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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  December 14, 2015 7:00am-9:00am EST

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captioning funded by cbs good morning. 2015. welcome to "cbs this morning." donald trump attacks ted cruz after the senator's iowa surge. but a new poll shows which defeat hillary clinton. >> we are on the front lines in the fight against isis. how the terror group is using territory. cbs news learns about a major development in the robert durst legal battle that could lead to a showdown in his murder case. we begin this morning with a
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your world in 90 seconds. this morning, two new iowa polls show ted cruz surging into the lead. >> ted cruz gaining ground on the gop front-runner. >> i don't think he is qualified to be president. >> why not? >> look at the way he has dealt with the senate. frankly like a little bit of a maniac. >> president obama will make a require visit to the pentagon monday morning reportedly to sell his strategy for plotting to islamic state army. >> they have more concerns about gun control and climate change than they do this about life. >> every western state is picking up snow with this particular snow. east texas. >> we have a tornado on the ground! >> a southwest airlines plane made an emergency landing at san antonio. the pilot reported problems controlling the wind flaps. question about the use of excessive force after deputies shoot and kill an armed man in california. >> he did not imply with their weapon.
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than. 50 newborns may have come in contact with a nurse who tested positive for t.b. >> a truckdriver in the czech republic is lucky to be alive. a passenger train ripped into the semi ripping it in two. >> all that. >> and it's gronk making the for the touchdown! >> the new england patriots will go to 11-2. >> and all that matters. >> this $20,000 on the line! oh, my gosh! winner! winner! >> on "cbs this morning." >> according to a new report, jeb bush's campaign on the super pact has spent more than $30 million on ads for him and from the looks of those ads, it seems like things aren't going great for jeb. announcer: this portion of "cbs
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let's go places! welcome to "cbs this morning." donald trump is on the offensive against ted cruz with his strongest criticism yet of the texas senator. this follows new poll numbers that show cruz is becoming the trump. one survey finds cruz now leads him in iowa by ten points. finds hillary clinton would defeat either of them in november. she holds a 10-point margin over trump and three-point lead over cruz. but that poll also shows clinton narrowly losing to ben carson and also losing to marco rubio by three points. nancy cordes is in washington looking at the new numbers and how they are changing this republican race. >> reporter: this is the second poll in less than a week to show cruz leading the gop field in iowa. the trump campaign instantly trashed the poll while, trump, himself, chose to trash cruz, saying he is unfit for the job. >> i don't think he is qualified to be president.
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this message for gop leaders who might think his support in iowa is waning. >> i don't go down. i go up. my whole life has been about winning. i'm going to win. >> reporter: he went after his sometimes ally ted cruz, after promising for weeks he wouldn't. >> when you look at the way he has dealt with the senate, where he goes in there like a frankly, like a little bit of a maniac. >> reporter: on twitter, cruz brushed off the comments. >> reporter: host ago link to this 1980s movie clip for the song "maniac." cruz has refrained from attacking trump whose supporters he'd like to win over. >> i like donald trump. a lot of our friends here have encouraged me to criticize and attack donald trumpship i'm not independence in doing so. >> reporter: nationwide the real estate mogul still has a big lead and beating cruz by nearly 20 points in the latest cbs news/"the new york times" poll. still, the texas senator's outspoken opposition to
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take on both sides of the washington establishment resonates with iowa conservatives. >> the way republican leadship punishes anyone who stands up to the cartel, is they engage in public flagalation. >> reporter: has made cruz who worry cruz could be as trump. brian walsh worked to elect 2010 and 2012. problematic. because if we are going to win in 2016 we need more female voters and hispanics. instead of learning those lessons you have cruz and trump doing the exact opposite. >> reporter: the stage is now set for the debate tomorrow night in las vegas. trump is front and center with ben carson on his right and ted cruz on his left with a total of nine participants on the spaj. mike huckabee and santorum and
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main debate and they will appear earlier in the evening. >> cbs news political director and "face the nation" moderator is in johnston, iowa. good morning. >> good morning. >> reporter: explain the ted cruz surge and whether it will make him the front-runner. >> well, the surge is that he has been patient and restrained in his campaign so far and he appeals to the conservatives who participate in the caucus and the primaries, because he is ideological pure on the issues and in sync with the grassroots which is to say he is not part of the washington establishment and staked his career pretty much on fighting that establishment. when they look at him they think this is somebody fighting for the principles we believe in. >> also a candidate who has done a lot of hard work on the ground and has been well-financed, right? >> well, that's right. that's what i'm saying. he has been disciplined and restrained, which means he has not -- he spent a lot of his time working on building a
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and spending times in states that are not just the first three or four contests, but all of the later states in the primary process, to build a network and also to build a ground game so he can be in it for the long haul, and that is starting to pay off for him in iowa. we will see if it pays off for him in other states. >> the only republican has raised more money than ted cruz is jeb bush. talk about ted cruz's organization. not only is he doing well in iowa, you then have new hampshire, south carolina and nevada, but first is the southern primary states which he is positioned to do very well in, right? he has got lasting power. >> he does. i mean, raising money, of course, doesn't really -- isn't the whole bundle. if it were, we could still have scott walker in the race and jeb bush would be doing better. what cruz has for this moment is he grabbing those voters who are excited about ben carson. he has the fire that the grassroots want and then the money allows him to turn that
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so he has been -- he's had a strategy that he has been following and now that he is getting the love or the look from the voters, he does have a system in place. >> john dickerson, i was watching "face the nation" yesterday. which is my favorite sunday morning program. win of the guests you had on was frank luntz who was talking about his later focus group and asking former and current trump supporters what they would do if he left the party. run that tape and get you on the other side. >> this is the 64,000 dollar question. with marco rubio as the republican nominee and trump running for an independent, raise your hand if you're voting for trump. right now the establishment republicans just died. >> they should. they haven't been listening to us. >> we want real change. >> this is not going to cut it. >> real change. >> that is more than half of you just raised your hands that you're going to leave the republican party. >> correct.
