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tv   Fox Morning News  FOX  October 17, 2013 7:00am-9:00am EDT

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democrats definitely run. >> it was a fool's errand to thing they could follow ted cruz. >> the result would have been very, very different. >> news of a possible end to the government crisis triggered a huge rally on wall street. the dow shot up 205 points. >> top secret documents show strong connection between the nsa, cia, and drone aircraft strikes. >> more than a hundred fires across the state. >> officials in missouri are pledging to take another look at a rape case. >> newark mayor cory booker heads to washington as the garden state's new senate tore. >> all that -- >> court stenographer after
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called out and screaming. >> adrian gonzalez. >> his second of the day. dodgers hang on. >> tigers have evened the series at two apiece. >> and all that matters. >> it never should be used as a weapon, the debt ceiling. it's a political weapon of mass destruction. it should be off the table that on "cbs this morning." >> averting this crisis is historic. >> some of these guys in congress are acting like it's a big achievement. if you pick up a gun and don't shoot yourself in the leg with it, it's not really an achievement. >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" brought to you by toyota. let's go places. captioning funded by cbs welcome to "cbs this morning." good morning to you, norah. >> good morning to charlie. >> it ends the government
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shutdown. that means all federal workers will be back on the job this morning. 400,000 furloughed, another 1.3 million worked without paychecks. >> the food and drug administration and irs will be reopening. rangers just unlocked the yard and boston promises to bring the panda cam back online in a couple of hours. we begin this morning with nancy cordes on capitol hill. nancy, good morning. >> good morning to you, norah and charlie. after three weeks of false starts and deals gone bade congress fe congress finally found itself way out. the senate went first passing the bipartisan deal by a huge margin, 81-18. >> let's be honest. this is pain inflicted on our
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nation for no good reason. >> then it was the house's turn. >> the motion is adopted. >> all the democrats voted yes along with about a third of republicans but that was more than enough. >> i believe that now we all should act for the greater needs of our nation. >> the hastily crafted 35-page bill only funds the government until january 15th. it raises the debt ceiling until february 7th and it calls for medial deficit reduction talks between the chairs of the budget committees and the house and senate who will meet for breakfast this morning. >> i think we can now work together toward a deal that solves these problems from both sid sides. >> the deal caps an ugly few weeks for congress which standard & poor's says wasted $24 billion that went nowhere. house conservatives tried but failed to weaken the health care law using government funding as bargaining chip. house speaker john boehner said in a radio interview it was time
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to move on. >> we fought the good fight. we just didn't win. >> reporter: tea partiers said they didn't regret taking a stand. >> my constituents were glad. >> they say it might have been different if all his gop colleagues stad stuck with me. >> if they stood together and simply supported house republicans and the american people. >> immediately after this bill passed in the house and senate, notices went out from federal officials informing furloughed workers that they should come back to work today. they will all get backpay, but norah and charlie, no one around here is sleeping easy knowing that this is just a short-term fix and we could be having this fight yet again in just three months. >> nancy cordes, thank you. president obama will be speaking later this morning
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about the impact of the shutdown. the domestic growth product f l fell .16% because of it. >> reporter: that's why there's know celebrating around here even though it's a big win for the white house. there's no high-fiving by the president because they have to make sure this short-term fix doesn't lead to another breakdown in the affect three to four months. >> hopefully it doesn't happen. we've got to get out of habit of governing by crisis. there's a lot of work ahead of us including earning back the trust of the american people that's been lost over the last few weeks and we can begin to do that by addressing the real issues that they care about. >> reporter: some of those real issues the president wants to address before the end of the year include immigration reform
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and the farm bill. this morning he'll talk about the damage, the shutdown and the threat did to the economy. and he hopes republicans have learn thad mr. obama will never engage on the debt limit or on keeping the government open. charlie, norah? >> bill, thanks. cbs news political director john dickerson is also in washington. john, good morning. >> good morning, charlie. >> do you think they have learned the president will not negotiate on the debt ceiling. >> the president said he didn't have to budge on it and he didn't have to. if you look at his position on the debt ceiling where he said we would not negotiate over any cuts that was actually a very unpopular position in our poll. only 20% of the country supported that. but what they had a punishing dislike for is the funding strategy of tying it to obama care so in that fight the
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president's negotiating position was the clear winner but in the next round of fights which will be overspending and taxes and the size of government, the question is will the government feel the same way about the president. it's a totally different context. >> how does this deal set up the next round of negotiations that something may actually get done on a budget? >> well, we've seen -- the next round of fights will be over the same things we've discussed for years, and so in that way no one should have any great hopes about a successful outcome. the big questions of how do you get a handle of the growth of entitlement and what do dwrou about generating some kind of revenue through the tax code. those fights will continue. they're having an internal fight. the president just had a very big negotiating win and democrats are united so politically the president has the upper hand but this fight is, you know, can change quickly. >> let's talk about winners and
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losers. first ted cruz. does he come out a winner or loser? >> his plan he was associated with was a disaster. the approval ratings are down. polls sew they have a more favorable view about the president's health care plan which is the target for ted cruz and there are a lot of republicans who thing that he did real damage to the party. however, among ted cruz's base, what they saw is someone who went to washington promising to stand on principle and stand up against the establishment and ted cruz did that fairly well and so they are applauding him and so within his grurngs he's done quite well for himself. >> a win err certainly includes women in the senate. they show,000 bring about the art of compromise. >> no doubt indeed. john, what about the thought within the republican party that their ratings took a big hit. they lost focus on some of the glitches in the rollout of the
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health care reform bill? >> yes. the rollout -- i mean the rollout of the health care reform bill has been so bad it's as if it's designed to ratify every complaint that the republicans had, that the program is not ready for prime time, but that was on the back burner while this fight over the shutdown continues. the long view is in essentially months if obama care and the rollout of it is still in disaster, people will look back and say what is the big fight about. it's about obama care, and, jeerks it still looks bad but it had merit to it. on the other hand if the glitches get forgotten and if it rolls better, that won't work out so well for republicans. >> thanks, john. the end of the standoff means stocks are poised to continue their rally. the dow shot up 1.4% on word of a deal that it was a 206-point gain. the s&p 500 shot 23 points.
