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tv   Fox Morning News  FOX  October 10, 2013 7:00am-9:00am EDT

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suspect al libi. >> there is no real government. there is no real army. >> the gop will meet with the president later today concerning the budget and the debt creeling. >> the president says he will not negotiate under pressure. my question is when will he negotiate. >> seva seventh biker goes befo the judge in the motorcycle road rage case. >> nearly a dozen people back on the ground after they got stuck on a roller coaster for hours 150 feet in the air at university orlando. >> i couldn't imagine being in that last car. >> a dramatic collision in texas. a truck couldn't move in time to escape the oncoming let motive. >> all of a sudden now it's like amy minor easter on the east coast. >> the cardinals will go on to the national league series. >> way to bring it home, guys. >> all that --
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>> when you make this, does mitt come running? >> he can smell it, and no matter where he is -- >> do you want a job at msnbc? >> you have low standards. i'd much rather gone on fox. >> you really want to talk about low standards. >> he was suspended. a south carolina man decided to lend his services. >> this monument is not closed as far as i'm concerned. >> on "cbs this morning." >> no zscissors on the floor. >> permission to use scissors? >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" presented by toyota. let's go places. captioning funded by cbs welcome to "cbs this morning." good morning, norah. >> good morning to you, charlie. breaking news. >> we begin with libya.
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prime minister ali zaidan was reportedly safe after being kidnapped overnight in tripoli. news agencies say he was freed several hours later. >> many believe it was in retaliation for saturday's mission where u.s. captured al libi inside libya. mark phillips is tracking it in london. good morning, mark zbhood morning. it was an arrest, an abduction, or a kidnapping. pick one. the clear understanding that the prime minister was taken from his residence in a tripoli hotel. by whom, why, not so clear. the prime minister is ali zaidan, removed by a gang of armed men. no shots fired. from the hotel where he's been living. but what really happened and for what reason has been a moving feast all morning. the head of security at the hotel says the gunman arrived with an arrest warrant but the
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department, which is alleged to have issued the warrant has said it knows nothing about it. the group which took the prime minister away has been calling itself the libyan revolutionary operations group. they appear to be one of the militias that have been jockeying for control in libya ever since the revolution that overthrew moammar gadhafi. one theory is it was linked to al libi being snagged last week. secretary of state john kerry had said the u.s. is in regular touch with the libyan government but never confirmed it had provided advance knowledge of the raid. another theory is that zaidan was picked up in connection with corruption charge. this is a country where shows of force by various militias is not uncommon. in may one of the groups
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surrounded the government building to make a point. the point made today is that the libyan political structure is as stable as the proverbial house of cards and that it's a sort of action that can bring it all tumbling down. norah, charlie? >> mark, thank you. we may be seeing the first of a political compromise as washington begins itse s its te of the government shutdown. the plan to act on it is now only seven days away. bill plante is in washington. good morning zbhood morning. nothing definite but there are signs today that the white house and congress are at least thinking about how to end the shutdown and avoid defaulting on the nation's debt. some republicans seem to shift their view from health care to a larger deal on the dev sit. they meet with both house republicans and senate democrats. they say it's not anegotiation.
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>> many of his members in this fight forcinging the president to negotiate his health care program. >> how can we tax people for not buying a product from a website that doesn't work? this is why we need to sit down and have a conversation about the big challenges that face our country. >> the president repeat thad he's willing to negotiate but only after the government is reopened and the debt limit extended. >> john boehner has other priorities and in a normal negotiation you'd sit there and say, okay, this is what i want, this is what you want. what speaker boehner has said, you know, unless i get what i want completely, then i'm not going to reopen the government. >> the longer the standoff continues, the more the frustration builds. a new gallup poll has congressional approval at 11%, down 8 points from last month and one point away from an all-time low.
