tv CBS This Morning CBS October 13, 2014 7:00am-9:01am EDT
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it is monday october 13th 2014. welcome to "cbs this morning." how did protective gear fail to stop america's newest ebola infection? the family of an american hostage held by isis tells margaret brennan about the phone call that changed every edd everything. and the fbi slams apple. the reality of the threat to national security. but we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener." your world in 90 seconds. >> there was a breach in prolotocd , anthat breach resulted in this infection. >> a search for answers as ebola spreads on u.s. soil.
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>> a dallas health worker who treated the liberia man who died from ebola now infected. >> it's the first known case of the disease being transmitted in the united states. >> the patient has now been. >> iest don't have to be american boots on the ground, but you have got to have people t onrohe gund who can identify targets. >> in hong kong pro-democracy protesters are said to be coming under attack. some arrests have been made. >> it's the spot of the sentencing for oscar pistorius. a threat in the ohio va lley ar ne the gulf coast. nearly 40 million at risk. >> this will be tracking its way across the u.s. and british virgin islands. >> police will be bracing for more protesters in missouri here today. >> police used tear gas. >> ama dratic rescue in san
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diego. lifeguards saved three swimmers who got caught by strong waved and swept into a case. >> the sexiest woman of the ye ar penelope cruz. >> it's intercepted. the dallas cowboys have shocked the seahawks. >> hillary conlint a had quick comeback to a heckler during a speech. >> there are some people who missed important developmental stages. >> on "cbs this morning." >> long hit into right into the corner. game over. wong wins it in the ninth! >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" presented by toyota. let's go places. captioning funded by cbs welcome to "cbs this
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morning." gayle king is off. we begin with ebola spreading for the first time on american soil. the cdc is blaming what it calls, quote a preach in protocol. a health care worker who treated the patient contracted the disease herself. it is the first transmission in the united states. >> that is one of the women on the team who cared for thomas eric duncan. the cdc isn't ruling out others may be infected too. manuel bojorquez is at the hospital this morning. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the nurse is being treated at an isolation unit here at the presbyterian hospital after developing a fever over the weekend and testing positive for ebola. she was one whoequipped with dpeer that was supposed to help prevent the virus. a hazmat team spent hours decontaminating the nurse's apartment in dallas on sunday. she was part of the medical team
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that treated thomas eric duncan at texas health presbyterian. she had extensive contact with duncan on multiple occasions. >> this individual was following full cdc precautions. >> reporter: but two days after duncan died, she developed a fever and later tested positive for ebola. the cdc said it was prepared for the possibility of a health care worker beinging infecting in the u.s., but officials said the new case has them deeply concerned. >> at some point there was a breach in protocol and that breach in protocol resulted in this infection. >> reporter: protocol for re removing the protective gear is critical because the virus can be transmitted. the cdc said it will now re-evaluate protocols for
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removing the gear. it will determine how many other people will need to be monitored for 21 days for possible exposure. in the nurse's neighborhood volunteers handed out flyers about ebola, and those within a four-block radius received a reverse 911 call. >> please be advise thad a health care worker who lives in your area has tested positive for the ebola virus. precautions are already in place to clean all known potential areas of contact to ensure public health. >> reporter: the call was to ensure neighbors that they're not at risk. but another site being de decontaminated is very unsettling. >> scary creepy. it's just a few houses down. >> reporter: but officials believe the nurse had contact with only one coming to the hospital. that person has been tested. >> manuel, thanks. chief medical correspondent dr. jon lapook is in washington. good morning. >> good morning, charlie. >> why is frieden so insist tent
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that this had to be a break in protocol. >> well, you heard manuel say it's very easy to be infected. it's possible to expose your skin. this happens especially if you're not spefringly trained in how to do this and, of course dallas was -- that hospital did not do specific training beforehand. this was a surprise to them. and i think supporting the fact that the protocol does work if following correctly is the fact that there were two places emery and nebraska, where five people who were infected were treating and none of the health care workers there became infected. they do drill all the time there. >> is there any explanation other than that? >> i don't think you have to invoke that now, charlie. there's four decades of this virus and it is known how it's spread. >> given that and there's an inquiry under way and president obama said this inquiry should happen as quickly as possible, should ebola patients only be
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sent to these specialized hospitals? >> norah, i think that's a very good and reasonable suggestion. i wrote dr. frieden asking him that and i got an answer that the cdc is going to consider that so it is very reason snoobl let's talk about the reliability of fever as a symptom. the new england journal of medicine found in a study they had no fever. based on these findings what should we know? >> they define fever anything greater than 105 or 104. but if you look at that chart, there's a little asterisk and it says next to the 81%, they often didn't have temperature in the districts in west africa, so they would say to the people, do you have fever. fevers can come and go. but think it's a very good point that you can't just rely on
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fever. there are other symptoms. of course we know vomit, diarrhea headache so you have to think about that as an entire constellation. i asked the cdc about this. they said, yes, they should have been saying fever or other symptoms. >> fever or other symptoms. jon, thank you so much. cases across the states is not taken lightly. doctors say it's unlike lie one has a disease and there was a scare on the l.a.x. when a woman with a fever vomited on the flight. she went to south africa not west africa so she's not infected with the virus. jeff pegues is at kennedy airport here in new york where measures began just this weekend. jeff, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. jfk is one of the five airports to get this screening. it goes to other airports later this week but some members of congress say it's not enough.
