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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  October 27, 2014 7:00am-9:01am EDT

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good morning. it is monday, october 27th, 2014. welcome to "cbs this morning." why a homecoming prince opened fire on his friends and family. new details on the washington school shooting. lava flows as thousands prepare to evacuate. >> but we begin this morning with today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >> i't don believe when you're dealing with something as serious as this you can do that. >> controversy over the quarantine. >> they're pressuring them to
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reverse their isolation policies. >> a federal lawsuit is expected to be filed on be f of the nurse in quarantine in new jersey. >> she knows how to treat ebola. christie apparently does not. >> a second victim, 14-year-old gia soriano has died after a shooting at a school in washington state. >> police say jaylen fryberg opened fire. >> could you see this coming? no. it was out of the blue. >> major milestone. they ended combat operations in the helmand province. >> lava flow on hawaii's big island. ut>> ahorities telhel t population to prepare for ev evacuati evacuation. >> this is the real thing. it's not oh, yeah. it's now. >> marsha strassman from "welcome back, cotter" has died. the dramatic rescue caught on tape. >> all that --
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>> a shutout for madison bum garper. giants win, 3-2! another one by 21 points. >> -- and all that matters -- and the son of jeb bush is weighing in on whether his father will run for the white hoe. >> think it's more than likely that he's giving this a thought. >> that he'll run. >> that he'll run. >> -- on "cbs this morning." >> if you come across strange feces or moucus or something else, don't eat it. >> that's great advice. mystery mucus in the street until the panic is all over. >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" is presented by toyota. let's go places. captioning funded by cbs welcome to "cbs this morning." actions to curb the threat of
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ebola in the united states are under fire. new york's governor responded late sunday. he modified a 21-day quarantine for medical workers returning from west africa. other states have similar rules in place including new jersey where the governor says he's changing nothing. critics call the restrictions unnecessary. here in new york city a 5-year-old boy was rushed to new york's bellevue hospital last night. he had a fever after returning from a trip. bill plante is at the white house where officials are trying to roll back the new ebola rules. bill, good morning. >> good morning. over the weekend the white house pushed hard against new york and new jersey and other states to drop the quarantine. they plan to have new guidelines announced later this week. they say the quarantine is not grounded in science. late last night new york governor andrew cuomo modified his state's quarantine requirements for health care workers returning from the ebola hot zone. >> a health care professional whour retns to this region who
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had exposure to infected people will be asked to remain in their homes for a 21-day quarantine period. >> but governor christie says he thinks the federal government will susan follow his lead. >> i don't believe when you're dealing with something as count on a voluntary system. this is the government's job. if anything else the government's job is to protect the safety and health of our citizens. >> in the series of television interviews sunday dr. anthony fauci called the practice draconian and he worned of unintended consequences of a policy he said was not based on science. >> the idea of a blanket quarantine for people who come back could possibly have a negative consequence of essentially disincentivizing people from wanting to go there. the best way to stop americans is to stop the epidemic in
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africa, and we need those health care workers to do that. >> nurse kaci hickox, the first health care worker quarantined under new jersey's policy has been in isolation since friday. she spoke out sunday about her confinement saying she's completely healthy and poses no threat. >> the quarantine and how it's being carried out doesn't make sense. it's not ens based. and the second thing is it's really inhumane. >> they met to work out the new guidelines. they hope that the states will use these new guidelines to replace their own. meanwhile samantha power, the nation's u.n. ambassador is in west africa this morning visiting the stricken ebola nations. she, too, emphasized the message saying returning health care workers should be treated like conquering heroes and not stigmatized for the tremendous
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work they've done. norah? >> bill, thank you so much. lawyers for kaci hickox say they will fight to get her out of quarantine. they have announced plans for a federal lawsuit. >> there was an error made when she came into this country. she was then evaluated. and once that evaluation took place as best we have been informed by the medical authorities who are taking care of her, she is not febrile, she is not contagious, she does not pose a risk. >> dr. jon lapook spoke with kaci hickox on the phone. good morning. >> good morning. >> tell us her condition. >> yesterday she said she was fine. she's feeling frustrated but she's feeling fine. >> is it possible she could get sick later? >> that's always possible. the frustration is when she
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landed people were all smiles until they found out where she was and what she had been doing. she felt like a criminal. she said she hadn't had food or water for a couple of hours and she got flush. they took her temperature. she said it was not done either. she said take it orally, i think my skin is flush. they said they're not going to do that. >> is this a policy based on fear rather than medical fact? >> i tlirng's a lot of fear going on. there will be some middle ground where we can keep the public safe and at the same time retain the dignity and respect of the heroes returning from west africa, the people who are going to make sure that epidemic goes away so it doesn't come here, those are the people. >> you talked to her. she said this was a knee-jerk reaction by politicians, by governor chris christie. >> she was really incensed that governor christie, i have to say, especially by one thing that he said. he said, she's obviously ill and
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that really got her goat. he has not examined her, he is not a physician. where does he come off saying that? it turns out it probably could have been a falsely elevated temperature. >> and dr. fauci said yesterday it is not based on science and he opposes the quarantine. >> people have to remember with all that's gone on, all the missteps, mr. duncan going home, nurse vinson being on a plane and all that, the number of people who have been infected is two and both of those were nurses who were, you know, sort of immersed in fluids. no one has gotten infected in the united states from casual contact. >> very important point. thank you, jon. >> interesting what samantha said over there. they should be treated as heroes. >> they should be treated with hero heroes. we have to treat them with the dignity they deserve. >> thank you so much. the doctor who has ebola in
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bellevue hospital is in serious condition. he received a plasma transfusion on friday from ebola survivor nancy writebol. and "60 minutes" introduced us to four nurses who put themselves at risk caring for the first ebola patient diagnosed in america. we'll find out how it affected their work outside the hospital. it's some of the information you didn't hear last night that's ahead only here on "cbs this morning." a second victim of a school shooting in washington state died last night. the gunman shot five students on friday. one of them died at the scene. the 14-year-old boy then shot and killed himself. the other three victims remain at the hospital. carter evans is at marysville-pilchuck high school in seattle. carter, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, charlie. school will be closed here all week as people struggle to figure out what set off this
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teenaged gunman. this morning they're dealing with news of yet another death. students and community leaders returned sunday to marysville pilchuck high school to remember the victims of the shooting on friday including 14-year-old gia soriano who died from head injuries late sunday night. a spokeswoman spoke on behalf of the family. >> widow nated the organs so others may benefit. >> reporter: those who knew the shooter and his victims are beginning to piece together the events that led to the deadly shooting in the school cafeteria. it appeared he wanted his closest friends at that lunch table that day. >> yeah. i just don't understand what was going through his head that day. >> reporter: page iker was friends with the 14-year-old friend jaylen fryberg and his friends, the five victims. on friday she wasn't there.