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the nasdaq hid a 13-year high. in our next half hour we'll ask former secretary of defense bill daley about compromise and what they can do to prevent another standoff next year. that's ahead. this morning federal investigators are looking to deadly cartel shoot-out. sharyl attkisson broke the case known as fast and furious. she's in washington with a story you'll only see on "cbs this morning." sharyl, good morning. >> good morning, norah. sources say they're very concerned behind the scenes. a grenade used in the murders of three mexican police officers last week has been linked to an alleged arms trafficker that the u.s. left on the streets to operate long after they had evidence of his crimes. the violent gun battle took
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place last week near guadalajara and was captured on video by area residents. authorities say five members of the new generation cartel used at least five firearms and ten hand grenades against mexican police. cbs news has learned that one of the grenades has been linked to jean baptiste hennery. we've obtained this atf significant information report dated tuesday stating evidence of one was a kingery grenade. they're also investigating the conduct of the kingery case.
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it led thousands of weapons to drug cartels in the case fast and furious. atf case files show the agency learned back in 2009 that kingery was dealing in grenades. they develop add plan to let him smuggle parts to mexico and follow him to his factory. some worried he would disappear once he crossed the border into mexico and that's exactly what happened. he resurfaced in 2010 trying too smuggle this frightening stash when prosecutors let him go. in 2011 they people raid his factory and arrested him. he allegedly confessed to teaching cartel how to build grenades and convert semiautomatic guns to automatic weapons.
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they say the murders of the mexican police last week is just the latest example of the carnage that continues from u.s. agents allowing guns and grenades to cross the border and he says both governments are trying to keep the rising death toll quiet. charlie and norah? >> thanks. we have an update on an explosion on a plane. it suffered an especially serious uncontained engine failure tuesday. pieces broke away from the outer engine housing. that means they could have hit the plane like shrapnel. passengers saw flames outside. one man onboard dialed his wife 26 times before leaving this message. jan, i love you very, very much. this mostly could be the end. i want you to go on with your life. >> the plane made it back to dallas with no injuries.
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>> chilling. now to the alleged assault of a 14-year-old girl in missouri. the case is drawing international attention. they're asking for a special prosecutor after the local prosecutor stepped aside. terrell brown is in missouri. good morning. >> reporter: norah, good morning to you. the prosecutor has been widely criticized after he dropped charges against the suspect at the time a popular high school football player and since then this town has been virtually torn apart. >> it's taken me almost two years if that says anything. >> reporter: it's taken daisy coleman two years to take her story public. then 14 she snuck out of her house with a friend to attend a party with older boys. there she claims she was plied with alcohol and sexually assaulted before being dumped outside her house. the boy admitted there was sex but said it was consensual.
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he was arrested but two months later prosecutor robert reich dropped the felony rape charges. he says they asserted their fifth amendment rights at a taped deposition. >> we were very careful, very deliberate to make sure there was no misunderstanding that when they at that time invoked their fifth amendment rights that by doing so was going to force a dismassal of the case. >> but daisy and her mother insist that's now true and say it was dropped as a political failure. >> we cooperated completely. we went to the hospital, had the physical done at the hospital with all that report. then we also had the rain kit done. >> reporter: in the weeks after the colemans say they suffered constant threats and were forced to move away. the saturday expo say turned a national spotlight on the case. some say the ensuing publicity has made them a target.