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>> i'm voting for man or woman that wants to change this country. >> i admit, i'm stunned. >> the republican party has failed us the last two times with weak candidates. first mccain who is weak and romney who is weak. we are tired of weak candidates. is there no number two to trump. who is number two in the republican field the one that can really win the election? who? >> trump is an independent, you're voting for trump? >> yes. >> trump as an independent. >> i'd vote for him over rubio because maybe the party does need to be fractured. maybe it's time to blow it up. >> and hillary -- >> blow it up. >> a lot of interesting things to say. what do you make of that exchange in particular? >> well, it's, obviously, not good for republicans who want party unity and part of it might be a little overdone, which is to say that if those same voters, if donald trump didn't get the nomination and they saw an independent bid by him as a guarantee that would help
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change their views and not vote. but the problem is even if a small number of them don't vote, republicans want them all turning out, especially if it's a candidate like ted cruz who believes that the goal in the general election is to turn out as many conservatives as possible. so it is a problem that the republican party is going to have to deal with. >> certainly more to come on this. thank you, john dickerson. president obama is starting this week focusing on isis and terrorism. he holds a rare meeting this morning at the pentagon with his national security council. the president is expected to speak about the isis threat. he is also scheduled a conference call with religious leaders. the president's strategy is playing out on the front lines in northern iraq. a cbs news team traveled there some 20 miles northwest of mosul. isis has controlled that second largest city for a year and a half. charlie d'agata is in dohuk, iraq. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. in many ways, it was a routine
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head out to the front lines and see how kurdish peshmerga forces are holding up against isis. we got within a half mile of isis territory and, man, did we witness how deadly and determined this enemy can be. colonel bandy and his forces front line outside of mosul for more than a year. how often does isis attack you? they attack whenever they can, he said, sometimes three or four nights if na row. in fact, bandy told us that very morning, three suicide bombers charged toward their outpost. his soldiers were able to kill the drivers before they detonated their explosives. but two car bombs remained there, not 50 yards away, posing a deadly threat to the troops. here on the front lines, the bomb squad is a 50-caliber
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one vehicle until it went up in a plume of smoke. he then opened up on the car much closer to us. the bunker until, finally, a direct hit. that noise you can hear is debris raining down on top of us, shrapnel of the bomb and twisted remains of the vehicle flew high and everybody's ears were ringing. but the next sound was laughter. a happier ending when car bombs blow up on the other side of the front line. when you're up close to one of those huge car bombs, you realize how destructive they can be in civilian areas and why they are the most feared isis weapon on the battlefield. and attacks like these are norah?
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from iraq, thank you. this morning, egypt says its investigation has found no evidence terrorism brought down a russian jetliner in october and that contradicts russian and western government conclusions that a bomb likely exploded inside the plane. isis claims it smuggled an explosive on board. 224 people died in the crash. investigators this morning, are still trying to learn who syed rizwan farook and his wife tashfeen malik talked to before the san bernardino shootings. fbi divers spent much of the weekend searching a lake three miles from the scene and officials believe the shooters massacre. carter evans is outside of the inland regional center in san >> reporter: good morning. authorities are now trying to focus on who or what motivated this couple to open fire at the me. there is new information about now. the questions how thoroughly she was vetted before she entered
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dive teams from the fbi and local police finished searching the bottom of this muddy lake over the weekend. they pulled multiple objects from the water, but it's still unknown if they recovered a computer hard drive that the two may have discarded in a lake before they were killed in a shoot-out with police. in investigators hope to search that hard drive for information on potential connections between the couple and foreign terror groups. law enforcement sources confirm to cbs that malik made radical postings on social media as far back as 2012, two years before she moved to the united states and married farook. according to a report in "the new york times," malik spoke openly on social media about her support for violent jihad and said she wanted to be a part of it, but none of these postings were discovered when malik applied for a k-1 fiancee visa.
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their social media postings and person you're really worried about being a threat to the united states. the question is how do you identify them? >> reporter: malik was not identified as a threat. despite being interviewed at the u.s. embassy in pakistan and vetted by five different government agencies who checked her name and picture against a terror watch list and ran her databases. >> this is a case we know had a lot of red lights and red flags. how come they didn't stand out as a high-risk traveler? that's a really, really good question. >> reporter: investigators are also continuing to question farook's question enrique marquez. we know he purchased the rifles used in the attack and charges for him could be forthcoming. we are now learning that malik expressed interest in joining a
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2012, two years before they should have had mere to vetted her. >> two sheriff's deputies fired 33 times at a man hold ago gun saturday in lynwood, outside of los angeles. 28-year-old nicholas robertson died. an investigation is under way about whether the deputies used appropriate force. ben tracy shows us video of the controversial shooting and we want to warn you, it may be very disturbing to watch. >> reporter: this cell phone video captured the moment nicholas robertson was gunned down by two deputies. they pause before firing again. [ bleep ]. >> reporter: as robertson tried to crawl away. on sunday, the sheriff's department released this photo of robertson, still holding his his .45 caliber semiautomatic handgun after he was shot. minutes before the deadly encounter, a surveillance camera captured him walking along a busy street, armed. >> he is handling the gun in an odd sort of way.
