tv CBS This Morning CBS October 3, 2013 7:00am-9:00am EDT
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force furloughed. >> where is our commander in chief? what is he doing about it? >> a violent accident involve agriculture. bus that left eight people dead. investigators say a blown out tire caused a bus to spin out and control. >> in my 17 year, probably the most serious incident i've ever been a part of. >> the jury finding the company was not responsible for his death. >> all eyes are on the caribbean. there's a low pressure system that could turn into a tropical storm. >> we could be looking at landfall across parts of the central gulf coast. >> prime minister benjamin netanyahu who says iran's president cannot be treft usted >> death toll rises rapidly from a sinking ship carrying migrants
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off the coast of italy. >> the man went into a house. he emerged dressed differently. >> an excellent try. i're about got to give you that. >> all that -- >> there it is. the tampa bay rays are moving on the world series. >> look at that. roy is taking the house down. >> and all that matters. >> it's possible now that the shutdown is at a legislative stalemate. >> i think this time is different. i think they should be concerned. >> on "cbs this morning." >> how long have you been maired? >> a few months. >> who -- >> i don't talk about my personal life. >> this morning's "eye opener" is presented by toyota. brought to you by toyota. let's go places. captioning funded by cbs
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welcome to "cbs this morning." charlie rose is on assignment, son and anthony mason is with us. >> nice to be here. >> good to have you here. good morning. a partial government closure with no sign of a deal to end it. according to a cbs news poll out this morning, 72% of americans thing a dispute over obama care should not have led to a shutdown. >> 44% blame republicans for the impasse, 35% blame president obama and other democrats. the democrats met with top congressional leaders yesterday. >> good morning. it wasn't very productive. afterward house speaker john boehner told reporters the session was nice and polite, but neither side changed its position. the meeting with the president lasted just over an hour. afterward lawmakers blamed one another for the continuing
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impasse. >> my friend, john boehner, i repeat, cannot take yes for an answer. >> the american people expect their leaders to come together and to try to find ways to resolve their differences. now, the president reiterated one more time tonight that he will not negotiate. >> in an interview which took place before the meeting, the president accused boehner of giving in to a faction of the republican party which is obsessed with his health care initiative. >> am i exasperated? >> absolutely i'm exasperated because this is entirely unnecessary. we have a situation right now where if john boehner, the speaker of the house, puts it on the floor at current funding levels sew we can then negotiate on a real budget that allows us to stop governing from crisis to crisis, it would pass. >> earlier in the day he met with wall street executives who warned of serious consequences if they do not act.
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blankfein says a combination of the shutdown could still harm the fragile recovery. >> if money doesn't flow in, money doesn't flow out. we haven't seen this before and i'm not anxious to be part of it. >> and on capitol hill james clap erd -- >> as each day goes by, the imand jeopardy and safety of the security of this country will increase. >> despite all of these obvious concerns, there does not pie peer to be any moven't. the white house's position is it's up to the republicans to figure out their own internal disagreements without help from the president. they're very comfortable here refusing to negotiate both on the health care and raising the
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rate of the nation's borrowing level. on the other end, the house and senate enter the house this morning still locked in a stalemate. nancy cordes is on capitol hill. good morning. >> good morning, anthony and norah. the big fight right now isn't even open thor tire government. it's about opening slice. they're expected to fund sections of certain agencies. a type of triage approach the white house says it will vito. with the washington monument in the background. house majority leader eric cantor explained why restoring funding is at the of the of the gop's priority list. >> it is a shame that folks in this country who come to washington who are able to see these memorials can't. >> veterans had to push back veterans tuesday to visit the world war ii memorial.
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they even offered to pay for the memorial's upkeep during the shutdown, but the park service declined saying the examiners who normally approved it had to be paid. >> whoo are you stating that that's important? >> that's coming as well. we're going to take every issue that is out that that we have p on and put it on the floor, and we will tackle it. >> senate democrats say they will block the piecemeal approa approach, which they call irrational. >> why not put some back to worj? >> you have to open the entire government.