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>> we have actually been stuns by the amount of cyber threats and e-mails and social media posts directed at the community in general. >> reporter: rice is now calling for a special prosecutor and that could reopen the case. i felt really weak, worn down, just like i wasn't worth anything. so it mean as lot to have support now. >> reporter: online activist group anonymous is calling for a an investigation in how the case was handled. army general keith alexander will step down next spring. his eight-year tenure was rock this summer by widespread surveillance on americans. the documents came from former nsa worker edward snowden. the "washington post" reports the nsa is extensively involved in the government's targeted killing program. the documents show the u.s. was
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behind the drone strike in 2012. it killed an al qaeda operative. the file shows it relies heavily on the nsa to collect e-mails, phone calls and other documents. "the guardian" shows iran hints at significant con senses is over nuclear program. cory booker won a special election. and the "los angeles times" says the senate confirmed caroline kennedy to become the next ambassador to japan. kennedy says she is humbled to help carry on her father's leg see. the dallas morn news says the jury finds mark cuban
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engaged in insider trading. the southea >> announcer: this national weather report sponsored by splenda no calorie sweetener. i think sugar. say splenda.
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is america missing out on a chance to stop terror? national intelligence insider john miller is with us. >> well, charlie and norah, there is a battle under way for hearts and minds. we went to europe to see a would-be terrorist and you'll see how police there are finding ways to stop people from turning into radicals. a new report shows more than a thousand buildings in california are at risk of collapse in an earthquake. >> if you were to reinforce this building with steel, what would that cost you? >> oh, i'm sure into the millions. >> reporter: and that's prohibitive.
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>> yeah. >> ben tracy with the danger that lies. >> plus the meteor that raced across the russian sky. it brought a lot of questions man could provide answers about the mystery of our universe. the news is back in the morning here on "cbs this morning." stay tuned for your local news. past my prime? i'm a victim of a slowing metabolism? i don't think so. great grains protein blend. protein from natural ingredients like seeds and nuts. it helps support a healthy metabolism. great grains protein blend.
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you know who's in town right now, libyan al qaeda leader al libi. but he's downtown trying to bring down the united states government. but guess what? congress beat him to it. >> welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up this half hour, more than ten months after slamming into russia, a new look at a meteor. >> and in the 12 years -- look at that thing. it's been a while since question'questiowe've seen that. in the 12 years al qaeda continues to inspire new acts of terror. messages are spread online using sites like youtube. so far law enforcement in the u.s. is unable to fine a way to respo respond. that's not the case in britain. john, good morning. you've been talking a lot about this. >> so, norah, going back before 9/11, radicalization was an up
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close and personal thing. a group was identified, groomed, and taken to a camp and trained. today it's done globally on the videos done in the darkest corners of the internet. i went to manchester and london to look at what they're doing differently over there. in the boston marathon bombing the fbi said much of the bomber's inspiration came from anwar al awlaki whose message is spread across youtube in dozens of videos. >> to the american people i say your security will continue to be threatened as long as your government continues with its aggression against the muslim people. >> i think al awlaki realized he could gather up chinks of people. >> he says 12 years after the
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september 11th attacks governments have failed to create a counternarrative that is as power to young disaffected youth as the messages of anwar al awlaki or oh so madieu he said he was taken in by a narrative that was built from what he called cleverly arranged half truths. >> to add them up and conclude there is a global war against islam is what leads to the young radical reaching a state where his or her heart is completely hardened and closed off to anyone other than muslim operatives. >> and that he says becomes the justification for this. >> something just blew snup in his new book "radical," he charts his own path from radi l radicalization to rejection.
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>> since then i've visited ground zero and spoken at the memorial. he may be the anti-al awlaki. >> why are we making excuses? is it not also a crime when muslims are killing muslims? >> we don't have a coca-cola to their pepsi. >> he grew up and works in great britain. we went to man chesser to to see how police are identifies young men at risk. peter heads that program. >> it's about a reach into the local communities. >> plain clothes officers like daryl cunningham and oz khan work their neighborhoods with ties to middle east, africa, and
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asia. >> we're not there to identify sources of information but we are there to take their concerns back. >> and when somebody identifies a person who may be headed down the path of radicalization, police look at their options, do the police make an arrest or find another approach. >> how do you evaluate that? >> if it's devised into it. is this a vulnerable person who perhaps has been radicalized. >> nowaz has an even brad irposition. >> simply focus on renegotiating social contract so the young people can believe in certain core principles of human rights and democracy. >> so this was an interesting contrast from -- they have a strategy that's broken into pieces. this part is the prevent piece. and that part where they divert
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pieces into programs is called the channel to channel them away from radicalization. it's a little more advanced. >> it's such a fundamental and basic idea. you've got to be a participant. you ev've got to be coke to the pepsi. >> government is just about the worst messenger. this is a battle of hearts and minds that has a religious overlay and when the message is being overlaid it's one thing to say just say no to drugs but when you start to interpret things, government can formulate that message and we haven't really found that person with charisma and outreach, the american anti-awlaki. >> does it work? i sat in those meeting. this is what nowaz said.