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>> reporter: the department had received multiple 911 calls about an african-american man with a gun. >> i saw a guy holding a gun and pointing at people. we thought it was fireworks and then my mom looked out the window and he has a gun and shooting straight in the air. >> how many times did he shoot in the air? >> seven times in the air. >> reporter: one of the deputies who responded had been in the field for a year, the other for 18 months. investigators said robertson's gun was not loaded but they grasp. >> he did not comply with their weapon. >> that's not right! >> reporter: activists and civil rights leader called for an investigation. >> the people on edge. what they saw was a young black man shot in the back by police officers and shot again as he crawled to his death. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning," ben tracy, los angeles. this morning, extreme weather is sweeping across much
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temperatures will reach the 60s and 70s across most of the east coast. some places may hit 80. heavy snow forced drivers off the road sunday in the texas panhandle. parts of kansas received more than a half foot of snow. >> crews in east texas with cleaning up today after three tornadoes touchdown down in that state on saturday. high winds derailed a freight train. 64 cars were blown right off the tracks. at least two crashed onto a highway. this morning, china says its president spoke with president obama late sunday to discuss implementing the landmark climate change deal. in paris saturday, nearly 200 nations committed to keeping global temperatures from rising and another 1.8 degrees fahrenheit and china was a key player. that is a change from 2009 when beijing was blamed for the failure of climate talks. we asked president obama about holding china accountable in an interview earlier this month. how can we trust china the
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trust them and they will make the cuts necessary? >> keep in mind what we are eting is up here. the target are self-generated. the united states says this is what we are going to do and china puts forward its own plan plan. that legal aspect is not legal binding but every country what we are saying should be subject to some sort of transparency and accountable it should be reviewed every five years so we can see what has happened in various countries and what more we did kdo, based on new science and new technology. >> that accountability is key as the paris agreement calls for rich countries to spend billions to help poor countries deal with climate change. the nation watched accused killer robert durst make a chilling statement on an open
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good morning everyone, i'm meteorologist danielle niles, rain is well to our west, it is not going to arrive until after the evening commute, temperatures rise through the east, mild start into the 50s despite the clouds this afternoon, rain approaching after the evening drive, it will fall steadily. wind year, cool are on temperatures in the 50s friday. announcer: this portion of "cbs jcpenney.
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the peace corps is accused of turning its back on volunteers when they are sick or injured. ahead our new investigation. volunteers who spend years battling bureaucracy. the news is back this morning right here on "cbs this
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jane fonda is the happiest hey good monday morning, we'll update your top story after danielle niles with the forecast. temperatures right now are in the east, a mild start to the day and despite the clouds that are in place, we are going to rise into the east, we are waiting on rain. so it's not going to arrive until which get to the evening hours, maybe a patch or two of drizzle and isolated showers, 50s by early afternoon. 60s but windy, gusts to 40 miles per hour, much cooler. danielle let's take a look at some of the problem ride
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boston 18 minute delay. route 1 southbound, like a 15 minute ride now. avon to 120 in, 24 north will take you 15 minutes. thank you so much, it is 79:27, our top story, closing arguments are expected in the philip chism murder dial, danvers teenager raped and murdered his high school teacher in 2013. chisms team says chism was
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the winner of this year's heisman trophy is derrick henry. >> there you go. one proud grandma. there she is! reacting after her grandson derrick henry was awarded the heisman trophy. gladys wasn't able to travel to new york city because the family brought the celebration to her. the alabama running back was raised by his grandmother. she is 81 and clearly she is very proud. >> she gave him a shocka nim nak when he was born. >> they are clearly very tight. >> great grandma. coming up in this half hour,
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robert durst outsmart the authorities charging him with murder? "48 hours" correspondent erin moriarty is in the green room with more on that. some peace corps volunteers say the agency helped to design help around the world is losing sight of tragedies in its own backyard. kris van cleave with our new creation is ahead. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. "usa today" reports on the federal reserve likely to raise interest rates gradually. the fed is expected to increase rates for the first time in nearly a decade when it meets this week. fed policymakers have emphasized they would likely lift the rate gently because of economic weakness and overseas and tight credit. "the washington post" reports on journalists swept up in the chinese cyberattack that targeted federal employees. the government is notifying journalists accredited by federal agencies to sign up for
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social security numbers and other important information may have been stolen and the breach could involve thousands of reporters. vandalism in two mosques in southern california is investigated as hate crimes. hawthorne mosque was vandaled with graffiti and a hand grenade was found in another mosque. they want to know if these are relate to the san bernardino shooting rampage. a suspect carrying an ax early sunday inside a parking garage. the university of north texas campus police responded to reports of someone smashing car windows. the school said the suspect advanced toward the officer with the ax and the officer shot him. business insider reports on amazon now pulling some hoverboards from its website over safety concerns. there have been several instances of those boards catching fire and then exploding. amazon is now demanding proof from the hoverboard makers that the products meet the safety
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some major airlines, as you know, have now banned the self-balancing boards on the plain planes. erin more artie is learning that robert durst it expected to plead guilty to a federal gun charge. that to comean a decade in prison but there is another twist. erin is here with how the deal would force a showdown in the murder case. erin, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. i'll get to that twist, but for more than 30 years, durst and his posse of highly skilled lawyers have outmaneuvered lawyers but in the end a .38 pistol and his own mouth that did him in. >> did you have anything to do with the death of your wife? >> i don't know that she is dead. >> reporter: robert durst "the jinx." he made several incriminating statements concerning not only
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disappearance in disturban, new york but also the unsolved 2000 murder of his once close friend susan berman in her los angeles home. in the case durst admitted that handwriting looked nearly to his own on that piece of evidence. >> the writing looks similar. the spelling is the same. i can see the conclusion the cops would draw. can i have this? >> reporter: durst still wearing a microphone in the bathroom is heard mumbling what sounded like a confession to murder. authorities in los angeles tipped off before the final episode aired in march, issued an arrest warrant for durst in berman's murder and then tracked him down to new orleans, where they found cash, pot, and a handgun in his hotel room. >> not guilty.
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of that .38 revolver that finally tripped up durst. this thursday as part of an agreement hammered out between his lawyers and federal prosecutors, he is expected to return to federal court in new orleans and plead guilty to possession of a firearm by a felon. a conviction ka that could mean a sentence of ten years in federal prison. here is that twist in the plea agreement. durst is asking to spend his sentence in the state of california and the reason? he actually wants to go on trial there for the murder of susan berman and if he is in that federal prison in california, he no longer has to be extradited. the los angeles county prosecutors just have to rid him out. he is actually making it easy for everybody to put him on trial. >> the question is why? >> well, i think -- to be honest, i think this is a high stakes game of chicken. i think his attorneys say he wants to clear his name. and they want him to go on trial sooner, rather than later.
