puts rwanda on the cusp of a technological revolution and turn around their health care services and see similar projects launched across the continent. >> debora patta in rwanda, thank you. amazing to think that can save so many lives and use technology in that way. >> incredible to see that and good for everybody involved. coming up, superstars align to celebrate prince. ahead, the concert that brought music legends together on one stage to help fans pay tribute. take us on the go with you. we invite you to subscribe to our new "cbs this morning"
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podcast. get the news of the day and extended interviews and podcast originals and find them on itunes and apple's podcast app. we will be right back. from leaving me at a higher risk of stroke. that'd be devastating. i took warfarin for over 15 years until i learned more about once-daily xarelto... a latest generation blood thinner. then i made the switch. xarelto® significantly lowers the risk of stroke in people with afib not caused by a heart valve problem. it has similar effectiveness to warfarin. warfarin interferes with vitamin k and at least six blood clotting factors. xarelto® is selective targeting one critical factor of your body's natural clotting function. for people with afib currently well managed on warfarin, there is limited information on how xarelto and warfarin compare in reducing the risk of stroke. like all blood thinners, don't stop taking xarelto without talking to your doctor, as this may increase your risk of a blood clot or stroke. while taking you may bruise more easily,
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♪ >> "let's go crazy" from the prince's tribute concert last night. lineup of artists shared the stage to honor one of the music's greatest performers. michelle miller was there and at prince's paisley park compound. michelle, good morning. >> good morning. that five-hour concert was certainly a celebration of prince's life and also brought some closure after his sudden death. prince, of course, died here at paisley park six months ago from an accidental drug overdose but still a lot of questions about the future of this estate and included in that, an entire vault of his unreleased music.
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♪ >> reporter: stevie wonder and chaka khan partied like it was 1999 on thursday. nearly six months after prince's death, some of music's biggest names shared the stage to help give his fans and themselves a bit of closure. the concert's 17,000 tickets sold out quickly last month. >> the concert means a lot for the people of the twin cities because they can finally get together and both mourn and celebrate. ♪ purple rain purple rain >> reporter: prince was a master entertainer. a concert in his honor attempted to live up to his genius. ♪ >> reporter: fans are also honoring prince's legacy at his paisley park home, now converted to a museum. zoning issues have kept it from officially opening to the public, but the museum got a temporary permit to open the next two weekend. >> the record p. the gold
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records. >> reporter: "et" kevin frazier was one of the first to tour the archive last week. prince left no known will so unfortunate how his $300 million fortune will be divided and billboard is shopping those to record labels for as much as $35 million. his sister and five half siblings could share the estate. >> we are going to remix it. we are going to get it out. >> reporter: but for the artist and his fans who loved him, prince's "purple rain" will go on forever. ♪ purple rain purple rain >> reporter: now a few hiccups. john mayer and christine ya aguilera and net and baker were billed to perform last night but they did not. it was those who collaborated with prince over his 40-year career, mint condition, morris
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day and the time and so many more, they brought the house down but truly the finale "purple rain" was the show stopper. prince in his own voice. >> michelle is excited about that one. >> we were all singing along here, michelle. rightful fufu fufully so. shark proof cages are not always shark proof. that is awful. ahead, a scuba diver gets a far closer look than he might have wanted at a great white shark. first, it's time to check
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eliquis treats dvt & pe blood clots. plus had less major bleeding. both made switching to eliquis right for me. ask your doctor if it's right for you. ♪ >> here we go. >> whoa! >> terrifying moment caught on video as a shark breaks into a cage with a diving instructor inside! it happened on an island in the
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live in philadelphia. this is cbs-3 "eyewitness news". good morning, i'm joe holden. police are investigating the death of a special needs student at a school in wynnefield height. police say the 15 year old boy died after a scuffle with a staff member at wordsworth academy. they say the teen had medical issues, authorities saw they'll release more details once their investigation is complete. >> and, now, to the eyewitness weather forecast, with katie fehlinger. hey, katy? >> good morning, joe. looking ahead here to real pleasant day, off to cool start, mid october, so you're used to dressing in layers at this point, temperatures definitely reflecting the need for that, 41 the current temperature in allentown, only in the 30's mount pocono, 49 currently in philly. now the sun has been up shy after hour so it will do it part to help the temperatures
