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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  November 2, 2015 7:00am-9:01am EST

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captioning funded by cbs good morning. it is monday, november 2nd, 2015. welcome to "cbs this morning." the royals are the kings of baseball! kansas city clenches the world series with an extra inning comeback win over the mets. what caused a passenger plane to break apart at high altitude? new clues overnight about the deadly crash of a russian jet in egypt. chipotle shuts down dozens of restaurant after and this e. coli outbreak. we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener." your world in 90 seconds. inside corner. e throyals, 2015ld wor champions! >> kansas city takes the world series crown. >> couldn't get any better. it's unbelievable.
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>> yea! >> woo! these guys are partying! >> no way are you taking me out of this game. >> i will second-guess mice for a -- myself for a long time. >> consequence when the debate process is abused in the way cnbc did it. >> representatives from the republican candidates had a summit meeting about debate moderators they consider ohio hostile. >> they are trying to figure out what brought down a russian passenger jet. >> extreme weather slamming the south and floods and twitters store through texas where the death toll now stands at six. >> former u.s. senator and actor fred thompson has died after a battle with lymphoma. >> i have done a lot of things. prosecutor and been in the senate and made a few movies and traveled around the world. >> victimsf o a deadly colorado springs room page remembered. a man opened fire with a rifle on saturday and killing three lepeop. >> washington state and oregon
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e. coli outbreak linked to chipotle restaurants. >> all that. >> he just tiedn a nfl record with his seventh touchdown pass today! >> great night for denver. >> touchdown. >> an uber driver is attacked by a passenger. intoxicated benjamin goldman pulls the hair of the driver. >> i'm calling the police! >> and all that matters. >> please welcome charlie rose! you're wearing shoes that lady gaga wouldn't get into tichlt! >> i now know what gayle and norah go through each morning. >> the kansas city royals are the world series champions! announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. ♪ welcome to "cbs this morning." >> wait a second charlie. we have to have a moment for you as frankenstein. we can't act like we just didn't
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see that. i know we will talk about it later but you were so great. fun to see that. >> an hour and a half makeup. now i know what you go through. we begin with baseball. the kansas city royals came up one base short in last year's world series. this year, they made it all the way. the"the kansas city star"the"the kansas city star" declares them royalty after last night's dramatic series win. >> fans in downtown kansas city went nuts as mets gave up five runs in the 12th inning. the final score in game five was 7-2. it is kansas city's first world series title since 1985. congratulations to them! jeff glor is here with the royals rally. jeff, good morning. what a game. >> reporter: indeed. good morning. the royals are relentless and now redeemed. a year after losing the world series in seven games, they won it in five and became the first team in world series history to
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win three games after trailing in the eighth inning or later. sunday night was the crowning achievement. >> that's in the air to left. it's own conforto's head up against the wall. >> reporter: kc was sparked by eric hosmer and ninth inning double and following by in unforgettable dash to score the tie run. >> tie game! unbelievable base running by eric hosmer. >> reporter: in the 12th new hero christian cologne who hadn't batted all season delivered home the winning run. >> ka lon to left. in to score is johnson! >> that a boy! let's go! >> toyhe rals piled on the hits from there scoring four more. burying the mets 7-2. >> 1-2 again. inside corner! the royals 2015 world champions. >> reporter: the new kings of
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the baseball world celebrated in appropriate fashion, on the field and in the clubhouse. >> we won! the kansas city royals world series champs! >> reporter: in the streets of kansas city, fans ended 30 long years of waiting, including a punishing loss in last year's series. >> it was a team effort. and just proud of my brothers. >> came back won a world championship. you just can't -- words can't each describe how awesome this feels right now. >> reporter: for the mets and their fans it was a world series that could have been, and perhaps should have been. they led the royals in three games very late. they had an untimely error but mostly by a kansas city offense that always seemed to save its best for the last. a young and powerful pitching staff the mets have a bright future. the royals too and keep most of their corps intact. kansas city most immediate concern is the present. a parade is set for tuesday. >> this was a case of the royals
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winning rather than mets losing in the end wasn't it? >> in many indications they should have won last year. clearly they were the better team in the world series. that says heart breaking for mets fans the way they gave away a few games. >> thank you jeff. >> sure. this morning, u.s. intelligence sources tell cbs news a missile or rocket-propelled grenade likely did not bring down the jetliner over egypt. they are not ruling out a bomb inside the plane. the disaster on saturday killed all 224 people on board. >> the airbus went down over egypt sinai papaenisula. allen pizzey is in cairo with the investigation. >> reporter: the ors of thewners of the airbus claim the pilots did not report any problems during the flight and the only possible explanation was physical and mechanical actions.