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>> do you think he wanted to take his friends with him. >> i honestly think if he wanted to do something to himself he didn'tt wan too go by himself. >> he shot five people in the head. zoe died at the scene. four others were injured. two of his cousins and another died last night. >> did you see this coming? >> no. it was completely out of the blue. >> reporter: a week earlier he was named homecoming prince. the day before the shooting he tweeted it won't last. it will never last. >> there were tweeted. he was not like himself. >> reporter: how are you dealing with this now? >> i'm in complete shot. it doesn't feel so real to me. >> reporter: students who witnessed the attack say it could have been worse if not for a quick-thinking teacher megan silberberger who cop fronted fryberg during the chaos. >> i think her actions were
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amazing, wonderful. i'm glad she was there. the straight answer is, yes, i think she's probably saved some lives. >> reporter: police aren't talking about how fryberg got the gun or his motive for the killing but the shootings do come at a highly charged time in washington state as voters consider two gun control measures on the november ballot. norah? >> carter, thank you so much. u.s. and britain handed over a huge base to the afghan military. hello monday was the most deadly region of afghanistan for coalition forces. this morning all u.s. marines are out of there. elizabeth palmer is in london with more on this major milestone. elizabeth, good morning. >> good morning, norah. that's right. as of today, there are no u.s. forces left on that sprawling complex called leatherneck and
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bastion that were the two bases. this is a major turning point in a war that as you pointed out lasted over a decade. ♪ >> reporter: the flags were lowered for the last time at the vast hello monday base shared by the u.s. and british forces. the stars and stripes were folded up for the journey home. it's up to the afghans now. the marines have been packing for weeks. this is a historic moment. the end of u.s. marine combat missions in afghanistan and the close of a chapter in america's longest wore. corporal matthew thompson from maine has been fighting in helmand for six mondays. >> i'm sure people are going to ask me if we made a difference in afghanistan. i hope we did. i know we did. hopefully it stays that way.
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for how long, i'm not sure. >> reporter: 2,210 american military have died on afghan soil since 2001. the aim then was to defend the al qaeda-linked militants who planned the 9/11 attacks but what seemed like a simple objective at the time morphed into a complex battle not only against violent extremists but against poverty, drugs, and corruption. this may be almost mission over but not everyone believes it's mission accomplished. >> i'm worried that my son has to come back, the future generation of marines have to come back and start over again much like iraq. >> that u.s. drawdown in afghanistan is going to continue until the 1st of january, 2014 when a small u.s. force of just under 10,000 military personnel will be left in afghanistan but in a support and training role.
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charlie? >> elizabeth, thanks. a new isis video surfaced over the weekend showing hostage john cantlie. he was abducted with another. they described the horror that foley, the captive, endured before they were including waterboarding and torture. welcome. >> thank you so much. >> what were your sources? how did you get remarkable detail and terrific stories? >> my number one source and those are the hostages held with james foley and another captive, but i was able to speak to a former member of isis who ran afowl last year and became a prisoner himself in the same jail foley was held. he was held with foley for three weeks and is now back in europe where i was able to speak with him for the first time. >> and you even show foley
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realizeded they were talking to his family because of the details they had. >> yes. for the first year of captivity, the captors made essentially no demand and i think he was very desperate. it wasn't clear why they were holding him, what they wanted with him. a year in, which is roughly november, december, they took all of the hostaging out one by one and by this time there were close to two dozen and they asked them three proof of life questions. in foley's case it was something very specific about who cried at your brother's wedding and when he heard the questions the others said when he came back he broke down crying because he knew my family finally knows i'm alive and surely the government is going to negotiate my release which is a real tragedy that that did not happen. >> the real details how they were beaten, starved, waterboarded, is really difficult and also of the 23 prisoners, they were divided into two groups.