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to begin to rebounds, only get so far. still expecting only 56 on the thermometer, but beautiful fall day, ever so slightly below average, and the weekends looks absolutely stellar, meisha? >> seventy-seven and 78 next week, oh, katie! this weekend looks great, as well. fifty-nine north at girard, looking at we do have accident pulled off to the shoulder and it is looking fairly slow around there. plus, you guys, weaver fatal accident in doylestown, route 611, east road southbound at main street heads up on that area, as well. septa university city tunnel construction airport media elwyn, adjusted saturday and sunday schedules, check them. joe? >> next update at 8: 25, coming up former cia director talks isis and
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♪ it is friday, october 14th, 2016. welcome back to "cbs this morning." more real nus ahead news ahead including the candidate's views on national security and russia and cyberwars. cia director michael hayden is here in our series "issues that matter." first, here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. >> donald trump blamed the entire controversy upon the clinton campaign. clinton sympathizers and corrupt and compliant need. >> obama's speech is declared one of the most powerful of this election cycle and no one saw it coming. >> talk to him directly? >> absolutely. >> you believe him? >> i -- >> do you believe him? >> donald trump has -- has asserted that all of these
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recent unsubstantiated allegations are categorically false and i do believe him. >> she says this is not locker room banter. does that make you uncomfortable? >> i have a lot of respect for the first lady and the job she has done the last seven and a half years but i don't understand the basis of her claim. >> she spent the first half talking in an emotional and personal terms about donald trump's language. >> that five-hour concert was certainly a celebration of prince's life and also brought some closure after his sudden death. president obama, today, released a list of his favorite sci-fi movies and tv shows. it's good to see him digging into the big issues before he leaves the white house. >> said obama, i just can't wait to get home from kenya. i believe it's october already? gotcha. i'm charlie rose with norah o'donnell and josh elliott of our screaming network cbsn. gayle is off today.
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donald trump is emphatically and repeatedly denying allegations of sexual misconduct made by multiple women. trump said in ohio he was falsely accused and offered no evidence he and he blamed hillary clinton. >> gop lareaders wait until nowo disavow trump. >> finally the last minute the guy they nominated and they endorsed and supported is caught on tape saying things that no decent person would even think, much less say, much less brag about, much less laugh about or joke about, much less act on. you can't wait until that finally happens and then say, oh, that's too much! >> the president said he is less forgiving to, quote, the people who know better and stood silently by for political convenience.
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one of the most critical talking points for the presidential nominees is national security. in our continuing series "issues that matter" we are taking a look at the threats to the united states, the next president will have to confront. >> when it comes to keeping america safe, i believe in three very important words -- peace through strength. >> this is a time for america to lead, not coward and we will lead. >> then there is isis. have a simple message for them. their days are numbered. i won't tell them where and i won't tell them how. >> we should keep the pressure on ramping up the air campaign, accelerating support for our friend fighting to take and hold ground, and pushing our partners in the region to do even more. >> it's called extreme vetting. people are coming into our
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country like we have no idea who they are, where they are from, what their feelings about our country is. >> i will not let anyone into our country that i think poses a are risk to us. but there are a lot of refuges. there are children suffering in this catastrophic war, largely, i believe because of russian aggression, and we need to do our part. >> i'm not using the term muslim. i'm saying you're going to ha profile. we need to start profiling. >> we need to cooperate are the muslim community. they are on the front lines. >> on the critical attacks of our country, the united states has to possess and has to the unquestioned capacity to launch crippling cyber counterattacks and i mean crippling. >> i will make it clear that the
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u.s. will treat cyber attacks like any other attacks. we will be ready with serious political, economic, and military responses. >> retired air force commander michael hayden, then led the central intelligence agency until 2009. he was one of 50 former national security officials who signed a letter saying donald trump, quote, likes the character, values and experience to be -- lacks the character, values and experience to be president. he is now a president of the chertoff group. general, good morning. thank you for being here as we try to focus on some of the issues that perhaps have not gotten as much attention in this campaign. let's start with the issue of national security. and these cyber attacks. how do you see russia as trying to influence our election? >> actually, i think the russians are trying to erode confidence in our processeses. i'm convinced the russians are doing this. the clinton campaign have said they are doing it to pick a winner.