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you have to open the entire government. >> many insist if speaker boehner would put the vote on the floor to fund the entire government, it would pass. but right now he's under more pressure for tea partiers to hold out than he is from the 20 or so republicans who want to see this fight ended. >> a game of who blinked first. nancy cordes, thank you. a tragedy is unfolding in the mediterranean sea. a both of some 500 immigrants. many are dead. many are missing. they were trying to reach italy. the coast guard has reach 150. the search for a survival continues. secretary of state john kerry says iran will have to prove it's not trying to build nuclear weapons.
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>> it would be diplomatic malpractice of the worth order not to examine every possibility. >> i assure benjamin netanyahu and the people of israel, that there's nothing we're going do based on trust. >> in an interview with charlie rose yesterday netanyahu laid out his evidence. >> the first thing is understand what's going on in iran. this is not a guesstimate. this is vor solid information. >> do you have sources? >> yeah, a few. there is a very clear distinction between owe hani and ahmadinejad. he says we can get to weapons with a smile. amine jade said we can get sapging with a mound.
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they're giving row hay in a chance. >> there's nothing in your dna that would allow you to be prime minister of israel when iran has the capacity to make a nuclear bomb. nothing, under no circumstances would you allow that to happen. >> that's right. that's correct. >> does israel today have the capability to stop it? some say, yes, the united states does, but, no, israel will not. all israel cannot. >> you know something? i'll give you a state secret. the u.s. has a stronger military than israel, but don't short change israel. >> are you worried at this moment while negotiations are under way to frighten in your language? >> no. i'm being truthful. >> if no negotiations are under way, you can't launch an attack
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under iran. >> there you go again. >> what is wrong what i just said. you cannot attack during the time they're negotiating, can you? >> you know, i never talk about that, but i did and do say what has been said time and time again including with president obama. israel is threatened with a violation by iran and id real has a right, by itself should defend against it. iran would not be interesting in one or two womans. they're gearing up for 200 bombs. and they're not building those bombs for us. they can reach us. it's for you. >> you told them that. >> i don't have to. the american intelligence knows it.
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>> i want to ask you request one more time. much has been written and said about the differences between the prime minister and the president. are you saying after this three-minute conversation we have -- i would say at this stage, we have a common goal. we've had it for many years. >> there's nothing new about having a common common goal. >> i saud something very importantly and private. you said what we have to see are steps, actions, not words. >> okay. >> the policy should not be -- no one's interest, our or anyone's. not let iran wiggle away with a smartial deal. if you lift the sanctions or part of them, once you do that it can collapse. >> where is it that united states and israel ditcher on
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having any gauche igss with iran. he said, clearly, we have to see deeds, not -- >> these right. we don't object. there in there necessary any threat of annihilation by iran, it's on us. >> we're going to hear more in our next hour. now, this morning the commander of iran's cyber warfare program is reported dead in an apparent assassination. the police official says he was shot by two men on a motorcycle. since 2007 five iranian nuclear scientists and the head of its missile ballistic measures.
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iran blames israel. >> a high-ranking officer is relieved of his duty. he's being investigated for an alleged scheme to swap classified ship information. another navy commander was arrested last month. stars and sometimes boarded to shep yesterday . a bus of elderly churchgoers crossed the median and slammed into others. it happened in dandridge, tennessee. er aets were hurt. >> the crash occurring when the left front tire of the bus blue out as it wauls traveling interstate e.
