tv CBS This Morning CBS September 3, 2014 7:00am-8:58am EDT
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good rnmoing. it's wednesday, september 3rd 2014. welcome to "cbs this morning." justice will be served. the vow this morning from president obama after the second isis execution of an american. >> the president also takes aim at russia as there's word this morning of a possible cease-fire in ukraine. plus a potentially massive credit card breach this time at
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home depot. why major retailers cannot keep your information safe. >> but we begin this morning with today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >> we will not be intimidated. we will not forget. our reach is long and that justice will be served. >> isis executes another kidndappe american. >> the gruesome video shows isis beheading steven sotloff, they say in retaliation for isis attacks in iraq. >> president obama is sending 300 additional tsroop to gagd. >> meanwhile the president is in estonias thimorning meeting with baltic leaders worryinger more advances in ukraine. >> it jeopardizes the debit and itcred card inftiormaon of its customers. >> the third american in africa diagnosed with ebola. >> i don't think they ever said kent you're about to die, but i
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felt like i was about to die. >> three people were killed in the libyan city of ta bruk when a flight crashed and exploded in a crowded residential neighborhood. >> 17 suspects are still on the run after escaping from a juvenile facility in nashville, tennessee. >> changes are coming to cvs. the drugstore will stopel sling tobacco products. >> they're supposed to be solemn. a guard has been seen pirouetting around the buckingham palace. >> a car reappeared after it was stolen more than 30 years ago. >> the new zealand team has a secret tradition, a traditional war dance. >> but we beat them by 27 points. >> on "cbs this morning." >> more trouble for bieber. he was arrested and charged with assault after his atv hit a
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minivan. >> he allegedly punched the other driver. when police arriving 20d minutes later, the man was still laughing. >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" presented by toyota. let's go places. captioning funded by cbs welcome to "cbs this morning." the isis video showing the beheading of another american journalist is authentic. american officials confirmed this morning that steven sotloff has been beheaded. the islamic terror group posted the gruesome images yesterday. >> the president said he is repulsed by the killing calling it a gruesome act of violence. good morning. >> good morning. the president wasted no time addressing sotloff's execution which comes just two weeks after the beheading of another american journalist saying that americans are disgusted by this barberism of his killing and his
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killers will face consequences for your their actions. >> and those who make the mistake of harming americans will learn that we will not forget and that our reach is long and that justice will be served. >> the scene has become mi faliar an american journalist kneeling in an orangeup psuit in the desert presented what appears to be scripted s.word >> the executionist in black blames sotloff's death on president obama. >> i'm back obama. >> his execution comes two weeks after the beheading of another journalist, james foley. an investigation is under way to see if the executioner who speaks with a distinct british accent is the same man behind foley's death. sotloff from miami, florida, had been reporting on the arab spring for time"time" magazine and others the past if you're.
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his death comes despite pleas from his mother shirley sotloff last week. >> i want what every mother wants to see his children's children. i plead with you. >> a spokesman said the family knows of this horrific tragedy and is grieving privately. there will be no public comment from the family during that difficult time. the killing ends with another announcement. isis knows that these executions are unlikely to change the policies of the u.s. and its allies, but analystings say these videos have two purposes to drive fear and horror into the hearts of american people and to inspire new recruits to enjoin the islamic state. norah? >> all right, clarissa thank you. and with continuing threats from isis another 350 u.s. troops are preparing to go to iraq this morning. the state department wants the extra security forces for its workers and buildings at the u.s. embassy in baghdad. the white house says the troops will not be in a combat role
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but this move does bring the total number of american troops in iraq now, to over a thousand. >> senior cbs news contributor, mike morell. he's a former deputy director. mike good morning. >> good morning, charlie. >> what presence might we have in europe and what might the plan of attack be against isis? >> charlie i thurng we need a three-pronged strategy and i hope that's what gets discuss at these meetings. one prong would be in iraq to go after them militarily using the iraqi military and the kurds backed by u.s. air strikes underpinned by a political solution. second, we need go after isis. this is a very small leadership a lot of command and control, a lot of sophistication. we need to take them off the battlefield. it will weaken the group. and then third, we need to find a solution to the problem in syria where they also control territory.