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death by committee. they never came up with anything. part of the problem is politics which is if you're going to find somebody whose voice resonates to that demographics, you have to find somebody who may disagree with you and basically when you get the that, politicians say you can't support that and then the whole discussion starts over. >> largely in the past it was good will ambassadors who were high-raenking officials and those who couldn't resonate. great story. thank you so much. and scientists are studying a giant space rock after pulling it from a lake on wednesday. it's part of a meteor that exploded in the sky this past winter. the shock wave broke windows and injured more than 1,600 people. seth doane shows us what the experts hope to learn from this rock. >> reporter: most stones don't attract throngs of media but this is no ordinary rock. weighing more than half a ton,
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it started out as a much larger asteroid in the far reaches of the solar system. the last time it was publicly seen was in february as a huge fireball streaking across the sky over russia. it exploded with a force 20 times greater than the nuclear bomb that destroyed hiroshima. >> while we have lots of asteroids and meteorites spin overhead, very few of them actually make it to the pleasant. not only did that make it to the planet it was one of the largest ones to hit us. it plunged to the bottom and was buried under a thick layer of sediment. crews spent ten days freeing the space rock. no one knows exactly how heavy it is because it broke the scale when it was being weighed. >> when it hits the atmosphere, it's traveling so fast that it burns off a lot of the outer
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stuff leaving a dense core matter that can actually hit the earth. >> reporter: the original meteor was about the size of a bus and weighed roughly 10,000 tons. the explosion broke it into countless fragments. one hauled ashore wednesday was by far the largest recovery. the rock was taken to a local museum where scientists can study the formation. for "cbs this morning," seth doane, beijing. >> well, if it comes, yu hope it's not a big one. >> there's that. where's michio kaku when you need him. california spent billions getting ready for the next big earthquake. the new report exposing the threat to california and the building there. that's next on "cbs this morning." across america people are taking charge
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the oakland a's -- >> i tell you what. >> that is the scene during the world series when a 6.9 earthquake struck the san francisco bay area 24 years ago today. 63 people died and thousands more were hurt in the 1989 disaster. >> a quick like that is why 24 million will take part in today's great shakeout. it's a drill to prepare for the next major seismic event. the real question is when? scientists put a possibility of a massive quick at 99.99% in the
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next ten years. >> reporter: the earthquake near los angeles killed 72 people $7 and cause 20d billion in damage. at the siem some city leaders called for a list of buildings that could collapse during a major quake but it was considered too costly to retrofit their buildings so the list was never made. >> reporter: how much worry does it cause you? >> it's a constant fear. >> reporter: he manages this building in downtown los angeles. its 12 stories of concrete built in 1925. if you were to reinforce this building with steel, what would that cost you? >> oh, i'm sure into the millions. >> reporter: and i'm sure that's prohibitive. >> a lot of buildings are going to fail no matter what you do.
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>> reporter: it's considered one of 1,000. most are concrete structures built in 1920s and 30s as los angeles rapidly expanded. they're mainly in downtown los angeles and hollywood. "l.a. times" database editor doug smith spent several months digging through permit records and walking the streets. >> many tell me my building is reinforced with steel. it's safe. every building has reinforcing, but how much. >> reporter: without enough, during the quake concrete buildings don't bartend, they break and the building collapses. >> we've known for many year these buildings are by far our most dangerous buildings in los angeles. if we had a large earthquake similar to that earthquake but in the down town area, i would
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expect to see many thousands of people killed, maybe tens of thousands. >> in 18981 los angeles mandated that 8,000 buildings being refitted or knocked down. all new buildings are built to stricker earthquake codes but owners of existing concrete buildings where thousands live and work have not been forced to make changes. now they're considering a review of concrete buildings. in a motion filed tuesday one counsel member writes, we have known about these dangers for some time, houvgs we must also be aware of the costs involved and any comprehensive effort to require retrofitting. ethan eller says he spent money. installing reinforcements is simply too expensive. >> you feel like you've done everything you can do that's reason tobl make this building more safe. >> yes, we do. we are very cognizant of our
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tenants and their customers. if you kill your tenants, they don't pay the rent. so that's not really a good business plan. >> we're having an aftershock right now, people. >> nobody knows exactly when the big one will strike but it's clear los angeles has a concrete the federal budget standoff is over for at least a few months.
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we'll look ahead at what's ahead with former white house chief of staff bill daley. why president obama is lucky to have the tea party around. that's ahead on "cbs this morning." >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by houuman humana. we take the time to get to know you and your unique health needs. then we help create a personalized healthcare experience that works for you. and you. and you. with 50 years of know-how, and a dedicated network of doctors, health coaches, and wellness experts, we're a partner you can rely on -- today, and tomorrow. we're going beyond insurance to become your partner in health. humana. of nescafe clasico stir what's inside of you. ♪ [ engine revving ] [ tires screech ] ♪
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the recent increase in cafeteria prices is not cool. when you vote for flo, we'll have discounts. ice-cream discounts. multi-cookie discounts. pizza loyalty discounts! [ kids chanting "flo!" ] i also have some great ideas on car insurance. [ silence ] finding you discounts since back in the day. call or click today. i like her.