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prosecutors have enough evidence, despite what we have seen in the documentary to actually convict him beyond a reasonable doubt. and so the los angeles prosecutors don't have to say, we have to extradite him, he is right there and they can just get him. >> number one, you've been covering this trial forever! >> my entire life it feels like! >> how soon could he go on trial? >> they would like to see him in california by spring/summer. that leaves it up to the prosecutors, of course. but he has to be arraigned and they are going to push for it and they could actually wave his right to a speedy trial which means he could go on before the end of the year. but i think that is unrealistic but i think they are pushing it. >> he's in poor health? >> well, he is. but he has cancer. that seems to be in remission. he has balance problems and he has a stent in his head. he could get as much as ten years.
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>> 72 and he'll be 73 in april. it's not quite clear exactly how many years he has agreed to. this actually resolves a lot of cases their pending against him. there were some banking charges that could have been charged against him so this will resolve it so he'll spend the long end, so somewhere around ten years. >> thank you for staying on this case, erin. >> i will. some peace corps volunteers say their lives are falling to pieces when they get home. our new investigation is next. if you're heading out the door, set your dvr so you can watch "cbs this morning" any time. you don't want to miss jane fonda who writes a powerful note to her younger self.
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a new internal peace corps report exposes deep problems at the agency when it comes to health care. for volunteers returning from service, up to 30 thrs % of volunteers come back sick or they are
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kris van cleave is in washington with the story. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the peace corps says 91% of its volunteers are satisfied with the medical care they receive. but government reports, as far back as 1991, found problems with that care. some volunteers tell us they have fallen through the cracks. in some cases, for decade. 73-year-old nancy minodao flanagan is struggling. in 1965 as a young peace corps volunteer in melee a elee alaysia she was raped and impregnated about a daughter who died. >> i had nightmares and flash backs. >> reporter: in 2002 she got word she would be rehe inturs imbursed with medically expenses but needed receipts.
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>> the mission of the piece kaerp peace corps is to help other people in other countries but what about me? i'm here and i need help. >> reporter: by law volunteers who return sick or injured have to go. >> they he serve their nation. we really want them to be able to get the care and support that they need and we are working hand in hand with the department of labor to make that happen. >> reporter: a fantastic force established by the peace corps in march found some return volunteers have been waiting years and even decades to have their medical issues handled and admits some of the issues cannot be quickly resolved or would require need legislative change. we spoke with some of the volunteers. >> it's a heavy bureaucratic mess. >> reporter: victoria smith broke her leg in 2008 and a peace corps doctor operated.
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dealing with a fallout from a surgery that wasn't done right? >> yes. when they did the surgery they inserted the rod at a 45-degree rotation so my ankle and knee went that way. >> reporter: was the peace corps helpful in this process? >> no. they never contacted me and never returned phone calls or e-mails. they sent investigators out to make sure i wasn't lying about my injuries. and, basically, i don't want to to you dramatic but i'm pretty much dead to them. >> reporter: in 2012 the government accountable office found fault with both the peace corps and department of labor with not tracking the accessibility and quality of care for return volunteers. >> i was in and out of the hospital in bangkok a month. >> reporter: while volunteering in thailand in 2010 william hardless got an infection and says the pain is excruciating and he struggles to get care. you came back sick and why didn't you go to a doctor? >> turned out no reputable
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coast or west coast would take this compensation. >> reporter: how has the you? how have they treated you? >> the claims from the department of labor and house treated me like i'm a parasite who is trying to live off the government. >> reporter: what has kept you fighting for so long? >> my mom. because i know if i ended it all, it would tear her apart. but if she wasn't here, i can't tell you what i would do. >> reporter: smith asked for an investigation how the peace corps handled her injure and told the for medical offices were upgraded in 2012 but, months later, sue calve's son nick died from a stomach virus while volunteers in china. do you think your son would be alive today if he hadn't joined the peace corps? >> definitely. it took me two years fighting getting an inspector's general report fighting with them.
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failures and delayed treatment led to nick's death. >> when you're advocating for yourself they are not advocating for you either. so there needs to be better measures in place. >> reporter: the peace corps says it's been implementing significant reforms like hiring staff to help with the claims process but to do more, the law would have to change. the department of labor told us the average volunteer gets a decision on their claim within 29 to 46 days. >> thank you. >> these are troubling. >> something is wrong. bureaucracy complacency. >> you believe what they are saying so somebody is listening, saying, okay, houston, we have a big, big problem. see what they do. >> a wake-up call. finding the next generation of pilots. ahead, we go along for a ride to see how aerobattics try to encourage young people to reach
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good morning everyone, i'm meteorologist danielle niles, we are waiting on rain that is back through ohio, it is going to advance east and arrive after the evening rush hour. notice temperatures come into the 50s, isolated shower through late morning, most of the afternoon between 8:00- 10:00 p.m., they are going to come in and continue overnight tonight, windy, i can't noer round of rain thursday into weekend, have a great day. announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota p let's go places. toyotathon is back with like 0% ap let's go places. .let's go places. let's go places. are still on the road today? but hurry, our biggest event of the year won't last long. right now at toyotathon, get 0% apr financing for 60 months on a 2016 camry. for great deals on other
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it's now a drony drone world in tokyo. they will help fight security risks flown by illegal flown devices. the drones are banned in the capital. they will use nets to capture the flying objects and bring them to the ground. officers will be trained in drone operations and they should be ready by next year. >> they yank them out of the sky. kind of genius. i like it. amy cutie is the star of the ted talks but nearly lost everything after an accident.
