tv CBS This Morning CBS October 22, 2016 8:00am-10:00am EDT
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is responsible for the content of this ad. captioning funded by cbs good morning. it is october 22nd, welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." a massive cyber attack takes down some of the biggest sites on the internet and details on the suspects. deadly floods in the northeast take out roads and trigger mudslides. >> donald trump takes his battleground fight for a real american battleground. the big event planned for his closing argument. images seared into history. the auction of some of the most memorable photos ever taken. we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener." your world in 90 seconds.
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internet.wh do di it? >> it doesn't look like a kid in a basement with a laptop. it looks more sophisticated than. >> foreign hackers claim responsibility for crippling the internet nationwide and around the world. >> paypal and anmazo and nixetfl a few of the names hit. >> it began with the east coast and spread to the western united states. we have a bunch of babies running our country, folks. we have a bunch of losers. they a relosers! they are babies! >> attack the city of kirkuk in northern iraq. >> firefights erupted as security forces try to gain control of buildings and streets. >> incredibly nothing to do happening ssacro massachusetts. worcester county hardest hit. >> the cars are trying to drive through a big body of water. >> a huge fire isur bning in a recycling center in los angeles.
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>> beautiful and amazing and rare images of the longest living marine mammal in the world. bowhead whales near the arctic circle where the water is nearly transparent. >> a protet st amithe ami heat game. this woman taking a knee while singing the national anthem. >> and all that matters. >> nyquist. score! and it-2's 4. >> obsn "c this morning: saturday." >> a lot of people have begun to wonder what trump will do in the likely scenario he will lose the election and the unlikely scenario that he admits it. now reports are that trump is thinking about starting a donald trump tv network. i'm excited! i can't wait until he introduces his other programming like the hour-long crime drama "bad
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? welcome to the weekend, everyone. i'm jeff glor along with jamie y y yuccas. 70 years in south dakota one man's vision has been slowly carved into the mountain and see how the mountain of work is in the hands of his children and grandchildren. >> later this morning, we will ha summer residence as it opens to the public. >> he was a founding member of the grateful dead but now bob weir is playing music that changed his life years before forming that band. he talks to anthony mason about the inspiration and you'll hear him perform in our "saturday session." first, the top story. investigators are trying to to determine who was responsible for a string of sophisticated cyber attacks that caused major outages for some of the largest websites in the u.s. >> the rolling attacks began
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again. the disruptions happened in the wake of recent breaches that targeted organizations and election agencies. marlie hall is here with more. >> reporter: good morning. overnight a foreign group called new world hackers claimed responsibility for the cyber attack but the american web company at the core of the attack hasn't been able to confirm that. meanwhile, cyberexperts winner hacks like this are becoming the new normal. the first wave began early friday, taking down websites including twitter, amazon and spotify, among others. around noon, a second one hit which also apparently affected the fbi. the cyberattacks continued throughout the day. >> at this point, i don't have any information to share about who may be responsible for that malicious activity. >> reporter: the attacks focused on a website called dyn inc. it has a switchboard for major website. dan ackerman who writes for cnet
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>> that is when a lot of computers around the world who have been previously hijacked send dummy data to a target and prevents it from showing the websites you want to see. >> reporter: still unclear who is responsible but late friday wikileaks who has been releasing hacked e-mails from democratic officials, tweeted to its supporters, stop taking down the u.s. interpret. you proved your point. cbs news homeland security townsend turned to russia as a possible instigator. >> a pushback pitch from the russians saying we should be careful engaging these cyber activity with them because they are very capable. >> the fbi and the department of homeland security told cbs news they are investigating all potential causes, but they have not gone as far as to say that this was a state-sponsored attack. >> fascinating. marlie hall, thank you very much.