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the republicans, their approval rating is down at its lowest ever. 28%. democrats are down as well, 43%. democrats in the house could be the key to passing any fiej resolution. they met with the president wednesday and they say that they've already made a concession by accepting the republicans' lower government funding level. >> what they're doing now is moving goalposts and changing views and taking back their commitment is a luxury our country cannot afford. >> but there are now plans under discussion to raise the debt ceiling on a short-term basis. representative paul ryan, the chair of the house budget committee is proposing to tie the length of the extension to the amount of spending reduction to which the administration is willing to agree. charlie, norah? >> all right, bill. thank you. the house voted on wednesday to restore death benefits to families of troops killed in combat. for now a private charity, the fisher house foundation is
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stepping in to pick up the cost. the shutdown is affecting those reserves who receive benefits. nancy cordes is on capitol hill. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, charlie and norah. what's happening is a snapshot for the way the shutdown is hurting the nation, not just for the people hurt by the government but for people who rely on the system as well. it's only going to get worse as time goes on. u.s. veterans are due $6 billion worth of benefits in november, checks that won't go out if the government is still shutdown. the secretary of veterans affairs says a third of his employees are veterans themselves, facing a double whammy. >> if they are furloughed and they're also recipientsrecipienm come december i'm screwed along
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with a lot of other veterans out here. >> jerry is an army veteran who served during the gulf war. he's no longer able to work and says he relies on the is v.a. for everything from food to medical care. >> when your day to day life depend on what the government does for us, you know, that means the world to us. people are going to lose their homes. we're going to be homeless. the grocery stores don't take ious for groceries. >> reporter: the design and cop struks of 33 new facilities is on hold and vmt a. funding has been reduced or halted. house republicans pass add bill last thursday to fund the v.a. but senate democrats who want the whole government reopened blocked it. secretary shinseki argued it wouldn't have fix the problem because his agency relies on ten others to help with health care,
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education, insurance, and housing. >> what is best for veterans and all of us right now is a -- you know, a budget for the entire federal government. let us get back to work. >> reporter: even before this shutdown the v.a. was dealing with a backlog of about 1,095 claims. now with so many of his workers furloughed, the v.a. secretary, norah and charlie, says that backlog is growing by a couple thousand a week. >> nancy, thanks. among those furloughed park service employees who maintain the national mall in washington. south carolina native chris cox decided to step in. he used a lawn mower and chain saw to spruce things up. he says he wants the mall to be in shape for this weekend's million debt march. >> veterans are coming here this weekend. i didn't want to see spit cup,
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diapers, banana peels, apples, you name it, out there. >> he calls himself memorial militia. he plans to work through this shutdown. on wednesday president obama nominated janet yell on the replace ben bernanke. his ten year ends in january. right now she's the vice chair of the fed. she would be the first woman to lead the bank if confirmed by the senate and yellen says more needs to be done to strengthen the economy. >> while we have made progress, we have farther to go. the federal reserve can help if it does its job effectively. we can help ensure that everyone has the opportunity to work hard and build a better life. >> in our next hour we're going to take a closer look at yelin who's on the verge of becoming the most important woman in the financial world if not the most important. that's as he.
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this morning investors are nervous about a possible government default. they sold all their short-term government debt. they say the move is a precautionary measure. american express chairman ken she nault is one of the company's top executives. he says the impact will be immediate and dramatic if congress does not raise the debt ceiling. >> what we're talking about as a default is the first time in 237 years the history of this country that the united states would not pay its bills. what that means is the government does not stand behind its word. and the confidence and our financial system would be severely eroded. this would be catastrophic. >> but some republicans do not agree. on monday senator tom corbin downplayed the impact when he spoke with us. >> i would dispel the rumor that
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is going around that you hear on every newscast that if you don't raise the debt ceiling we'll default on our debt. we won't. we'll continue to pay our interest. we'll continue to redeem bonds and we'll issue no bonds to replace those. so it's not entirely accurate. >> bill cohen is the author of three best-selling books about wall street. welcome. >> thank you, charlie. >> here you have the leading ceo saying catastrophic and the senator from oklahoma saying, well, not really. i actually used to think tom coburn made some sense as far as senate republicans were concerned. but i guess now as was said earlier this week, this is crazy talk. ken chenault is right. it would be catastrophic. when you don't pay your bills, that's simple. you don't get good credit. >> one of the reasons that
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business has not spoken out and markets haven't moved it is said is because they cannot believe a default would take place. if they start believing it, markets will collapse and will that have an impact on the republicans? >> they're right that there are some on wall street, wall street analysts who say in the last two days there's a zero chance of this actually happening. i don't think it's true. i think it might take a 1,000-point drop in the dow to get people's attention and believe that actually could happen and i think it's the result of these business men who happen to also be republicans, wall street guys. many of them happen to be republicans who aren't having the sway that they're used to with all the money that they're spending and all the influence they're having. they're not having sway. >> what about this talk about a short-term increase in our borrowing limit. it seems again the only opening we have again is another short-term fix. >> what i do they want to fix it on a short-term basis? so we get to go through it all again?
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short-term interest rates are already backing up and we're already questioning the ability of the u.s. government to stand behind its debts. >> what about the world reaction? i've been watching this. it's embarrassing. >> well, it's embarrassing for us. it shows us we're kind of look a banana republic, which is not the kind of image we want to give in the world. besides, we've got a huge competitive advantage. people want to invest in our country. china is our largest creditor because they think we're the safest nation. if we put that into question it's going to hurt ourselves in the long run. >> those people around the globe no if there is default it will affect their economy as the recession in 2008 affected their economy. >> this will be a colossal global recession just as we're getting our feet back on the ground. not smart at all. >> thank you. >> my pleasure. and a california chick prone deucer must explain how they're going to fix a problem today.
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they are linked to a nation wide outbreak. the usda is concerned about sanitary conditions. at one plant, 25% of the chicken samples tested positive for salmonella. 278 people in 17 states have gotten sick since march. an update on the biker road rage case this morning. this morning two of the suspects under arrest will be arraigned today. an undercover detective accused of taking part in the attack was in court yesterday. wojciech braszczok was in court yesterday. a video shows he did not assault the driver of the suv. prosecutors called him an active par it is pant. as clarissa wards, election officials announced the winner one day before anybody actually voted. >> reporter: election day in
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azerbaijan. it's been ruled by two men for the past 20 years. nobody was expecting a free and fair election yesterday, but wednesday's news was a new high or low in electoral history, even among the most totalitarian of regimes. >> it looks like the result was already decided before the voters went to the polls. not a surprise in a place like azerbaijan. >> reporter: that's right. before a single ballot was cast it was found he won 67% of the vote. officials claim it because computer glitch, that the totals were from 2008 but totals were shown alongside pictures taken last week so that didn't fly. 37% of the vote might seem a
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little over the top ben when you see how elections like this are controlled -- >> getting anything below 90% is deemed a weak showing. >> reporter: why bother with an election in the first place. >> they want to use the facade of elections to legitimate their operations and their way of ruling the country. >> reporter: given azerbaijan's oil resources and ipts strategic location between russia and iran, don't hold your breath for a recount. for "cbs this morning," clarissa ward, russia. >> the official results shows the official president got 85% of the vote. time to show you this morning's headlines from around the globe. "the miami herald" says the obama administration is reviewing dozens of cases at guantanamo bay. they're being held would charges. it's part of obama's effort to close the prison system.