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that's the much more difficult problem because we also need -- in addition to air strikes we need a military on the ground in syria to take these guys on. the only military around is assad's military and as you know, we're fighting assad as well. >> should we make a deal and make isis the priority? >> i think the first thing we need to do is try to pressure the russians and iranians to pressure assad to step down. that is the best course of action. to press him to step down to get a new leadership in syria that will work with us against isis. if that doesn't work, i think we need to rethink our strategy vis-a-vis assad. >> you heard the president very clearly this morning trying to do some cleanup from the week before and he said our objective is clear to clear up and destroy isil. that means more than just in iraq. does that mean strikes in syria?
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>> i think it means strikes in syria, and going after the leadership. it means all of those things norah. >> how do you go after the leadership? >> you need very good intelligence where they are and then you need to put guys on the ground to go get them or you need to use unmanned aerial vehicles to kill them. >> mike i know this is sensitive. clearly that type of planning would be going on wouldn't it? >> i would hope so norah. >> one more quick question about libya because there are dangerous ideas coming out of libya and events suggesting an iraq-like situation. >> great question, charlie. what's happening in libya is very similar to what happened in iraq. the extremists there, the al qaeda affiliated groups there, are making a move to take over the country. they took tripoli this weekend. a lot of people aren't focused on what's happening in libya because what's happening in iraq is dominating it but we need to
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focus on libya as well. >> mike morell thank you. >> you're welcome. coming up a closer look at the life of steven sotloff, what was happening in the most dangerous places no matter the risk. president obama also said this morning the united states will stand by its allies in any conflict with russia. this morning the president announced he's going to send u.s. airmen to help the baltic states with security. now, this comes as ukraine announces a truce with russia. major garrett is traveling with the president in estonia where many are skeptical of this peace deal. >> reporter: president obama said it's too early to tell what a cease-fire between russia and ukraine might mean. at the same time they said there could be no cease-fire because russia wasn't parties to the conflict in ukraine. that lent credence to president obama's later statement that it was beyond his reach to try to interpret the psychology of russian president vladimir putin. there's real concern the next
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attack could be here. they all share a border with russia. they said they would live up to its commitment to fight against neneany nato plan. >> it's a commitment that's unbreakable, it's unwavering it is eternal. estonia will never stand alone. >> reporter: the president said economic sanctions imposed on russia so far have had real economic cost and would continue and possibly increase if russia would continue to violate what the president called basic international principles. >> thanks. terrifying picture. a fighter jet slammed into a residential area. you can see the nose. the plane was flying as part of a tribute to another pilot
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killed last week. this morning home depot is its customers credit and debit cards were exposed. it's not clear how many stores or shoppers could be involved but experts say it could be larger than the breach that affected 40 million shoppers at target last year. in a statement, home depot says protecting our customers' information is something we take extremely seriously. cbs news contributor and analyst mellody hobson is in chicago. mellody, good morning. >> good morning. >> why do these security breaches keep happening? >> it's like the old saying, why do you rob a bank? it's where the money is. the cyber thieves know it's a new organized crime. there's a lot of money to be made online because 60% of us are banking online, shopping online. when they get these numbers, they can sell them. the estimates are the thieves made in the neighborhood of $50 million from that one breach. >> so what are these companies
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going to do? what are potential targets going to do? >> well now what they're saying -- target was the wakeup call. they knew that they lost over $200 million in market cap, the ceo lost its job. now they're saying we have to get in front of this and play offense. on top of that the credit card companies said if the new reader card technology hasn't been adopted by 2015 if there's fraud, the retail is responsible. so now everything is trying to get in front of this new card reader which has dual authorization. >> let's talk about that new technology. we keep hearing it it. they call it chip and pin technology. when is it going to be available for shopping? >> i was told by one of the retailers yesterday, in the next 18 to 49 months you're going to