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i don't think that is true. i think even putin understands that is a multiple carom shot by what the russians are doing and creating talking points for both campaigns if you get what i mean. >> what is the goal of that then? >> it is to erode confidence in our political processes and to mess with our head. it's to do to us what he think we do to him and his political processes. it's a way of his pushing back against what he views to be american pressure. >> but is there a connection between russia and wiki leaks? what is it? >> i do. so here is the sequence, all right? i think the actual theft is being done by russian criminal gangs on behalf of the russian state at the direction of the russian state. it's a little bit of a cutout plausible deniability. i do think the russians are pushing these in the direction of wikileaks and let them push them into the public dough may. norah, i got to say the theft of the documents, honorable,
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international es se espionage. if i got the major thinking party -- >> if all of that is true and you just heard hillary clinton cyberattacks is the same way we respond to other attacks with military, economic and other power. >> sure. >> what has been the united states government's response? >> so here is a way i would suggest we think about it, all right? don't put this in the cyber problem box. put it in the russia problem box. put it in that box with all of these other indicators, actual russian behavior to which we should respond. in my view, respond more robustly. >> what does that mean? what is a proportionate response which the president said they were going to do? >> yeah. charlie, i don't know that i'm in love with the word proportionate, all right? we got a whole bunch of russian behavior and i do think we need to push back against it so i'm
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just spitbawling here with ideas. >> what about the criticism of this administration the failure to push back on this issue the failure to get involved in syria is inviteding these attacks? >> i agree totally and my point. we have been too light in our response. can we be more robust in other areas? for example, more robust in ukraine? and in syria the space we give the russians to operate. one more is getting out of the narrow box. why don't we make it american policy to wean the europeans off of russian gas? why wouldn't doent we simply say we got it, we are going to exploit it and ship it and create a at any time tonic shift in a russian pressure point. >> hurt their economy? >> yes. >> what is the greatest threat to america's national security and where do you place north korea? >> charlie, i get asked this question. i create this little graph here. how bad is it? how much time do you have? down here, it's terrorism, even cyber. out here, three to five years,
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more serious. a bunch of states i call ambitious, fragile and nuclear. north korea, pakistan, iran, even russia. then when i run the time line out here about ten years, i got this bubble way up here that is really important. and that is the sign of american relationship. not saying china is an enemy but if we don't get that right over the long term that is pass/fail. >> back to syria for a moment. we heard both candidates speak to the need for save zones in syria. >> right. >> there has been discussion about how they can best establish them but how realistic is it and what would you do? >> i would do it. josh, it's much harder to do now than one, two, three years ago. the russians being there complicates this. i would actually tuck up relative thin zones along the turkish border with our on turkish friends and jordanian
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border with our jordanian friends. you say this is serious. this is a safe zone. we have responsibilities and we can't let one way or another operate out of there and conduct attacks. that is our policing function, not yours and you should not go there. >> should we make aleppo a no-fly zone? >> i agree with the man you had here who wants to be the vice president with his campaign. i thought far more robust but fortunately disowned by his own presidential candidate. i think on a raw humanitarian basis, we have got to do more. >> right. that was the moment where mike pence said we should use military power to enforce a no-fly zone and donald trump said in the debate, i haven't talked to him about it and we disagree on the issue. he seemed to dis his vice president natural candidate. >> has russia backed into the united states? >> in my view, it has. putin is doing this with a we can't. he doesn't have more than a pair of seven's and has no picture
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card and knows it. the fact we have given him space and allows him to keep betting with a fairly we can't. >> general, thank you. >> thank you. >> thank you for discussing the issues. appreciate it. paul mccartney had a secret for a new hundred fans. ahead how they got to hear sir paul up close at a road house in the california desert. first, it's time to check your local weather.
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did an adulterous husband make his wife kill him? >> i'm in san antonio and standing on the spot where either a tragic accident occurred, or an act of murder. that story is coming up on "cbs this morning." i have asthma... ...one of mlife.ieces in my so when my asthma symptoms kept coming back on my long-term control medicine. i talked to my doctor and found a missing piece
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♪ sudden passion is the legal term for a profoundly human experience, feeling so entrenched in the heat of the moment that you can't think clearly. well, that could have happened to francis hall. she was a texas wife, mother, and grandmother, unhinged by her husband's infidelity. in a preview of tomorrow's "48 hours."