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it clipped app suv and hit a tractor trailer. the truck ended up on its side. the truck was engulfed in flames. >> this wasn't the most serious accident i've been a part of. >> reporter: it was a journey of more than 200 mining. officials say six people on the bell were cold. one in the suv and the drive ore the tractor-trailer. four teens were injured, moefrdly serious. >> wit because a teenage ek day tony ooj an victims are the friends and family. >> and the front street church
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they tried to make sense of so mill who haas fallen. >> this is a time of difficulty. we trust in good, that he is there always. as part of the investigation they're looking at it. they have not ruled out the possibility of mechanical failure. >> thanks, michelle. the family of pop star michael jackson is considering its next move after suffering a major defeat at his wrongful death trial. yesterday a los angeles jury decided a concert promoter is not liable for jackson's death. ben tracy was there after the jury read the verdict. >> reporter: after three days of deliberation it was decided that
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michael jackson was deliberate in his own choices. >> he was used to getting his way. he had all these big doctors. >> >> reporter: the jury's verdict said that aeg live did hire conrad murray to be jack n jackson's doctor. murray was given the anesthetic propofol to help him sleep. it killed him. dr. murray was unethical. if that world was in there, it may have gone the other way. again, he was. hired to do that. he was hired to be practitioner. >> and so the jury is saying you can't hold aeg responsible for something michael jackson told the doctor to do. >> that's right. michael jackson wanted this doctor. he made certain choices with the
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doctor. but that's not ae ge's fault. >> but michael jackson's mother katherine and his children blamed them and sued them. >> in the end, the juridy not give the jackson family a single cent. aeg lawyers say they never considered settling the case. >> they weren't going to allow themselves to be shaken down. >> jackson's attorney hasn't decide bld they are appeal. >> it is time to show you this morning headlines. "the wall street journal" says the u.s. is overtaking russia. the surge in american internal is fueled by shale formation. boston marathon bombing suspect zocor tsarnaev.
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an suv. the latest on the case and jack ford on the upon lead joutd of the driver. >> and readers. a look bat at the conversation. >> the news is back in the morning here on "cbs this morning." stay tuned for your local news. >> announcer: this spock odd cbs this morp,ing sponsored by choids he tells. book your stay today. need a spoon, dear? not anymore. ladies... kitchen counselor. it's likely your detergent. cascade platinum's triple cleaning formula delivers brilliant shine finish gel can't beat.
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a biker led police on a wild chase in southern california wednesday. the pursuit went across essentially freeways and city streets and then he took a bizarre turn. the man ditched his bike and went into the house. moments later he came out dressed differently. he got past police walking casually down the sidewalk and blended in but a helicopter tracked the man as he went into an auto parts store. minutes later they surrounded the store and took the man into custody. a master of disguise. >> he almost got away with it there. welcome to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, we have new information about other stories. the road rage confrontation right here in new york. there are questions about the driver of an suv who ran over a biker to escape. should he also face charges? we're going to talk to legal analyst jan ford about that. and remembers tom clancy.
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a look back at the author's conversation with charlie rose and about his success and washington's failings. that story is ahead. >> a secret website that played host to a mavis black market drug ring is o uf off tu the line. as job blackstone shows us, a crucial mistake may give investigators a very real victory. >> reporter: fbi agents entered the science fiction section of the san francisco library on tuesday and arrested the man, 29-year-old roaz obrecht. he's the mastermind behind an underground drug market known as silk road. >> it was set up to be completely anonymous, hidden from law enforcement efforts.