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the first bodies have arrived some st. petersburg from where the victims' holiday trip gann. they will provide dna and other means of identification at a crisis center is that that is a memorial site for victim at least two dozen were children. finding all bodies and what happened is a painstaking task. the debris is scattered over an area covering eight square miles. a child's body was found some five miles of the main site of the wreckage. the site of the debris indicates a catastrophic event according to aviation experts. all signs prove that the structure of the plane disintegrated in the air at a high altitude russian transport agency head alexander noratko said. >> we have a track record of making claims that aren't right, so hard to say on the basis of their claim happened here. >> reporter: the final word is hopefully contained in the black box recorders which will be
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examined by experts from france russian and egypt and ireland where the plane was registered as well as representatives from the company airbus that manufactured it. the plane was given a clean bill of health in its annual review earlier this year and airline officials insisted there were no complaints about it before the flight. all of which is cold comfort to relatives and friends of victims showing selfies and holiday photos and e-mails on the way the plane took off on its way home. analysis of the black boxers recorders and other evidence could take a month by officials. this morning, republicans who hated the last presidential debate are ready to make sure it doesn't happen again. they have a plan to take more control over future debates and there has been a shake-up at the republican national committee which set up last thursday's cnbc debate. major garrett is in washington with more. >> reporter: the rnc pushed aside the lead debate negotiator
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and gave the job to their former top attorney after the cnbc debate the republican gop candidates wanted a pound of flesh. now they have it. >> reporter: they sent advisers to the debate strategy session and emerge united in driving a harder bargain with the tv broadcasters. barry bennett said the republican national committee will not call the shots. >> the rnc sanctioned eight more debates. what we are doing is asking those sanctioned broadcast partners to give us some information so we can talk with them and decide what the format is. >> reporter: the campaigns will push for guaranteed opening and closing statements and commitments to distribute questions more evenly. ben ginsburg a long time rnc legal adviser. >> now it's time to make a correct correction. >> 15% -- >> reporter: candidates like carson want constraints on debate moderators. >> we should have moderators who are interested in disseminating
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the information about the candidates as opposed to you know gotcha! you did this and you defend yourself on that. >> reporter: as for defending, jeb bush after three mediocre debates has had to do plenty of it. >> i'm a grinder. i mean when i see that i'm not doing something well then i reset and i get better. >> reporter: bush tried unsuccessfully to get the better of ally turned rival marco rubio by attacking dozens of senate votes while missed campaigning and a topic bush won't let go. >> i think he has given up and i think the wrong thing to do. >> i think jeb is convinced by people around him he needs to attack me to be more successful. >> reporter: back to the debates. the campaign said there isn't enough time to incorporate the desired changes into the november 10th debate on the fox business channel. there will be time for longer answers 90 seconds instead of 60. >> all right. thank you, major. john dickerson will drot
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this moderator the debate on cbs november 14th, 9:00 p.m. eastern, 8:00 p.m. central. the storm system is blamed for at least six deaths in texas. record breaking rain triggered flooding and caused widespread damage in austin. tornadoes struck several communities in the houston area on halloween. nearly a foot of rain since friday triggered dozens of water rescues there. more than 2 million gallons of raw sewage spilled into the city's bayous. rare earthquakes rattle phoenix area last night. three small quakes hit between 9:00 p.m. and midnight local time near black canyon city. it's about 45 miles north of phoenix. the largest was a magnitude 4.1 quake that didn't cause any damage but startled people across the area. this morning chipotle is keeping dozens of its restaurants in the pacific northwest closed after e. coli
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outbreak. 22 reported cases and 19 in washington state and 3 in oregon. eight people are hospitalized. chipotle closed 43 locations but all of the victims ate at the chain's restaurants. dr. tara narula is in studio 57. >> good morning. >> how serious is this? >> e. coli is actually a large diverse group of bacteria but six of the subtypes can cause day real estate diarrhea illness. the symptoms for people to remember would be vomiting, severely diarrhea or cramping. a low grade temperature less than 101. the incubation of the time between you might have eaten something and get six is three to four days although it can be one to ten days. >> how do you think you've got it? >> if you've eaten at chipotle between october 14th and october 23rd and have lookbloody diarrhea call your doctor.
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if you can't keep food down, call your doctor. a mild illness use gatorade, soups enand videoolunteer highy fattys. it is something called hemilytic urea syndrome and is a serious complication and can result in kidney failure. >> they are saying the issue appears to be limited to the six restaurants in those two states. they closed 43 restaurants in those two states. do you think this problem will grow? >> i think health officials said we will expect to see more cases in the coming weeks or days. certainly a lot of people who are diarrhea illnesses don't go to the doctor and stay at home sew we don't know if those are cases or if they go they don't get their stool tested which is the way to diagnose this and if they get a test it takes days for that lab result to get nfirmed. they hope the next several days
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to weeks. 23 e. coli grououtbreaks since 2007 investigated by the cdc. they by it's in the food supply chain because it's affected multiple restaurants so we expect to see some answer relatively soon. >> in the food handling than the food supply? >> exactly, although we can't say that for sure. it is a mild illness but can be severe and life-threatening for the young or elderly especially. >> thank you very much dr. tara narula. >> thank you. investigators are trying to learn what led to a deadly shooting rampage on colorado springs on saturday that killed three people. there a candlelight vigil last night for the residents left victims to honor their lives. the gunman died in a police shoot-out and witnesses say he seemed to pick his victi one was a man on a bicycle and two women died on a porch who were at a home for women recovering from addiction. a colorado woman in the hospital after a shark attack in florida.
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28-year-old jill kruse suffered a leg injury while swimming on cocoa beach on saturday. the mother punched the shark in an effort to get away. kruse will need stitches on her hand. wreckage discovered near the missing cargo ship is el faro that disappeared october 1st during hurricane joaquin in the bermuda triangle. the wreckage is 15,000 feet under water. sonar indicates the ship is in one piece and still upright and could make it easier to recover the ship's data recorder. a record number of migrants arrived in europe by sea last month. fishermen continue to rescue migrants from unsafe vessels. 15,000 migrants came to europe by sea in october. the highest total in any months and the same number for all of last year. many are escaping the conflicts
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in syria and other nations. pope francis returns to north america early next year with a trip to mexico. the vatican says the pope's eight-day visit will take place in february. mexico is more than 80% catholic. francis highlighted the flight of immigrants in a trip in september. they want the pope to tour the broader region to the united states. former senator and actor fred thompson is being remembered this morning, as a larger than life figure. he died sunday from a recurrence of lymphoma. he was 73. thompson was the son salesman. he built a career that spanned politics and hollywood. thompson appeared in at least 20 movies and on television's "law & order." state workers' compensation systems are based on decades of experience and careful deliberation. >> reporter: fred thompson spent much of his time in commanding roles in both washington. >> you call me harry one more time and you'll be busting counterfeiters in alaska!