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strategies. a cybersecurity firm and in boston for us this morning. james, good morning to you. >> good morning. thanks for having me. >> let's go ahead, talk about, first, how this happened. >> you know, look. denial of service attack is essentially the flooding of traffic. if you think about a traffic jam on, you know, i-93 here in boston, you're essentially flooding the highway, in this case, the internet, with the and so distributed denial of service attack which is essentially using the internet of things, other devices, such as dvrs, other things connected to the internet that might not have standard security will be brought together to essentially, again, flood the internet, so if you're a user and you're at home and logging on and trying to experience a website, you know, look something up, do some work, you essentially will get a blank screen and because the internet
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>> as you mjentioned, this is cameras and cable boxes, whatever else they are using. can you talk a little bit about new world hackers? who they are and what they are trying to do? >> sure. i mean, i think you need to think about this in the sense of, you know, following 9/11, the country took a lot of streps to secure our infrastructure. a lot of steps to secure bridges and roadways essentially for the reasons of having that backup services not being able to get to people that might be of need. you have to think about this hacking group, if, in fact, it is them in the same limelight in the fact they are looking to jam up our services and how we run our lives every day. so, you know, certainly there's some success there. there was some, you know, disruption in our daily lives and that is essentially what they are trying to do. >> but, james, in part, they say they are doing this because they are pointing out flaws. they say they are trying to
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and, you know, certainly, you know, the internet is essentially the name came from connected networks and so the internet is a broad, fast, collection of pieces and parts. so certainly if you look at the recent hackings that occurred in the federal government of the office of personnel management, at target, at home depot, you know, there were flaws in those security and the for the most part we didn't have our defenses up. it wasn't anything certainly overly done in a certain way. they could be just pointing out that there are some flaws and we have to get our defenses up. it is october and that is cybersecurity month and everybody should understand the internet is a place that need to be secured and looked at as an area we are vulnerable. >> is there anything that consumers can do? you're talking about netflix, spotify, services that people use every day. >> absolutely.
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identification. i'd say once a month so they are up-to-speed in terms of what their passwords are. always monitoring their services and looking at their credit reports. there is two types of attacks. certainly there is the hacks like there was at home depot and target where, you know, they are getting people's social security numbers and credit cards and one yesterday which is slowing down the internet and something we have become very independent on. both things could have a major impact and consumers should be vigilant in terms of their information online and changing that type of information. >> james norton, thank you. >> thank you for having me. donald trump will try to take a page from abraham lincoln today when he makes a gettysburg address in pennsylvania. trump's campaign described his speech as trump's closing arguments which is his plan to restore the economy and outline of priorities for first 100 days in office. >> that speech is supposed to be
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the trail have anything but for donald trump. craig boswell has more. >> reporter: donald trump came under fire again this week for reusing to commit himself to respecting the results of november's election. yesterday, in pennsylvania, trump picked up that drum beat once again complaining about an election that is stacked against him. >> we are living in a rigged system. remember, folks, it's a rigged system. just remember it. we are in a rigged system. and a big part of theig the media. big part. >> reporter: donald trump continued to insist friday that the election and journalists covering are in a league against him. >> the media, the special interests, wall street, the career politicians, the system is rigged and i've been saying it for a long time. >> reporter: an argued this election is a struggle for survival. >> either we win this election or we lose the country.
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chance to win. >> reporter: in north carolina, trump directed his fire at two of hillary clinton's most effective surrogates, the president and the first lady. >> they are losers. they are babies. we have a president. all he wants to do is campaign. his wife, all she wants to do is campaign. >> reporter: expressing frustration that michelle obama is now depicted as a big supporter of clinton, trump recalled a time when she was anything but. >> if you can't run your own the white house. >> where is that? i don't hear that. i don't hear that. she's the one that started that, i said, we can't say that. it's too vicious. >> reporter: later in pennsylvania, trump also amped up his attack on the man in the white house. >> the world hates our president. the world hates us. >> reporter: and with just over two weeks until election day, trump dismissed poor showing in recent polls as proof he is bringing new voters into the political process.