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>> the site was shut down by the fbi. it products included illegal drugs from heroin to location and also guns, fake licences, and hacking services. >> this is a website through which it's estimated $1.2 billion passed. >> the operation used a cyber currency called bit coins which are independent of financial institutions, making them hard to trace. albrecht also signed them outside of the regular internet. instead he set it up which allows users to visit it anonymously. >> it was a sophisticated electronic smoke screen and it
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took federal agents almost two years to infill trait albrecht. according to the fbi, albrecht not only want on to become the largest digital drug lord but with a twist straight from tv they allege he tried to put a hit on a blackmailer. they caught him because he failed to follow his own security rules. while checking tech help for the site he used his personal i'm and gave his rail name. >> it's kind of a fatal flaw if you're going to become a criminal mastermind but that's what he did. >> for "cbs this morning," john blackstone. >> it's a new kind of currency. >> police here in new york say the motorcyclist who took video of a weekend road rage assault
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is now helping the investigation. it shows the man who broke the side window with the helmet. meanwhile pros dutiers say one of the two arrested will not face charges, at least for now. oilt's getti it's getting attention across the country. >> you've probably seen the video by now. a group of bikers chasing an suv down the highway and attacking the driver in front of his wife and child. one of the bikers faced charges regarding reckless driving and unlawfulful imprisonment. he got in front of it and forced it to shut down. the driver alexian lien was with his wife and child. the family was surrounded. after 15 seconds lien hits the
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gachlts about five minutes later after a high-speed chase police say bikers pulled lien out of the vehicle and attacked him. he received stitches from the hospital. the police has not ruled that out. jack ford is with us. good morning. >> good morning. >> i have so many questions. isn't there an amount of self-defense? can you do that? >> we saw it in a george zimmerman trial. ultimately he was charged. h we have to look at it. cloirly his lawyers and even the prosecutors are looking at this saying is this an instance of
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self-defense where somebody got hurt. the standard is was your conduct reasonable? you can't pull out a gun and blow them away but here i'm sure they're saying he's sur rounded. he's terrified. if that person hadn't been there in the first place it would have never happened. >> let's talk about the motorcyclist. why has only one person within charged? >> they want to make an arrest. that's their job. they want to do it sooner. prosecutors will often take a look -- i go back to when i was a prosecutor -- look. let's make sure everything is ready to go. so it's not unusual. and the prosecutor has said this, look, we're going to take
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this to the grand jury but we don't want to be premature. these guys cruised by. they've passed by me. they're scary. there's almost a provocation involved here. >> if you look at the first guy charged, he's slowing his bike down. it appears he's trying for a p a confiscation. >> jack ford, thank u so much. best-selling author tom clancy is being remembered this morning as mazz ter of a military thriller. clanlcy died tuesday night in baltimore. there's no word yet on the cause. he was 66. the lesions on his fans remembers. >> he was too near sighted to join the military so he wrote
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about it. >> ju jufrtd va to thench of it. >> clancy was an insurance sailman what in 1983 he sold his first book for $5,000 to the military institution press. president reagan calls it the perfect yarn. the story later made into a film. a associate yet suck marine cab was looking to rirn to the indiana, kwmt red storm rising" and "patriot games" followed. he would right 17 number one new york best hellers. as he told them in 1996 --
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>> the book acquires a right of its own and the righter do. it make this femme sun too. >> sort of. >> whenl the book goes off in an unexpected visty. et wut a mattive tail. the perfect ee quinn request lent of a high tech video game. he later branched out. if clancy loved the pemt gob, he had little for the capitol. the difference between fiction and reality, tom clancy said, is the flex has to mamg fun. >> i think he wanted to be and i think that's how he became one, and he ham an enormous following on among the military all over
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the kun trichlt the country. he didn't have it. >> he did it himself and he was a genuine publishing phenomenon out of. >> wre. whoo glow to the mfrm reince could legal you feelinging like you struggled a there trat edge sunshine injury. he surprises it was was a lom term stow lts. that's hi iowa head next on "cbs this morning." for those nights when it's more than a bad dream, be ready. for the times you need to double-check the temperature on the thermometer, be ready. for high fever, nothing works faster or lasts longer. be ready with children's motrin.
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february, 2013. a landmark transportation bill is up for consideration. even though it's backed by republican governor mcdonnell... ken cuccinelli joins tea party republicans to block the plan. but terry mcauliffe believes it's time to break through the gridlock in richmond. mcauliffe presses democrats to support the bill. and the bill passes. terry mcauliffe. putting virginia first. "i'm terry mcauliffe, candidate for governor, and i sponsored this ad." in our morning rounds new research reveals the dangers of a hospital stay. a study finds nearly three out of four patients treated in the intensive care unit leave with demean cha-type symptoms when
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they had no symptoms before they went into the icu. dr. jon lapook is with us. explain. this is really scary. what's going on in an icu? >> what's even more scarey is at three months a third of them have changes that look like alzheimer's or traumatic brain injury. after a year it persists. what's going on -- first of all, i should say they're very sick patien patie patients. severe infections or heart failure. they'd're getting sedation which can lead to delirium and in the intensive care unit it's very disyore yebted. it's very noisy, machines going off, no changes in what's day, what's night. >> this is not just older patients? >> no.