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hundreds of babies may have been exposed to tuberculosis. our david agus is standing by in good morning, it is 7:56 i'm bree sison update of your top stories after danielle niles updated forecast. right now mild part of the day, 46 in boston, temperatures are warmer than they should be in the afternoon. we are cloudy, areas of rain back into ohio, it doesn't evening. rising to the 40s, overcast, 52 by lunch time. traffic and weather together. a major accident right now, north of the city causing big backups, let's go to sky 4 over the scene right now, you can see firefighters trying to move
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there is is a rollover 93 southbound at route 110 all lanes closed, everything diverted on to 110, backup to rocking hand park, that is a 459 minute delay. top stories, the new england patriots snapped their two game losing streak, they clenched a spot in the playoffs, ron gronkowski returned back to the field. even scored a touchdown, we'll be back in the next half-hour
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(buzzer) hey, you're a lucky guy. you'll probably win the jackpot. (bell) you know, luck doesn't play any role in slot machines. the odds of winning are the same every time you play. (buzzer) if you lose money, just keep playing. you'll win it back. (bell) don't chase your losses. set a limit on the time learn more about gambling and how to keep it fun. visit the gamesense info center at the plainridge park casino. (buzzer) hey, you're a lucky guy. yo anncr: when the attacks come here... ...the person behind this desk will have to protect your family. will he be impulsive and reckless, like donald trump? will he have voted to dramatically weaken counter-terrorism surveillance, like ted cruz? will he have skipped crucial national security hearings and votes just to campaign, like marco rubio? 27 generals and admirals support jeb bush. because jeb has the experience and knowledge
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good morning. it is monday, december 14th, 2015. welcome back to "cbs this morning." there is more real news ahead, including jane fonda's note to self. the oscar winner remembers the mistakes and pains that helped her grow to be happy. first, here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. the second poll in less than a week to show cruz leading in iowa. trump's campaign instantly trashed the poll. >> what cruz has is he grabbing those voters who are excited about ben carson. he has the fighter that the grassroots want. >> a half mile of isis territory and, man, did we witness how
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authorities are now trying to focus on who or what motivated this couple to open fire at the inland regional center. >> he is actually making it easy for everybody to put him on trial. >> the question is why? >> well, i think -- to be honest, i think this is a high stakes game of chicken. >> peace corps says 91% of its volunteers are satisfied with the medical care they received. but government reports as far back as 1991 found problems with that care. both golfers went full-on happy gilmore with a windup drive. announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by progressive. i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. the lineup is set this morning for the last republican debate of the year. donald trump will be front and
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ted cruz will be on his left with ben carson on his right. >> the latest poll shows ted cruz is a bigger threat to donald trump. a new poll in iowa shows cruz leads trump by ten points with just seven weeks to go before the caucuses. it's the second poll to show cruz is ahead in iowa. and for the first time, donald trump is hitting the texas senator hard. >> i don't think he is qualified to be president. i don't think he has the right temperament. look at the way he has dealt with the senate where he goes in there like, you know, frankly like a little bit of a maniac. you're never going to get things done that. i have good judgment and great adjustment and far better judgment this ted. i actually get along better with people than he does. >> cruz is tag the comments in very good stride and posted a video link for the 1983 hit "maniac" from the movie "flash dance." he tweet in honor of my good friend donald trump and good-hearted republicans everywhere.
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return to "saturday night live," he imitated president george w. bush. >> now an announcement from the 43rd president of the united states. >> i've made a big decision. i'm entering the race for president of the united states of america. the field of republicans out there is so messed up, i figured it? yeah. cruz and rubio. rubio and cruz. sounds like a miami law firm. if you've been injured on the job, call rubio and cruz. then you got this knucklehead. i tell you something. whenever i get in a bad mood, i just -- i just picture his big fat orange face and i just mess my pants. jeb, oh, boy. i wish you would have asked me about the exclamation point on the end of his name.
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i don't like the taste of broccoli, but it doesn't get any tastier if you call it broccoli! but running a government is kind of like driving a school bus. you don't want a crazy person driving that bus, you want a simple underachieving, not very educated, but reliable guy behind that wheel. someone with a steady hand who will be on time and get into one or two, but no more than four accidents a year. you already know that someone. and that someone is me. >> it was laugh outloud funny. roll. >> i think we will see will farrell again before this session is over. that was great. >> encore. encore. >> that's right. there is a new poll this morning and it shows trump and cruz would lose to hillary clinton in november. the survey gives clinton a ten-point advantage over trump and she would defeat cruz by three points.
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the democratic front-runner. the same poll finds ben carson would beat clinton by one point and she would lose by three points to marco rubio. >> they are banned from are freedom simple freedoms like driving but this morning, women are making history in saudi arabia. the first saudi election to allow female voters and candidates saw more than a dozen women elected to local government. nearly 1,000 women ran for office and many campaigned online using social media since men and women are banned from mixing in public. even with these historic victories on saturday, women still make up less than 1% of the 2,100 positions that were contested. >> this is history. >> this is history. >> southwest airlines is inspecting one of its planes this morning after an emergency landing. flight 987 left or yesterday from harlingen, texas and land inside san antonio 32 minutes into the flight. southwest tells cbs news part of the wing appeared to be at an irregular angle. the passenger on the boeing 737
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the wing was photographed and inspected once the flight touchdown down. 109 passengers and five crewmembers on board and no one hurt. ronda rousey is moving forward this morning and proving she is the woman of her word. the former champ kept her promise to attend a marine corps ball in south carolina this weekend. this was her first public appearance since her first career knockout by holly holm one month ago. she thanked her date for being, quote, such a gentleman and putting a smile on my face again. he invited her with his facebook video in august which became an online sensation. >> you are my celebrity crush, like, i love everything you do. and i think that you are a phenomenal person. which is why it would be my honor to you to the marine corps ball on december 11th. >> i love him! the ufc will likely hold a rousey/holm rematch in july.
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it and i'm not feeling it and not into it but she kept her word. you're my celebrity crush. i love everything you do! how often do you hear that, charlie? >> will you go to the prom with me? >> yes, i would! >> oh, gosh. you make me feel. you make me feel. hundreds of newborns could have been exposed to a potentially deadly disease. very serious story ahead.