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this weekend passengers traveling from west africa were subjected to tougher screening border control. for the first time at jfk their temperatures were taken with a noncontact thermometer. starting thursday chicago ee's o'hare airport and dulles outside of washington, d.c. hartsfield-jackson in atlanta and newark international airport in new jersey will all have the testing in place. most travelers travel from liberia, sierra leone, and guinea. they acknowledge the new system is not foolproof. >> we can't get the risk to zero. that will not be the case. but this additional layer should add a measure of security and assurance to the american public. >> reporter: some members of koj believe the best way to reassure the public is by instituting an
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all-out travel ban. a group has signed this letter urging the president to cut off the flow of passengers from west africa until such countries have defeated the epidemic. on "face the nation" house chairman michael mccaul said more needs to be done. >> we need to target the individuals themselves and look at the idea of temporarily suspending the 13,000 visas that would be coming out of this region. >> reporter: but the head of the cdc is on the record saying an all-out travel ban will impede help getting to west africa. other experts say it would be counterproductive, allowing ebola to spread to other countries. charlie? >> jeff thanks. another virus claiming to affect kids put another in the hospital. the virus killed a 4-year-old
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new jersey boy about three weeks ago. ent row virus is the most dangerous in children under 5. it spread to 46 states and washington, d.c. four days of anti-police protests in st. louis finished with mass rallies. hundreds of demonstrators faced riot police last night. protesters are angered about the killing of michael brown two months ago and another, meyers. he shot at an off-duty officer. no arrests occurred. this morning a crouse of people opposed to the pro-democracy protests in hong kong charged barricades. some tried to remove barriers blocking roads in a financial district. we've been telling you about demonstrators imposed to election restrictions imposed by beijing. they blocked city streets last month. isis forces are attacking cities again. they attacked the key town of
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kobani. and this morning there are serious concerns about the security of baghdad. they're getting around security checkpoints in iraq to carry on deadly attacks. elizabeth palmer has more. >> reporter: good morning. the iraqi army is trying to clear and stabilize a buffer zone around baghdad and in some areas they're actually succeeding. here's something you don't see very often. territory that isis had and lost. it's the flat fertile farmland south of baghdad. in late september iraqi soldiers of the 23rd bury good fighting alongside paramilitaries drove them out but they had crucial help. the building behind me was used as a base. until three weeks ago it was destroyed by an air strike.
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some were killed. some managed to get away. the fighters retreated back across the euphrates river, blowing up the bridge so they couldn't follow. while the iraqi army gets on with the daily grind of keeping them out. setting brush on fire where isis likes to hide and staying close to the local people knowing better than anyone else who may be planting ieds or guns. he fought alongside marines in fallujah. he said just like back then the insurgent fighters are local men angry with the government but this time some of the leaders are foreign. >> sudanian saudi arabia libya, tahitian neeknee tunisiaen.
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>> things haven't been going well but here the victory over isis and competent leadership has boosted morale. >> are you going to win? >> what i think? yes. >> reporter: carefully, though he didn't say when. the fact is norah, isis is still in control of key towns and sections of the highway. >> all right elizabeth. thank you. isis is also threatening to kill peter kassig. that's ahead on "cbs this morning." seven high school football players are suspended this morning. several are charged with sex crimes. vladimir duthiers is in sayerville. it's so horrific they canceled the season.