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thing. people that we have never seen before, great people that have never voted before because they have never felt like voting and they have never had the confidence in the people that are running. >> reporter: trump trails clinton in recent polls of both pennsylvania and north carolina. later today, he'll deliver his third speech in two days in pennsylvania where he is behind by nearly double digits and hasn't led a poll since early summer. >> craig boswell in washington for us, thanks. another key and where hillary clinton was on friday after a nine-day absence from the campaign trail. the push there comes with a new attack ad being rolled out and some important surrogates hitting the trump. nancy cordes is with the campaign. >> we know in our country the difference between leadership and dictatorship, right? >> reporter: in cleveland,
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democracy and releasing a new ad in ohio and six other states. >> he saved everyone in his unit. >> reporter: the ad features gold star father khan who bashed for days after khan spoke out after his stance on muslims. >> i want to ask mr. trump would my son have a place in your america. >> reporter: in wilkes pennsylvania -- >> i take it behind the gym. >> reporter: there was more blunt talk from oprah winfrey. >> people say i don't know if i like her. she not coming over to your house! you don't have to like her. >> reporter: that is not exactly the ringing endorsement candidates dream of, but it reflect how many clinton backers feel. oprah went on to describe the
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democracy and a demagogue. for "cbs this morning: saturday," i'm nancy cordes, in cleveland, ohio. for more on the twists and turns of campaign 2016, we are joined by "the washington post" political columnist philip bump. good morning. >> good morning. >> donald trump is not changing his strategy, is he, at this point? >> doesn't seem to be. . he is quadrupling down? let donald be donald? he has been pushing for sometime what we call a base play. he has a core basis support. he is trying to energize them and get them to turn out. the problem we see repeatedly in these polls, which, by the way, are very good at tracking what is going on, contrary to what we just saw him say, these polls suggest that he is about 40% and that he has not figured out how to get past that ceiling. >> you have to look at, though, after the third debate and also the al smith dinner that happened, there has been so much negative talk. when i'm talking to people on the road, they are saying i'm just staying home.
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>> i think it will, right? these are two historically unpopular candidates. i shouldn't say no one but most people who are voting for donald trump, for example, are doing so because they don't like hillary clinton. a lot of people who are voting for hillary clinton because they don't like donald trump. i think this is advantageous to some extent to the democrats because democrats generally turn out less any way so the democrats have built good machines for getting people to go to the polls. >> interesting. >> the democrats deal with the drips from the wikileaks. >> sure. >> and do those continue to out up until election day from what we have seen or your statute of limitations? >> it seems that way. i'm not sure if it's going to make any difference. what we are seeing nowadays minor revelations of different people who work on staff with the campaign. i'm not sure we see any bombshell and if weekyleaks had a bombshell they would release it. the time is sort of now.
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frightening at times and interesting to see. i want to talk about some of these states their, one would think, big-time red states that the clinton campaign, i think is going after and we have seen some of that in these e-mails as well and including arizona. >> exactly right. michelle obama, for example, is in arizona. arizona is a state that, you know, for the past 64 years only once has voted for a democrat. incidental that time was 1996 when they voted for bill clinton. what campaigns do is throw resourcein opponent have to defend there. this seems like legitimately because the demographics say a lot of hispanics there they might have a shot at winning it. >> because he is not defending there? >> well, in part, because he is doing so poorly nationally, right? he is losing by about six points nationally. that's a wide margin. if you're doing that badly nationally that tend to on suggest even in states that you should be able to win you're going to do worse than the people before you. >> early voting started there. how is turnout?