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announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by progressive. making it easy to bundle your
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it can be especially unfortunately, many people who spread it may not know they have it. and the cdc recommends everyone, including those around babies, make sure their whooping cough vaccination is up to date. understand the danger talk to your doctor or pharmacist about you and your family getting a whooping cough vaccination today. hey mcmellin' you gellin'? i'm gellin' and zinfandellin'. and so is my new bride, helen mcmellin' i'm so happy my eyes are wellin' dr. scholl's massaging gel insoles are so soft they make your feet feel outrageously comfortable. i'm gellin you're so not gellin'
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this morning, a california hospital is tracking down hundreds of people who may have been exposed to tuberculosis. the possible exposure affects more than a thousand people. a list includes 350 newborns, a nurse at the santa clara valley medical center tested positive to a potential deadly disease. starting today, the hospital is offering testing and treatment for those affected. dr. david agus is in los angeles with more on what makes this infection so dangerous. david, good morning to you. how seriously a threat is it? >> reporter: it's serious. the turn of the last century, tuberculosis was the number one killer in the united states. it certainly has gone down dramatically to 9,000 cases a year in the united states but in
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newborns need to be treated right away. so they are going to be treated for six-month course of a particular antibiotic they have to take every day and tults adults have to wait until they show positive and then treated. >> is there special concerns for the babies, giving this? >> no question about it. when t.b. happens in the child and it can go throughout the lungs and throughout the whole body. the medicine has clear side effects and can affect the liver and the nerves, but it was felt the side effects was greater than -- i mean, the benefit was greater than the risks in this case. they are going to treat them. >> david, hospital knew about this in mid november that the nurse had tested positive for t.b. >> that is a really sad part. at least to me. is that, you know, she tested negative in september and went to her doctor, the nurse, and they did a chest x-ray and found it. in november, they knew, the hospital. it took them a month to put together a game plan of
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parents who were affected, as well as other hospital workers. and also how to notify them and figuring out what to do. to me, a month is too long. when you know, you got to talk. >> how can it be prevented, david? >> well, we can prevent it by isolating the individuals. we have to get better as a country, as a world, by identifying this. right now, we can culture it, but it takes several months. thr there are skin tests and other tests but we need immediate tests so when people know they have it we can treat it and not spread. the science hasn't caught up to what we are doing. >> turning to something less serious. steve jobs influenced you greatly as your friend and got to you wear a black sweater all the time. why are you wearing red? and what would steve think? >> he would approve. he would approve, david.
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celebrate the holidays, do >> it looks nice. you knew we would not let this moment go but we were starting with something serious and i was waiting to get to the end to get there. you look good in red, dr. david agus. >> i like the black, david. >> thank you, charlie. >> a purple one is coming in the mail! thanks, dr. david agus. a pilot shortage threatens to ground parts of the airline industry. we will take you to the air show to show you the sky-high efforts to inspire new careers in the cockpit. we have got that story next on "cbs this morning." the challenges facing
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roasted hazelnuts and cocoa, there's a whole lot of happy in every jar of nutella.
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a piece of home. the single serve-make-all-your-favorites exactly-how-you-like-it machine. keurig hot. your favorites. your way. no rain and heat could not stop mail carriers from completing their appointed rounds. this mailman is harassed by the birds every day and carries a long pole with him. i think they like his legs and they think i want a chunk of those, it's good meat! >> a little bite here and there won't hurt. >> he is very calm about it. >> he is happy to get in that vehicle. >> very calm about it. >> i'm surprised they didn't make a disappearance around november, the end of november. >> yeah.
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>> a little whack with the pole? just kidding. >> don't want any e-mails. all right. >> yes. >> okay. all right. this morning, this regional airlines are struggling to find pilots due to the high cost of flight school. jetblue has a unique plan to address that issue. they are recruiting students with little or no experience and then them how to fly. air shows are another way to encourage aviation careers. the jetblue team is on its first american tour and john blackstone went on board to learn how to become a young pilot. >> reporter: i'll come with you. lifting off in formation, my life was in the hands of pilot gaston march ds and. >> i had my coffee this morning
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>> flying up to speeds of 565 miles per hour and at times, just ten feet apart. the seven powerful l-29 albatross jets are a blend of precision. marchand is a former air force pilot who has flown for the team for 12 years. >> i began flying gliders when i was is a 15 years old. >> reporter: air shows inspired you? >> yeah. >> reporter: with their brand prominently displayed, the company is spreading the word about its watches but the president of usa says another mission here. you also want them to discover aviation? >> that's actually probably our number one goal. and when you see these pilots flying those planes at air shows all around the country, you inspire people. >> reporter: that inspiration could prove critical. some in the aviation industry are predicting a pilot shortage in america within the next ten years.
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the profession has become paramount. >> we like the aviation to flourish and like it to be a little more popular. >> reporter: it's estimated 21,000 pilots will be turning 65 and face mandatory retirement from the four major airlines. those jobs are often filled by military flyers or younger regional pilots moving up. but these days, fewer people are pursuing careers in the cockpit. in part, because of the increasing cost of education and flight time. an investment of up to 200,000 dollars to qualify to become a commercial pilot. cbs news aviation and safety expert captain sully sullenberger says what is really needed is raising pilot wages at regional airlines. >> it really doesn't make sense for entry-level jobs in aviation to pay sometimes less than $20,000 a year or just over . when it requires a lot of training, the major airlines
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for this current situation. >> reporter: but at air shows, the challenges of the aviation industry get lost in the clouds. what is on display here is the joy of flight. thomas yonky, 17 and his 14-year-old sister, have their heart set on becoming pilots. is this any part of what made you want to fly? >> yes. >> yes. seeing them maybe one day, that could be me up there. >> reporter: and for one show at least, i am part of the breiling jet team and surviving tight loops and discovering that pulling 4 for 5 gs causes a flood in your head to rush south! >> we are just ordinary people doing extraordinary things. >> reporter: hoping those extraordinary things make someone else want to reach for the sky. for "cbs this morning," john blackstone, above ventura, california. >> very cool, indeed.
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>> always ready to go. i like to watch it. >> amy cuddy is of good morning it's 89:25, i'm kathryhauser, checking your top stories after danielle's forecast. temperatures are in the 40s out the door right now, 47 boston, norwood as well. we are on our way to 50s, clouds in place right now, a touch of patchy fog, but the rain is still well to our west. wait until later this evening, slowly rising into the 50s today. rainfall is steady into tomorrow morning. it is going to be windy and warm, much cooler mid 40s on wednesday.