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>> reporter: seven football players were taken into custody over the weekend. the sayersville football team are a state power house be this morning there are indications that this horrific hazing was not an isolated insz accident. at a park across from the school sunday evening people gathered by the hundreds a town that had revered their high school football team now rallied around the four alleged victims. >> they have the support for the community. we're here for them for their families, and we're going to begin the heal progress says today. >> reporter: the state assembly man john wisniewski said they're banned for the next few days. >> we can support one another. we can find a way to run a new football program. >> reporter: several boys claim they were sexually assaulted in the boys' locker room. this man spoke with the parent of a teenager who detailed the attacks. >> one would howl, flick off the
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lights, four would hold down the freshman around two would guard the doors. >> the students charged are charged with aggravated sex eye assault, aggravated criminal sexual contact, conspiracy, and hazing. they have won three state championships in the last four years. the head coach has not been disciplined or charge, and the superintendent has said he has not decided if they'll suspend play beyond the season. but wisniewski said they hope to find answers. >> we need to find out how many are involved but most importantly put in safeguards to make sure it doesn't happen not just in sayerville or new jersey but anywhere across america. >> reporter: now, the fate of the coaching staff has yet to be determined. meanwhile the school is waiting for permission to begin their
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own investigation. >> thank you so much. a broken man. that's what a psychologist hired by oscar pistorius's defense team is saying about the blade runner. he's back in court after convicted of killing his girlfriend. cbs legal analyst rickykki klieman is with us. what have we learned? >> what we learned is the psychologist there with oscar pistorius originally there for grief counseling is the first to testify and the defense begins here. the defense is going to call the total of four witnesses. she's the first. what she says is this entire episode has made him feel worthless, has made him feel humiliated, and she paints a picture of someone with post-traumatic stress disorder. remember sentencing is different from whether he committed the crime or not. >> what will the prosecution do
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to try to take down the prosecution for him. >> what we know is mr. knell, is prosecution lead is called the bulldog. what he is trying to do is belittle oscar pistorius again and belittle the psychologist by saying she had not even read the report. he also wants sympathy for the steenkamp family. >> how much time is he facing? >> 0, which is nothing, to 15 years. the legal analysts are not guessing here. they're saying it could be the minimum, it could be the maximum. most cases of this time get at least five years. remember this. he's a first-time offender, he has fiscal difficulties, he's suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder and heightened
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anxiety. that's allng in his favor. of course, we have to look at this crime and look at who the victim was. >> all right. rikki, thank you. good to see you. >> thank you. ahead on "cbs this morning," alzheimer's in a dish. >> announcer: this national weather report sponsored by toyota. let's go places.
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the horror of isis brought home for one family on television television. >> one minute you look at your scrambled eggs and you look at football and then you look at your scrambled eggs and then you look up and there's your son. >> ahead the secret they kept and why they're going public now. the news is next on "cbs this morning." stay tuned for your local news.
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pakistani teenager malala yousafzai is the youngest to get a nobel peace prize. so a pakistani teenager can change the world while an american teenager cannot even. jane pauley is in for gayle. good morning. >> good morning charlie. coming up this half hour the american family fighting to keep their son fighting to become the latest victim from isis. margaret brennan sat down with the parents of peter kassig. >> washington is not happy with silicon valley. we're going to look at backlash from apple, google and your
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privacy. peter joins us. that story's ahead. time to show you some of this morning's headlines from around the globe. aww today says boeing landed the biggest order. they'll sell 50 jets to garuda. that's indonesia's international airport. the price tag, $4.9 billion. they're more fuel-efficient. "the wall street journal" looks at credit card companies racking up big profits this year. revenue will grow to more than $158 billion. that's up 9% from last year. the recovering economy is helping credit card users spend more and pay their bills on time. britain's "telegraph" saying ebola may academic threaten the chocolate supply. >> "the london times"."
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about 200 people gathered saturday to honor the 17-year-old. that's where the taliban tried to kill her. many afraid to celebrate because of the recent surge in taliban killings. >> "the new york times" looks at a breakthrough in alzheimer's research. scientists at massachusetts general hospital grew alzheimer's disease human brain cells in a petri dish. this will allow them to better research the drug and treat it. until now they had to do research on mice. >> "the philadelphia inquirer," a man better known for singing outside of games had his prosthetic legs stolen. sources asay a drunk woman grabbed it and ran off. the police found it on a subway
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this morning. >> american peter ka sig has been held hostage for more than a year. in the latest isis execution video the terrorists claum to kill him. margaret brennan spoke with ka sig's parents. they're going public with an effort to save him. good morning. >> good morning. ed and paula kassig's son went to syria a year ago. isis announced they'll kill him next. >> we'ring down everything we can to secure his release. >> reporter: for most of the last year ed and paula kassig kept his abduction secret an order from his captors. >> we couldn't answer honestly when people would ask us so we had to lie to our friends again and again and again. >> reporter: the recent murder of american journalist steven
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sotloff, kassig's cellmate at one point prompted the kassigs to make a public plea for help. >> that changes everything. steven sotloff's family kept it secret and he's been executed. peter's name has been listed. >> reporter: their only son, grew up in indiana. loved fishing and hiking. after a brief tour in iraq he found hids calling, helping syrians. >> he always was a compassionate person and this was just something he felt he needed to do. >> reporter: it was on one of those missions he was taken. ed kassig was told the day it happened by a friend of peters in syria. how did you find out that he had been captured? >> a phone call. and it was peter's number and i thought, oh, man, i get to hear from peter. and when i picked up the phone, i didn't recognize the voice,
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and the individual introduced himself, and we learned that he had been detained. that was on october 1 2013. >> reporter: once the video appeared showing their son being threatened by isis ed and paula retreated to a hotel to avoid the media. ed described his reaction one morning at breakfast when images of his son flashed across the tv. one minute you look at your scrambled eggs and you look up it's football. you look down at your scrambled eggs, you look up, and there's your son. and you sit there, and you have to watch. everybody's jaw in the place you have to fake itwant to stand there and look callous. inside you yell, hey, that's my kid. ate it and went back upstairs. >> reporter: they recall the first time they received a horrified audio recording of their son two weeks ago. he said his life was in jeopardy
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if the u.s. strikes don't stop. >> it was an automatic toneless as though he was a robot. and i'm sure it's because they were insisting what he could say. >> that was the first time you had heard his voice >> yes. >> over a year. >> reporter: now the kassigs are asking for mercy, appealing directly through isis and youtube messages. >> have you held that that's falling on any ears that are willing to listen? >> i don't know that it is but i have to try because i need to know that i've done everything that i can do. >> have his captors asked for anything? >> no. they demand. they simply demand. >> and their demands have always been ones that we cannot accommodate. >> it's just beyond what's reasonable in terms of money, in
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terms of your power? >> right. in both cases, yes. and have sent them back messages that we cannot do what you ask. we have tried. but we don't have the power to do it. >> margaret when and how did pete change his name and how did the parents find out? >> well there have been hostages who have been freed, so some information has come out and been shared with the parents but ed and paula -- they think it's very important that their son's journey toward islam as they say began for this. he had fasted for ramadan, he had been learning about religion, but he didn't change his name until he was in captivity. >> but they want that to be known because they're hoping isis won't kill a fellow muslim. >> that is a hope.