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interestingly walmart adopted it eight years ago and even home depot has a lot of these car readers in their stores right now but you need the new credit card. interestingly i just got my new airmax has a new chip and pin technology. they sent a letter saying it is going to be safer. this is rolling out right now and you'll see much much more of it if you haven't already. >> i assume that the credit card companies and others who are having to take these extra measures will simply pass on the cost of that to their customers. >> again, i talked to this major retailer yesterday. i don't know how they can do that. now, the costs are huge. they're estimated to be about $8 bill to change all these systems around the country but i don't know how they could pass it on. >> mellody hobson thank you. this morning a doctor treating pregnant women is the latest victim of ebola in
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africa. so far five countries confirm ebola cases. we're shown why experts say they're losing the battle against the virus. don, good morning. >> good morning. more than five months since the first case was confirmed in guinea. health officials say it's the largest and most complex since the disease was first identified in 1976. health official this morning are warning it's a global thing and it may affect the outbreak. >> he didn't work in an ebola ward. he is said to be doing well and in good spirits while being treated in isolation, but it is too soon to tell if he'll be evacuated from liberia. the two american missionaries to survive their diagnosis, dr. kent brantley and nancy writebol were treated with the drug zmapp zmapp, but the supply is gone. so the pharmaceutical company
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that's making the drug is getting paid to speed up production production. the cdc is calling it the world's first global even deppic and margaret chan says everyone has underestimated the youts brake. >> the outbreak will get worse before it gets better. >> reporter: it's already tested some of the health care systems in some of the poorest countries. they've choked off some towns with quarantine zones. calling the effort so far too little, too late doctors without borders says west africa is overcome by the disease. >> we have been losing for the past six months. we must win over the next three, and we can. >> here in the u.s. there are concerns as thousands of foreign students and workers arrive on campuses of colleges and universities across the country. the cdc is asked to screen
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anyone who has been in the african country in the past 21 days to take their temperature twice a day. where it's most severe sent 400 students to study in america. >> an interesting warning. don, thank you so much. two north carolina men spent years in prison for rape and murder but they didn't do it. both are expected to be released today after their convictions were overturned. the courtroom erupted in cheers tuesday when the judge declared henry mccollum and leon brown insoemt. dna implicated another man. the mentally disabled half brothers were convicted in the 1983 rape and killing of an 11-year-old girl. mccollum faced a death sentence. they were questioned without a lawyer and signed written confessions. they say they were coerced into giving. what a story. passengers are noticing a
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bigger problem in the air. it is the third case of its kind in nine days. jeff pegues is at reagan national airport outside washington with growing evidence of turbulence among flyers. jeff, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. most flights take off and land here in the u.s. without incident, but this morning there was a growing number of aviation groups saying unruly passengers are becoming an is ka lathe problem. on a flight from new york to florida, a situation got out of control. after a woman reclined her seat, the person in front of her struck her in the head. the plane was diverted to jacksonville. that incident was one of at least three in the last week where planes made unscheduled landing s landings. but throughout the year flights are disrupted.
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in june this jetblue passenger caused a new york-to-las vegas flight to divert to detroit. in november this man's threat caused a spirit airline flight to divert. according to the airlines global trade organization in the past three years, there's been one unruly passenger incident for every 1,300 flights. the delays add up. one independent airline analyst says it costs $6,000 an hour plus import landing fees for some jets. steven waller is with the federal aviation association. >> so at what point does the pilot decide to divert? >> i think diversion is the last report. it's a tremendous inconvenience to the passenger and to the airline. passengers may have to disconnect dump fuel to turn around. that definitely is last resort.
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>> reporter: during a 12-month period ending in jeune there were nearly 1,500 flights diverted in the u.s. that's on average of one a day. most happen because of weather or mechanical problems. norah? >> all right jeff. thanks so much. and as kids head back to school, some falling rates of vaccinations in california. it shows the rate of children whody not get vaccinated because of family's personal beliefs more than doubled. in 27 the number was 5%. they say the trend is contributing to measles and whooping cough across california. the nfl is suspending wes welker for five games. he violated the performance-enhancing drug rule. you see him here handing out $100 bills at the event.