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boston, so let's go to the map now, 993 southbound at 1910 all lanes closed after rollover accident, traffic still being diverted on to 110, the driver was distracted, conscious and alert, the car is to you in process of being towed. but for now, 5 miles, 45 minutes backup, bree. >> thank you very much. checking other top stories, closing arguments are expected in the philip chism trial, the continue veries teenager rape and murdered his high school teacher, the teen was criminally insane at the time of the crime, the jury could get the case by the end of the day. the redline train operator whose train took off without him will face a disciplinary hearing today, david vazquez violated multiple safety
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rubber cord around the throttle controls. vazquez could be fired. and the any england patriots have snapped their two game losing street betting the texans 27-6 and clenched a spot in the playoffs. ron gronkowski returned to the field, he scored a touchdown. coming up, a conversation with ted talk internet sensation and harvard sensation inspiring ourselves to be the
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[ dog barks ] [ bark ] there it is! [ gasps ] oh no! look, the sky's awake! that. was. epic!
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drum roll! yea! >> oh, my gosh! he made it! winner! >> and it went in! that is a quick way to make a buck or $20,000. shane mckenzie from stillwater, oklahoma. he made this half-court shot during halftime. first time someone has made that 20,000 dollar shot. >> you wonder how many times he practiced that shot. >> he did the power pose. that is the power pose of victory. amy will be out here later. this half hour, ever wonder what drives top athletes to
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victory like that guy just did? harvard researcher amy cuddy says it's all about the body leading the mind. she's in our toyota green room and saying your iphone is your iphone! busted! >> oh. >> jane fonda writes a note to her younger self. find out what she learned ahead. more businesses are changing prices by the minute to respond to changing demands. this happens with airline prices so-called dynamic pricing is being used on everything from resort tickets. economists say on average consumers pay more as a result. "the washington post" reports on what could be the largest hollywood movie premiere ever. some say bigger than the oscars. three theaters are rolling out red carpets tonight for the
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"the force awakens." one of the theaters hosted the original premiere of "star wars" in 1977. "the force awakens" opens on friday. >> "usa today" reports on adele this morning announcing her tour dates for north america. yea yea! it kicks off in st. paul, minnesota. six shows at madison square garden. adele's last tour was back in 2011. she was forced to cancel or postpone many of those dates because of illness. >> i think we have got a date lined up, guys! new york's daily news reports all i want for christmas is you is no longer the most played holiday song in stores. it's been replaced by this. i'm happy a wonderful christmastime >> shoppers are more likely to
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"wonderful christmas times." mariah carey's holiday song is not the most played song. i don't know what it is but i love that song. >> i love it. >> i do too. do you have a favorite christmas carol? >> "all i want for christmas is you." >> an article in "the new york times" -- charlie, what is your favorite? you didn't tell us. >> i didn't. >> okay! >> an article in "the new york times" explores how smartphones are bad for our posture and our mood. amy cuddy argues that hunching over devices leads to physical and psychological problems. right now, "the times" most e-mailed story and her "ted talk" the most watched with nearly 30 million views. cuddy explains how posture can affect some of the basic and the biggest moments of our lives. >> the social scientists spent a lot of time looking at our body language on judgments. we make sweeping judgments and inferences from body language
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predicted really meaningful life outcomes who we fire or promote or ask out on a date. >> the harvard professor and researcher coined the term "power pose." and standing like wonderwoman two minutes before a big challenge can provide a surge of confidence. her new book is called "presence." bringing your boldest self to your biggest chags. llenges. welcome. >> thank you. >> the body is like the mind's easy button. what we do with our body shapes what we do with our mind but we forget about that because we are stuck in our heads all the time. >> how does posture influence our behavior? >> posture makes us more assertive if we open up and expand and take up space because that is what we do when we feel paumpl and dominant. if we tell ourselves we feel that way it opens us to
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instead of avoid. we perform our best. >> many people always say, amy, fake it until you make it. you say fake it until you become it. what is the difference between the two for you? >> i think fake it until you into believing you're something you're not. fake until you become it means you fool yourself into being your best self. so you trick yourself into feeling confident enough to bring forward your best self. >> you give examples. before a big presentation, they what? do. i would say expand. stand like wonderwoman and stands like a starfish and make private! before you walk into these situations and that will deal well in a really challenging situation. another thing that you can do, my colleague allison woodbrook has research showing this. instead of saying i'm anxious, you say i'm excited. you can't say i'm calm when
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but you can tell yourself that you're excited. >> there is science and research behind this? >> yes, absolutely. >> you talk about, too, being imposters that many people will say i'm very successful and you say being accomplished doesn't take away the imposter story. you told a story you felt like an imposter. how? >> i felt like an imposter many times. i had a really serious head injury and i never wanted to be found out. and, you know, i was sure if i was, people would say, you know, we are taking these credentials away. my son said to me one day, you're the luckiest person in the world. i said why? because you get paid to do what you love doing. you study people and you try to make the world better. i thought when he said that, oh, no, i'm going to be found out, somebody will take this job away. this is too good to be true. >> you spend a lot of time in this book talking about the imposter syndrome. sheryl sandberg and others have written about it. the idea they are not supposed
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what is the basis of that? is it a lack of confidence? what sf? >> i think the basis is that we are in our heads with these doubts and we don't realize that other people are also in their heads with these doubts. so we look around at everybody else and we think they are fine and i'm not fine. so there is, obviously, something wrong here. i'm an imposter but they actually belong here. >> someday they will discover me? >> exactly right. >> let's talk about how you're sitting right now at this moment and what you thought about before you came out here. >> um. i thought about wanting to sort of open myself up. >> but you're sitting back and you're sitting back in the chair and your knees are here. >> i think -- i think legs crossed are fine. women cross their legs. i think that is fine. when women do this thing i call twisty legs where they also wrap their ankles, that is no good. i'm trying to keep my elbows on the arms of the chair because that keeps mimi instead of doing this, which is super powerless.
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any time we wrap ourselves up and touching our face or necks. >> they are nervous. >> you see that happening you know somebody is feeling powerless or nervous. >> you talk about the gender differences. little kids and little boys and little girls just see men as more powerful. >> we did a series of studies with 4-year-olds and 6-year-olds and showed them pictures of dolls that were gender nurt and eutral and in postured like this and like this. even by age 4, the kids thought these dolls were boys and these dolls were girls. by age 6, the effects was even stronger. so kids are learning those cultural stereotypes very, very early. >> i like your picture of the power pose. why is that a power pose? this is norah at her desk. why is that the power pose? >> it's so expansive. it's not a position you would normally adopt. if you look at pictures of president, they are often in that position in the oval office.