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certainly isis has killed many many muslims, but they're trying to make the point, our son is an aid worker that's what he's trying to do. he's one of you. and they hope that that message is received. i mean that name means servant of the merciful and that's a very fitting name. >> how is the government helping? >> it's not clear. the u.s. government said trying through the fbi through the state department to do everything possible through diplomatic channels. but this choice to speak out was purely the parents. they decided they have to try to do everything they possibly can. it's not clear whether their messages have been received. they say the conversations are varied. they get messages can't respond. but this was their choice. >> how many americans are currently being held by isis? >> well there have been a handful that were held but there are still two including him. >> thank you.
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the fbi director says apple and google are putting people above the law. we'll take a closer look at last night's interview with james comey. michael mora joins us. that's next. type 2 diabetes affects millions of us. and for many, it's a struggle to keep your a1c down. so imagine, what if there was a new class of medicine that works differently to lower blood sugar? imagine, loving your numbers. introducing once-daily invokana®. it's the first of a new kind of prescription medicine that's used along with diet and exercise to lower blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes. invokana® is a once-daily pill that works around the clock to help lower a1c. here's how: the kidneys allow sugar to be absorbed back into the body. invokana® reduces the amount of sugar allowed back in, and sends some sugar out through the process of urination. and while it's not for weight loss,
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i'm john foust and i approve this messge. the fbi director is slamg apple and google this morning. those tech giants are making smartphone data off limits to law enforcement even with a court older. apple's tim cook told me on my pbs program that his business is not interested in people's information. >> our view is when we design a new service, we try not to collect data. so we're not reading your e-mail. we're not reading your imessage. if the government laid a s&p on us to get your imessages, we
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can't provide it. it's encrypted. so it's sort of the door is closed. >> in an interview for last night's "60 minutes," james comey said those limits threaten national security. >> the notion that people have devices, again, with court orders based on a showing of probable cause in the case of kidnapping child exploitation or terrorism we could never open that phone? my sense is we've gone too far when we've gone there. >> cbs news senior security contributor and former cia deputy director michael morell. good morning. how keep is this new software when it comes to privacy. >> so what apple has done here is created an operating system that allows the user to choose an encryption system for which only the user has the key, nobody else does. not apple, not anybody else.
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so the user decides who gets to see that and that's what jim comey is worried about. >> it's -- go ahead. >> do you think this new level of privacy amounts to a new level of security threat as the fbi director said? >> norah, i understand jim's concern but there are two aspects of security here. it's not just one-dimensional. the second dimension which jim didn't really talking about is cyber crime, cyber hacking is growing, and people want to be able to protect the information on their electronic devices, and that's really important here and that's something we have to think about. >> excuse me. jane here, when cook -- apple's cook says -- can you hear me? when apple's cook said in "60 minutes" it's encrypted and we don't have a key and so it's
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sort of a door is closed, yeah there is a key, is that basically what you're saying and that the government and hackers will be on a race just to get it? >> i'm not sure he can hear us. >> i don't think so. >> it is an interesting question about that because in the wake of the nsa revelations and snowden, we all want more privacy and now there's this other tug about it. >> exactly. protect your data versus the considerations we had about privacy. i mean what's interesting is whether after for the last several years, we've been trying to find this balance between privacy and national security and we don't seem quite to be able to get it the way we want. >> it's not just the "we." apple and google are global concerns, and there's a lot of pushback abroad about our security agencies having access to european or latin american or
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the university of north dakota's women's hockey team battled off the ice with its bus. it got stuck at awnn intersection home from a 0.game actually beating minnesota. they pushed it along with a little luck. a tow truck showed up eventually. i mean they pushed hard. those buses are heavy. give them good credit for that. ahead, unmasking america's
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good morning. it is monday october 13th 2014, and welcome back to "cbs this morning." more real news ahead including a visit to the ground zero of the ebola outbreak. debra pata bra debora patta takes us to the front line. first here are your "eye opener" at 8:00. >> it's very easy to get infected. even though you're thinking you're following protocol taking off the gear it's possible to expose your skin. jfk is the first of five airports to get the screening for ebola. it goes to four othersat ler this week. the building behind us was used by isis. three weeks ago it was destroyed by an american aircraft. >> have the captors asked for