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are doing better as a percentage of the return ballots in arizona and north carolina than we saw four years ago. >> philip bump, thank you so much. >> thank you. tomorrow morning on "face the nation," john dickerson's guests include reince priebus chairman of the republican national committee. deadly storms overnight. one person killed after 7 inches of rain fell on central and western pennsylvania. friday's storm flooded several roads and triggered mudslides. officials are monitoring the water supply fearing the in from a ruptured pipe. eastern and central massachusetts is drying out this morning after a torrential rain storm there. hardest is worcester which got 5 inches of rain and dozens of motorists were stranded on flooded streets as you see there. they actually had to be rescued. there were no reported injuries. at least 85 people in atchison, kansas, are recovering
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plant lisaed a cloud. you can see firefighters neutralized it with foam. a courthouse and three schools were evacuated and the air was shrer cleared a few hours later. in baghdad, iraq's second largest city and isis stronghold in northern iraq. jeven finnan was the first offensive which began this week. yesterday, isis launched a counterattack on kirkuk, carry out deadly terror attacks. we were with this local s.w.a.t. team as they fought a gun battle
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the surprise attack started with multiple suicide bombings before the extremists holed up inside buildings, including this house under construction. >> we know there are between six to eight isis men over there inside that building. >> reporter: six to eight inside that building over there? >> yes. >> reporter: on the streets below, the body of dead isis extremists. security force said they were 50 behind the assault. the s.w.a.t. team began firing tear gas canisters throwing up a smoke screen before sending a team into the building. so they have been shooting at the building and also firing tear gas canisters and now the assault team is about to go in. but as they approached, they came under fire and one of them was hit. one of the s.w.a.t. team was injured. they had to pull back and now they are trying to pin the isis
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commander louie mohammed is from kirkuk and told us he'll fight isis until every last one of the extremists is dead. what's in their heads? revenge, he said, for the mosul offensive. the fighting continued in kirkuk overnight. this may have been retribution for the mosul offensive but it's also a foretaste of what that battle will look like. gun fighting in a densely packed iraq, thank you. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. the "miami herald" said the protest during the national anthem that started at nfl games have worked their way to the nba. singer denaja lawrence took to her knee as she sang the spar spanni -- star-spangled banner last night. the heat said it had no advance knowledge of lawrence's plans.
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tribune. the chief says the officers did not violate the department's force of use policy when a man was shot in the head during a confrontation last year. the officers were cleared of criminal or civil violations. "the new york times" reports the nfl is catching new heat over its approach to domestic violence. that follows the initial suspension of new york giants kicker josh game after brown said he had abused his wife. the game created a six-gameing years ago. brown is now suspended with pay indefinitely. a top aide to chris christie testified that christie knew in advance of a plan to cause a
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he was one of the most revered native american chiefs. coming up a monument to honor crazy horse is in its 70th year! will it be completed? find out the bold project that is planned after it's done. then one of the world's great photographers is auctioning off some of his most famous pictures. we will find out why. we will be right back. you're watching "cbs this
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is responsible for the content of this ad. ? top story this half hour. america truckers shortage. 48,000 drivers are needed and companies are aggressively recruiting retirees. in this country are now over 65. >> a five-month cbs news investigation examined how this increase in older big-rig drivers translates to potential danger on the highway. kris van cleave has more on that. >> they come here and we finally going to see me do something real positive in life. >> reporter: it was supposed to be a celebration for the hooks family, driving from oklahoma city to st. louis in the summer of 2009 to see ronnie become an
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but on i-44, near the state line, traffic slowed to a crawl. >> i was on the phone with him. when it happened on that day and the phone just went dead. >> reporter: the semi driven by 76-year-old donald creed did not. it rolled on top of three cars, killing ten, including hooks' parents and two brothers. just this summer, in newark, new jersey, a bus was t-boned by another new jersey transit bus driven by a two died. days later, a truck hauling stones driven by a 74-year-old slammed into traffic in a construction zone in binghamton, new york, ten were hurt. a cbs news analysis of crash data reveals 19% increase in accidents involving commercial truck and bus drivers in their 70s, 80s, and even 90s in just the last three years. from 2012 to 2015, there were