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yesterday a special envoy was set to oversee the detainees. researchers have found a compound that stops the death of brain cells in mice. "the wall street journal" says mobile advertising is soaring. that is more than twice the amount from last year.
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>> announcer: this national weather report sponsored by the jcpenney columbus day sale. hurry in this weekend for do door buster savings. an unprecedented scandal in the nation's nuclear missile command. >> jan craw is in washington. >> norah and charlie, this involves one of the top officials in our country's strategic command. you'll see how poker chips brought down a three-star
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admir admiral. >> they maded off the field alive but are the wounded being medicated to death? neighbors tell bill whitaker it's a true hollywood disaster tale. >> reporter: so it's like a t wild west it's like a goat rodeo. >> reporter: a goat rodeo? >> a goat rodeo? the news is back on. stay tuned for your local news. >> announcer: this morning's cbs sponsored by splenda. thinking sure, say splenda. you can use splenda® no calorie sweetener. ♪ splenda® lets you experience the joy of sugar without all the calories. it's a very good reason to enjoy something sweet with the ones you love.
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no! you don't even get football. [ male announcer ] when you've got 100% fiber optic fios, you get it. america's fastest, most reliable internet. it's the ultimate for downloading, streaming, and chatting. -- that guy all over the football field. thanks, joe. if the running backs don't start picking up the blitz, the quarterback is going to have a long night. is that your sister? look, are you trying to take my job? maybe. technology that lets you play with the big boys. call the verizon center for customers with disabilities that's powerful. at 800-974-6006 tty/v. the world talk to c
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a roller-coaster at universal studios in orlando remains closed the morning. last night 12 people were trapped on the hollywood rip ride rocket for more than two hours. got stuck near the top. it is billed as orlando's tallest roller coaster, 17 stories high. firefighters got even down safely. the park officials claimed a technical glitch do. you like roller coaster? >> i do. >> i do too. you don't like roller coaster tos. >> i don't. >> you like a good thrill. >> i do. >> welcome back, everybody. sorry, we were just talking. former football stair erin hernandez answers judge's questions in court but now there are questions about the judge and hernandez's defense team. legal analyst rick is here.
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neighbors say there's a growing way to keep the fame while keeping tourists out. the number two command of the u.s. nuclear weapons has been released this morning. his name is mike giardino. he's accused of using fake poker chips at a casino. jan has more this morning. >> they were tipped off by iowa state police. no criminal charges have been fired yet against the admiral but he already has been stripped of his three-star rank. admiral timothy giardino's been spotted using fake poker chips. he had been the second highest ranging officer at the u.s.
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strategic command, overseeing the military's nuclear forces, missile defense, and cyber warfare operations. general richard myers, once the top military commander says senior commanders must be held to a higher standard. he've never heard of one relieved of duty because of gambling. >> when people do background checks on you they ask do you have a sex habit, drinking habit, drug habit. all of those could lead to a situation of blackmail. >> casino owners noticed the fake chips in june and contacted the iowa police. once they discovered his identity, state investigators alerted the navy which in july opened its own investigation. two months later he was suspend bud allowed to remain on base. now that he's been released to kmond kmand he'll be reverted to the rank of rear admiral and returned to washington. >> he doesn't have do something that's illegal but lose the confidence of those above him.
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is this the kind of person we want on the phone with a national command authorities when there's a real crisis under way. >> now, giardina has not been arrested. the huge concern in cases like this, of course, is whether officers may have disclosed any sensitive information or somehow been put in a situation where they may have compromised national security. there's no indication of that here at this point, charlie and norah, but that investigation is still ongoing. >> all right, jan. thank you. former nfl star aaron hernandez returned to court on wednesday. he was indicted in august on murder and weapons charges. last month he plead not guilty. he answered questions from the judge. >> could you please state your name. >> aaron hernandez. >> and your age. >> 23. >> and how far did grow in school? >> three years of college. >> and what is haas been your employment. >> i played football, nfl.