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>> reporter: born in alabama he assistant u.s. attorney in tennessee and gained national attention in the 1970s as chief republican counsel the watergate committee. >> are you aware in the white >> yes, sir. ter: hpled government officials in movies and authority figures. >> senior captains d something this dangerous having thought the matte thro he was elected to the senate and your trial judge. >>n 2012 he became a district attorney but this time televisix]on's & or the." you know one day this chair is going to be empty. >> i'm not politician, arthur. >> yeah. everybody says that. >> reporter: thompson took a break from acting in a short-lived run for the 2008 republican presidential nomination. i spoke with him on my pbs program. why put yourself through this? >> i think it's time i stepped up again at a time when i can do it freely and openly and be myself and do things my way,
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which i've been criticized for and basically say this. this is the guy i am i've always been, i've been on the on public stage since i was 30 years of age. and what you see is what you get. >> that's what his family said about him. i never met him. >> in front of the camera and behind the camera and in politics and on tv. >> i covered him in politics but knew him most recently as a dad and whether at swim meets or whatever, a great man and great statesman. >> he made a red pickup truck famous when he ran for senate in tennessee. >> he had a very likeable day. >> our condolences to his family. an uber driver is pummeled by a passenger. ahead, disturbing video of the violent attack launched from the back seat. how the driver says using a app to hail
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announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by liberty mutual. see car insurance in a whole new light. families on the front lines of the country's biggest drug
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epidemic. >> i was yelling for my youngest daughter to come for dinner and she didn't and i walked into her bedroom and her boyfriend was shooting her up. >> ahead more on the "60 minutes" investigation into the surge of heroin use in suburbs in small towns. the news is back this morning right here on "cbs this morning." the future belongs to the fast. and to help you accelerate we've created a new company... one totally focused on what's next for your business. the true partnership where people,technology and ideas push everyone forward. accelerating innovation. accelerating transformation. accelerating next. hewlett packard enterprise.
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. ahead, one of the craziest plays ever and why the referees are being punished for allowing this game winning touchdown. >> tomorrow 50 most pivotal plays with hall of famer jerry rice who is here in studio 57. your local news is coming up next. ♪
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a halloween meteor streaked through the sky over europe and enhere it is over poland. the burning pieces from the debris could be seen in sweden and germany. ♪ >> interesting things when you look up in the sky. welcome back to "cbs this morning."
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coming up in this half hour "60 minutes" reveals a growing heroin epidemic all across the country. this morning, we will continue that conversation with ohio attorney general mike dewine who is here in the green room with his little granddaughter who is joining us today. 23 people a week are dying in his state. dash cam video captures an attack on an uber driver. how he says it's too dangerous to pick up passengers. "the new york times" reports on a stunning election victory for turkey's ruling party. he regained major parliament five months after losing it in a general election. the win will boost his grips on power. the president faced criticism for dividing the country by cracking down on opponents. he was also blamed for renewed violence stemming from the country's against kurdish militants. the seattle times reports on china today unveiling a passenger plane to compete with
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models from boeing and airbus. the c 191 rolled off the assembly line in shanghai. they have received orders from 21 customers for 517 aircraft. the "atlanta journal-constitution" reports on the supreme court today taking up racial discrimination in jury selection. the court revisits a ruling in the case of timothy tyrone foster who is african-american. he was sentenced to death for murdering a woman in 1986. at issue whether he was denied equal protection under the law when prosecutors struck all african-americans from his jury. you got to read this story because it's really eye-opening. yeah. "wall street journal" reports on potential strains with the affordable care act open enrollment. they need more people to sign up but premiums are likely to increase. some plans could jump 7.5% on the federal marketplace. last year insurers lost 2.5
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billion dollars or about 163 dollars per enrollee. "usa today" reports a wet spring caused a huge crack in a central wyoming hillside. the massive tear in the landscape stretches for hundreds of yards and is at least 100 feet deep in some areas. that's big. experts say the rainy spring and gravity caused the land to give way. they say events like this happen often in wyoming but they are not normally this large. a closer look this morning at a "60 minutes" investigation. heroin is being called america's biggest drug epidemic. heroin use in the past decade jumped more than 60%. users are men and women across all incomes. heroin-related overdoses nearly quadrupled. correspondent bill whitaker went to the heartland and met ohio families seeing the impact. >> reporter: how did you respond when your daughters told you they were using heroin? >> well, they first told me they were using the pills. and how i found out they were
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using heroin was i came home from work one day and made dinner and i was yelling for my youngest daughter to come for dinner and she didn't. i walked into her bedroom and her boyfriend was shooting her up. >> reporter: you saw this? >> >> i saw it. >> reporter: what do you do? >> dropped a plate of food. i dropped it. and i was hysterical. >> reporter: tracy's daughter jenna is 25 now. she knows she's lucky to be alive. >> in my addiction, i had been to rehab 17 times. and i had been to jail seven or eight times. every time i went to jail i got out, went to rehab, came home and relapsed and did all over again. >> reporter: you overdosed as well? >> uh-huh. >> reporter: how many times? >> i only overdosed once. and i woke up in an ambulance. >> mike dewine is ohio's attorney general and he showed bill whitaker how heroin is gripping his states from towns
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to wealthy suburbs. you called this an he epidemic. >> the worst i've seen. i've been involved in law enforcement since 1970s. it's in every part of ohio and so prerervasive. we used to think of drug epidemic on cities and the drug is going to the suburbs and also they are in the rural areas. >> what is the lure? i mean, in other words why so many are they doing this? heroin is a scary drug. >> it's a scary drug. i don't really know. what i can tell you is when i was a county prosecuting attorney in the 1970s, heroin was something that most people who were doing drugs wouldn't touch. i would talk to them and, you know relatively small county you got to know people and you got to know the drug dealers because we would arrest them and you talk to them. say, hey what do you do? they list a whole bunch of crazy stuff they were doing. i'd say, what about heroin?
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hey, i'm not crazy, dewine.ealers say i won't touch that. >> it do that and wouldn't put that needle in my arm. say you cannot arrest your way out of this problem. what do you mean and what should you do? >> the drug cartels are doing a great job in marketing this.e in law otally agree with them we can't arrest our way out of the problem. we want to do what we do in law enforcement. in ohio we think2 we do a pretty to help local law enforcement. really we need to focus a lot more on prevention and treatment. >> jenna morrison who we just saw got addicted to heroin and said her addiction started with pain pills legally described by a doctor. how many cases are people hooked on heroin first described opiates? >> i would three-fourths. we have made a major effort in
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ohio. governor kasich and i when we took office we made a major effort to deal with that part of the opiate problems. we have taken the licenses of 50 doctors from ohio and made some real progress in that area. the goal is to slow that down so they don't end up with heroin -- by the way, either one, they can kill you. they do kill people. >> i thought jenna's mother is a nurse and says in bill whitaker's piece, we didn't pres thi m 20 years ago, that that has changed and we have to look at that. i thought that was a real warning sign for parents. >> i have seen it with my own family and grandkids where they go in for, you know, wisdom tooth or something and a whole bunch of pain meds are prescribed. the idea is not to take any. >> mike three-quarters of a billion pain pills were pretty bad -- prescribed in ohio alone. that is 65 pills for every woman, man and child. that seems like a huge problem.