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good morning, gail, good morning, charlie. good morning, everybody. it is 8:00 a.m. and welcome back to "cbs this morning." the budget standoff is over but will it happen all over again in just a few months? we'll ask president obama's former chief of staff bill daley. plus the ceo of lockheed martin says the shutdown hurt the world east biggest company. first here's look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. the motion is adopted. >> after three weeks of false starts and deals gone bad, congress found its way out. >> making sure that this short-term fix doesn't lead to another breakdown in three or four months. >> trying to find a silver lining here is in several months if obama care and the rollout of
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it is still a disaster, people will look back and say what is that big fight about, so maybe that fight had some merit to it. >> a grenade used has been linked to an alleged arms trafficker that they left on the streets to operate. >> the county prosecutor hoar has been widely criticized after he dropped charged against the suspect and since then this town has been virtually torn apart. >> is america missing out on a chance to stop terror. >> we don't have a coca-cola to their pepsi. >> spin overhead. very few make it to the planet. >> you hope if it comes, it's not a big one. >> how much of the idea of the big one worry you? >> it's a clear one. >> in an interview with oprah diane nyad said she doesn't believe in god and oprah said i
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don't believe you. how cannot not believe in god, i'm right here. >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" is presented by benefiber. >> i'm charlie rose, welcome back to "cbs this morning." the deal keeps the government running through january 15th and raises the federal borrowing limit to at least february 7th. this morning hundreds of thousands of federal workers are back on the table. also national parks and monuments are reopening across the country including in washington where some groups of veterans were kept out. cbs news will bring you the president's remarks live in a special report. >> the shutdown forced lockheed martin to furlough 2,400 employees. marilyn hughson is the new ceo
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of lockheed martin. >> i'm running a business. whether it's the government's shutdown for how long, whether it happens to be sequestration, all of those things impact our decision in tims of decision-making on what we're going to do with plans going forward. >> do lawmakers get the impact do you think? >> i spend a lot of time speaking to our lawmakers and everyone understands that even as congress acts, it's a short-term fix. we'll be dealing with this again in a few months. >> that's an unfortunate situation. i'm frankly encouraged. if we can get forward, it's important to get things moved forward and come toon agreement
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that allows people to come back to work and with a full approach to get to a full approach to deal with our fiscal challenges to deal with the nation. >> we're going to have more of our conversation in the next half hour. marillyn hewson talk about how she became the ceo. it's a really interesting story. it's also of the six defense companies in the world now, three of them are now headed by women. so really interesting change going on there. >> where did she come from? >> she spent three decades at lockheed martin. >> good. with us bill daley, president obama's former white house chief of staff and also served under president clinton. welcome, bill. >> thank you. after a dramatic three weeks putting this country through the drama and we come up with
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basically a six-week solution. it's rather sad to take all that energy to come up with very liddeli little. the wing of the republican party in the house, and they had no real strategy and they thought that they could, i guess, b bamboozle him and it didn't work and then they had no strategy and yet the country and the world, really, was put in a state of panic over the thought that the u.s. would default. >> dwrou think they have support from anyone other than family members and close family friends? >> and they should. >> what do you think they should do, bill? can they turn it around? >> they'll turn it around.