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why? >> basically the americans and brits were put in a different category than the other europeans. and what they say is, yes, there was a certain animus because of our position on the war. but the other is they would not pay and they were punishing our country's policy on ransom. >> you also mention how foley organized games. >> this was the second time he was taken. he was kidnapped one year earlier in libya. people held with him in libya and syria said the same thing. he is the one who yorlg niced lectures. they played risk which i was able to discern was a pastime with the foley family and at christmas time they did a jailhouse version of secret santa. >> thank you so much. wonderful to have you here. we should note that it is eight
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days before the midterm elections. new numbers from the cbs news battleground tracker indicates that the republicans appear to be on the verge of taking control of the u.s. senate with 51 seats. the gop needs to pick up six seats. in iowa democrat bruce brayly and republican joni ernst. and udall is over gardner and michelle nunn is under david perdue. we won't know who controls the senate and we'll be here all night. >> major league baseball turning to a very bad story. one of the best young prospects in the game, 22-year-old oscar tavares died sunday in a car accident in the dominican republic. the dominican native played in 80 games this year as a rookie for the st. louis cardinals. he hit a home run in the
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national championship series against san francisco. this morning the giants are one game away from another world series final. game five was dedicated to dmeed yacht robin williams. his oldest son zach pitched to his good friend billy crystal. they shut out the royals for a 5-0 win. the giants will try to close out the series tomorrow night in kansas city. what a game. it's 7:19. ahead on "cbs this morning," the sheriff took away the one treatment that helps with
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>> announcer: this national weather report sponsored by ethan allen, home of the next classics. hundreds of all new designs arriving now. >> announcer: nurses who cared for an ebola patient feel the effects outside the hospital.
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>> i will see you if you tell me you have nod hat any contact with ebola patients. i said you know where i work. that's all i can tell you. >> he said maybe we need to schedule you for december. >> ahead, more from the cbs "60 minutes" interview you didn't hear last night. >> stay tuned for more "cbs this morning." >> announcer: this morning's sponsored by kyocera. document solutions from kyocera. we give you relief from your cold symptoms. you give them the giggles. tylenol® cold helps relieve your worst cold and flu symptoms. but for everything we do, we know you do so much more. tylenol® here's something fun to do with hot dogs.
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look at this. a german jetliner took a dive and wobbled from side to side. that island has very strong cross winlds macking it the most damgs in the world. the pilot managed to bring it in safely. can you imagine being one of the passengers? >> no, i cannot. i was on the plane yesterday. i can think of everyone sitting on the plane thinking depends for everyone. but everyone's okay. you don't get nervous, do you? >> i don't. i'm not courageous but -- >> everyone says when it's your time, it's your time. maybe it's the guy next to me's
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time but not mine. dozens of people are leaving their homes as lava approaches. we show you a town that cuts off hundreds of people. plus she says it was a miracle drug. she gave him medical marijuana after other seed sooezure medicines failed. we'll talk about the decision that could land her in jail. that story's ahead. the "south china morning post" says prosecutors want the death penalty for a captain in a south korean ferry disaster. 300 people, mostly students were killed after the ferry sank in april. the captain is accused of abandoning ship. it's believed cargo on the ferry caused it to tip over. politico says jeb bush's son believes his father will run for president. the younger bush who is a gop candidate for texas land commissioner says the family will be behind jeb bush 100% if he does go to the white house.
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>> i wonder if barbara bush is onboard. >> the "times" says she's not but they told her not to voice it so publicly. >> it looks like everybody else is. >> mom is strong. >> mom is strong. cvs and rite aid stopped taking apple pay. experts say they may be backing another mobile banking system that's being developed by the retailer. that information also collected informationer shoppers and saves money by cutting out credit card companies. rite aid and cvs join best buy and war matter not to adopt apple pay. "the wall street journal" says they're using social media to hire people. places like walmart and crate & barrel and other companies are bombarding inboxes
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with ads. online applications increeds by 66%. "washington post" says people can order a new home test for kolo cancer. a test is sent. if the test is positive, the next test is a colonoscopy. one nurse who risked her life to safe the life of a patient with ebola shared her story. thomas eric duncan died after he was admitted to texas health presbyterian hospital. scott pelley found that many of those nurses and their families were ostracized for simply doing their job. are any of you, all of you still self-monitoring for signs of infection? >> i am. >> you are? >> yes. >> you're still within the 21 day window? >> for mr. duncan, i'm past my
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21-day period, but for nina p m pham. i'm still asymptomatic and my temperature has been rock solid. >> they're not ineffected until they actually become sick. member os testify medical staff must take their temperature twice a day and show the reading to a state health official. >> you know, i wonder after being through this prolonged traumatic event how has it affected you? >> my dentist wouldn't see me because i'm an e.r. nurse here and he said, well, i will see you if you can tell me you haven't had contact with any ebola patients. i said, you know where i work. that's all i can tell you. he said, maybe we need to reschedule for december. >> i had a pleasant but 15-minute long conversation with the medical services for my child's school district because i don't thing they were angry or