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>> i think the one mom last night made a point very very good point. that the pendulum was too far the other way where, you know, we weren't really treating it as a society, treating people's pain. it flipped clear over here. we have to bring it back it to here. >> people say where was the outrage when it was a street drug and only limited to a poor community or minority community and now people outraged saying we have to do something about it. do you think that was true and what do you say about that? >> you're absolutely correct. in the '60s and '70s when i was a prosecutor we looked at society and said those -- you know, those are just those people over there. they didn't think they could be us. whatever "us" was. it was somebody else in another city. and it couldn't be -- now, you know, this epidemic cuts across every kind of line geographical but also by income. so anyone who is watching this or watched last night's "60 minutes" piece, which i thought was a great piece, is going to do a lot of good.
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anybody watching that, you know it could be your child, it could your grandkid, it could be in your community. if you don't think you have a heroin problem, you're probably f an overdose every week in ohio. >> that is probably a low figure. than that actually. >> thank you. >> and all families that are shattered on top of that. >> thank you. >> very important information this morning. thank you. a ride in an uber car takes a very dangerous turn. the dashboard camera shows a very violent assault on a driver. ahead, the new safety concerns. if you're heading off to work and out the door we ask you to set your dvr so you can watch "cbs this morning" any time you'd like. we will be here until 9:00 and allison janney will be in studio 57. you'll want to see that. we will be right back.
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♪ ♪ ♪song: "that's life"♪ ♪song: "that's life"♪ ♪song: "that's life"♪ ♪song: "that's life"♪
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♪ this morning a vicious attack on a southern california uber driver is raising new questions about safety. the driver picked up the passenger friday at newport beach for a trip that ended in costa mesa. the dashboard camera captured this moment that the ride turns violent. mireya villarreal is in los angeles with the driver who says he has been a target before.
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good morning. >> reporter: good morning. you know, we have heard a lot from uber drivers and this one in particular edward cabban. he picked up that passenger around 8:00 p.m. on friday night. he says the passenger was intoxicated. he wouldn't wear his seat belt. and he also couldn't give him clear directions and that is when the ride got rough. >> you got to give me directions, dude. >> why do i have to giveou y directions? >> because my -- >> address -- >> no, you didn't. you refused to. >> reporter: the uber passenger becomes belligerent. then the video seems to show him falling over in the back seat. >> you're too drunk to give me directions. i'm kicking you out. >> give me the directions. >> no, that's it. >> the next thing i know i just got fist flying at my face and, you know, i just -- i reached for the pepper spray. >> reporter: the man swears and pummeled cabban and yanking his hair. a law enforcement official told our los angeles station kcbs that the passenger 32-year-old
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benjamin golden is a senior marketing manager for taco bell. >> the only way that i felt that i was going to get him to stop beating me was to enka pass tate him and yahoo! some sort of self-defense. i don't believe he would have stopped. >> reporter: cabban has a camera in his car because he has faced unruly passengers before and uses the footage as evidence. >> safety concern is a big concern in the driver community. i wanted to show other drivers what happens. >> reporter: unlike some taxis, there is no participation between the driver and the passenger. when riders sign up for the service, they agree to a code of conduct. there is also a rating system for riders but that is not enough to make some drivers feel safe. cabban says he is done with uber for now. >> no. i don't feel safe driving for uber any more. >> reporter: in a statement to cbs news uber says we have been in contact with mr. cabban and are thankful he is doing okay. the rider involved in this
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incident has been permanently banned from the platform. benjamin golde is out of jail and he is now facing charges of assault on a cab driver as well as well as public intoxication. >> wow. thank you. think about the incidents where they don't have a camera. >> glad he had the camera and the pepper spray. interesting to see what his job has to say about him, mr. golden. >> yeah. ahead, why the referees are in trouble for not blowi whistle on miami's winning touchdown. >> indeed. >> yeah.
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announcer:s thiioport "n ofcbs this morning" sponsored by nationwide. ♪ nationwide is on your side ♪ scanner: rescan item. rescan, rescan. rescan item. vo: it happens so often you almost get used to it. phone voice: main menu representative. representative. representative. vo: which is why being put first... relax, we got this. vo: ...takes some getting used to. join the nation. ♪ nationwide is on your side ♪ representative.
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♪ a college football officiating crew is benched for the next two weekends. the atlantic coast conference says the refs repeatedly blew
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the call on a crazy play that ended saturday's miami -- duke game. >> lateral. time expired on the game. this either goes or doesn't. ball is still alive. they got blockers. >> miami lateraled the ball eight times before running 91 yards to end the game. the blue devils cried foul. >> the ruling on the field is a touchdown. the play is under review. >> after checking the replay for nine minutes, the official ruled a miami's player knee was not down before he lateraled the ball. the hurricanes won 30-27, but on sunday, the acc called the decision incorrect and suspended the crew and two replay officials for two games. >> are you crying foul? >> yes. >> yeah. >> i don't understand why they say it's incorrect but yet they still get the win. i don't get it. >> there is something about -- >> i don't get it.
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all right. peggy noonan wrote some of the most stirring words that president reagan ever said. >> i want to say something to the schoolchildren of america who are watching the live coverage of the shuttle. i know it's hard to understand but sometimes painful things like this happen. it all part of the process of exploration and sdloverdiscovery. >> peggy noony has a lot to say for herself these days. she's in studio 57 with a look at the presidential campaign. we will be right back. ♪ the house is telling you to close your eyes ♪ don't know "aarp" aarp and aarp foundation are taking on hunger with 31 million meals donated drive to end hunger teams with local agencies to reach the hungriest among us if you don't think ending hunger when you think aarp then you don't know "aarp" find more surprising possibilities and get to know us at aarp.org/possibilities
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♪ g." there is more real news ahead, including new brain research on brain myths and why cross word puzzles don't help your memory and why alcohol is not that bad. first, here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. >> world champions for the first time since 1985. >> let's go royals! >> the owner of the airbus claim today the only possible explanation was, quote, physical or mechanical action. campaigns wanted a pound o f flesh and now they have it. that and leverage to change future debates. deadly gulf coast storm is soaking the southeast. parts of alabama, georgia, south carolina and the florida panhandle. threatened by floods. > >>yo do hiu tnk this issue will
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grow? >> health officials said we will see more cases the coming weeks or days. >> benjamin golden is out of jail and facing assault on a cab driver as well as public intoxication. the next thing i know i just got, you know, fists flying at my face and, you know, i just -- i reached for the pupper spray. i think it was a great football game in the first half. looked like notre dame was just maybe going to -- [ screaming ] >> oh, god! ♪ i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. this morning, investigators are trying to figure out what brought down a russian jetliner over egypt. the disaster saturday killed 224 people. u.s. intelligence sources tell cbs news a missile or rocket-propelled grenade is likely not the cause. >> crews are combing the sinai peninsula crash site for crews and looking for more victims. some airlines are now rerouting the planes to avoid that area.