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>> cbs news legal analyst rikki klieman has been watching. what have we learned from this? >> think we learned a lot. first of all think it was very well orchestrated by his attorneys. they dressed him in a way that now for the first time since his arrest, we have video that makes him look like a respectable young man. we learn thad he can be soft-spoken, answer questions intelligently, that he looks thoughtful. i think that the defense did a great job of humanizing him because before we've seen him look like a thug all padded up and in a t-shirt. >> what is hernandez facing? >> of course, he is facing this murder charge and this murder charge may be one that is easy to prove. mate be one that's hard to prove depending if they find the gun and the cooperating witnesses. also have gun charges here. we have a number of firearms charges including possession of
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high-capacity magazines, weapons, and those stack up against him because even if he should be acquitted of the murder, he needs necessarily going to be acquit of the gun charges. >> and what about the prosecution asking the judge to take herself off the court -- off the case? >> i found that motion absolutely stunning. we know that defense lawyers go to court a lot and they ask judges to recuse themselves for a whole variety of reasons. in my day of trying cases and in covering cases, i have never seen a prosecutor make this motion. i think it is not a good idea despite any bad blood that they have had in the past because other people -- and i think really good sources of information about this judge, susan garsh in boston -- say she is very fair. now it makes the whole office look suspect in the eyes of other judges. i was thinking about it last night and i thought about the
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fact that prosecutors are actually fudgeable. you have a whole office full of prosecutors. if you move to remove a judge because you have animosity or she does, for heaven's sake why not recuse yourself or let another judge ask the questions. >> we're going have a hearing on october 21st. i cannot wait to see the defense's response to that motion. >> we'll be watching. thanks, rikki. this morning congress wants answers. last month wounded veterans being prescribed massive amounts of pain medication. it could be leading to deadly consequences. jim axelrod is on capitol hill. jim, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, charlie. a little later this morning a house subcommittee will hear from veterans and veterans dockers who say the v.a. is relying too heavily on narcotics
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to treat veterans' pain, a practice that in their view that could be costing veterans their lives. in the weeks after our investigation aired, we received photos like this one, the daily dosage of pain pills prescribed to a 38-year-old v.a. patient in texas. and this one from a 54-year-old v.a. patient in oklahoma. these were the medications prescribed to ricky green. a veteran of first gulf war for his back pain. among them, three narcotics. his wife kim ber by describes a visit her husband made to va hospitals in november of 2011. >> he wanted to be taken off this large amounts of medicines. >> what did his doctors and health care providers say to him? >> basically that he needed to continue to take the medication. >> all of them? >> all of them. >> when he came home, did he continue to take all the medication? >> he followed the doctor's
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orders. >> the next month green died in his slim, accidently overdosing on a narcotic and muscle relaxer prescribed va medical centers in arkansas. >> when he died, it completely shattered our own world. he was only 43 years old. we had a future together. and this shouldn't have happened. >> later this morning a veterans affairs subcommittee will hold a hearing examining va's practice of prescribing medications. congressman jeff miller is a chair of the house committee on veterans affairs. >> unfortunately it has become a routine way of dealing with our veterans is to give them a prescription. they walk out the door with their medications. and masking the pain only temporarily takes it away that it's not treating the underlying cause. >> no. and it's the underlying cause
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that absolutely has to be treated. >> kimberly green is one of two widows expected to testify this morn ag long with two v.a. doctors and two veterans themselves all who make the case the v.a. is overprescribing pills to treat pain. charlie, norah? >> tijim, thank you. and there is a turf war in tinseltown. why people are fighting to keep you from getting a close-up of the biggest name in hollywood. the city caught in the middle. >> you have to expect one thing. the public. >> see how far neighbors are going ahead on "cbs this morning." [ female announcer ] can it get any cleaner? [ steam hisses ] actually... guys! [ female announcer ] ...it can. introducing swiffer steamboost powered by bissell.
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well, it's not often you find people in hollywood who say the show must not go on but
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they're growing angry. that's right. they say the tourist sign is more than they can handle. how technology is adding a plot twist. >> reporter: it's the most visible and iconic symbol of tinseltown ever since it was promoted as a real estate promotion. it's attracted movie-loving tourists. they've become part of history themselves. >> i've been to paris and seen the eiffel tower and this is on your list. if you're going to hollywood. this is what you need to see. >> reporter: the only way to see it is on narrow streets. a vehicle knocked down a traffic sign imploring them to stay away. >> see this redzone here? on the weekend you'll see tons and tons of cars parked
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illegally. >> reporter: tony is a resident and he's trying to fight back against tourists. how many tourists would you have on a busy day? >> about 5,500 car, 4,000 walkers. >> reporter: a day. >> a day. >> reporter: residents say it would be horrible in an emergency because the streets are too crowded to get through. >> reporter: it's like the wild west. >> it's like a goat rodeo. >> reporter: they'll compare the flood of tourists to a flood of locusts. they say their complaints are falling on deaf ears. while the sign has always been turned into a horror story.