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anything like that, but she -- the principal had received numerous concerned phone calls that, you know, somebody that works at that hospital has, you know, a child in the school and, you know, what are you doing about it. >> was there discussion of take your child out of school? >> for me personally there was never any discussion and nobody that lived around me moved. >> for me the experience was different. i live with my sister and her 7-year-old daughter, and my sister had panicked that monday afternoon and candidly mentioned it to the school. and when the news broke that he was positive, i had a couple calls from the school nurse and unfortunately that friday morning my niece was put out of school. she was later welcomed back to school that following week, but,
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yeah. it was tough. it was tough. >> what a powerful piece last night. i kept thinking once again, nurses are the most important people in health care. they do the hardest work and, you know, i thought so highly of these nurses last night sharing their story. >> i thought what was so compelling to me they talked about the death of thomas eric duncan. he's always been this man who died the first victim. but for the first time you saw his humanity and cow saw how his dealt affected the people who were caring for him. it was very, very powerful, very tough to watch. >> it really puts a human face and human emion. >> that's right, charlie. my heart opened up. >> absolutely, absolutely. and this morning a small town on hawaii's big island is evacuating homes threatened by lava. the flow is moving toward a town at the rate of 15 miles an hour. that's very fast in volcanic
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terms. >> reporter: with temperatures reaching 2,000 degrees lava reached pahoa and swallowed streets. it's forced residents to pack up and flee their home. this weekend authorities went door to door to tell residents to prepare for mandatory evacuations in the coming days. >> yeah. it's real. it's now or never. you pack and get out. when you get the notice of anywhere from three to five days, this is the real thing. >> in august paha roa residents were hit by strong and damaged storms which knocked out power for more than two weeks. now they're facing a real hard threat. >> my whole family is in this
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sub division that we live in so we're all on needles and pins. >> reporter: the volcano has erupted continuously since 1983 but it usually heads toward the ocean. it's begun to shift toward more densely populated communities. >> we're going to be out there watching the activity. if it picks up in its rate of advancement, we may need people to pick up the face and move their plans out a little faster. >> lava could reach the first homes as early as tuesday. >> it's always -- >> what did she just say? >> it's always just beautiful to see. >> it's very pretty. i don't know what she said but it sounded pretty. >> her name and where she was. all right. a mother finds a remedy for her son's devastating injury. >> do you think it was a miracle? >> yeah. it was a miracle in a bottle. >> well, now she's accused of
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of madison, minnesota, faces possible prison time this morning for giving her teenaged son medical marijuana. h has a traumatic brain injury. she turned to the treatment as a last result unable to watch her son suffer any longer. adriana diaz sat down with the family that could be split up by the law. good morning. >> good morning. she traveled to colorado to get a bottle of can bus oil in the hopes of getting some comfort for her son but what she calls a mother's instinct may land her
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behind bars. >> i broke the law but i did it to save my son. >> for years she searched for a way to end her son's chronic pain. 15-year-old tray brown looks healthy but an injury to his head looked leak this. baseball accident from 2001. >> wehere were you standing? >> right there. >> a line drive caused bleeding in his head the size of a golf ball. doctors believed he wouldn't survive but when he finally woke up from a medically induced coma, his mother says the old tray is gone. >> who is he now? >> he's a shell of himself but he's in so much pain and that causes depression. >> with depression came daily my grains, muscle spasms, and uncontrollable outbursts like this one. >> oh, please, don't hit me. >> i cry every day before i go to bed.
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>> what does it feel like? >> like my brain is about to blow up. >> hoping to ease his pain, tray's parents tried 18 different medications but little helped. angela believes some of the drug's side effects made tray suicidal. >> he told me, mom, i don't want to live. i can't do this anymore. >> what is going through your mind? >> it's not fair. ite note fair. i have been so angry. i begged him. i said, we will find an answer. >> reporter: desperate she began researching the benefits of marijuana. the family drove to colorado and obtained this bottle of can bus oil, legal there but not minnesota. she said after a few drops tray's pain melted away. >> did you think it was a miracle? >> yeah. oh, god. yeah. it's a miracle in a bottle. >> it stopped the pain and it stopped the muscle spasms.
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it was helping me go to school until it got taken away and then school was really hard again. >> taken away when tray's teachers asked why he was doing better in school. i said, well, i gave him an oil that we had gotten from colorado dried from the marijuana plant and then you could feel the tension in the room. >> a week later the sheriff's department confiscated the oil and county prosecutors charged angela with child endangerment requiring child protection. if convicted she could face up to two years in prison and up to $6,000 in fines. >> i was trying to prevent him from being hurt. >> but you did get an illegal substance and give it to him. >> yes, illegal substance in minnesota. not illegal in other states. >> reporter: cbs news reached out to the prosecutor, law enforce mnlts and the school. if angela does go to jail, she fears most for her children.
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>> who would take care of my kids? my boys are mama's boys. >> they need you? >> yeah. i guess, yeah. i need them. i need them. >> in may minnesota did become the 22nd state to approve medical marijuana but the law doesn't go into effect until next year and they said they simply can't wait. >> i'm so glad you did this story. i hope people look at this and say, come on. at some point common sense has to prevail. they're clearly not abusing the system and it's helping their son. >> they say they want to move to colorado. whether or not the mother will join the family has yet to be seen. >> adriana, thank you so much. and he dove from the stratosphere with nothing more than a spacesuit and a parachute. we're going to show you the record-breaking freefall from 25
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genetic testing can prune diseases from the family tree, but where's the line between healthy children and designer babies. we look at critical technology with those playing god. that's ahead on "cbs this morning." grown in america. picked and packed at the peak of ripeness. with no artificial ingredients. del monte. bursting with life.