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it's older patients too. we think what's going on is the understand lying illness, for example, can cause brain damage. when they have an infection there are microclots that can occur that can damage the brain. >> what can relatives do to prevent this? >> that's a great point. since 2010 when this wu done, there's been a big movement, what can we do? >> cut down on sedation and try to have people be more awake, getting them up and around. there's a great story of getting them behind. relatives should come in and give them a sense of normal environmental. bring their glasses, hearing aids, tell them what time of day it snies by the way, congratulations on the emmy. i should also say congratulations to you on the
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good morning to you. it's 8:00. welcome back to "cbs this morning." talks at the white house but no deal yet to avoid the shutdown. israel's prime minister made a mistake it will not repeat. we'll have more of charlie's interview with benjamin netanyahu. >> and deon von furstenberg is here in studio today. she's breaking ground but now online. but first here's a look at to y today's "eye opener" at 8:00. >> why are you pushing for mon mentds to be reopened instead of, say, head start preschool? >> they're giving it up and they're not developing those icb
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m's for us. it's for you. they can reach us. it's for euro. >> they're looking at the bus driver's qualifications. they have not ruled out the possibility of mechanical error. >> reporter: in the end the jury did not given the jackson family a sincele cent. >> the fed smashed a billion-dollar drug. >> i'm sure the lawyers are saying, look, he's surrounded, he's terrified. if thatperson hadn't been there in the first place, this would have never happened. >> by the way corporation great lagss on the em many and congratulations to you on the emmy. >> killing jesus. my thanks to the holy spirit for inspiring me to write in.
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>> the father, the son, and the holy ghost righter. hello. i'm gayle king with norah o'donnell and anthony mason. charlie rose is on assign. it it's day three and counting. >> a cbs news poll out this morning finds 44% of measures blame republicans for the impasse and 35% point the finger at democrats. leaders from both parties are still holding each other responsible. >> the president reiterated one more time tonight that he will not negotiate. all we're asking for here is a discussion and fairness for the american people under obama care. >> john boehner has not been able to say no to the republican party over my health care plan. >> i'm absolutely convince thad
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harry reid and john boehner are happy. >> they're obsessed with this obama care thing. >> well, cbs news political director john dickerson is with us from washington. john, good morning. with no resolution in sight, i want to ask you. senator cruz said he never had a strategy and never had a strategy as to what the end game was. is this involving infight? >> what's happening? >> what you have now are a lot of republican senators against the strategy in the first place saying, basically, i told you so. i talked to some senators about this. what gets them so frustrated is they're furious when president obama won't negotiate. that has them outraged.
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they think ted cruz and others muddied the message. they did not want to tie defunding health care to shutting down the government and now our poll shows today the same thing. so as angry as they are with the president they want to go at him but they feel like they've been sidelines. >> we know that wall street is really concerned about the debt creels being breached on the 17th. is there anything he can do. can he by pass it? >> i've been hearing a lot about this. people say he could amend it. others say he could mint a coin.
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it's about the underlying securities. the world has to have confidence. if the president took one of these last-minute majority measures and say it's okay to raise the debt limit, it wouldn't instill any confidence and that wouldn't settle the market down. having said that, there's also a political reason the president wants to do and that he wants this to be a congressional problem. so if they even entertain the notion the president can doing in is removies the predder from. >> you know we hear a lot of whaling publicly. are you hearing anything privately that hits that it's in the working. >> no. the only difference is they
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could trade insults in person rather than ore the television. if you ask, i know your public policy, but how are you looking to create an exit for your opponent? that's styles happening in this situation. it's not happening. both sides are fixed. that's where we are right now. >> pretty discouraging. john dickerson. thank you so much. when israel's prime minister speak on tuesday, it was mostly about iran. in an interview yesterday charlie rose asked netanyahu about the jewish settlements this many see as an on tackle to world war ii. >> let me tell you something. >> the world believes it stands in the bay. >> the world doesn't get sniet i think the does.