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allen pizzey is in cairo following this investigation. >> reporter: good morning. the owners of the airbus claim today that the pilots did not report any problems during the flight and said that the only possible explanation were quote, physical or mechanical actions. isis is claiming it had a hand in bringing down the plane and not saying they shot it down and experts say that is not possible because they don't have the equipment. what is clear the plane disintegrated at a high at tuledltitude and said by russian officials saying the size of the debris field said ieds aidfield breakup and it covers eight square miles and discovering all of that d is going take more than a month according to egyptian officia analyzing the black boxes could take longer. >> cairo cairo. republican candidates are ready to take more control over on their debates. almostdates in a strat and arranged because of frustration with last week's cnbc debate.
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the campaigns now want to deal directly with broadcasters over debate formats and rules. they want each candidate to get a minimum 30-second opening and closing statement and each candidate would candidate would get actual number of questions. the format may have to wait until after the next republican debate that is held eight days from now. bernie sanders released his physician television first television ad. it's supposed to run in iowa and new hampshire. >> people are sick and tired of ta eshmblisent politics and they want real change. >> sanders is leading the democratic polls in new hampshire but he is trailing front-runner hillary clinton in iowa. cbs news contributor and wall street journal columnist peggy noonan is with us today. the best selling author is one of the most well-known author in politics.
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she became a speech writer for president ronald reagan and she helped him find the words on the day the special shuttle oded. >> the space shuttle "challenger" honored us and we will never forget them nor the last time we saw them this morning as they prepared for their journey and waved good-bye. and slipped the bond of earth to touch the face of god. >> noonan's ninth book oil the time of our lives" is a collection of her essay columns and speeches. welcome back to the table, peggy noonan. >> yea! >> that speech in particular you write you got it from a poem you had memory rise rised in your junior high school and the president at first didn't think it would work. >> i don't know if he knew the poem. hi a hunch he did. he had been a famous poem in the 1940s and '50s. i put it at the end of the speech. the president went over it and
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makes his et watched as you did as little children, i knew if i hear those words, it will be because ronald reagan cared about that speech -- cared about that poem. it turns out he called me next day and his first words were how did you know i knew that poem? i said, mr. president, i wasn't sure that you did, but i just had a hunch. it turned out he really did. >> did he think it won'tuldn't work for some reason? >> i think the whole speech he had been a little disappointed in i think because everyone was so upset that day, charlie. everybody was to rattled. there was nothing you could do to make it better and he felt that as he was giving the speech. but afterwards he changed his mind a little bit. i picked up exactly what he felt. i went home sad that day. i think a bunch of us did. obviously, we did. but i tell that story in a lecture that i gave to a bunch of college kids a few years ago who were all going into government. i said let me tell you about a
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moment in government where you just show up it's a regular day, nothing is happening, and then big things happen. >> you say that all presidential speech writers should be in their 20s and 30s. that surprised me. >> oh, you should be young. your legs should still work. you should still be able to run down the hall and say, but, mr. president, do you want me to kill this graph? and you should be young enough that, you know, the stuff of politics hasn't dampened your love and your enthusiasm. all speech writers should be just a little dreamy, you no he? know? >> and not cynical. >> i know we talked about this book "labor of love" going back to everything. i like the people i miss section. >> oh, thank you, thank you. >> yeah. starting with tim russert to jacqueline kennedy onassis. >> i love these people.
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when you do what you do for a them and know cthem. when they are both sink beneath the waves. i always want to say, don't let it sink. that was a great vote. it cut against the sky in a beautiful way. i want to describe it and talk about how fast it went and what its destination was. it's important to me. thank you for picking up on that. can i note guys? we are all writers. i learned to write about 200 feet from here in studio 5 and in the cbs news radio room and tv room which was the same in those days. guy, i came here in the '70s, and the guys who i was writing for were old folks of god, 50 and 60 and sometimes almost 70. they were the murrow boys and they had invented doing what we do, writing for the air. i had been a kid who had always written for the eye. i had written for a newspaper.
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they taught me how to do what i do. i had no idea how lucky i was and it happened all just down the hall from me. >> before we go you're also a columnist and you write about politics. >> yeah. >> so where is this republican race? we looked at jeb bush attacking marco rubio in the last debate and we see lots of columns talking about what happened to jeb and the rise of marco. >> yeah. yeah. one of the things i'm hoping right now, by the way, is that each of these candidates pacs don't decide. pacs exist in part dirty and negative and attack. i hope they don't start doing that. they all did it in 2012. everybody let it go. this is a year the republican base is not going to let these guys, i think, tear each other apart without paying a price. look. the good part of what is happening on the republican side is it's alive. it's vibrant. it's a fight. it's a scrum. you got the most unusual people in america involved in this
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thing. outsiders and insiders, old, young. >> your point in your book you say you don't like to offend but sometimes you write tough criticisms about people. this past column that you wrote, you basically declared jeb bush's campaign dead. i don't mean to be rude. you said i don't mean to be rude but -- >> you said he has not successed this year and no particular reason to believe he will. >> how could i do that? i got to tell you. i take it very much as parts of my job. you'll see it in this thing. to just tell you honestly what i think i'm saying and you're going to ruffle feathers when you do that and you're going to be sometimes a little tough, sometimes rude even. i always hope i promise you, at the end of the day that i'm wrong. i hope they turn it around. do you know what i mean? i criticized the president. i hope two weeks later he does something that makes me go yea, that is fabulous. >> jeb bush is certainly hoping
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you're wrong today. we will see. >> we will see. we have given him a little test. i hope he meets it. >> all right. thank you, peggy. >> thank you guys so much. it was great to start this year with you. >> yeah. thanks. the time of our lives. it goes on sale tomorrow. does mozart make your kids smarter and is the
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allison janney is one of the most recognized actors in television with seven prime time emmys. wow to her name. she will join us with what to expect on the new hit cbs show called "mom." and how she has fun when she is not at work. you're watching "cbs this morning." we will be right back. ♪
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insurance. emily wants to be an artist. erin thinks she'll be a firefighter. and maybe sarah will be a veterinarian. but sometimes it seems they're being trained to be professional test takers.