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it is monday, october 27th, 2014. welcome back to "cbs this morning." there is more real news ahead including a nurse trying to fight her way out of quarantine. we'll ask rikki klieman if states are going too far to stop ebola, but first here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. >> over theee w tkendhe white house pushed hard against new york and new jersey and other states to drop the quarantine. >> is this a pyolic based on fear rather than medical fact? >> i think there is a lot of fear going on here. >> school here will be closed all week. this morning they're dealing with news of yetth anoer atdeh. >> there are no more forces left
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on the two camps that was the base for the u.s. military operations in southern afghanistan. >> they also realized america and british would not pay and therey we punishing them. >> a small town on hawaii's island is evacuated,hr tneeated by lava. >> you did get an illegal substance and give it to him. >> yes. illegal substance in minnesota, not other states. >> can you imagine being on that plane? >> i can imagine everyone thinking depends for everyone. they have created a dessert, a pumpkin pie inside a pumpkin cake inside an apple pie. it's what texans are calling diet cake. >> announcer: this morning ice "eye opener" presented by wall green. >> i'm charlie green along with
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norah o'donnell and gayle king. new jersey, new york, florida, and illinois are telling medical workers returning from west africa to stay isolated for 21 days. health officials can call that move ineffective. >> a nurse in new jersey has become the opposition to those rules. she's sitting in an isolation tent this morning in newark's university hospital. she has no signs of ebola but she's been quarantined since returned friday. >> her lawyers are preparing a legal la suit. rikki klieman is with us. she's married to new york commissioner bill brat on the. that's the first time we said that. >> i'm not sure what that has to do with the question but he is a
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good husband. so let's talk about quarantine versus isolation. in isolation what you do is you have a person who is ill, a person who has the epidemic ebola. that person is isolated. then we have the issue of quarantine. what quarantine means is the state has the right under the basic public safety policies that they can take someone who does not yet have the sick toms but has been exposed and they can isolate that person while that person could potentially develop the symptoms. here we know ebola mean 2/1 days. >> what happens if a person says i have no symptoms, i've been tested, i don't want to be quarantined. a, can you refuse and what is the penalty if there is a police penalty. >> if you refuse the police powers -- not my husband's police powers but the state's
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police powers can put you in quarantine. it's really the means of the state. if you say i'm going refuse, what you need to do is you need to hire a lawyer or a lawyer will come and represent you as in this case kaci hickox has gotten representation and aloud her to be a test case. it's important that we have a test case here to see if the states are using quote/unquote the least restricted means necessary. >> their point is it's overly broad. >> right. that's exactly what mr. segal is saying. this is overly broad in new jersey. you know now we have a different policy in new york than we do in new jersey but ultimately the courts have to do a balance. the courts have to look at this individual's state right that allows the state rather than the federal government to quarantine people because public health and safety should not be sacrificed for an individual's rights. but when they do this balance, we have to do that the person
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who's been exposed, which she has, that secondly she's put into a safe habitable environment. here norman seagal is going to say it's way more than a safe habitable environmental. >> what's interesting as dr. jon lapook has said earlier, no one has gotten infected yet. we have shown the cell. 15x20 and there's no toilet, only a portable toilet. is that humane? >> the question may not be that it's human. they may say it's too restrictive. the courts may disagree. >> does that mean when people return they're going to quarantine them in a tent like >> not necessarily. unfortunately nurse hickox is the first one back.
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ultimately these policies will morph and they'll try to make it more habitable. >> really interesting, rikki. >> we'll be back in the courthouse later this week. >> mrs. bratton. >> see you. and we have a follow-up this morning on brittney maynard. she's the brain cancer patient who's prepared to end her life with a doctor. remember we told you about her? she visited the grand canyon last week. she thanked the country for helping her cross the trip off her bucket list. she was given six months to live. she chose november 1st after her husband's birthday but now she wants to see how her disease progresses. she writes, the canyon was breathtakingly beautiful and i was able to enjoy my time with the two things i love most, my family and nature. >> i'm glad she's not committed to november 1st.
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if you're feeling great, she may want to rethink it. >> absolutely. >> a small group of healthy older volunteers took a special drink that contained either high or low levels of antioxidants called flavonoids. after three months they performed brain scans and memory tests. they found a typical 60-year-old of high formulation had the memory of a 30-year-old. >> what's wrong with that? researchers say don't binge out on chocolate to get enough of those flavonoids, you would have to eat 25 candy bars day. all that sugar and fat would do you more harm than fat. what did you say? memory of a 30-year-old or 40-year-old at 06. >> i was going to say maybe it's the nice feeling. >> chocolate in all things is a good thing.
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>> when i see that story, is there some way to find out what is it in chocolate that gives you that? >> the flavonoids. a flavonoid pill, yeah. take a look. a freefall balloon lifted alan eustace. then he went 822 miles an hour. it broke the record set two year ago by felix bumgarner. he used it to break the sound barrier as he plunged to earth. >> you know alan. what do you know about him? >> he didn't have the same kind of protection as felix did. >> he had hot chocolate. what they're finding in dna of an
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this morning's "eye opener" at 8:00 sponsored by walgreens, at the corner of happy and healthy.
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making babies the usual way is dangerous. thy're showing how some families can breed out disease. that's next on "cbs this morning." you know, if you play football for a long time like i did, you're gonna learn to deal with alot of pain. but it is nothing like the pain that shingles causes. man when i got shingles it was something awful. it was like being blindsided by some linebacker.