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>> 50 feet, turn right. the 2 50 feet turn left. i have my sleeves rolled up because i want to try to help these people, to try to balance it out. >> the hollywood ending for this story has yet to be written. for "cbs this morning," bill whitaker, hollywood. >> very interesting. what are you looking at? >> we've got this coming up. fortune mag disease mo"fortune' powerful woman. who's noum ber one? >> we can't give it away. >> that's what
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alicia keys knows how to hit the right note and now she's talking to gayle inside her personal studio. they talk about her new role in the movies and, of course, her music. that's ahead on "cbs this morning." [ male announcer ] introducing new fast acting advil. with an ultra-thin coating and fast absorbing advil ion core™ technology, it stops pain before it gets worse. nothing works faster. new fast acting advil. look for it in the white box. then i read an article about a study that looked
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it is 8:00 a.m. welcome back to "cbs this morning." libya's prime minister's free after gunmen kidnapped him from his home overnight. now it appears he's already back at work. first on "cbs this morning" the most powerful women in business. "fortune magazine" reveals this year's list. and grammy winner alicia keys is now producing movies. she talked with us about changing her work, her life, and, yes, her hair. but first here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. >> it was an arrest, an abduction, or kidnapping, pick one. why, not so clear. >> ali zaidan is reportedly safe after he was kidnapped overnight in libya. >> nothing definite, but there are signs today that the white house and congress are at least
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thinking about how to end the shut joup and avoid defaulting on the nation's debt. >> some are saying there's zero chance of this actually happening but i don't think that's true. i think it's closer to 50/50. >> an unprecedented scandal in the nation's nuclear command. i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. they're trying to learn more about the kidnapping of libya's prime minister. he was abducted earlier. several hours later he was set free. he appeared on television a short time ago. >> there was speculation that zaidan was taken because he knew too much about the kidnapping of the libyan suspect. mark phillips is in london with more. good morning, mark. >> good morning to you.
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whether it was an abduction, kidnapping, or arrest, it is over. he's been returned to his office now greeted by members of his cabinet. he had had an eventful day. earlier he looked like this being led away by members of one of the militias that operate in libya. a dominant theory is he's soid to have information on the. it seems today's drama was part of the ongoing power struggle and the instability in libyan politics where various militias have been competing for control and it seems they still are. norah, charlie, gail? >> all right. thank you. and the effort to end the political paralysis in washington may be gaining some
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momentum this morning. house republicans will be speaking. >> jack lew about to testify before the senate finance committee. he plans to warn lawmakers that leading to diet increase at the last minute caught be very dangerous. bill plante is at thehouse. good morning. >> good morning. the president meets separately with democrats and house republican. they're looking at how to avoid a default on the nation's debts. the white house says today's meetings are a discussion, not a negotiation, but it is clear there is some insenn tev on both sides to find a solution before next week when secretary jack lew says he'll be unable to meet all of the country's obligation as. the president says he's open to racing the nation's borrowing limit on a short-term basis.
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house budget committee chairman paul ryan has a proposal to tie the length of the extension to the amount that's reduced. so we may be seeing the first tentative steps. charlie, norah, gail. >> some are hoping's the case. they had testy words. mayor vin cents gray has been calling on lawmakers to keep d.c.'s government running with an exemption from the shut joup. he approached reid yesterday. >> i'm not with the department. i'm with the government. >> i'm on your side. don't screw it up. >> wow. okay. gray had held a rally to restore funding to the district of colombia. gray says he doesn't know what reid meant by his comment. he was saying i'm on your side. >> he said i'm on your side, don't screw it up. >> i didn't hear the don't screw
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it up. president obama nominated janet yellen to head the federal reserve when ben bernanke retires in january. she face as difficult task managing the u.s. economy in app uneven recovery. the job would make yelin olen of the most powerful women in the world. nancy cordes looks at how she got there. >> thank you, mr. president. i'm humble and honored by the faith you've placed in me. >> reporter: one traditionally reserved for men. >> she sounded the alarm early about the housing bubble and about the risks of major recession. i should add she'll be the first woman to lead the fed in its 100-year history. >> reporter: "the wall street journal" skpanled more than 700 predictions about growth, jobs made between 2009 and 2010 1 2.
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out of more than a dozen fed policy makers, it found yellen's predictions were the most accura accurate. >> she's a proven leader and tough not just because she's from brooklyn. >> reporter: a valedictorian she earned degrees at brown and yale. she went on and became adviser to president clinton. 267-year-old wife and mother is currently ben bernanke's number two and poild poised to become p banker. >> she has the skills. she has the qualifications. she's the right person for the job. on the other hand, am i thrilled beyond belief that we've cracked this glass creeling? absolutely. >> reporter: but yellen's nomination comes amid deep political divide in washington. >> she's certainly not a hero to republicans or to the right.
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one of the attacks on her is she's too easy on the monetary policies. >> the economy is stronger and the financial system sounder. while we have made progress, we have farther to go. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning," nancy cordes, washington. >> extraordinary choice, isn't it, the fact that she brings so much talent, married to a nobel economist. >> they said her son is in the business too and when they go on vacation they go with a book of economic books, beach reads. >> don't you? >> yeah. that's me too. >> from "the new york times" profile of her they mention thad each year while she was in school the editor of the school newspaper interviewed the class valedictorian. well, miss yellen was both and she interviewed herself. the other thing margaret brennan
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said you probably have in three most powerful positions in the economy in the world are controlled by women. yellen at the fed. christine lagarde and angela merkel. >> i don't think that's a bad thing. >> she'll continue the policies that were initiated because she worked so closely with him. >> i suspect
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did you know that the partial government shutdown is affecting beer? this morning the founder of samuel adams tells us what to expect. in all that mattered in 1973 this man nearly losts he job and went to prison. do you remember who that was? the answer's next here on "cbs this morning." noter >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" at 8:00 is sponsored by benefiber. better it with benefiber. completely. s so you can feel free to add it to anything. and feel better about doing it. better it with benefiber.