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>> let me tell you and then you can decide whether you agree north. the settlement and the territories are not the cause of the conflict. >> nobody says that but they stand in the way of a solution. here's the way. they don't stand in the way either. many are clustered in a tiny fraction of that land. supposedly we walk away, the way we did in gaza. >> be but that was not you. that one a different -- it idea hnlt happen. >> >> in other words, the -- that charlie, you're not going to escape this. i got you. >> no, you don't have me. the lesson of gaza is what?
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>> we tore up the settlements. removed the people from their graves. it was taken away in two seconds and they continue to five 10,000 rock equitiet. we have the ee rein yan any goegs united nations and and now we have syria with the russians involved. 6 everything is in play in the middle east. that's opportunity. >> some of it is opportunity. buck the trends. don't go by fashion. if you govern by fashion, you'll get good editorials, which will be, you know -- then you'll get wonderful eulogy!s.
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i'd rather have bad press and no eulogies. better bad press than a bad eulogy. my responsibility is to earn sure the survival, security, longevity of the one and only state. i will to d that -- i will prepare to make historic compromises. i will never compromise on israel's security. never. >> i was e-mails charlie saying fabulous, great interview with netanya netanyahu. really imforeignive. >> it's a lot of give and take. let's have a charlie rose moment for a second unless he's not here. in less than a month he met three key people whochl does he
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ex-wife and her boyfriend. tens of millions stopped to watch that verdict. i remember that. on the same date 13 years later he was convicted of robs. same day. he could be paroled in just four years. we're here in the toy a green room. >> who's who here? >> when did compromise become a bad word? >> i don't like it. >> when would it be? >> we wown't be here without compromise. >> maybe they need to take civics lesson 101.
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>> if we spent as much time on civics as they to on miley cyrus -- >> oh. >> who are you wearing? >> i'm wearing dvs. >> so is norah and so am i. >> not me. >> we'll be right back. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by party city. nobody has more party for less. [ female announcer ] tonight, we're all cooking
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without compromise. what did you mean by that? >> last week was constitution day. men got together in secret in a hot room in pennsylvania, no air conditioning, windows closed, doors locked, and they made compromise. we wouldn't be here as a country. washington, d.c., as a city would not have compromise. they did not like each other but they got something that created the real estate deal that created washington, d.c., so that alexander hamilton could get his financial plan passed. >> what are the things -- >> the greatest and most tragic is 150 years ago. we could not find a way to politically resolve the questions of slafbry, and it was a political and a social and an economic question more than a moral question. and, of course, that killed off 2% of the american po p lags.
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that's the most tragic failure to compromise in our history. not all compromises are good. we go back to the constitution. one of those said slaves would be counted in the constitution at 3/5 of the rule. >> i hate it. >> without it, south carolina and georgia would have walked out. do you take the compromise or walk away and the country never exists. that was the question they faced back then. it was not an easy compromise. some thought it was a compromise with the devil. >> do you think something is actually different or once again we'll work our way through this? >> the long course of history says we'll find a way to work through this.
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we had other times in our past where people refused to compromise over things like desegregation and it slowly but surely eventually happened. >> what about the language that's being used. the democrats say republicans are acting like terrorists, arsonists, people with bombs strapped to their chests, comparisons to nazis, comparing them to killing women, children -- >> nothing new about that. thomas jefferson was called an atheist or a jacob ban. he was accused of sleeping with a slave. that was a campaign charge so they have always been mean and that was a campaign charge so they have always been mean and nasty bui want you coming up from the right hand side.
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can i play? 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. what's the difference between the shotgun and the pistol? well, the shotgun basically has the quarterback off the line about 5 yards behind the center. thanks, joe. [ male announcer ] fios takes your game to a whole new level. touchdown! we're done here. so what do you think, guys? the read option is absolutely shredding this defense. [ terry bradshaw ] you're exactly right. if their linebackers don't make adjustments, this game is over with quick! is that your sister? i follow her blog. it's so good, dude. [ male announcer ] switch to fios for just $89.99 a month online guaranteed for two years.