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peter van sant reports. >> reporter: i think that a lot of women see successful men, attractive men they think i want a piece of that and it doesn't matter if they are married or not. >> reporter: texas defense lawyer lee cutter knows a thing or two about jealous women. having just defended francis hall, a wife charged with murdering her unfaithful husband, trucking executive and millionaire bill hall jr. >> bill hall loved francis and his children. but bill's fatal flaw is that he also liked the attention of younger women. >> reporter: in 32 years of marriage to francis, bill cheated plenty. as he confided to his cousin hank hall. what is more, francis knew about bill's affairs but always forgave him. >> bill loved francis so much that it was unbelievable, but when he cheated in the past and she stuck with you, right? kind of makes it seem like it's okay, right? >> reporter: and francis might have forgiven bill, yet again,
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but this time, bill's mistress, bonnie contreras, wasn't letting go. during their three-year affair, bill had paid her rent and even bought her two cars, a bmw and a mercedes. >> bonnie contreras would take compromising photos, kind of gather all of these nuggets that if things ever went south, she had all of the proof she needed to force you to do what she wanted. >> my mother was on the verge of a nervous breakdown because bonnie was taupting her constantly. she is texting and calling francis. bonnie would call her every explicit name in the book. >> reporter: it was a toxic love triangle destined to explode and it did. francis hall was stopped at a light on this road outside of san antonio when she saw her husband bill atop his harley davidson and followed closely by bonnie driving the hall family car. >> i get a phone call from my mom. she said i just saw your dad and i just saw bonnie. i'm turning around. i'm going to confront her.
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>> francis was revved up and driving her own cadillac es escala escalade. she hit the gas and began pursuing bonnie's car. her husband and mistress they are driving toward us on this highway? >> exactly. they are coming this way. they are still going 85, 90 miles an hour. >> francis was out for blood. >> reporter: prosecutor stephanie paulissen. >> i don't think anybody imagine at the end of that day a dead body and someone in handcuffs. >> peter van sant is with us now. what questions do we have now? >> this is a case unresolved to exactly what happened on the highway. the two women tell different stories. it's clear that the wife francis when she took her suv or escalade that weighs 6,000 pounds and took up to 90 miles an hour she initiated this confrontation that turned into death. she claims her husband went off the road when he tried to veer
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his motorcycle, but the mistress who was also at the heart of this claims that she ran over her husband and knocked him off the road. >> what sort of extenuating circumstance is passion in texas? >> a long history in texas. back in the day if you caught your spouse with a significant other you could kill them and it would be a justifiable homicide and that was in the 1960s. sudden passion you just lose it and do something not premeditated and you can get 2 to 20 years for a crime like that. in this case, that's what happened here. >> peter, thank you so much. you can watch the full report "driven to extremes" in a new episode of "48 hours" tomorrow tomorrow night and part of a double feature that starts at 8:00/9:00 central on cbs. two women discover unexpected bonds going back 70 years. ahead we show you their emotional reunion after a surprise reveals a powerful connection. you're watching "cbs this morning." e is basketball.
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and when he went to washington, he voted to change the laws... to benefit wall street and banks like his. voting to gut consumer protections that crack down... on predatory lending and fraud. to take money from you and... line the pockets of wall street millionaires like... himself. pat toomey: out for himself, all in for wall street. dscc is responsible for the content of this advertising. i've always taken on the status quo. in harrisburg, they didn't like it when i stopped their perks and pushed for reform. as head of pennsylvania's third-largest county, i cut out wall street middlemen to protect pensions. now, as chairman of the pennsylvania commission on crime, i'm leading the fight to stop the epidemic of heroin and opioid abuse. as attorney general, i'll prosecute anyone who scams our seniors. and i'll hold the oil and gas companies accountable to keep our drinking water safe. i'm josh shapiro. i'll be an attorney general who always fights for you. do you own a plane? do you own a bank? pat toomey owned both.