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vice president agnew behreng himself as a tax cheat resigned under agreement. >> all that mattered 40 years ago today. vice president sphero agnew resigned. he faced allegation of political corruption. he plead nod contest to a single charge of tax evasion in a deal with the justice department. he was sentenced to three years' probation. he was only the second vice president in american history to resign from office. he was succeeded by gerald ford. >> i remember that. was actually at the university
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of maryland. so you can imagine, that was a huge, huge story. i remember that day. >> he later moved to palm springs and became a great friend of frank sinatra's. >> that's right. the new names and those staying on the top will be revealed here only on "cbs this morning." that's coming up next. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. ♪ ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] build anything with the new toyota tundra. toyota. let's go places.
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nice car. sure is. make a deal with me, kid, and you can have the car and everything that goes along with it. [ thunder crashes, tires squeal ] ♪
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♪ so, what do you say? thanks... but i think i got this. ♪ [ male announcer ] the all-new cla. starting at $29,900. as the next fed chair, she will become one of the most important women in the financial world, but plenty of other women are making their mark and first, only on "cbs this morning," we love when this happens, fortune
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magazine is revealing its list of the most powerful women in business. cheryl lanberg of facebook, the most powerful woman for a second year in a row is ginni, rometty. >> good morning. ginny rometty is top five two years in a row. >> it's really surprising. when we started this list in 1998 it was mainly media woman, consumer products women and everybody thinks that women are not going into technology, but
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the tech world in silicon world happened to be a very level playing field where you tend to get judged by your performance and not so much by your appearance or behavior. >> when you look at the top ten, do they take traditional routes to get to the top? anything stand out to you? >> the really interesting thing about these women leaders which we've been following for 15 years now is that they tend not to think about their careers as ladders. they take a lot of lateral moves. they enhance their resumes by broadening their experience base because women have to operate a little bit differently to get ahead. men tend to thing of their careers as ladder, you know? and shaecheryl sanberg talks ab this in her boom. she has a chapter called the
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jungle gym. >> i want to talk about someone new in the top five. maril marilyn hewson of lockheed mart martin. what's it about marilyn. >> she was not in line. the pivot first in line had to resign over an um propriety over another woman. she got the job. >> think about this. the biggest company in america is headed by women. the two biggest tech nick cal companies. >> meg whitman. >> right and ginny rometty and
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marissa mayer of yahoo! >> you know what would be a great is bring them together and say let's talk about leadership and let's talk about what it means and have a real understanding. >> you know what, charlie? we're doing that next week. >> oh, great. >> norah's going to be there. we have norah on our program interviewing marillyn hewson. >> pattie has been doing first a long time. >> talk about in power and what you mean by power. >> well, power -- we're valuate power as for purposes of this list as the size and importance of the woman's business in the global economy, the health and direction of the business, the arc of the woman's career and social and cultural influence. so sheryl sandberg, for instance, she moved up to number five because there's never been
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anyone quite like sheryl. she's sold over a million copies of her book "lean in." >> i like the backstories like ursula burns started out as an interand now she's the head of xerox. >> walmart has had several women on the most powerful women list. gisele and ros. they have tended to start out in stores. >> how many african women on the liz. roz brewer, ursula burns. shawnda ryan. quite a few. >> thank you, pattie. >> thank you so much. >> nobody can stop alicia keys.
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"i'm terry mcauliffe, candidate for governor, and i sponsored this ad." these are birth control pills. more than half of american women use them at some point in their lives but ken cuccinelli sponsored a bill that could have made common forms of birth control illegal, including the pill. cuccinelli was one of only five senators to support this "potentially radical intrusion into domestic, family and individual decision-making" why is ken cuccinelli interfering in our private lives? he's focused on his own agenda. not us.
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up this half hour, jim cook changed the way americans drink beer. he's the creator of samuel add a jim is in our toyota green room and only this morning he'll announce a new kind of beer. also with us, jonathan park. he believes earth can solve climate change. his new book "a glimgs into the new world 30 years from now." that's ahead. alicia keys is a four-time grammy winner, broadway actor and a wife and mom. now she's taking on a new role as a producer. we sat down with alicia in her new york studio about her move, her family, and a nod to her song, what keep this girl on fire.
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so we went digging in the archives. >> oh, my gosh. ♪ i keep on falling in love >> okay. so when you look at that, when you look at that girl, what do you think all those years ago? she's cute. >> she is cute. >> she's cute. she i got little braids and half shade glasses things. i'm not sure what those were. i remember the braids, the combat boot, the camouflage jacket. >> it was only leather jackets. i worked with a stylist -- >> stylist did this? >> no. >> okay. >> hey, i'm trying to say. what do you mean? >> when you first came on, it was a very different look. >> yes. >> so when you look at her
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today, what do you think about her? >> it really makes me smile. it makes me feel really good because it's been such an incredible journey. i just -- i'm so much that same girl, you know, but just with so much better clothes. ♪ it's a new day >> i love the fact that you cut your hair so drastically. for so many women -- because you've got gorgeous beautiful hair. you've worn it long for such a long time. it's such a chic hair cut but so many women would be afraid to do that. was it a big decision to cut your hair? >> i knew for years i wanted to do it but what do exactly was kind of the question and when i realized what i wanted to do, i just did it. >> were you surprised when you looked in the mirror? did you like it when you first saw it or did it have to grow on you? >> i really liked it.