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up this half hour, our legal analyst jack ford knows both sides of the law as a former prosecuting attorney. he'll show how it's based on the real and sometimes ugly history of the deep south. plus sara marie gellar on her prime-time tv show. how life offstage got her ready for the role. that's ahead. >> this morning it's time to lookal our head lines. clinton tells "glamor" she and her husband decided to make 2014 the year of the baby. call my mother and tell her about it. she asks every single day.
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>> the "new york post" says they're laughing off speculation that his fare may be frank sin a na. m mia farrow says he could be her son. >> ty warner choked up as he admitted stashing millions of dollars in a swiss bank kupt. he faces up to five years in prison. marc jacobs is leavinging louis vuitton. under his leadership it became the most lucrative fashion house in the world. he wants to prepare his own label for an initial public offering. >> deon von voss ten berg she
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call it is the wrap december. millions around the will still own it. determined to cree express her individualality he created elegant clothing. by 1976 she sold over 1 mill christian dresses by they'll calder her since cocoa cha knell. she was just in the right place at the rhyme title. dion new york magazine said her simple kohn jersey dress was something that everybody lovend anw anwar. in 1977 she put them back on the
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rack. today her brand is sold in at least 55 countries and has iks bradded to home furnishings. next here her wrap dress will be econic. >> it's so pretty. >> diane von furstenberg. good morning. great to have you here. 40 years. that's timeness. >> i think it has never happened to a dress before. it has lived generation after generation and it's always young girls who embrace it at the beginning of your life. as a matter of fact whenever i go, people have stories. oh, i met my first boyfriend, i went on that. so tonight at 8:00 i'm launching something called dvf rap story
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taum and you can go there from tonight on on and send your picture with a story, this is what happened to me and you will be par of the wall of fame and in the books. >> you said the success of that dress taught me everything i know about design. what did you mean? >> well, i mean, you know, that drn -- i knew the kind wonger woman i wanted to be. that dress alaud me to be who they wanted to be. so it's been a wonderful thing. >> do you like diane or dianing. >> michelle. i can't thing of a coolen time.
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when you look in the mirror, what do you see how how do foul foy feel? >> when i look in the mirror, i see my best friend. >> someone i can rely on. >> years ago you were married to a prince. usually when they mair a prince, that's when e -- >> it ended. you mean on the fair tale. >> for me e began sf it began. what was its for you? you didn't crumble. most women would be floored by
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that. first of all, it was mooi decision and that made it ease dwrer. i aren't ready to stand for the couple. i didn't agree with everything. i wanted to stand for who i wanted to. being enpen accident is very per fornlt. your first act was american dream, come back kid and now i mean bigz. >> and then the legacy. after 40 years i have created something formy and for my 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. -- 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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it sounds like a true story. a young law proffers and reporter combine forces to solve a decades-old murder of an activist. he's running for the highest political office in mississippi. it's the kind of case that our legal analyst jack ford would talk about but actually it's applied to his second novel.
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it's called "walls of jericho." i say this movie because it should be a meerchlt this book took so many twists and turns. where did it come from? >> i spent a lot of time at oxford university in mississippi. i spent 15 years there. i have a lot of friends there. i came across the story of a 1955 civil rights murder, rev reynolds george lee, shot guped to death after being involved in a civil rights voting movement. it was never investigated, just a motor vehicle accident despite the shotgun blast. the university of mississippi did this to regulate. how would the mississippi i know now deal with the ghosts of the
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mississippi past. >> so this is what it's about. the cold case. >> it is. people in places dealing with the ghosts of their past. how do you deal that when you're confronted with it. this coal place becomes. >> granddaughter of a klansman. i got to say i got a little uncomfortbling reading this. i thought, i know jack. >> and all of a sudden i think my mom who's 91 years old is going to read this. hit delete. maybe it will go away. i do think my children are embarrassed. >> it's so well done and the names are good, channing wallace, where did you get the names?