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obviously no one's helped by this. everyone's hurt by it. when the nation loses, the leader of the nation gets hurt by that, and i know him well. this is not -- he's not taking any great joy in the last three weeks at all. >> i want to talk about the next. we're going to have to deal with this in the next three or four months. does this suggest has the opposition forces been weakened at all. paul ryan for instance. >> i saw where they voted against the deal. now, what's that message? he's a leader. >> he tees one with patty murray, the democratic senator who has to come together and come up with a budget. >> i can't believe the republicans would allow another shutdown to happen because then they will probably go into negative numbers and family and friends and dogs would turn on
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them. >> it's a little bit away but do you think this and what follows now will have an implication even though people before this were saying there was no way they would lose control of the house? >> i don't think there's any question. one of the seats were held by democrats and so there's been a history in some of these histories. >> the interesting thing to me is would these negotiations taking place, that have to do with taxes, entitlement, tax reform, and it will be a test whether both sides will be able do something to avoid this. >> that in some ways plays better to the republicans in that people do have a great concern about the debt. they do have a great concern about spending. so that's where they may have concern about movement. >> i think the president is
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prepared as he has been for a while to do something serious about this long-term debt problem. trial to deal with the long term. >> what i do you say the president is lucky to have the tea parties? >> every time he seems to get in trouble they come to his rescue. >> in what way. >> look at the syrian situation. a lot of people were criticizing him for the syrian situation. i do believe they have a great concern about spending and yet these people pick obama care >> and as the front page of the norng times pointing out today. there's been so many glitches in terms of how many would be signed up in the first couple of months. there's not been a focus on that because there's been a focus on it. >> senator reid last night said this is not a time for fing
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fingerpointing or blaming and pointing the finger. do you think it's possible that we can move forward? it seems like we get together but i'm still mad at you. >> i think it's unrealistic, especially to the group of hard core republicans who picked this fight. remember, half of them voted against this seemingly small deal. almost 40% of the republicans in the senate voted and some of their so-called leaders voted. >> do you think the president will be able to get the reform? >> there should be. the economy needs it. >> it's always nice when you come bay. you're such a high person. at buckingham palace prynne
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william took on a role normally taken on by the queen. andy murray received a medal of order of the british empire but he almost missed the big moment on twitter. he was taking a random drug test and wu going to be late. william was practicing how to do the sword because he didn't want
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so do your knees ache when the weather changes? you are not alone. dr. agus shows us what happens coming up next. >> and tomorrow a woman who keeps up with the times. she'll be with us. that's tomorrow on "cbs this morning." t
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>> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" at 8:00 is sponsored by benefiber. better it with benefiber. so you can feel free to add it to anything. and feel better about doing it. better it with benefiber. two weeks. you already went to the doctor? not yet. but i took this new clearblue test. it's like two tests in one. oh, my god. i think i'm gonna cry. [ female announcer ] the new clearblue pregnancy test also estimates how many weeks. weeks estimator. only from clearblue. ugh! actually progresso's soup has pretty bold flavor. i love bold flavors! i'd love it if you'd open the chute! [ male announcer ] progresso. surprisingly bold flavor for a heart healthy soup. prefer the taste of gevalia house blend over the taste of starbucks house blend? not that we like tooting our own horn but... ♪ toot toot. [ male announcer ] find gevalia in the coffee aisle or at gevalia.com
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in our morning rounds today, feeling the weather. it's a long running medical debate whether achy joints can signal a change in the air. a growing body of research suggests there really is a connection. dr. david agus of "cbs this morning" and a proffers of
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medicine at the university of southern california, always good to see you, dr. agus. i know people who swear by this and others who say, listen, it's all in your head. >> i came in this morning and one of our colleagues said my toe hurts and that means it's going to rain today. >> a toe. >> our prop. you've got to think of a joint. there's always pressure on it. when the weather changes, it expand as little and you feel it. % one you injured. the nerves are really sensitive there so you can feel it above other joints in your body. >> older people? >> anybody. obviously we start go get injuries as we get older but grandma says my shoulder hurts, it's going to rain tomorrow, there is truth behind it shoo what kind of weather do you feel in your joints? what changes exactly? >> it's the barometric pressure
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changing. when the storm's coming in, you start to feel it, and classically 10 to 12 hours before hand. and it's also your weather talking to you. weather and disease goes hand in hand. when the temperature drops ten degrees, your risk of heart attack increases. when you're cold, your skin is white so weather clearly change us. >> what else can you do for your joints? if you're a golfer, play tennis, run, you worry about your joints. >> wear good shoes. walk on cushion. stretch. you know, i don't like yoga but i do it two or three times a week because it works. it's been tried for hundreds of years to make sure you don't hurt yourself. >> and didn't stretching your
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muscles? >> the core muscles are awesome. but you've got to focus on prevention. if a sport starts to hurt you, you've got to figure it out. your body is talking to you. you have to listen. >> i heard headaches too. >> that's true. >> i wish some of our weather men and women used more of these norway ways to tell the weather. >> listen. there are maps now where instead of change the bear metric pressure. >> david, we have to go. we're up against the clock. >> got it. critically claimed yo-yo ma, we have rare foodage of him playing for pr kennedy and the first lady at the aim of 7. we'll see where his music is taking him now. that's ahead on "cbs this morning." >> announcer: cbs morning rounds bought to you by necessary cafe.
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the truth. there is no allegation of wrongdoing by mcauliffe or hundreds of other investors. it's ken cuccinelli who should worry us. his office is being investigated by the inspector general for helping rip off virginia landowners. and now cuccinelli has been interviewed by the fbi in the star scientific scandal. false ads. a scandalous record. it's ken cuccinelli we can't trust.
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. what do grocery shopping and the defense industry have in common? the ceo of lockheed martin tells us how a trip to the
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"clearly inappropriate" virginia's newspapers on revelations that... ken cuccinelli's office secretly helped an out-of-state... energy company that ripped off virginia landowners... but gave a hundred thousand to his campaign. a federal judge called it "shocking." the inspector general launched an investigation. and now cuccinelli has been questioned by... the fbi about the star scientific scandal. investigations, gifts, scandals ken cuccinelli's not for us. nextgen climate action committee sponsored this ad. peppejalapeños, bacon,shrooms, tomato and avocado. i call it, "the avocado da vinci".