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anything? >> no. they demand. they simply nddema. >> the seven football players were taken into custody over the weekend. there are indication this horrific hazing was not an isolated incident. >> this psychologist is painting a picture of someone with post-traumatic stress disorder. it may bring a lot of sympathy for him. >> i understand jim's concern but there are actually two aspects of security here. it's not just one-dimensional. >> police in new jersey are saying someone broke into the yogi berra museum and stole several pieces of the memorabilia. the suspect was identified as 5'7", white, and definitely billy crystal. >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" at 8:00 presents by walgreens. >> i'm charlie rose with norah o'donnell and jane pauley. gayle king is off. this morning they call ebola the
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most severe acute of all times. they're cleaning the apartment of an infected health care worker. she was treating thomas duncan. he died next week. >> the dog of the patient will be kept safe. the canine will be rerue nighted with this owner once she's better. the dog will not be euthanized. that was the fate of an ebola patient's pet last week despite protests to save the animal. this morning flights continue from new york. others will start it this week. west africa continues to reel from the devastation of the disease where the cdc reports about 8,400 cases of ebola. the virus has led to over 4,000 deaths and that number is expected to climb but debora patta is on the ground near the
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capital where efforts could start to pay off. >> reporter: good morning. up until now it's been the biggest problem in trying to contain the spread of ebola, but slowly the treatment centers are being built which would triple the capacity to deal with this disease. construction continues around the clock. this is the first of 17 planned ebola treatment units that military are building 'cross the country. >> it's sort of a mirror image. you see it down the middle. this is the triage area. >> reporter: this ambassador to liberia said they wanted to build a place where people felt comfortable to bring their loved ones. >> we're still encountering denial but i think they understand it. they need to protect themselves
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and their family. the big con extract has been until the last two weeks the absence of places to take sick people. >> the center could be ready within days and will have 150 patient beds. the international health agency dock rs without borders have been in liberia for months and operates five centers with a total of 502 isolation beds. this is one of the emergency response coordinators. she agrees help was needed months ago and while grateful it's on the horizon it's nowhere near enough to maintain the epidemic. >> we need more people to work in the isolation centers, if nothing else to clean the empty stretchers. >> reporter: the message is slowly getting across that behavioral change and proper sanitation are crucial to fighting this disease. it's difficult to enter a
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building in the capital city without having to wash your hands in chlorinated water and have your temperature taken, but doctors without borders remains convinced that the dealt toll is a lot higher than statistics show because many people are still not reporting all cases of ebola. jane? >> deborah, thank you. a former director doesn't understand. retired general michael hayden told "60 minutes" correspondent lesley stahl that james riden of "the new york times" is acting on principle be i not revealing who gave him the secret information. >> so you would not be pursuing jim if you had the decision to make. >> frankly, lesley i don't understand the necessity to pursue jim. >> you're shocking me that the former head of the nsa is saying it's coming down too hard. >> i'm conflicted.
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i know the damage that was done. i do. know the free press necessity is in a free society. and it actually might be that i think, no he's wrong, that's a terrible thing to do america will suv were that story, but then i have to think about that. how do i redress that. if the method of redressing that actually harms the broad freedom of the press, that's still wrong. the government needs to be strong enough to keep me safe but i don't want it so strong that it threatens my liberties. >> risen says he'll never reveal his sources. he wrote a book publiced by simon & schuster, which is a division of cbs. the bounce house crashed to the ground after reach about 50 feet. it happened at an orchard yesterday. the bounce house was not in service and being held in a restricted area. it's unclear how the kids got
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inside. hillary clinton was in san diego to speak to a group of doctors. a hector with a bull horn tried to drown her out. >> in 1995 -- >> by coincidence the former secretary of state was talking about early language development. >> you know there are some people who missed important developmental stages. >> good for the former secretary of state. it's an important subject fordmother. >> i know you. have to be quick on your feet when you're heckled and learn to laugh it off. that was very quick. very quick. >> he didn't say anything. he just had the bull horn i guess. >> who knows. it's just disturbing. >> the point was made. >> it's my read isn't it? >> yes, sorry, jane. jane was saying to me norah,
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norah, time to read time to go. all right, ahead on "cbs this morning," the revolution that was televised here on cbs. walter cronkite and cbs news first used a computer in the 1952 presidential election. we're going to learn the >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" at 8:00 sponsored by walgreens, at the corner of happy and healthy.