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involving older drivers in 12 states alone. this highway patrol investigated the collision that tore apart the hooks' family. do you think his age played into that at all? >> i do. >> reporter: he has noticed an increasing number of crashes involving older commercial drivers. >> the industry is looking for truckdrivers. there is a shortage in truckdrivers so they are not going to self-regulate. the only way that could be done is on on the federal level. >> reporter: rose mcmurray was a senior directo '90s when the agency recognizing reaction time and stamina become compromised with age considered skills tests for older drivers. >> it clearly can result in a lot of political backlash so state governments have grappled with and so take ha the federal government because the age discrimination laws really intervene. >> reporter: the initiative was shelled. trucking schools are now
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promising good benefits and money to supplement retirement. >> is there an age limit or anything on this? >> there is not. >> reporter: we hired a 70-year-old former texas state trooper and with a hidden camera rolling, sent him to road master, a school recruiting retirees. >> trucking is just -- it's a different kind of industry and environment. they like women, any age, men of any age. as long as you are able to get behind that wheel and drive that truck. we had two ladies, they were probably in their 80s. >> reporter: the company defended its policy. dusty kashard is a director of their pennsylvania school. he says fmcsa regularing the trucking business does not prohibit training older drivers and against federal law to discriminate against age. >> i follow the guidelines. no age on it. they passed a physical and
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drive. >> reporter: fmcsa deputy administrator daphne jefferson acknowledges the intrefs crease older drivers and her agency is studying the trend. >> we are not at the point to say one way or another if there needs to be a change in the driver rules for safe drivers over 65. >> reporter: but washington's deliberations come too late for the hooks family. >> we have all had to learn how to deal with it and deal with it with the reoccurring memories >> reporter: the driver of the truck that killed the hooks family pleaded guilty to several counts of misdemeanor negligent homicide. the airline industry is also facing a shortage of pilots but it has a mandatory retirement age of 65. an association representing independent truckdrivers say while there are more commercial drivers over 70, the greater majority of truck-related crashes are not caused by truckers but, instead, caused by other drivers.
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washington, thank you very much. donald trump continues to claim the presidential race is corrupt. coming up, we will go step-by-step with how difficult that would be, a rigged election up next, medical news in our morning round, including how much time should your kids spend watching tv and using social media. we will have the new guidelines. doctors jon lapook and tara narula the tasmanian devil may help fight the flu bug. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." it's about moving forward
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jon lapook and dr. tara narula. breast cancer. october is national best cancer awareness month and it remains, especially metastatic breast cancer meaning it has migrated to other parts of the body. the five-year relatively survival rate is 26%. much lower percentage than earlier stages of breast cancer when are highly treatable. include the brain, liver, lungs and bones. jon took a closer look at this. >> going to have you face with dad. >> reporter: when miriam sloan was diagnosed with stage four or metastatic breast cancer two years ago, it had spread to her bone march
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>> we are making good progress. again, if we can prevent them from spreading, wouldn't that be better? >> reporter: this doctor at new york presbyterian and cornell medicine. >> we understand how tumors grow. we understand how they spread. we have a lot of things to make people feel better at the end of the day, still breast cancer still killing them. >> how do you have hope with reit four breast cancer is not curable it is a highly treatable disease. this was before there and this is is their after. >> reporter: not enough treatments exist but dodd is working on a way to alter the environment in the area where the cancer cells may spread. she is testing a drug that reduces the body's level of copper an element the tumors need to flourish. basically, your therapy makes it inhospitable? it can't grow there. >> >> exactly right.
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different drug that inhibits tumor growth for certain types of metastatic breast cancer and right now no detectable level of cancer. >> i think things are starting to change but it's way early in the game. i want to live to see the word remission and cure apply to me right now. >> reporter: and right now? >> it doesn't. >> the bottom line women with metastatic breast cancer don't have enough treatment options and it's great that researchers like dr. options but we need a lot more research and a lot more funding. >> moving on to another topic. a lot of people talking about children and media. always a big one. communication technology constantly evolves and with it more ways to consume content p.m. this week, some of the statistics highlighted by the economy children eight and over
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mobile devices 3 out of 4 teenagers or 75% own smartphones. estimated 25% see themselves as constantly connected to the internet. so i have to ask what are the recommendations here? because we all have not only smartphones now but tablets, the tv is on. what do we do? >> this is a big problem and big topic in my house of discussion. the recommendations are if a child is less than 18 months old and they shouldn't be exposed to any sort of media, unlest' face timing or skyping or video chatting with relatives. older they can be introduced to media but as long as it's high quality media and we mean by that "sesame street" and pbs kids. they touch a great topics like obesity or prevention own common sense media is an organization that will review and rate things like apps and games for parent.