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that's powerful.
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, how can you get your creative juices flowing? we find out from the team trusted by fortune 500 companies. here's a look at brothers tom and david kelly in our toyota green room. they lead the company in some of the greatest innovations including apple's first mouse. plus cellist yo-yo ma played for the president as a child and even as an adult. more now with our conversation with marillyn hughson. as ceo she manages 116 thousand employees along the world along with the largest weapons program in u.s. history. we spoke with hewson yesterday.
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>> i must say, you know, to be in this role is quite an honor. >> it's also considered quite the responsibility. she became the most powerful person at the largest defense company in the world. she always became its first female coo. >> how has the transition been? >> it's been great. i've been there with 30 years. i stepped into the role in 30. >> the defense industry has been known as the ultimate boys club and now a woman is in charge of the biggest defense contractor. what do you think about that? >> if first off i don't consider it an ultimate boys' club. if you look at lougheeckheed ma you have a lot of women.
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i don't consider it an old boys club. >> how has it changed? >> there was a time i was the only female in a room with a lot of leaders. today i'm happy to say it's not the case. she never turned down a promotion even though it moved her family eight times over the course of her career. >> what's the leadership passion? >> to form it. don't let it hold you back. just as my mother said, you can do anything if you put your mind to it and work hard. that would be my message. >> you've talked about your mother, that you learned about a lot about leadership. how so? >> my mother isle 4 yes, sired old and is still going strochlkt frankly wanted to make sure her
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children were prepared. >> your dad died when you were 9 years old and your hom had five kids to raise. how did she do it? >> she's robust and did a superb job. she did it like many women of herrera. many women during that time, in that generation, face add lot of challenges with their husbands or off to wore or there were challenges in the environment and she had to do what she had to do, thabds ta taught me. your mom would give you $5 for seven worth of groceries. she'd say make it worst. here's the list. >> that would make you work to buy everything with that value. these days hewson is with
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lockheed martin. she's wranked number four of the most powerful women but she'll always credit her success to lessons learned at home. >> she wanted us to be self-reliant. i bring that into the business world. i think it's important for people to be prepared. we give them experiences and education and things so that when they're faced with a new challenge, they've had a collection of experiences to draw on so that they can be sus sellful. >> sounds like a woman who is very comfortable with herself and the role she has. >> anybody in big business, certainly washington knows the defense system carries a lots of wait in washington, when someone calls chuck hagel and it's marillyn hewson, they get on the
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phone. a lot of to contractors are at these big firms. you can see she's very level-headed, very smooth. this is her first interview she's done. >> she did very well. now i want to be meet her mom clearly she's passeden on to her daughter. you'd be surprised how many say this is not a good time in my life. >> i thunk she worked her way up. it was a difficult transfer. she knows every little piece of it. the other thing is that given the defense cuts a lot of work is going to come from overseas, they want her defense systems.
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for 30 years david kelly and his brother tom have taken products and made them better. they reengineered everything from the computer mouse to remote controls and even the classroom chair. david yel kelly was on "60 minu" >> reporter: breakthrough ideas happen every day here. the keep to unlocking unorthodox approach to problem sov. >> your business. >> yep. >> yep. >> doctor os, anthro pot gists for spam pechlt you've got to have diversion and a computer
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thiep miss. >> you've got it. that's the hard part having them building on each other's ideas. >> the brothers have put out a new book. it's called creative confidence. david and tom kelly, welcome. >> thanks. >> what is creative confidence? >> it's really two things. the natural ability to come through with breaking ideas combined with acting on the ideas. what we discovered is some have the idea but they have fear of being judged. >> we both believe everybody can be creative. after looking at the book, i am thinking differently. i never believed that. >> look at kids in kindergarten. they're making it like a chicken with four legs and mom puts it
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upton refrigerator and ir somewhere around the line as not creative because you're being judged by your peers. the one thing is they don't have to create creativity. all they need is to have a few small successes. they hold their hands and have a few small successes. you write in the book you share add bedroom for 14 years. you create add telephone that only dialed your phone from your girlfriends. e love that it. >> you know, we kind of approached this from did drejzs.
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>> new never used the word "work." >> we know people who drag themselves in to work every day you. can thing of it as a job. a career, a calling. there are people who don't have to work but it's fun. >> i have young children and you see that happen early on in school, that child is very creative and you get the assumption pa people are born creative. you dmot believe that. and yet you think you can create it. >> it's not the case. you don't expect a person to sit down at the piano and play for the first tiemt. that would be kratzy. but we somehow think you can draw or you can't. so you find your different ways.