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you don't see it coming. boom! it was this painful rash of little blisters. red, ugly stuff. lots of 'em. not a good deal. if you've had chicken pox, uh-huh, we all remember chicken pox. well that shingles virus is already inside of you. it ain't pretty when it comes out. now i'm not telling you this so that you'll feel sorry for me. i'm just here to tell you that one out of three people are gonna end up getting shingles. i was one of 'em. take it from a guy who's had his fair share of pain. you don't want to be tackled by shingles. so please go talk to your doctor or pharmacist. talk to your doctor or pharmacist about your risk. if it doesn't work fast... you're on to the next thing. li cnically proven neutrogena® rapid wrinkle repair. it targets fine lines and wrinkles with the fastest retinol formula available. you'll see younger looking skin
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we thought our cable internet was fast. but, our uploads are half the speed of our downloads so our internet is really half-fast. so half-fast. someone did a half-fast job posting our vacation pics. when i post my slow jams, i'm a little half-fast. totally half-fast. stop living with half-fast internet. only verizon fios comes with speedmatch - upload speeds as fast as your download speeds. so his homework won't be so half-fast. that is up to him. now with speed match, you'll get faster upload speeds so you can share photos, post videos and send big files faster than ever before.
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all on america's fastest, most reliable internet. get a fios triple play bundle at an amazing price guaranteed for two years when you sign up online. sign up now and get $300 back. and as an extra bonus from verizon wireless a free lg tablet or up to $200 off any tablet. go to fiosspeedmatch.com today. call the verizon center for customers with disabilities at 800.974.6006 tty/v in our morning rounds, breeds out disease. we're about to speak with a couple from gene peek. they spoke on the advances of the world in genetics after ann morris's son was born with a serious genetic mutation she wanted to protect other children from a similar struggle. >> every human being walking the planet is a carrier for a rare disease, but what matters is who we choose to partner with reproductively, that's where the risk shows up. >> now she wants to reduce the
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risk of a bad genetic match for others well before they start the reproductive process. she just started a company called genepeeks. his latest idea doesn't take place in a lab. it's entirely virtual. >> we are creating digital babies. >> digital babies. >> yes. >> you're simulating the process of reproduction but on a computer. >> exactly. >> silver says all it takes is a saliva sample to obtain dna. he then combines information from both prospective computer to make thousands of digital babies. it contains virtual dna which like real dna is represented by those same four letters, a, c, t, and g. >> this baby has a mutation. >> he says that by analyzing the
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dna in all of those digital babies he's able to calculate the risk of two people conceiving a child with any one of 500 severe pediatric disorders. for now genepeeks is available for $2,000 for clients using sperm banks and egg donors to conceive. he says they plan to expand it to everyone who wants to have a baby. >> you think everyone who wants to have baby will go and have a digital baby first? >> i see people who will not use sex to reproduce. that's a very dangerous thing to do. >> good morning. >> that's quite a statement. >> yeah. i can't tell you how many people when we watched this piece said, what is he saying? you're not going to use sex to reproduce? what is he talking about? >> that's been going on for a long time, the separation and reproduction, the other way, contraception, the birth control
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pill. you've had contraception. we've had artificial insemination, artificial -- >> you say it's dangerous to reproduce using traditional sex. why? >> if i can jump in just to clarify, most people will get great news back from this kind of analysis and they can go back to dinner and a movie and it's great, but for people like me who are walking around with genes and genetic mutations who may put our children at risk with our reproductive partner, we have a way now to get that information at the earliest possible point in the fertility journey and that's what this company is about. >> what do you say with this is like playing god, it crosses the line. >> i'd say that medicine has been doing that for 200 years since we first developed vaccines in the 20th century, and all of that is looking toward increasing people's likelihood of being healthy,
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having a normal life. >> that didn't answer the question of designer genes. >> yes. all we're doing is seeing whether two people have mutations that are not compatible with each other and then making -- in the future we'll be able to make sure -- >> where is this good? >> we've been talking to families about this technology and this kind of innovation for many, many years and what's really clear from those conversations is what people care about is the health of your baby. if you want smarter kids, you should read to them, put them in preschool. but if you want to protect them from serious diseases, this is when this kind of information becoming so powerful. >> invaluable. >> i did this test. put saliva in a tube and then they have -- one of their companies is the manhattan sperm bank where all the men have donated sperm have also done the same thing and then they matched me up with 100 men from the
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manhattan sperm bank. >> to determine what. >> to see if we were come partible. 25 of them were immediately eliminated because we would have been a bad genetic match i hear you. that's sort of you don't have a bag match. that's the point of it. but if you were trying to go further than that and make sure it was a match that had all kinds of positive think about it, you could that as well? >> that's not what we're doing. >> go back and tell me where the science is. >> the science makes it possible. you can speak to this as well. the science makes it possible to see any genetic trait in advance, but what people care about and certainly what the mission of this organization is to help protect children from serious diseases. >> you did say one of the best matches would have been a peruvian man for me. >> that's right.
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his gene are very different and didn't care the same mutations. we schild everybody carries mutations. he did, you did, but you're compatible. >> this accounts for any single gene. that's hundreds of them. what about that people will use this technology for certain eye color, hair color, gender, things like that, nothing to do with disease. >> that's so-called designer genes. >> the patent is confusing and i want to be clear on this point. that's not what we're doing and that's not -- >> you've said that three or four times. i know you're very concerned that people they think that's what you're doing. >> sure, sure. but i also want to be clear who we are as a company and the mission of what we're doing. it's also for clarity. >> you can't give this yads
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without suggesting. >> absolutely. >> we control the patent and how it's used. we're not going to use it except for child hood diseases. >> thank you so much. you can see more along with my experience at "60 min60minute 60minutesovertime.com. >> announcer: "cbs this morning" sponsored by purina. your pet, our passion. ♪ [ male announcer ] from the farm to our fridge in just six days.