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i've shed a lot. that's what this whole album "this girl is on fire" is doing for me ♪ this girl is on fire so it held me. it felt like it invigorated and empowered me. ♪ this girl is on fire >> you don't see to have a lot of paparazzi drama with people tracking you down or being in your face. you and egypt and your husband swizz beatz move around openly. >> we do. >> and you don't have a lot of stuff that comes. how are you able to do that? >> we're very grounded and we're in and of the people in a very real way. we're not going to the spots. the spots, are you ready. are you dress degreesed up? we're going to the spot.
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>> this is sort of our spot where we are. >> right here. >> i was reading an article when you talked about mr. dean that he was ostentatious and annoying. i thought, who is she talking about and you were totally turned off by him. >> yes. i was so annoyed bihm bihim. >> because? >> well, i guess maybe at the time being a little more philosophical about it all in retrospect, maybe at the time he was what i wish i could be. maybe at the time he was so bright and brilliant and able to be completely owning his own space with no apologies. i think i wished i could be like that. so now i think that's what annoyed me about it. ♪ i just want you close where you can stay forever ♪ >> i'm so fascinated with you, alicia keys, because you don't
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have enough to do? singer, songwriter, activist, broad way producer, and you said, you know what? i have some free time. let me produce a movie. >> you foe what? i'm really loving producing film and television. >> because? >> because i love being able to tell stories that wouldn't have been told. >> look at the ones you can do, that don't care about background checks. >> this is what you think of me? >> i wasn't thinking of rocket scientist. >> what's your problem? >> my problem? i'm the one with the problem? >> i have a confession. when they told me the premise, black kid, the mother the druggy, it's going to be so predictable, tiesh got to watch it because it's alicia's movie. i went in and watched it. i have to tell you i went in feeling very biased but it was over and i felt totally different. it's not predictable, not cliche, and it was really good.
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why was id good for you? >> i was drawn into each piece. i felt their pain and their tree fs. >> you know what i love about mr. pete, one is black and one is asian. that caught my eye. hmm, this is different. >> it's a global story, a human story. so no matter the location of where we are wrrks we live, whatever the case, it is about two boyce bonding together to make it through a very tough time and somehow it ends up being hilarious. sometimes you're laughing with them and you're rooting for them. >> as i was watching and i said you've got have an alicia keys song in here. i'm not going to do it justice but i love the closing track, better me, better you. i know i'm going to might, i've come too far to be focused. are your ears burning? >> no. sounds beautiful. >> better me, better you. what did you want the song to
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say? it was a beautiful song at the end. >> that song speaks to all the troubles that you have and you realize that you're looking everywhere but inside of yourself for everything that you need. i do love it. do you want me to sing for it? >> absolutely. >> it may be too microphone. ♪ i'm here to make a statement my place don't tell me what my name is ♪ ♪ i know going to mack it i've come to far to lose it ♪ ♪ got to stay focused and find a better me ♪ >> bravo. i think you have a future. how gorgeous. >> well done. >> did you say young man? >> he said well done. >> i thought you said well done young man. i'm a girl, charlie. >> that was so great.
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she's so talented. >> she is. she is. and she's as gorgeous as she is talented. she's smart. i'm always attracted to somebody who's smart. and she's scary smart, alicia keys. go ahead. >> she writes her own stuff. >> she writes everything. and, listen. she's been doing this for a very long time. she went to columbia and stopped. she was going to columbia and stopped to pursue her career and she's been going up, up, up. >> this movie has been out for a while. >> the script has been out but the movie's coming out tomorrow. do you know whetherwhere she got the name alicia keys from? >> no. >> do you, charlie? >> her mother. >> good guess but no. i didn't have enough time to put it in the piece. i'll put it on the web. it has a double meaning, the name alicia keys.
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cbsthis morning.com. >> you'll tell us. >> i'll tell you. >> the man jim cook is in the green room. he believe this is the backbone of any good beer. he travels to germany every year to select the hops for his brews. and only on "cbs this morning" he'll share news about his
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jim cook created his first batch of beer in his kitchen in 1984. he became one of the pioneers of the kraft brewing industry creating samuel adams but he won't be getting any new competition for the moment. the partial government shutdown means new breweries and labels aren't being approved. welcome. >> thank you for having me here. >> you have 1% of the beer? >> yes.