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minutes. researchers wanted to learn how family dynamics during meal time relates to child obesity and the surprising findings are here with dr. holly phillips. good morning. >> good morning, norah. >> what did they find? >> this is interesting. we've known for a long time that having meals together as family is good for kids' health but we didn't know if it affected their weight. researchers looked at 120 kids and their families and actually videotaped them during mealtime and they look at indicators or qualities of the meal. >> so how does it have an impact on weight? >> a few things were connected with kids' weight. they were more likely to be overweight or obese if the kidmeals were shorter, if they ate anywhere other than the kitchen or dining room like a living room or bedroom and if fewer members were present like a
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father or stepfather, also in terms of emotion. negative reactions at dinner were more linked to obesity. they ate more if the dinner table was hostile or an dpri. and positive interactions kids are more likely to be a more normal weight. >> images of dinner with my family was hor snieg what would they have heard? >> there's a screen on of some sort. it strikes me that maybe one big change that would be easy would be to turn it off. >> absolutely. you know, jane when i saw that i thought, well this is going to be the greatest correlation with obesity. but it really wasn't an independent risk factor for that. what was much more important is how long the meal lasted and for whaer reason 20 minutes is the magical number. if you can sit down be together for 20 minuteses, whether or not a screen is on. >> jane that's such an
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important question. for someone who has young children it's not bad thing if we have the tv on and let them watch while they're eating. >> that's why the study is so impactful. it's not necessarily what we eat but the way we eat. >> spend more time at the dinner table and spend more than 20 minutes at a time. >> yeah. and try and make it positive. really possible emotional interactions at the dinner table. >> we can't scold them about eating their vegetables? >> it's hard not to. >> dr. holly phillips thank you. she's reaching for more than the sky. the 13-year-old on a mission to mars. that's next on "cbs this morning." >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. [thinking] started my camry. drove to her wedding.
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took off from a skyscraper in kuala lumpur and pair chuted to a building. look at this. he landed in the swimming pool on the roof of a hotel, and guess what? he got a nice little applause. >> i understand was he trying to land on the roof and not the swimming pool? >> think he wanted to land in the swimming pool. nasa's replacement for the
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retired shuttle will take people to a never before period. they'll travel to asteroids and eventually to mars. vicente aransas met a teenager in baton rouge who is already preparing herself for a seat on that mission. >> reporter: the journey to mars begins in the bayou. just outside new orleans this is nasa's rocket factory in what they're working on what will be the most powerful rocket ever built. do you get excited when you see things like this? >> i do. because i see people working very hard to make my dream a reality. >> if you can't tell by her flight suit 13-year-old alyssa has a dream to become an astronaut. i heard people have been to the moon. i want to go to mars. no one's been there. >> daddy, you want to be an
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astronaut. >> yeah. astronaut, fireman, policeman, okay, baby whatever you want to be. i walked into her bedroom and she's got a map of mars. >> how old was she? >> about 5 or 6. >> so when i said what are you doing? she said when we get to mars i want to know where to go. >> i want to know everything about mars and everything. it was pretty much the best long weekend of my life. >> reporter: alyssa has been to over 20 session of nasa's space cramp. she rubs shoulders with nasa administrator charld bolden. and, oh yeah she speaks four languages. [ speaking foreign language ]
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>> this is a focused and determined individual. she came here with a goal. she's been working on that goal day after day, year after year. >> reporter: dr. deborah barn hart runs the u.s. space and rocket center in alabama and has been following alyssa since her early days at space camp. >> her persistence separated her from those who would like to go to mars and those who are prepared to go. >> i'm already looking at colleges and what i want to study. so instead of doing geology or biology i plan on doing now. >> that's far from now. that's like five or six years from now and you're thinking about this already? >> i pretty much have the next 20 years of my line planned. >> to years. how is that possible? >> i didn't push her into this. she's pulled me in. i now know more about space and nasa and, you know all this
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stuff than i thought i would ever know. >> a big sacrifice on your part. >> it's a sacrifice i don't mind. if you see the passion and the desire that she has in her eyes and her heart, you have to be there for her. you can't not want to support her. >> nasa hopes toau lnch a human mission to mars around 2030 when aliyssa will be 29. >> have you thought about what your first words will be when you step on the soil? >> i thought a lot about it. i still doan know what it is. it's something i still have to think about. >> reporter: while alyssa thinks about her steps toward the red planet she has plenty of time to write the perfect tag line for the next giant leap for mankind. for "cbs this morning," vicente
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour hollywood is cashing in on blood money. graphic and gory shows are taking over television. lee woodruff goes behind the scenes to look at the business of art and horror. plus walter isaacson is in studio 57. his new book is "the inside story of a revolution." it changes how we communicate and connect. we learn about the digital innovators. that's ahead. >> there's tony gonzalez. we're going to talk about football. first it's time to show you some of the stories. we look at the new yorkx. students reacted to eating a fancy meal. the students were treated to a seven-course tasting meal that cost $220,000 -- no $220.
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one dish included caviar. >> i can't believe we're going to eat fish eggs. >> uh. >> the children did like the waku beef rib eye. >> that's yummy. isesquire unveils penelope cruz as the sexiest woman alive. the mother of two young kids tells the magazine she was attracted to personal drama in her 20s but does all she can to avoid it. her full interview hits newsstands on october 31st. she has a 1-year-old and 3-year-old, i'm just saying. the "new york post" says hermes birkin bags are going to pot. they smeeoll like marijuana.