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but it's the fact that toomey owns a seat in the u.s. senate that should really concern us. while on the senate banking committee, pat toomey voted to rewrite rules to help bankers like him ...and he tried to eliminate protections put in place to stop wall street's risky practices. pat toomey: looking out for wall street and himself, not pennsylvania. senate majority pac is responsible for the content of this advertising. ♪ to make it better hey jude. >> a surprise concert last night by paul mccartney at a biker bar called happy and harrietirrieir of los angeles. 300 fans quickly snatched up the 50 dollar tickets! >> to be there! >> best name for a road house
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ever. >> absolutely. good morning, i'm rahel solomon. police are searching for the car and driver involved in a unusual crash early this morning, in northeast philadelphia. eyewitnesses tell police a 18 year old man, jumped on the hood of a car, near verree road rhawn street just after 9:00 last night, teenager thrown off, he's now in critical condition. not clear if the driver and the injured teenager new one another. now we switch it over, sends it to meteorologist, katie fehlinger. nice forecast. >> looking so nice, rahel. for now we do have the chill in the air, granted, another one of those days, dress in layers, but virtually no winds, nothing but sunshine, several weather accessories you'll needed to. extra layer, also sunglasses because we barely have cloud in the sky. that will be the story all day, storm scan3, showing nothing, absolutely nothing to see here folks, not even the
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clouds on a saturday light. so with that said, under nice clear sky tonight, we will have frost advisory take effect for the second time this season, philly once again not included, however, so where we drop into the 40's in the city, the urban corridor, it is more like the mid or low 30's as go out to the outlying suburbs, that's where you are likely to see the frost form. cure man three day for the cure sunday looks absolutely perfect when it comes to the forecast, timing with us, sunday, just beautiful. meanwhile, by monday, still mild, but, that's when our next shot for showers moves into the region, meisha, over to you. >> despite the beautiful sunshine, i can tell you right now we are really busy out there, okay? so around 8:30 a.m., still rush hour, fire department activity 95 north before academy pulled off to the right shoulder and around this area it is very slow moving. also, downingtown accident route 30 eastbound past route 282 blocking left lane, as you can see, causing significant backups there, and fatal accident here, in doylestown, you guys, route 611 easton road closed near main street, you will have to use alternate
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route 413 will be your best bet, rahel, back to you. >> thank you, next update at 8:55, ahead on cbs this morning, two women discover unexpected connection after 70 years. i'm rahel solomon, good morn
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♪ >> sing your song! ♪ let's go to the mall, everybody! go! ♪ >> i was a teenage pop star in canada. >> pro singing to comedy actors, cobie smulders is in our toyota green room. >> hi! >> how she prepared physically and mentally for her new role in the latest jack reacher movie. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around
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the globe. london's zoo locked down yesterday when a gorilla got loose. the 7-foot tall ape was caught on video hitting a screen in his enclosure before his escape. officials say he did not reach any public areas before captured. they are investigating how he got out. chris rock will earn $40 million for his return to the small screen. netflix has signed the emmy winning comic for a pair of stand-up specials and taping begin next year. the paychecks believed to be the biggest area for a comedian. he hasn't been on tv for eight years but didn't he host the oscars? >> i suppose that counts. actress cobie smulders stars at major susan turner in "jack reacher don't go back." a police unit framed for espionage. >> ma'am? these men are here to transfer
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you. >> who are they? reacher? what are you doing? >> reacher, do you know who i am? >> relieve the command, ma'am. >> no time. >> without cause. it is your right to -- i thought it was under my command. >> we don't have time for this! >> i left explicit orders for you to stay away. >> orders? orders? >> yes. i knew you would do something like this. >> don't make me regret it! >> cobie, welcome. good morning. >> thank you for having me. >> so major susan turner, again, in charge of the elite unit, the jack reacher was once part of. who is she and why has jack reacher chosen to go back even though he was never supposed to? >> good call. well, i think he goes back. these two characters strike up a relationship over the phone and it becomes a little bit
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flirtatious. and he actually comes back to ask her out on a date and when he arrives at his old office, her current office, he find that she has been arrested and thrown in jail. and so he goes and he breaks into jail, breaks in and out of jail and for the rest of the film, they are on the reason together. >> a lot of stunts in this movie, right? >> there is a lot. >> did you have a stunt double? >> i had a stunt double but i never used her. >> you did all of your own stunts? >> i did. i was very proud and i was very determined to do that. it took a lot of training. >> is that like you showing up to the set every day, look, she is here? >> got it. she's ready to go. >> i had this girl lucy. we actually did a lot of our training together whenever we were doing all of the stunt choreography, we worked together and fought each other and i mirrored her because she knows what she is doing. yes. she was always at the ready and i think we used her for a couple of shots just so the stunt guy could throw her a bit harder than he threw me.