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i grew up going to public schoheols re and now my kids do but today more time is being spent on tests and not enough on the science and math needed for today's economy. i'm jeremy mcpike. it's time to fix standardized testing. it's not working for parents for teachers or for our kids. ♪ music ♪ my k-cup® filter is back. now you can make any coffee from anywhere. your favorites. your way. keurig hot. ♪ morning rounds mental myth busting you may know the claims that doing cross word puzzles improves memory or playing music for your baby will make them a genius. this month's issue of "popular
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science." common misconception of how our brain works. how much of our brain do we actually use? >> is there a common misconception we are only use 10% of our brain. it's not tr you only use 10% of your brain you basically brain dead. so thanks to modern brain scan and technology we know actually that we are using all of our brain at all different moments and different moments are activated depending on the activity. >> the interesting thing the brain is changing every day. activity changes the brain. >> absolutely. and what we have found in recent yearss that the -- of the brain is pretty high. you can develop the brain long into adulthood when is a new idea in the scientific community. >> what about alcohol and killing brain cells? >> this was another shocker in our office. basically, there is a lot of research that indicates that it
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did not kill brain cells but compares the way the cells communicate with each other. moderate alcohol use you may compare things like decision making and speech but you're not actually killing the neurons in your brain. scientists know this because they have studied the brain of alcoholics and nonalcoholics and found the number of brain cells to be the exact same. >> how about the mozart effect? for years, we have heard if you play mozart if you're pregnant and play it to your baby when your baby gets here you will have a smarter baby. >> unfortunately, nothing is ever that easy right? with the mozart effect, you know, this was a funny one. we traced this back to 1993 when a team of researchers at uc irvin studied 36 college students and that is a small number of college students, mind you. these students performed better on i.q. tests after listening to mozart mozart. over time it was twisted and
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miscontrued by eager parents who interpreted it as listening to mozart makes you smarter. when, in fact, it's not that easy. it's not that easy. >> what about being left brain or right brain? some of us more creative than others? >> like the left brain is your logical side, right? the right brain is your more creative side? >> right. that's something that you hear in these cultural idioms and things that have been sed. two hemispheres of the brain. no one has a dominant side of the brain. >> i know a neurosurgeon. >> unfortunately, no. i'm lucky enough to talk to them. so that is the fun part of my job. >> any gender differences in brains? >> there aren't. this is an important one for us at "popular science." both male and female brains have the same cognitive potential and
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although there are small anatomical differences, for the most part, the perceived differences that you see between males and females and science and math are because of cultural -- >> other than exercise and all of the things that make our body more health care what else can we do to enhance our brain? >> well, there is three really easy things that you can do. there is no magic pill you can take obviously. you can practice healthy routines day in and day out. eat your greens and be fueling your brain. exercise. your brain is your body mass and eat lots of greens. >> cross word puzzles? >> that will not make you smarter but eating healthy and exercising will and socializing, talking to interesting people. >> thank you. >> socializing makes you smarter? >> yeah. >> how about sex? >> sex, i mean, it might increase blood flow but i don't think it's going to make you any
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smarter. >> what about black leather? >> michael is like this. thank you, michael. how far would you go for a milk shake? a tennis star went the extra 26.2 miles and that is coming up next on "cbs this morning." >> that is awesome! announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by pro namel toothpaste. protect your e namenamel your enamel is wearing away, and that sounded really scary to me enamel enamel can you paint it back on and he explained that it was not something that grows back, it's kind of a one-time shot and you have to care for it. he told me to use pronamel. it's gonna help protect the enamel in your teeth. it allows me to continue to drink my coffee and to eat healthier and it was a real easy switch to make. you get usedgx to sweaty odo rs inr you think it smells fine but your passengers smell this... for up to 30 days with the febreze car vent clip break out the febreze,
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narrator: for state senate, who shares our values? jeremy mcpike - supports school funding. thinks women should make their own health care decisions. and favors background checks on all gun sales. hal parrish? as mayor, he slashed education. fought to block women's health clinics. parrish gets an "a" from the gun lobby - they oppose background checks to keep guns out of the hands of dangerous people. virginia extreme or mainstream? vote mcpike for virginia. feinblatt: everytown for gun safety action fund
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sponsored this ad. i'm jill mccabe, candidate for state senate and i sponsored this ad. all the mouthwash in the world won't help dick black. because what comes out of his mouth is just offensive. black said gays and lesbians lead "lifestyles that are harmful to the culture of this state." he dismissed rape in the military, calling it "as predictable as human nature." black opposes the use of birth control and voted to force women seeking abortions to have intrusive transvaginal ultrasounds. dick black. so extreme, it's dangerous. ♪ this morning the winners of
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the 2015 new york city marathon are savoring their milestone! stanley biwott captured mirs his first victor and mary keitany won the women's division. the wheelchair division macfadden shattered the record by more than seven minutes. grand marshal spike lee joined more than 50,000 athletes stars like alicia keys who also hit the streets. james blake was roughed up by a new york city cop in september after being wrongly identified fell a fellow tennis star brought him
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♪ 1,000th show a is of this this morning.