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have you seen the news about barbara comstock? first, the washington post reported, barbara comstock failed to report eighty-five thousand in income. now, we learn, barbara comstock pushed a client's issues in the virginia legislature and didn't disclose it. barbara comstock shepherded a trio of bills through the legislature and into law, but barbara comstock never officially disclosed that all the while she was being paid thousands of dollars. no wonder she hid it.
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." does this music sound fire alarm? coming up this half hour david byre, the talking heads co-founder will share his inspiration. his newest act is about imelda marcos. plus, finding your routes. we'll talk with them just ahead. britain's "daily mail" looks at australia's first laundry service for homeless people. they installed washers and dryers in a van while they go around brisbane and offer free laundry to the homeless.
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the daily news says horses are better than cars. they say the horses give a tourist experience that's more fun than so-called ecarriages. heads-up for you fans. the 153-year-old hotel has released hogwarts rooms. the guest package includes tours of landmarks from the movie. david byrne is best known for his music with talking heads. but it extends to film, photography, and theater. and for years he's been outspoken about the tour of the industry. ♪ >> the name david byrne is synonymous with the group
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talking heads, a band he co-created in 1976. ♪ >> they became one of the most influential groups of the 1980s. blending rock, african influences, funk, and electronic sound the 1984 "stop making films" talked about i. it changed how to capture rock concerts on film and had audiences dancing in the aisles. ♪ their innovative music bolstered their popularity. they were inducted into the rock and roll hall of fame in 2002. in his solo career byrne created
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eight albums of his own and won an oscar for the 1987 film "the last emperor." byrne and musician fat boy slim feature the film baseded on immi imimelda marcos, first lady of the philippines. >> where does your diversity come from or do they feed off each other? >> i think they feed off each other and at an early age, i thought, why not. >> exactly. >> why not give it a try. if it fails, go somewhere else. >> here we are in 2014. many people are still discovering your music. i would imagine you're very gratified that the music still resonates. does it surprise you? because music has changed so much over the years. but talking heads endures.
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>> really gratifying, of course, yeah, yeah, yeah. >> how has it changed? what's the difference between releasing an album which you did versus 2014? >> oh, it's changed a lot. i think for younger acts coming up now, i think it's really difficult. if they're an emerging act, they probably won't make any money from record sales maybe ever. >> mostly touring. >> yeah. maybe touring. >> what was it about imelda marcos that made -- >> do you like shoes? >> no. i have -- no. nothing against shoes. >> no, i got you. >> she's obviously a larger than life character. i'm old enough to remember her. >> i'm old enough to have interviewed her. >> yeah. so she's -- yeah -- a character.
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when i read she had a disco ball installed on her one floor, effect innively one floor turned into a disco hall. i thought, she's really living the life and has the music going all the time in her life. i thought, well, i wonder if there's a story in her life yochbld just the rise and whatever. i wonder if there's a way to tell the music she already has surrounding her and wouldn't that be fun. so there you have it. >> there you have it. i like what charlie said about your vary right of work. as you sit here in 2014, is there something you haven't done you want to do?
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i'm sure your brain is clicking along. i'm not saying you're getting old but your malk nation and curiosity is still in evidence. that's what i mean. >> i'm working on another project but it teenages a long time long time. a lot of people have a story and it ends up on the shelf like a movie. >> it's interesting because of her husband, first of aushlg ferdinand marcos, because of the friends she had in new york and the different people she was friendly with. it's all well documented. there's lots of footage, news item, everything. so there was lots of things to draw on. >> today taylor swift drops her new album. me and paul needham over there. they say she could be the first artist to break the platinum
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record here. nobody's broken it. why is it so difficult compared toll the way i used to be? >> it's not difficult for her. for someone just starting out, there's lots the of barriers. it's easier to make the music you want to make. >> you could go direct to the consumer. >> you can go direct to the consumer, post it out on your website. there's no gate keeper on the creativity, but asking people to pay for it and getting people to know you exist, that part is, i think, harder than ever. >> thank you. >> yeah. she's also stepping out of her security zone. >> taylor swift. >> yep. >> she's leaving country and goes pope. yes. >> they you david.
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angela bass set is in our toyota green room. he's the mainland behind "finding your
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he's been called a super lobbyist, the ultimate washington insider. ed gillespie paid millions to lobby for the oil companies for a student loan company that overcharged taxpayers. his firm even lobbied for five foreign governments including a dictator now awaiting trial for war crimes. and then there's enron. gillespie lobbied for them while they committed the largest corporate fraud in us history. ed gillespie. the million dollar lobbyist whose never looked out for you.