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but i did all of it myself. >> any comedy in this? >> yeah. there is! there is, actually! the film, although it's a crime thriller, there is a lot of comedic moments because like life, even in dire situations, you have to laugh at your circumstances. >> tom cruise, i mean, he produced it and stars in that. >> yes. >> in the film as well. how was it working with tom cruise? >> it was amazing. quite frankl quite honestly, with me to jump into the high intensity that was required for all of the training, i mean, he helped prepare me at the he has an amazing team of stunt people he works with constantly. he is an expert and it was such a joy to learn from him in that respect and also it was just fun to be around him and he is an amazing man. >> go ahead. >> one of the producers said she is the perfect combination of brilliance, physical ability, and humor and quintessential american girl next door. >> or a canadian girl next door? >> even though she is canadian! >> oh! yeah.
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that is a huge compliment. i don't know. i just -- i just was excited to jump on to this role and to play a woman within the military because i think it takes a very strong determined type of person to not only enlist but to have that type of career. >> this movie sort of breaks down the stereo typical woman who gets rescued. >> i like to think when he comes to break me out of jail i would get out of there myself. >> the clip we played certainly suggested that. >> i was almost really angry to see him when he came to bust me out of there, yes. >> lee child, writer, visited the set, has a cameo in it. >> yes. >> what is it, do you think, then about this character and this story that he has created that resonates. >> well, i think, you know, he has successfully written 21 books within this series. this is book number 18 and when i jumped on to this project, i had planned to read all of them and then i realized it was book
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18. but -- so i didn't. >> you didn't have a calendar? >> i have a life. and i want to keep that life. but he's an amazing writer. and i think the character of jack reacher is really interesting. he's a lone wolf. he likes to go through life alone and he is not used to being paired with anybody or having to worry about anybody and that is what is interesting about this film. he forced into this family dynamic by being coupled up with me and we also pick up a teenager, a young girl played play danika ross. >> it's so good to see you again. so excited about this movie. thank you. jack reacher never go back opens in theaters october 21st. ahead, an emotional reunion for a pair of women in chicago. listen to this. they met again after discovering an unexpected bond nearly 70 years after first crossing
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i survived breast cancer. if the doctors hadn't caught it early i might not be sitting here. so i'm outraged that pat toomey voted to defund planned parenthood... which thousands of pennsylvania women depend on for cancer screenings. pat toomey was even willing to shut down the federal government to eliminate funding for planned parenthood. shut down the government over planned parenthood? i think we ought to shut down pat toomey.
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senate majority pac is responsible for the content of this advertising.
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when i was one year old, i was diagnosed with a rare form of cancer on my spinal chord. but i spent my whole life fighting back. so you can imagine what i thought when i saw donald trump say... "i don't know what i said, ah, i don't remember!" "that reporter he is talking about suffers from a chronic condition that impairs movement of his arms." i don't want a president who makes fun of me. i want a president who inspires me, and that's not donald trump. priorities usa action is responsible for the content of this advertising. two women who escaped from nazi germany in the second world war have discovered a new connection. their separate family history and pictures and documents and they come from a time when communities and countries were torn apart.
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the women first knew each other's neighbors in chicago but nearly 70 years later, they put missing pieces of their stories back together. chip reid shows us their remarkable reunion. chip, good morning. >> good morning. growing up in chicago, they had lived on the same street, attended the same high school, even went to the same university. now all of these decades later, they are finally discovering their true connection. >> i can't believe this! >> i've searched for years and then here she is. >> there we were all the time. >> we were all the time. six degrees of separation. like, what, two blocks away? >> reporter: not even two blocks. in the late 1940s, the two lived a few houses apart in chicago. what do you remember about her? >> i remember she was always smiling and had curly hair and she short. >> reporter: they knew each other only in passing, not realizing they were connected in a way that would bring them
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together nearly a lifetime later. beatrice and renee were born in the same year '43. >> i was born in '34 the same year that hitler came to power and my parents were managing my grandfather's butcher shop. it was closed within a few months. they couldn't work any more. >> reporter: targeted for being jewish, their rights taken away, her terrified parents moved the family to bulgaria and eventually to america. >> we came on the queen mary and my father took me to new york and put me on his shoulder. >> reporter: you remember that? >> that is is my first memory. >> and i remember flames. and i remember running out moo wmy father. i knew my life as it existed was over. >> reporter: beatrice's family fled to belgium. they tried, but failed to find sanctuary in america.