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>> "cbs this morning." >> "cbs this morning." people have said like wow. it's a surprise success. is that a compliment or an insult? it's like saying well, you really good great. >> it's a recognition that cbs had tried many many times, including walter cronkite. >> he did a morning show? >> he did. mike wallace did a morning show so cbs has a long tradition of doing morning shous and lots of people said, you know are they ever going to get it right? and we got it right. >> i thought it was so nice when the audience applauded at that point. that was interesting. even in your fake chin they put the dimple. >> i got there like at 3:30. it was like two hours of makeup. they put everything on you and then they paint your face and takes an hour and a half to take it off! >> geez! >> i know. >> enjoying to see you talking about that green face about president putin and president assad and still sounding like
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charlie rose but rooglooking like that. >> they put big shoes on you? >> not high heels but platform shoes. lady gaga shoes, they say. i love stephen. he is so much fun to work with. >> he really is. >> we have a good time. >> are you keeping those shoes? >> no! no. but they had pads and all of this other stuff. i was like 6'7". the first thing i said to stephen, you trump! >> it was really great. welcome back to "cbs this morning." you can get it online if you missed seeing charlie rose as franken stein. actress allison janney is ready to kick off season 123 of the cbs hit comedy"mom." there she is! >> doing a crossword puzzle. >> what is on the menu for the military. we will look at the new generation of meals on the go.
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the one food troops beg for is ahead. "the new york times" reports on the arrest of two members of a commissioned setup by pope francis to study church reforms. the suspects allegedly leaked confidential documents to the media. the arrest came days before the release of books that claimed to reveal new evidence of past scandals inside the vatican. "usa today" reports on why unemployed workers should hold out for the right job. a study today finds more employers called unemployed people who did not take a stop-gap job. a lower level job could be seen as a blemish because it is often outside the worker's field. employers admit those with a current low level job may get filtered out. >> that is interesting. "vanity fair" reports on a war of word. donald trump and comedian jonhn oliver and started here when john oliver told us why he
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doesn't want trump as a guest on his show. >> there is nothing. he said everything he wants to say. he has no internal monologue. it's not like you're going to find the secret nugget he is holding back. he is an open book and that open book doesn't have many interesting words on it. >> trump disputes that. he tweeted the following. oliver's show responded with this tweet. a couple of points. show. two, at no point did we invite donald trump to appear on it. >> classic. >> we said that when he said it then. donald trump is coming after you. ed, okay. >> there you go. listen to this story. the telegraph wondered whether our cats are secretly plotting to kill us. it has probably crossed the mind of a cat owner once or twice and experts say your cat wouldn't try to murder you unless it was bigger. a new study found domestic cats
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have traits of neurotic and impulsiveness and share that with africa lion which could kill you. >> cat lovers are saying show the more pleasant side of cats. for seven seasons on the "the west wing" allison janney played the white house press secretary and chief of staff to the president. she won four emmys for that role and she continues to rack up the awards. janney recently earned her seventh emmy for the second straight year. wow. allison janney was named outstanding supporting actress in a comedy for her role as a recovering addict bonnie on "mom." the third season the cbs show co-starring ferris premieres this thursday night. here is a preview first. >> whoa! all right. stretch it out! >> how was your run? >> oh, i think it might have been my personal best.
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two aisles and 46 minutes. >> you're really committed to this? good for you. >> yeah. you know how they talk about that runner's high? well, it's real. it's not great, but it's real. >> allison janney welcome back to studio 57. a good line. such great writing on this show. >> incredible writing. >> now here comes ellen burstyn as your mom. >> the season opener this thursday ellen, bonnie my character, finds out that her birth mother is trying to get in touch with her. she was given up for adoption at 3month-old and not sure she wants to meet her but she does because ellen burstyn's character lies and i go to meet her. it's a touching and moving episode but the writers managed to make it hilarious. jean squib also is mistakenly
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identified as my birth mother. >> i thought it was interesting. you said were afraid to meet ellen burstyn as you are most people. >> i'm always afraid somebody is going to disappoint me if i meet them or she may be difficult to work with. you want to hold people you admire in a special place and not burst that bubble. she did not disappoint. i only love her more. she is such a professional. as a matter of fact no one gets to change their lines on "mom" but she would ask chuck, can i change this line? he would let her do anything. i would go up to ellen and say, i think bonnie should say this. like, she had carte blanche, she is fantastic. >> that good. what about joe? he has been in "magic mike" shirtless. did i disappointhe disappoint? >> anna gets to do most of the acting with him. i did get to love on him and hug
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him. he comes in as a new member of aa and i come in and give him a big hug. he is an incredible specimen of a men and also a wonderful actor but it's unbelievable to touch that -- the situation there. >> touch the situation. >> pretty good. >> i agree! >> speaking of that. the show deals with alcohol and addiction and other big subjects. >> i'm proud we are putting that out there and desigma tiesing addiction and recovery as much as we can and showing it's not something that can be -- that is awful and unhappy. recovery can be freeing and fun and wonderful, and i think we are showing that that people can go through tough things in life with laughter. >> how was "masters of sex"? >> that charlie, is a different show. >> yes. >> which has its own challenges
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for me. >> like -- something? >> this season on "masters of sex" i did a lot of things i do on tv that i don't get to do in real life like have three-ways and those sorts of things. >> what is it like having a three-way? i've never done that? charlie, what is that like having a three-way? >> it's not as much fun in a whole crew of people i would imagine. but kate is a wonderful actor. my mother she called him and said, well, i'm so -- i applaud you as an actress. what challenges you have to overcome and you did it beautifully. i'm going to be honest. i don't like everything that you do. but i think this is amazing and i'm also not going to tell your father to watch this episode if you're all right with that. i was absolutely fine. >> but it's fun to play that. it's fun to step out of your box and do something else. >> absolutely. these two roles are completely different and i get to do it and most actors can do that but don't get the opportunity to.