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new york's junior senator kirsten gillibrand says she's been the target of sexist comments right in the hallways. >> she was told good thing you're working out because you wouldn't want to get porky. >> one of the senators approached her squeezed her stomach, and said don't lose too much weight now, i like my girls chubby. >> don't get too porky, i like
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my girls chubby. even when it comes to [ bleep ] sexism the senate is gridlocked. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming back this hour who's to blame for the explicit theft of celebrity photos. apple says hackers gained it the old-fashioned way. we'll show you how they track them down and locking doors. >> they did not realize the instructor had been shot and killed. the focus was on the 9-year-old girl after she shot the uzi. for the first time the reaction after the accident. that's ahead. "the tennessean," they're still on the run. they escaped by crawling under a weak link of fencing. officials say they fixed the gate and started an internal investigation to prevent another breakout. "the new york times" says there's no evidence that young
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illegal immigrants are being abused. investigators were surprised that the detention facilities. the most serious made by 116 young immigrants could not be proved. "usa today" says most americans think that the washington redskins should be able to keep the controversial name. that's according to a poll for espn. 71% support the name but opposition is growing. 23% think that it should be changed. and that is up from 8% from two decades ago. some say the name is just disrespectful of native americans. "the wall street journal" says halliburton agreed to pay over $1 billion. they were the cement contractor on the deepwater horizon oil rig in 2010. 11 workers were killed. a federal judge has to approve the deal. "time" magazine is remembering steven sotloff, the
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journalist killed by isis.xó "times" editor says sotloff gave his life so readers would have access to information from some of the moefrmgs dangerous places in the world. our thought and prayers are with his family. jan crawford is in washington and shows us how sotloff discovered at a young age that he wanted to be a reporter. jan, good morning. >> good morning. you know sotloff's reporting trips took him to libya, egypt, bahrain, somalia turkey. but he vanished last august while on an assignment in a country that's considered the most dangerous for jurchlt sournalists syria. this video from 2012 shows he was well aware of the risks. he said this syrian jet hunted him outside the city of aleppo. >> they came from around the corner here. >> almost a year later he had dinner with a friend filmmaker
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matthew van dyke. sotloff was about to return to syria. >> he with us a little apprehensive about going. he said the kidnappings started around that time. isis had just appeared a few months before. he knew that each time he went back it was getting more and more dangerous there. >> reporter: the 31-year-old reporter was a reporter much of his life. he was pepperspray and shot at by a sniper but even when filing dispatches from a war zone he found out a way to keep up with his favorite sports teams in yam. hilast tweet one day before the kip was about the miami heat signing center greg odom. he grew up in the gated community of pine csting the olders of two children. his mother shirley taught preschool at the family's synagogue. >> i remember him a a completely fun-loving beautiful spirit, really joyful kind of goofy. >> reporter: as a teenagerot love attended boarding school in
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new hampshire where he played rugby and football. he also discovered his passion while working on the student newspaper. sotloff studied journalist at the university of central florida. he eventually went to the middle east. >> he was somebody who took time to learn the culture and ways of the region and he wasn't just somebody that just leapt from conflicts to conflicts. >> reporter: sotloff posted these ingrams eight months before he vanished. on tuesday friends gathered at the home of the sotloffs. the family asked to be left alone to mourn in private. >> the only reason he knew it was dangerous is guys like that told us that. otherwise we would have no idea what's going on in syria. >> now, sotloff spoke arabic and hebrew and also study and lived in hebrew. and this morning it was ruled he holds dual citizenship. that was a fact that they tried
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to keep hidden from his kidnappers. >> this is one more example of how some of our best journalists, you know go in harm's way, simply with a passion to tell the story. >> to tell the story and get the word out. i'm so glad jan did that piece so you get to see exactly who he was. every time you get a look at that video, both him and foley, not a tear not a plea. it's just heartbreaking to watch when they know what's about to happen. now we have insight into who he was. thank you again. the family of the 9-year-old girl who accidently shot her gun instructor is breaking her silence. as carter evans reports, we're learning new details about the moments after the tragedy. >> how did that person get shot? >> on a gun range. this is a gun range. we need an ambulance immediately. >> reporter: this 9-year-old girl was firing an uzi submachine gun when police said she lost control and shot her instructor charles vacca. >> where was he shot?