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they can cost up to $20,000. there was a badly batchedlet that smells like weed when it gets warm. this morning we're looking at some of the biggest upsets and victories from sunday's gamt. here with the highlights and a countdown to thursday's game between the patriots and the jets tony gonzalez is with "the nfl today." good morning. >> good morning. >> we always like to have you at the table. >> thank you. >> what happened to the giants yesterday? >> they got beat down that's what happened i'll tell you that right now. in the beginning the eagles came out and it was fast. there was a lot of trash talk leading up to the game. pictures posted on websites, and it's a rivalry game. you knew the best of the best each time is going to bring. >> and victor cruz, is he out for the season? >> he's done for the year according to reports. that's not good. he's a very good receiver. eli manning's blanket so to
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speak. now that he's gone they're going to have to regroup. >> the less said about that the better. >> that's a giants fan who just spoke. herself and her husband. >> well my son looks like eli. >> he does. >> yeah. >> can he pass? >> oh yeah. he can do it all. >> so what about the patriots? the offense, are they back? >> oh yeah they're back. the way tom brady is doing it. the way they're doing it is giving him time to do it. the man is rod oregongronkowski. he's back. now he's getting his legs back. tom brady is finding him and it looks like they're back on track. >> can we talk about "thursday night football" coming up. my son has already asked can i please stay up to watch the patriots and the jets. he's so excited. >> everyone is excited about the
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jets here in new york. >> he's a patriots fan. he can root for with who he wants. >> who doesn't like the patriots. you talk about two teams going in opposite direction. >> geeno is playing better. >> i used to live in dallas. cowboys are back. >> cowboys are back. no one saw this coming either. i had no idea. i mean they had a good record. they only lost one time all year, but going up to seattle to win up there with the 12th man. the crowd they have is for year and to go up there and win, this is a good football team. i am totally surprised by it. they're doing it with offense, running the football. this guy, dimarco who's got the most in rushing the football that offensive line in the dallas cowboys is the best in the league. >> oh, yeah. may i remind you of something. you came here earlier in the
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season -- >> i wasn't here then. this is my first. >> take it from me. and he said we could have an undefeated team this year. it could be the seahawks broncos. the seahawks have lost and the was wrong. >> charlie wanted to end the interview with you. >> i am wrong. the one thing i learned in my first year of doing this you never know. who would have thought the philadelphia eagles were going to win. >> that will be the last time you predict an undefeated season. >> it woechbtn't happen again. >> great to have you here. we're following "thursday night football." patriots taking on the jets -- how am i sounding -- beginning right here on cbs. >> listen to that anchor voice. fans of the undead got a
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fresh dose of zombie love. "the walking dead" premiered last night with all the ickiness. 17 million people may have tuned in. that would shatter last year's record for the cable show. the zombie apocalypse is part of a bigger trend. lee woodruff looks at the whole bloody business. and, remember it's all fake. >> so i'm going to tell you how this piece came about. i was watch "the walking dead" with my girls. greg is a special effects whiz and co-executive producer of "the walking dead." >> i thought, who is making all this blood in hollywood. be're we're having a blood explosion. >> yes. we've been in business for 25 years. "the walking dead" probably uses up the most amount of blood that
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we've ever had on any show. >> how much blood? >> i would say per episode, we're usually somewhere in the 20 to 30 gallons range. >> reporter: nick attire rowe and his crew make every bit of that blood along with all the ghoulish members and dismembered body parts. all of it fake but made to look so real. >> this is our walking dead blood called dark zombie blood. >> reporter: the blood's appearance changes depending how it's going to be used in the scene. >> we have dark zombie blood, dried shirt, co-ag lated blood. if you have a shirt that's dark like my shirt, you'd have to have bright blood or it would fade in with the colors. it's kind of oddly a weird art form. >> not just a bloody mess. >> it's not just a bloody mess. >> reporter: television has gotten into the blood business in a big way. time was the horror genre on the
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mall screen was hidden with comedies like "the munsters" or a"theddams family" or in a family way like the soap opera "dark shadows" nairry a drop of blood to be seen. nowadays they're jam packing the stations with it. >> it seems like there's blood and gore everywhere on tv. when did this happen? >> i think it's a progression of things. >> he himself once had the great fortune or is it misfortune to be a zombie on "the walking dead." >> cable is responsible. you know once cable tv comes to the forefront, there are so many more options with less restrictions, so you're going to see more violent fare. >> and gruesome blood is more.