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the fact i've gotten to play such different roles and at the same time, it's really i feel very lucky and proud that i've gotten to do that. >> allison, last time you were here, we are i talking about dating and being single. charlie asked you if you're available and you said you were. if i go online and see the different pictures i think you're no longer available. true? if it's true i'm very happy for you. >> i'm currently off the market. >> i like it. because he is younger. i like that too. >> he is a bit younger than i am. i'm not going to tell him how much younger! >> but you're having a great time? >> i am. >> both on and off camera? >> i am. i'm very happy in my life. >> we are cheering you on always. >> thank you very much. >> thank you allison janney. >> you can watch the third season premiere of "mom" this thursday night at 9:00/8:00 central on? >> cbs! >> there you go. our front line
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♪ this morning, the diet of america's armed forces is about to get an overhaul. they are eating meals ready to eat in combat and training for nearly 35 years. mark albert is merenear the pentagon
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with how they are getting a change in menu. >> these keep troops alive. but they have given life to not too kind nicknames. meals really edible and meals rejected by the enemy. now the military's top chefs hof the troops will soon be giving them a new nickname -- delicious. >> reporter: from tactical maneuver maneuvering. >> let them have it! >> reporter: to taking down targets. >> pick it up. pick it up. watch your step. all right, move it. >> reporter: and emergency rescues. >> lift lift. >> reporter: this company's army is burning 3 thousand to you to 4,000 calories a day during their training at ft. ap hill and army marches on its stomach. >> anyone up for banana nut ranger bar? >> reporter: but complaints about the food are a daily staple. >> it's terrible. all-around terrible. >> delicious.
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>> sounds good. >> it's not good. >> it's not? >> reporter: on a scale 1 to 10 how is it? >> 3 to 4. >> reporter: you know mres sometimes get a bad rap? >> no, i don't know that. >> reporter: rations are the defense department's department jeremy witson but he is not looking for a tasty recipe. >> it's about increasing performance. >> reporter: you're not just trying to keep them alive? >> no. we want to help them fight and win. >> reporter: in the army's test kitchen at native research center outside boston his team combines the military's top culinary and scientific minds with high-tech equipment to create the next generation of mres. stuffed with added nutrients. like this chocolate protein bar. >> fortified with vitamin d and calcium and help produce bone growth and eliminate fractures. this pound cake is fluffy like a came and designed to improve
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muscle performance and full of omega 3 fatty acids and studies say may deter the traumatic effects of brain injury. they they are changing the way the food is preserved. they have eliminated the need for sustained high heat, which kills vitamins and flavor. the test kitchen also makes sure that the 36 million mres the military guys per year to make it to the troops and surviving air-drops and rough handling. this new plastic developed by army engineers is not only lighter, which reduces a soldier's load but it helps the food last longer and taste better. but perhaps the biggest culinary coo is the dish troops have craved for decade. pizza! the problem, how to deep bread, cheese, sauce and meat together in one package for three years without.
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spoiling! >> we have a sailing around here that chemistry happens. you ca stop the chemical reactions that are taking place. >> reporter: but through science, they think they have perfected the pie. >> we are able to control the water and stop it from going from the sauce into the bread bynding the molecules. training. what would be the number one see in mre? >> probably have to say get some pizza in there. >> reporter: we brought thi down from the army test kitchen. >> let's give this a whirl. >> reporter: private first class bryce keller got his wish. >> that is actually really >> it actually tastes like a pizza, like a cold pizza that you have the night before. >> reporter: what would you say to the sentence who have worked for about 20 years in the test kitchen to come up with pizza? >> i would say thank you, because this is delicious. this is amazing. i like this a lot. >> reporter: the pizza delivery is scheduled for 2017. the military is also working on tailoring mres to different climates to troops in the arctic
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would eat something different than troops in the desert. we have some taste testing for you there at the studio. you've got the prototype omega 3 pound cake and the caffeine jerky and much sought-after pizza. >> you're so considerate, macmark. i like his reaction to the pizza to go from meals rarely edible to delicious. seems like they accomplished what they were trying to do. >> i think that is great. terrific. >> i'm going to go heat up my pizza, though. thank you, mark. i know that defeats the purpose but i got to nuke it for ten seconds. thank you, mark. prince harry celebrates a victory for wounded veterans. an america who comrades in arms. that is next on "cbs this morning." ♪
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narrator: for state senate, who shares our values? jeremy mcpike - supports school funding. thinks women should make their own health care decisions. and favors background checks on all gun sales. hal parrish? as mayor, he slashed education. fought to block women's health clinics. parrish gets an "a" from the gun lobby - they oppose background checks to keep guns out of the hands of dangerous people. virginia extreme or mainstream? vote mcpike for virginia. feinblatt: everytown for gun safety action fund sponsored this ad. we live in a pick and choose world. love or like? naughty or nice? calm or bright? but at bedtime... why settle for this? enter sleep number. don't miss the semi-annual sale going on now! sleepiq technology tells you how you slept and what adjustments you can make. she likes the bed soft. he's more hardcore. so your sleep goes from good, to
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♪ prince harry welcomed six wounded combat veterans to buckingham palace over the weekend after they walked across
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britt. he shared a very emotional hug with one of them. she is from florida. the 24-year-old is the only woman to make the 1,000-mile 72-day journey for the wounded warrior charity that the prince supports. they raise awareness for troops like herself. ennis was badly hurt in a helicopter crash in afghanistan and she has had near 40 operations. wow. prince harry gave ennis a dog tag in honor of fallen service members. you can tell we thought we'd be ready. but demand for our cocktail bitters was huge. i could feel our deadlines racing towards us. we didn't need a loan. we needed short-term funding. fast. our amex helped us fill the orders. just like that. you can't predict it but you can be ready. another step on the journey. will you be ready when growth presents itself.
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every coconut has a dream. to come out of its shell. to show all the world its true, inner beauty. and then, in an ironic twist get covered up by chocolate and almonds. almond joy mounds. what every coconut wants.
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we've got thanksgiving fashion tips. >> and it's monday, november
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2nd this is eat day washington. good morning my name is chris leerily. >> it was so hot this summer i wanted it to cool down. >> i don't want it cold either. >> how was your dee yeah dayless pures to? >> i don't know. is that today?
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>> my dad got treatment for his prostate cancer and he is fine. >> he learned tennis late 2348 life. it's all early detection. >> get that early. get it early. >> so you can enjoy life and the good things in life. like mexican food. and freshly made guacamole. >> you've been to these restaurants. >> i eat it for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. we are talking about dressing up for thanksgiving dinner. whether it's your family or meeting your boyfriend or girlfriend's family for the first time. we have ideas on how you can
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dress to impress. >> so dressing for thanksgiving i'm thinking sweatpants. i must be wrong. >> call me before í9you get dressed. >> i will do that. we have a fun show today. we have one of our own our family members mmm mmm --
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