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>> right in the head dude. >> he's shot in the head. >> yes. pick him up and put him on the deck right now. >> the girl's family was making a home video when it happened. according to a police report the mother told officers her daughter dropped the uzi immediately after shooting. she said the gun was too much for her. she said they didn't realize immediately that vacca had been hit. >> is he still breathing? >> yes, he is. >> did yu apply pressure to the wound. >> yes. i don't think he's going make it. >> vacca died on the way to the hospital. the family is devastated and the accident turned what was supposed to be a brief and unique excursion from their summer vacation to a tragedy. it also sparked public debate about whether young children should be allowed to operate guns. >> let's protect children from guns. >> i tell you our forefathers are crying tonight. there's no way they thought the second amendment would apply to 9-year-olds and uzis.
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>> i don't think is an opening for some big sweeping national federal gun control. >> the girl's family accused certain people of using the tragedy for partisanship and agendas but it was argued it's irresponsible to put a machine gun in the hands of a child. for "cbs this morning," carter evans, los angeles. >> that is the question. why a girl had an uzi, it never should have happened. >> terrible story. starting today, cvs, the nation's second largest drugstore chain, is pulling all tobacco products off its shelves. it's come sooner than expected. they say its sale of tobacco in its 77 stores conflicts with its health care mission. larry merlo first announced it here in studio 57. >> we had a lot of discussions among our management team and i
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think everyone came to you know, the right decision you know, that it's a real contradiction to talk about all the things we're doing to help people on their path to better health and at the same time sell tobacco products. >> cbs expects to lose roughly $2 billion a year from its move. the company is changing its corporate name from cvs caremark to cvs health. >> i think we'll all just call it cvs. >> i think it's a bold move and an okay thing. >> they're going to take a loss and they're okay with that. apple pushes back on the photo scandal, plus,000 protect your privacy when passwords are, well, just not enough. that's next on "cbs this morning". >> apple is believed to be partnering with american express on the new mobile payment system that would resist carrying credit cards around. that way you could lose your naked pictures a to help all those wishes come true. [ applause ] cvs
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hold it cut the bucket free with a hacksaw. the guy then ran into the woods. i love this bear. >> i do too. you just walk around with a bucket on your head. i saw that story on "evening news." next time you see me norah, i'm going to have a big ol' bucket on my head. >> gayle's new diet plan. >> you did a good job. >> we didn't expect anything lels. >> we didn't. >> absolutely. you looked like you were enjoying it. >> yes. from fashion to fashion, angelina jolie, she's credited for saves living and now we'll look at her crucial health choice. that's ahead on cbs. argarita sauce all served with a bowl of soup. chili's fresh mex bowls from our lunch combo menu stngarti at 6 bucks. more life happens here.
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served. major garrett is traveling with the president. major, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the president described the killing of steven hot love as a horrific act of violence. they have now murdered two american journalists. at first the president used language reminiscent of the long running battle against al qaeda. >> the bottom line is this. our objective is clear, and that is to degrade and destroy isil so it's no longer a threat not just to iraq but also the region and to the united states. >> moments later the president softened that language describing the goal against islamic state fighters as to make that threat manageable. >> we know that if we are joined by the international community we can continue to shrink isil's they'll also be looking to search for in essence the virtual fingerprints of the
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hackers themselves. >> so who do you think could be charged here? the hackers? the websites? the people that posted the videos? the pictures? >> you have to look from the greatest to the smallest. we know that the hackers can be charged. there's a law on the books as far back as 1986 and it's called the computer fraud and abuse act. that's recommend the big law because what we have there are penalties for each count, each hacking. and that goes to five years account and even with enhancements it may be more than that. you may remember that there was a case where joet johansson among otherser her nude photos were hacked. a person in florida who did that, a man by the name of christopher chaney he wound up with a ten-year plea on the basis of nine counts so he could have gotten a lot more than that. what we looked at after that is people who have put it on deploy the boring potato chip decoy bag. with a variety of tastes and textures only chex mix has twenty bags of interesting.