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>> they evoke a name and a feeling. i grabbed the oxford mississippi phonebook. i thought this sounds like the person who would be the trial order. >> this is your second book. did it get any easier? it did. i marvel at friends of mine like john grisham who does a book in six months. you learn what's the best time. >> when is it? >> later in the day. ty find ifky walk on the boardwalk it helps cheer your mind. i thought you must have been a badass in the courtroom. really. i would be very sub kudued if i didn't like it.
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hey guys, thanks for coming. are we in trouble? no, you're not in trouble. i just want to set some ground rules. like what? well, remember last week, when you hit vinnie in the head with a shovel? [chuckling] i do not recall that. of course not. well, it was pretty graphic. too graphic for the kids. so i'm going to have to block you. 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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what's a sfek tack lar? >> it's a media attack. >> let dees that. >> they already did that. that's how we know that. >> i give it to the spectacular day. >> that's enough, lauren. >> it will be even better than red bull's. >> you're literally saying adjecti adjectives. >> we're in. >> it could be anything. >> sarah michelle gellar co-stars with robin williams. it's called "the crazy ones." 16.2 million watched it. that's good. three days ago she joined us at the table. >> i remember from back in the day on "all my children" you
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played erica kane's daughter. >> and you now play opposite robin williams, your dad. >> they're like, that's uncle robin on a light bulb at a bus stop. i always say, robin william. i can't say anything else. those lines don't frost. >> what's he like to work with? >> he's -- you know, it's funny. he's a juliard trained actor so he takes it very seriously. he comes in learning his lines and sometimes you have to push him to rif. you don't know where it's going go. it's going go places where i'm scared. >> so as you start off in the number one position, are you feeling comfortable or pressure?
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>> i feel pressure. when you're first out of the gate i always worry. it ooh's mary thop, not a sprint. the episodes get better and better. we hope -- we're finding our way through it. i hope people keep tuning in to see where it's going. >> what do you think is the genius of the show. 15.6 million. that's a strong start. what do you think it is? >> david kelly. one of the greatest witiest smartest writers out there. jason who piloted "mott erp family." we have this great mix and what we have is really funny but it's also really heartwarming. >> you have said before being a missouri and working is hard. >> working with one is one thing, but working with two -- >> how are they? >> they turned 4 and 1 in 24
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hours and we moved and launched the show. >> you don't have anything going on in your life. >> you don't have any children putting on crazy outfits. >> we're in the tutu and leather phase and that's just my son. >> this new law in california where halle berry and jennifer garner -- i wanted to go. my poor daughter who at her birthday party did not want to pose for one picture because she's so traumatized by tapeopl taking her picture. >> in the new law they say paparazzi cannot take pictures. >> yet they did this weekend. they're outside her school and
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ballet classes. >> you guys in public on the red carpet, you're fair game. >> right. and if you take your children, that's it. it scares the other children. it yale yen yated the other children. >> >> buffy was huge in your life, seven seasons. where does she stand in your heart? >> it's amazing and time help. i am so brought to be a part of that show and now it's -- if i see it on prewound i can't remember each episode spej le. i don't know what i had for breakfast and that was literally an all hour. >> you were a brunette.
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>> what? this isn't natural? that was also pretweezers, before i found tweezers. and i think my bump started long before snookis's. there's a lot of things going on. >> you look good. cleaned up good. >> thank you. did charlie talk that whole time? you can tell he was into that one. >> you can see the crazy ones tonight at 9:00. that does it for us. what do you say, gayle? >> the local news is next. we'll see you tomorrow. take it easy.
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announcer: the following program contains mature suggest matter. viewer discretion is advised. >> a toy an "the doctors" it's the dirtiest home in the room. it's not your bathroom. it's your kitchen. instead of cleaning it's spreading bacteria. >> owe pential e. coli and salmonella. announcer: we ask the three things you need to know to keep it germ free. and the app that has dr. rachel saying. this. >> the vagina and penis are too important to use a picture to diagnose. announcer: and find out what celebrity it riding to the "spin to win." how the government shut down can affect your health. flu shots and food supplies. what you need to know today on "the doctors" ♪ >> how is everyone doing! [cheers and applause]
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