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>> tv is copycat. as soon as someone does very well guess what? everyone wants in on it. >> i haven't seen this much blood and gore in my lifetime on it. >> reporter: thomasom masters was the special effects person for "true blood." masters says technology is making blood and gore more accessful to television. >> now that we're able to create effects faster for television we're allowing the producers and writers to do what they want. whereas before they were limited to the big budget feature films or kind of keep it limited to a cutaway or shadow in thewald or something. >> reporter: so if blood-sucking or the dead is your thing, now
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it's your moment in the sun or in the dark as the case may be. >> would by a better vampire or zombie? >> you'd be a great zombie because you have good cheekbones. >> is it a good thing or bad thing. >> it's a good thick. definitely a good thing. >> for "cbs this morning," lee woodruff, los angeles. >> lee, you never looked better. i love it. walter isaacson is in our toyota green
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i just can't wrap my head around it. we just need to break it down into simple steps. is that house for sale again? you're changing the subject. we looked at that house. we have so much demanding our money right now but we have to save for later. right... that's the house- -with the low ceilings. the let's stick with the subject of retirement conversation. wells fargo can help with my retirement plan. a tool that gives you manageable steps for retirement. we can do it with you or try it online.
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together we'll go far. but some days are more balanced than others. so coke, dr pepper, and pepsi have joined forces to launch mixify; a new project with tips, tools, and inspiration to help find a balance that's right for you. spend a day on the couch, go for something less. just finished an afternoon of frisbee, maybe you've earned a little more. balance what you eat and drink with what you do. that's how you mixify. balance your mix at mymixify dot com.
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in fairfax county we had to cut a lot of waste. we consolidated offices. started sharing printers. we can walk a few feet. replaced computers, but kept the monitors. they still work fine. we even discovered that the phone company overcharged us by three million dollars! i approve this message because congress doesn't need another right winger. they need someone who can balance a budget. oh, and we definitely didn't need so many government studies.
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he's coming offer his best autobiography. walter isaacson is going off one pioneer. his new book focuses on men and women who created the computer and internet. it's called "innovators." it is published by simon & schuster a division of cbs. welcome, walter. great to have you back. this book got some encouragement and some advice from bill gates. >> yeah. i was going to write a book about the history of the internet because, you know we had been looking at the internet at that time and trying to figure out how it came to be. he said, no the combination of
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the internet and the personal computer, that was the combustible mix that led to the revolution. do them both, show how it came together. >> you said, too, you were going to write about the lone inventor inventors. but really it's about collaborative creativity. >> one of the things out as autobiographyierautobiographiers, we think it's a gal or a guy when in fact, most of the innovation is done at tables like this. you sit around. you have a team. innovation is a collaborative sport. >> and there are women at the table. >> i try very hard. my daughter turned me on to the fact that the first concept of a computer comes from ada lovelace in the 1930s. and she comes up with the notion that there can be a general computer program that can deal with music and art as well as
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numbers. as i went through the book, i looked through how women, typically pioneers went through the mathematical programs. they don't get their due in history. lieutenant grace harper who did it at harvard. it's particularly important because she and women are doing in computer science now what they did 50 years ago. >> why is that? >> like what jane alluded to history has been -- they've been wiped out of history. >> i didn't know who ada lovelace was. in my family i have my father, my brother, they are computer programmer programmers. i never heard of ada lovelace. >> take jane bartack. jane jennings was in missouri who wanted to get out of there, studied magts at missouri state
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teacher teachers' college and said we need women with math to help us with the war, took the train to philadelphia and ended up the primary program of the most important first computer there was. so people like that should be known in history more than others. >> go ahead. >> i was putting my glasses on so i could read something. counterintuitive. i've been seeing stuff like this over the last couple of weeks over the weekend. three bottom college majors in terms of getting jobs were math science, and communications media. and overall u.s. colleges produce twice the number of stems -- stem technology and engineering and math to find jobs in those fields. i don't get that. can you? >> first off i don't know that study. >> this isn't history. this is today. >> right. i think that the combination of the humanities and technologies
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that's where the magic is. >> yeah. >> steve jobs said that he loved humanity and arts, cal ig gray fi, he drops out and does dance. he said if he can stand at that intersection -- that's love lace did. her father was lor she was a poet but loved mathematics. >> leonardo da vinci. >> they have no idea between a transistor and resis toretor. those who can do both that will be the next new jobs. >> walter isaacson has struck again. >> thank you. >> good job. my favorite book the wise men, einstein. yeah. >> you're not that -- >> all right. "the innovators" is on now.
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enron, the largest coporate fraud in american history... and ed gillespie was their lobbyist. enron paid gillespie and his firm seven hundred thousand... dollars to block regulation of the energy markets... so they could raise utility rates. then got even worse. "thousands lost their jobs and life savings." "the former leaders of enron head to prison." enron's ed gillespie. the million dollar lobbyist who put enron ahead of you.
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>> the ebola epidemic. drastically cut time for cabin cleaning, from 45 to 5 minutes! >> ♪ ♪ doctor, doctor gimme the news ♪ ♪ plauseplause ♪ ♪ >> [ applause ] ♪ ♪ >> thank you for tuning in. a smaller waistline could leave you feeling better, looking better and acting better, but most importantly, it may even do this: >> could your waistline determine your lifeline? >> the answer is yes! accordin
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