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finally after 30 years of working my tail off, i got to 1%. i'm proud of that. >> what do we mean by craft brewing industries? >> craft brewers are small brewers, under 3% of the market. they're independent, meaning they're not owned by some big conglomerate and they use more ingredients to make flavorful beers. >> i remember when you first started ininterviewed you. >> it was wonderful. you were on at 2:00 in the morning and all the bars were watching. >> it was called cbs news night watch at the time. tell us the success that you had within the world of beer. taste? >> yeah. american beer drinkers are changing their pal@s. they're waking up to the fact that craft brewers are making beer that has real taste, real
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character and they're innovate and creating new styles of beer. new hops, new flavor. so it's going through probably the best time in the history of the world to be a beer drinker is today. >> you even travel out of the country looking for the best peer. you go to germany every year? looking for what? what are you looking for? >> i'm looking for the best hops in the world. >> i dome even know what a hops is. >> everybody knows beer is made with hops but nobody know as what they are. guess what they are? hops a little flower. they're frown on a perennial vine. looks like a really tall vineyard, and the hops giving beer its spiciness and bitterness to balance the sweetness and body from the malt. >> so it's worth a trip to germany every year to find the best hops. >> right. it's like a wine maker. you can't make a great beer without the best hops. >> and then i hear, jim, the
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government shutdown is aaffecting your industry. how is that possible? >> craft brewers are regulated by the government. we can't bring out a new beer until we get a label approval. we can't add an ingredient or new brew progress says until we get federal approval. we can't open a brewery without federal aimprovement we have new beers we're ready to bring to market but we can't. we have a philanthropic program where we make loans to over a dozen brewers. some of them can't open their breweries. it's bad enough but we may have to dump beer. this is getting serious. >> what's your suggestion to ending this? >> i've got great idea. instead of dumping the beer i'm going to send a couple of six packs to speaker boehner and president obama bleebing they're
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people of good faith. >> unfortunately speaker boehner is a merlot guy. he's not a beer guy. >> he can be flexible. his tastes can mature. he's still zblung you have a new beer. >> yeah. this is sort of the first announcement of it. it is a beer that expands your whole definition of beer. it's called sam adams utopias. it is about 60 proof. it's the strongest naturally fermented beer in the world. it's aged in oak barrels. some of of it is old. >> $200 a bottle? >> yeah. >> doesn't it sound crazy? we made 200. we sell every one of them. people scalp it on ebay for $300 for a bot f of beer. this is not your fare's schlitz.
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>> do you drink two beers? >> sometimes. >> especially on the golf course. >> it appears beer pays well. rumor is you are estimated to be above a billion dollars. are you willing to share? >> i save my empties. >> and recycle. thank you, jim. >> thank you. a leading environmentalist says each places like detroit can make the earth greener. and tomorrow baseball hall of famer reggie jackson will be here in studio 57. his new memoir will look at how he went from an outcast to yankee legend that's next f next on "cbs this morning."
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a new climate change study predicts some day no matter where we live our coldest years will be warmer than our hottest years today. university of hawaii scientists say it could happen all over the world by 2047. that's 34 years from now. jonathan port has suspect the last 40 years showing people how to make the planet clean and sustainable. in his new book "the world we made" he pore days a dent view. in the world you imagine 90% of the energy comes from renewable sources and climate change has been fixed. how could that be possible? >> it's possible if we really devote ourselves to getting this transition from the world of fossil fuels to a world of
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renewable energy. it does mean doing it at speed and at scale so we can avert some of that information we shared with your view irsing what will happen in a warming world. >> the importance offiting this piece is to show the world whoo it would be like and giving them the incentive to get there. >> yes, because i think people are baffled and run doerring whether it's possible. looking back to where we are now. it will be a great world, lots of prosperitity and a fairer world. >> economy flourishing? >> definitely. i thank think talking about the green economy is about anti-progress. it isn't. it's a different kind of story. >> alex mckay is a history teacher, he has a daughter, a
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son, his father dies. we see the world through his ey eyes. some of the times i had to remind myself this is not real. it did not happen. why did you tell the story this way? >> it has to be perm. if you put all the figures down. >> eyes glaze over. >> does that really happen to me. we took it and made it personal with the sort of working conditions he's in and so on. it does help to bring it to people's own eyes. >> when everybody talks about america and its future, natural edge and gas. what's so great about that? >> for me, renewable energy is
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just as much an important part of energy security as gases. >> it's a small percentage. >> very small now but you can see the growth coming really fast all around the world. >> think what you're trying to do is get people to visual yiiz. what is another example of things you would have to do very, very soon to get there? >> china's critical. >> jonathan, i have to interrupt you. thank you so much. the book is called "the world we made." it's on sale right now. up next your local news. we'll see you tomorrow on "cbs this morning." -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com when ouwe got a subaru.s born, it's where she said her first word. (little girl) no! saw her first day of school.
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(little girl) bye bye! made a best friend forever. the back seat of my subaru is where she grew up. what? (announcer) the two-thousand-fourteen subaru forester. (girl) what? (announcer) built to be there for your family. love. it's what makes a subaru, a subaru. the pain started up and wrapped around to the front. i couldn't play my bassoon because of the pressure that i felt throughout my whole head. the blistering and the rash was moving down towards my eye. the doctors at the emergency room recommended that i have it checked out by an eye doctor. there was concern about my eyesight. when i had shingles the music stopped.
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>> today on "the doctors"! >> the granny panty crew.
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>> wardrobe malfunctions that can harm your health. >> camel toe. >> when you have camel toe, you are suffocating your vagina. >> the dreaded whales tail. >> it will travel from the anal area to the urethera. >> bedicate. >> let's talk about how hickies happen. and how they go awry. >> he actually caused her to have a stroke. >> the dutch oven. >> and in today's news in 90. tom hanks' serious diagnosis. >> how to instagram the pounds away, today! ♪ doctor, doctor gimme the news ♪ [ cheers and applause ] ♪ [ cheers and applause ] ♪ >> how's it going? [ crowd cheering ] [ applause ]

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