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throughout her groundbreaking career, angela bassett has portrayed women with
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compelling stories and very rich history but like so many of us, particularly black americans, the award-winning actress didn't know where she came from. so here's harry lewis gates. he traces her family to the heart of slavery. >> can you imagine what it must have felt like for a slave to be able to take this oath, citizenship, and a right to vote. >> very proud. the right to vote. >> it is astounding to see people who were considered three-fifths of a human being, to find them and know they're five-fif five-fifths, one whole, human beings. >> i got chills when she said that. anja lael is here along with harvey. good morning to you both. angela, let's start with you. what did you know about your
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family and what did you want to know? >> i knew a little bit. i grew up in st. petersburg, florida, single mom, my sister, and my grandparents lived in town and my great grandparents on my mother's side. i mean i felt blessed that i grew up with my grand grandmother and great grandfather and every sunday an and all that and that was about it. then i went off to college. then on the other side, my father's said, they were more intune and diligent about finding out about the family tree. such a small family and a little, you know, disconnect and stuff. i would hear tales that a tree had been done but i had never seen it. >> where did you hear the bassett name came from? >> it's interesting hearing from. bassett. that's the furniture company. you'd see it on furniture pieces
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around the country. i wonder. they must be doing well. we aren't. you know, that's probably the other side. >> what did you find out? >> found out that actually my name would have been ingram. for a long time i thought it was turner until we did the finding. i heard it was a different name and then the child took, you know, get rid of the one name and take another. >> it's one of the saddest slave stories that we found. her great grandfather was william henry bassett born in virginia in 1886. when he was three the master sold him away. we found that out because we found the names of his real parents were george and jenny ingram. but unlike the typical slave story when children were sold away, and can you imagine that, we found out in reconstruction, they were reunited. >> they were 40 miles away.
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and began to work for a young man who built a wood refining compan company. when freedom come, out with the old. >> how do you do it? >> we have a team of genealogists and we send you a form and you fill out the name of your parents, grandparents, whatever you know. most don't know anything. i was telling gayle when i started the series with "oprah" and "quincy" called african-american lives, i thought it was only african-americans who had genealogical amnesia it turns out nobody knows. if you get to your great grand parent grandperrins you knob about the tree.
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isn't this about american history? >> it puts a face on american history. in the clip we showed her the day that her slave anxious sister, her third great grandfather was born in georgia in 1820 and he was illiterate. the day he put a mark on the ball let, june 259, 1867, that's the day he became a citizen of the united states. >> the detail. it's so amazing. i didn't know the first slaves would teenage the nark of the shaven owner. >> know. in our research, almost every african-american an says tr we traced te traced the name. the parents took the name of ingram and the son sent took the name of bassett. >> and, angela, i heard you say you tried to put yours in their
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position. >> i did. growing up i was always interested in history and skip was my professor. >> at mother yale. >> i had that interest, the pride, the journey, the strength, the fortitude that was necessary. as an actress also it's about character. so it's easy, you know, to do that for me. i don't think i could have survived it. >> what's the most surprising thing you've found in terms of any of these searches? >> i have a short list but one was oprah winfrey. her great great grandfather was constantine winfrey. he's in mississippi in 1876. he walks up to a white man, a foirm confederate soldier.
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he says i'll pick eight bails of kohn on my own if you give me 80 acres of beautiful land you own. i'm sure the confederate thought that was the dumbest knee grow. who can pick that. that's 3,000 pounds. i know huh did it because i had the deed. so you want to know why oprah winfrey is oprah winfrey. >> how many people come up and say me, too, me, too efrm. >> i get a letter from a lady who said she was a russian jewish descent. she said you're a big fast race crest because u don't do everything. >> but now you to. >> angela, wi going to ask what weight you use to use those arms. i was going say, you look
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awesome. >> thank you. and the finding your roots even society features airs tomorrow on pbs. bill murray explains our favorite sport to the english. that's
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physical activity. but keeping that mix balanced, isn't always easy. so coke, dr. pepper, and pepsi are joining your efforts to find balance with the new initative called mixify. coming together for the first time to talk to teens about balancing what they eat and drink with what they do. and helping them think about when they've had too much, or maybe when it's time for a treat. supporting your efforts, with our message. balance what you eat and drink with what you do. that's how you mixify. dove invited women to a makeover hi ma'amifference. hi would you like to have a free makeover? yeah, why not? who doesn't love a free makeover? there you go. it's a shower. it's a shower. but it's a shower with new dove body wash,
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>> if i were an english man and i thought the lions were going to fight in public, it would sound tedious. i'm stay home and drink beer. >> he puts on a bears hat to introduce londoners to football. the actor also previews two nfl games back home. he whistled like a cardinal and we heard roger goodell say football is big in london so they had a good time. >> we love bill murray. >> that does it for us.
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be sure to tune in to the
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hey, how you doin'? it hurts. this is what it can be like to have shingles. a painful blistering rash. if you had chicken pox, the shingles virus is already inside you. as you get older your immune system weakens and it loses its ability to keep the shingles virus in check. i just can't stand seeing him like this. he's in pain. one in three people will get shingles in their lifetime. the shingles rash can last up to 30 days. i wish that there was something i could do to help. some people with shingles will have long term nerve pain which can last for a few months to a few years. don't wait until someone you love develops shingles. talk to your doctor or
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pharmacist about your risk.
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>> 3, 2, 1! >> camera ready. >> here's what's coming up today on the doctors. >> the new social media trend that's shames travelers. >> you lost half of your body weight. >> how you can do it too. and a cancer breakthrough. >> this is huge! >> announcer: then ... >> here's what's breaking in today's news in two: >> announcer: the latest on the war against ebola . >> new york city on high alert after the first ebola case was confirmed. how jake jillenhall, dropped 30 pounds for his film. ♪ doctor, doctor gimme the news ♪ >> hello, if it's in the news and effects your health, we are covering it. lately we are hearing a lot about bad behavior going down while folks are up in the air. >> passengers on a virgin american flight from boston to

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