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pick your mix. [ female announcer ] choices aren't always this easy. so it's good to know that mazola corn oil has 4 times more cholesterol blocking plant sterols than olive oil. and a recent study found that it can help lower cholesterol 2 times more. take care of those you love. mazola makes it better. [announcer] who could resist the call... ...of america's number-one puppy food brand... ...with dha and essential nutrients also found in mother's milk. purina puppy chow. this reporter gabrielle enright
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was covering heavy rain. the wind was so bad it broke her umbrella. but she kept going. she kept going. although, you know the story came more about her than it became about the actual weather. >> go gabrielle. >> have you ever had an experience like that? >> anybody in local news. you've never had that right, charlie? >> no. never in local news. >> have you had that norah? it's so good to be here. go gabrielle. angelina jolie told the world she carries a genetic mutation and underwecht a mastectomy mastectomy. in the six months that follow a number of clinics say the women who got tested had it more than double. good to see you again. >> good to see you. >> her surgery certainly raise >> i love everything he does. >> i agree. you may remember mo'ne davis. she's the 13-year-old baseball phenom and she made her big
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league debut last night. the star little league pitcher for philadelphia's taney dragons threw out the first pitch at the los angeles dodgers game. and guess what? it was a perfect strike. as we showed you last month, mo'ne became the first girl to throw a shutout game in the world series. yasiel puig turned the tables and asked her for an autograph. >> she's gone got on her dodgers cap too. >> i know. >> i know norah is watching this. i was thinking about you and looking at her. norah's cheering as everybody was. >> all-star. ahead, when virtual relationships turn into real lies lies lies pants on fire kind of spinach? grazie! plus, with no known dietary restrictions mary can eat the healthy foods she likes.
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don't stop taking xarelto®, rivaroxaban, unless your doctor tells you to. while taking xarelto®, you may bruise more easily and it may take longer for bleeding to stop. xarelto® may increase your risk of bleeding if you take certain medicines. xarelto® can cause serious bleeding and in rare cases, may be fatal. get help right away if you develop unexpected bleeding, unusual bruising, or tingling. if you have had spinal anesthesia while on xarelto®, watch for back pain or any nerve or muscle related signs or symptoms. do not take xarelto® if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. tell your doctor before all planned medical or dental procedures. before starting xarelto® tell your doctor about any conditions such as kidney, liver, or bleeding problems. switching to xarelto® was the right move for mary. ask your doctor about once-a-day xarelto®. no regular blood monitoring; no known dietary restrictions. for information and savings optionyear's ees's blockbuster animated feature. next year disney plans to relet a short "frozen forever.
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"some would say disney just won't let it go. that song is -- >> they take pride in that. >> in my household, my daughter sings it so much that my son screams and goes stop. >> it is still very catchy. >> it is catchy. now this. saus today looks at california's 100-year drought. this is the third drought. it's leading to potentially staggering losses and wildfires. the crisis is part of a 15-year mega drought across most of the western united states. one scientists calls it a threat to civilization. >> and here's one example of just how bad things are getting. in east portersville, california near bakersfield, underground wells are complicated -- >> what's the answer to all of this? >> the answer? >> yes. let's assume there are legitimate reasons to want
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friendship companionship and all that. you carry it online and it has the risk of not turning out as you expected. what should one do to pursue something online and then make sure that you're not being defrauded defrauded? >> it all kind of comes down to self-esteem and self-respect and knowing what you want. a lot of people are online. they don't really think about why they're using internet so much and how they're engaging in social media and that makes them vulnerable. so if you know who you are and you're confident who you are and you're liking okay i want to have a friend or a relationship, that's okay, but you have the make sure you hold people to the standards you would sort of have them hold you to and make sure they prove themselves. >> you've got red flags. this is what's grade about the book. you give very specific things
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