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>> my father took me on a train with my cousin. i thought i was going to summer camp. >> reporter: desperate to keep her safe, beatrice's parents hid her in in a catholic building with a couple of sisters. >> i had no idea i would never see my parents again. >> reporter: just 9 years old and feeling abandon, she wrote her parents a letter. >> dear mommy and daddy. your little girl loves you with all her heart and wishes that someday we might be together again. >> reporter: did you ever see your parents again after that? >> no. >> reporter: what she didn't know then was that her parents had tried to escape the nazis. her father was shot and killed. her mother was sent to auschwitz and was never heard from again. after the war, beatrice made it to chicago as her mother had hoped and was adopted by an aunt
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and uncle. this summer, nearly 70 years later, through ancestry.com, she discovered a branch of relative she never knew existed. pow are you related? >> our grandmothers are cousins. >> reporter: which makes them second cousins. what is it like to find out after all of these years? >> the best thing is finding renata. it's sad we spent a life so connected and we would have loved each other. i can tell that. >> reporter: now reunited and surrounded by their families, they hope their families will remain close for generations to come. do you feel a bond? >> very much so. the fact that trixy is a live person who knew as a kid and turned out to be my cousin. you know, i am so in awe and
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admiring of you and who you are today. >> i think we all sort of do what we have to do, seriously. and we take the real good things when we can get them and this is a real good thing! >> this is a very good thing today, right. >> reporter: beatrice muchman the one on the right in the last shot wrote this book about her experience. never to be forgotten. a young girl's holocaust memoir in which she says her parents almost escaped to america but her father's name was misspelled in their exit document so their request was denied. in essence her parents' last chance to escape the nationalys did not happen because of a typographical error. >> what are the extended family reyoons li reunions like? >> this was the first one. there wasn't a dry eye in the house. powerful story. they want this to go on for generations, this connection. >> her father died in a
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concentration camp? >> her father was shot trying to escape and one the only escapes and the mother was sent to auschwitz and never heard from again. >> thank you, chip. that is terrific. next up, a look at all that mattered this week. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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♪ another amazing, can you believe it, week. >> i know, right. >> thank you for joining us. tune into the "cbs evening news" with scott pelley tonight as we leave you, let's take a look back at all that mattered this week. have a great weekend. ♪ >> he was like an octopus and like he had six arms. >> slander and libel was thrown at me by the clinton machine and "the new york times."
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>> array of charges depict an egotistical man. >> a steady stream of embarrassment for the clinton campaign. >> it's good that donald trump is not in charge of our kin. >> because you would be in jail. >> wasn't much presidential about some of the discussion. >> this was wrestle mania. >> do anything. whatever you want. i can do anything. whatever i want. >> we all heard what he thinks of women. >> locker room talk. >> the front page losing the senate. >> i may be limping across that finish line. >> the nearby lumber river overflowed its banks. >> i lost everything. >> i thought she was dead. >> people were lucky enough to survive and live through hurricane matthew are now facing real catastrophe. >> sangsum may be suspended galaxy note 7 altogether.
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>> you don't want something on fire in your pants. >> americans troops thought they left iraq for good in 2011. you wepon't be fighting on the front line? >> no. >> tom brady is back after serving four-game suspension. >> big papi came out after the game for a final salute. >> it hit me hard. i won't lie to you. >> how much do wish you could debate donald trump? ♪ >> you want to go back to them or do you want to stay with donald trump? >> trump. >> kenneth bone, the undecided voter, has become decidedly popular online. >> did you know your fans are now calling themselves bone heads? >> that's fantastic. i have been calling my family that for years. >> okay, good. >> this guy is so naturally appealing. you know hillary's campaign is just analyzing everything about him.