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you may be a creative kur rater or figures things out in new ways, so cree ateshty needing to be kochb fines to come up with new ideas. you know creativity from silicon valley. tell us about steve jobs' cray atishty? march rj mags telli stevens creativity to me was about inspiring others, mostly, you know, he got the best out of me, out of every designer. he did everything with intention. take all the little parts of a project and then you say how can i make this little piece frmg
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you know, zrard. for someone who's listening to you what do you think when a person says i'm not creative. >> get the book. >> other than that. >> the whole thing is getting in and building empathy. we've seen bias toward instead just jump in. if you're designing a new bicycle, go out, watch people who ride bicycles. rield when other it. . you're having paem the for people. i want to build empathy for them. we mostly look at knock joil yolgy or widsed by. it's much better, i believe, to
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go out and really build. pathieu. f what's meaningful for people? in some ways it's easier to sop that plarch problems. income it says on the pam of the book they will design a way to changed on personal life. you brought in a b-52. >> thank you very much. charlie rose has a very big gun. yo-yo ma is in our toyota green room. >> i don't like the sound of this. >> it's a family show. >> along with his 180--year-old
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yo-yo ma is widely regarded as one of the world's best cellists. the child prodigy made his carnegie debut at 16. he also played at president obama's first inauguration. yo-yo ma joins us in a moment but first a look at his career. yo-yo ma began playing cello at the age of 4. in 1962 he performed for john f. kennedy and his wife jackie in washds. often called the greatest cellist alive, yo-yo ma has produced over 90 albums, won 18 grammy awards and receive both the national medal of arts and the presidential medal of freedom, but for him music is just about as much sound as imagination. he believes every song tells a
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story. he told charlie rose he believes it's his job. >> somehow, somewhere there's a common denominator that links them. >> there's absolutely. >> at age 58 yo-yo ma is still performing for audiences around the world playing what he says is the highest level of a career that has spanned more than five decades. >> i think he likes to play. yo-yo ma's latest album is a playlist. it's a collection of musicians and promoters from more than 20 countries. how are you. >> >> good. how is it you knew the cello was something you wanted to do.
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>> i didn't. it happened by accident. >> did it choose you? >> no. i wanted to play the largest instrument and at age 4, that was the largest instrument because i -- i wanted to play the double bass. it was huge. my parents said, we had a violin for you. you didn't like it. you stick with it, kid, and i did. >> do you remember that? do you remember playing for ken president kennedy? >> i actually do. ty remember it was an important occasion. i understood that president kennedy was a very specialman, but i was not aware that presidentiz ize ize izeisenhowe same dinner until we saw the tape. somebody saw that. but i did not know really what the man did until obviously later on, so i can always reflect on that and say that was
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kind of amazing to have been there. like waldo. >> where is waldo. >> yeah. you know, it's funny. we were talking with tom and dave kelly, whether you're born with creativity or it's something you learn. do you have a take on that? you were so talented. it's almost that you had a gift girn to you. >> it's interesting. i heard the interview and i thought that was so amazing that both david and tom used many of the same vocabulary that i use thinking about what it takes to create things. and, you know, the collaboration part and essentially -- you know, putting diverse groups of people together, which actually in nature would be when you have ecosystems you could get an edge, an edge effect. that happens with ideas, disciplines, people. >> a human centered approach.
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>> empathy. absolutely. so in terms of talent, creativity. e it requires imagination. all of you are mixing it on top of one another. so with your different backgrounds, living in durchlt places, you can at any moment think what if this person were somewhere else. >> the silk road, playlist without borders, what does that mean? >> a playlist actually 7 billion people can share in kmob these days. and in terms of bofrders, we determine our borders. some of thm are political. but them there's the border of imagination. that we have the most control over. we don't have a government
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shutdown today but we can't control where our own edges are and that's where the growth hatches. so to develop a great imagination is the first step. >> thank you, yo-yo. great to have you here. >> thank you, yo-yo. "a playlist without borders" is on sal
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isn't it great to come to work and talk to yo-yo ma. >> i think he said it best. he said, you have an interesting group of people that come to the table. >> like him. >> i think he gets us. like him. >> creativity. that does it for us. up next, your
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and when you get up -- can i play?
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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. you have 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.
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technology that lets you play with the big boys. call the verizon center for customers with disabilities
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6th season, 175,000 audience members, countless questions. what goes on after the show? >> who has a question? >> i have a question. >> my eyes are always burning. >> surprise procedures! >> when you work on the doctors, the doctor comes to you! >> surprise treatments. >> i think it's probably the most common thing people come to me for. the heart moves, but so does the intestine . >> a surprising confessional. >> dr. rodriguez. >> no question goes unanswered. >> when we're done taping the fun begins. >> what happens backstage should stay backstage. [ laughter ] >> the doctors, after the show. >> aren't you glad you got to see the doctor today? >> today's new in 90. >> milie cyrus,

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