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their desk and hands behind their heads. >> have you noticed the way donald trump speaks? it's always like this and gesturing like that. >> there is a lot of gesturing from donald trump and seems not super controlled so that takes away from the sort of -- >> you analyze the gestures of presidential candidates? >> oh, well. that's always a slippery slope. no one is ever happy when i do that. >> but talk about when you said something we were talking earlier, you said something, sometimes your presence is more presentation. that is really interesting to think about. so if someone is giving a presentation or going for an interview, what are the things they should do? >> what you need to do is believe your story before you go in. the funny thing is that we might believe our story but we get to the door and filled with self-doubt and all of a sudden comes through. no one else will believe your story if you don't believe your story. that is really the key.
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presence is going in and showing people who you actually are. even if it's awkward and kind of strange, who you are is better than something that seems scripted and chorp you don't believe. >> the name of your book is was? >> it's called "presence." >> so much good stuff in this book. >> thank you for having me. >> we appreciate it and tuesday, december 22nd. that is the power pose, charlie. jane fonda shares what it
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how many years have we known each other, mick? >> jesus. for me, you're putting me on the spot. let me counseled. >> 53 years. how many films have we done together? >> nine. ten! >> eleven! so after 53 years of friendship and 11 films together, you don't think i'm going to start to [ bleep ] you now, do you? you of all people? >> no, i don't! >> this morning, jane fonda is up for her first golden globe in nearly 30 years thanks to her new role in the new movie. at age 77 she already owns seven gomed globes and two oscars honoring a career stretching from the silver screen to the
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life behind the scenes. here is jane fonda in our emmy nominated series "note to self." >> dear jane. what you don't realize now is that your life will be like a big circle, passing through many dark periods when you will see no future for yourself. when you won't know who you are and you won't feel that anyone will ever be able to love you. bright eright now, you want to be a boy. preferably a native american boy. living in the willerness and passing through it silently, invisibly, with stealth. >> you will be sexually molested at 7. just as your mother was as a child. when you're 12, your mother will commit suicide and the bravery
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will seem to fall by the way side. you'll come to feel you have to be perfect if you want to be loved, meaning sin and pretty and appealing and certainly not angry. you'll have to be a, quote/unquote, good girl to be loved. >> jane fonda, daughter of a famous actor. >> living in like this will lead you to various addictions that will dominate much of your life and energy. your parents are both self-involved. so you'll grow up not really knowing what love feels like. what will come to pass is that with a lot of work, you will realize that your parents did the best they could. you will learn to remember them with compassion and love and
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i think that maybe you and should have the kind of relationship that we are supposed to have. >> what kind of relationship is that? >> well, you know, like a -- like a father and a daughter. i wish i could explain to you that the painful things that will make your life challenging and get you in trouble are the very things that will ultimately make you strong and compassionate. >> your biggest strength will be that you won't shut down and become cynical. you'll become an activist. >> 1-2-3! we don't want you any more. >> i didn't go to north vietnam hanoi. eyes. if it was true the civilian targets were gone. you will discover that doing this will give your life a meaning you don't think is
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we all need to participate! life. >> jane in your short career you've done theater and motion pictures. rewarding? >> well, i like the theater, the stage of my development. you're a late-bloomer, jane, so it won't happen quickly, but your ability to be honest with yourself and your desire to make sense of it all and to learn from your mistakes will permit you to blossom into life. close that door or i'll shoot! a woman with courage. i'm not asking him to lie. i'm not asking him to cover anything up, but he is going to tone it down or i'm going to fire him. imagination. you spineless chicken! >> and resilience. >> you look fabulous. a perfect --
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last millennium, mick! as i read this, i'm about to turn 78 and though i know you'll find this hard to believe, this is the happiest i have ever been. it was all worth it. the good and the bad, so don't give up. i'm proud of you because you will never settle for less than you think you can attain. love, jane. >> love, jane. thank you, jane! what a great message to say that as you get older, life gets better and that you feel happier in her case. she talks about growing up not knowing what love feels and to finally feel she loves that. >> she learned the lessons well. >> she did. she did. very candid and very nice. >> beautifully done and beautifully produced. >> you're watching "cbs this
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our pose. >> yeah. that's right. >> you're right, norah. i like it. >> oh, my announcer: a horrific terror attack in paris. then, a brutal act of terror here at home. it's time for a tested
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good morning, it's 8:55, i'm kathryn hauser, right after danielle's forecast. good morning, kathryn, good morning everybody, it's now 50 in hyenas, wooster back up to fitch berg in orange, some of this fog may expand, a lot of clouds around, but dry, rain to our west, so temperatures do come into the as, but it's a gradual process, skies stay mainly overcast, too. steadiest rain arrives late this evening, gone by tomorrow, gusty wind, gusts to 40 miles per hour. less wind, much cooler though on wednesday. traffic and weather together.
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final look at the toughest rice, mass pike eastbound now a struggle back to west end, that is a delay of 25 minutes. all lanes open, but one. 93 southbound, if we can pop up that map at route is 110 after and earlier crash closed the road, still seeing a 5-mile backup to rockingham boulevard. is 128 northbound, 25 minute ride there. expressway from the split to south bay looks like and 18 minute trip, kathryn. >> thank you, busy out. checking top stories, investigators are looking into a deadly house fire in wooster on burncoat street. paramedics rushed an elderly couple to the hospital where they later died. closing arguments are expected this morning in the trial of the teen accused of raping and murdering his math teacher.
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kline was criminally insane when he killed colleen ritzer inside danvers high school in 2013, prosecution argues he is faking insanity and he knew what he was doing. also the redline operator whose train took off without him will face a disciplinary hearing today and could be fired, david vazquez violated multiple safety procedures. well our next newscast is coming up at noon, hope to see
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