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she is going to show up at the third debate in a red sweater and a fake mustache. >> you clearly don't know who you're talking to on so let me clue you in. i am not in danger, schuyler. i am the danger. >> were you a bad boy? >> i was not so bad boy. >> you weren't? >> we like bad boys. >> were you a bad boy? >> your title in that picture is what? >> women in ecstasy. that's me. >> one fan pushes the other off the ledge and quickly as the fight began, the pandas were pals again. ♪ kung fu fighting >> but, first, a check of your local weather. all that. >> you could do this job. >> and all that matters. what does it pay? on "cbs this morning." >> not as much as you make. >> oh, please! ♪ watch your mouth
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i would support legislation in pennsylvania that would ban abortion and i would suggest we have penalties for doctors who perform them. would you put people in jail for performing abortions? at some point doctors performing abortions i think would be subject to that sort of penalty. dscc is responsible for the content of this advertising.
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>> good morning, i'm joe holden, one person suffered minor injuries within the half hour when a school bus crash happened in burlington county, chopper three over pemberton road and arnie's mount road. the injured person was not transported to a hospital but apparently treated right there at the scene, also not clear if another car was involved in this crash. the scene is just a short, short distance from pemberton high school. now the eyewitness weather forecast, meteorologist, katie fehlinger in the weather center, katy? >> talk about perfect conditions for the upcoming weekend, joe, knock but sunshine in this forecast, not just today but right through the weekends, also little bit of modest warming trend but still worth dressing in layers, see that in the seven day. clearly taught to one live picture across the live neighborhood network, not
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finding any cloud cover anywhere. high pressure settling in, the clouds just can't form, but it is 49 degrees right now, starting to see just little bit of rebounds take place, we've got our friday football frenzy game of the week tonight, father judge taking on st. joe's prep t looks like it will be cool, certainly, i would highly suggest having blank tote drape over your knees if you are sitting out at any high school football game here tonight, but nice clear skies again perfect football weather frankly. tomorrow we've got frost advisory early in the morning, for specifically the outlying suburbs to the northwest, also, interior southern new jersey, but look at this, wall-to-wall sunshine through the weekends, and gets even warmer into next mid week, meisha. so really is something for everybody in this seven day. >> i was just going to say, can't deny how beautiful it is, katie, thank you so much. so i switch gears completely. we talk about video i'm showing you right now, where a fatal accident has happened in plumbstead town have sh ship route 611 easton road closed right now. this is near main street. the alternate will be 413. that's hard to look at. so again, that's fatal crash.
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you will have to use the alternate 413. also construction on 95, these lanes moves in the northbound direction will have traffic shift. take a look. starting 8:00 p.m. until tomorrow mid-morning, over to you. >> thank you. join us fori et witness news at noon, i'm joe h katie v/she stays late.rd. but she gets paid 21% less than her male coworkers. pat toomey has voted time after time against equal pay for women,
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against pay that helps hard working families get ahead. katie o/c: for my daughters and yours, i'll fight for equal pay for women. families need it; you've earned it. katie v/o: i'm katie mcginty, and i approve this message because it's your turn to get ahead. i've always taken on the status quo. in harrisburg, they didn't like it when i stopped their perks and pushed for reform. as head of pennsylvania's third-largest county, i cut out wall street middlemen to protect pensions. now, as chairman of the pennsylvania commission on crime, i'm leading the fight to stop the epidemic of heroin and opioid abuse. as attorney general, i'll prosecute anyone who scams our seniors. and i'll hold the oil and gas companies accountable to keep our drinking water safe. i'm josh shapiro. i'll be an attorney general who always fights for you.
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>> announcer: today on the doctors, friday news feed. the assassination attempt on president reagan, shook the world. new details on what went down that fateful day. and judgment day for the softdrink industry, and how could it impact you. and i needed help. how sitting in the doctor's audience changed you forever. >> dr. travis: you redefined your life? >> i got my life back and it's all thanks to you. >> announcer: a new hot spot for brunch. >> complete with a side of -- >> dr. travis: beef steak? >> announcer: that's today. >> it's time for the friday news feed, and i know you are dealing with election hangover. we will give you a break from the ugly political news and start the show off with this adorable video

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