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should be consuming less than within ho one hour a day of media. >> we check in for our son who is 6 and our daughter is about 18 months so something we are talking about all of the time. what else are we doto do, jon? >> a lot of great recommendations. people should go to our website for the whole report. my mother used to call television the thief of time. i know she would be saying the same thing about all of these devices. a bunch of good suggestions. one is have media like dinner. you take the devices and put them in a bowl and you cannot have them at the table. avoid exposure to the screen, the blue light at bedtime. inhibits melatonin. they are saying an hour before, at least. maybe even more put it away. do more physical activity. don't be sitting in front of the television or with your screens eating. that is like mindless eating. the worst possible thing!
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safety. that is age appropriate but you have to talk to them about the dangers out there. finally something not in the report but that you and i talked about, walking down the street while texting. do not do that! high slap stick potential! it's the worst! >> i have two phones. i don't know what i can do about this. >> jamie is walking like this in the hallway. tasmanian devils super bug. looney toons character may come to mine but may play a role in the fight against drug resistants bacteria. a report found milk produced by tasmanian devils contains anti-microbial peptides. six were found to have bacteria killing qualities including the ability to kill the often
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mrsa. >> we know anti-microbials in breast milk. >> who knew we would find them in the tasmanian devil some of all places. >> different places, right? if we don't, we will have these super bugs and no way to treat it. >> we need as much help as we can get. >> tasmanian devil, it is. >> thank you both very much. up next here, donald trump election is rigged against him. is that even possible? we will examine the facts. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." i recommend nature made fish oil. because i trust their quality. they were the first to have a product verified by usp. an independent organization that sets strict quality and purity standards. nature made. the number one pharmacist recommended vitamin
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majority that you had it was bizarre and some have concerned concerned. how hard would it be to rig an election? we are going to ask wendy r. wiser from the nyu school of law. good morning. >> good morning. >> welcome. first of all, when we talk about voter fraud, different types. what are they? >> absolutely. voter fraud is any kind of deceptive attempt to with the election and could take many forms. it could be voter intimidation or ballot box stuffing or it could be what was just insinuated ineligible person trying to impersonate at the polls. >> how often does this actually happen? >> the kind of voter fraud of ineligible people showing up and voting in the name of another -- >> it's small, isn't it? >> it is very rare.
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looking at those casts from 2000 to 2014 out of 1 billion votes cast only 31 instances of that voter fraud. this is something that certainly unacceptable and something that should be punished, if it happens, is not something a real threat to our election. >> is there any confidence shaken this year at all by some because of outside influence in other areas? i mean, does hacking present any sort of a problem when it comes to counting votes? news and stories and election officials are worried about this is the shaking of voter confidence. experts do not think that there is any real credible threat to the integrity of our elections from hacking. while there were attempts to interfere with voter registration and to hack into and get information from voter registration databases, unlike voter registration laws, voting
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to the internet at any point so you can't worry about someone in a basement in moscow trying to access the voting machines. >> just hearing that can't that shake voter confidence and say i don't know if i want to participate? >> that is the concern out of this kind of activity, that voter confidence will depress participation. people should know that and know that the most patriotic thing that they can do is actually go up, show support for their democracy and go and vote on election candidate, whoever that is, does not actually legally have to concede in any way. >> absolutely not. in fact, at no point is there a required concession. this is an important ritual of our democracy of showing that we come together and believe in our democracy and accept the legitimacy of our results. and sometimes, the election results won't be fully known at the end of election day, but
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we accept the outcomes and we move forward with our new leaders. >> a few weeks to go until election day 2016. wendy wiser, thank you. >> one of the great sports photographers ever is putting some of the most valuable pictures in his collection up for auction. this time, not all of the photographs are his. you're watching "cbs this
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g. do not take invokana? if you have severe liver or kidney problems or are on dialysis. tell your doctor about any medical conditions and medications you take. using invokana? with a sulfonylurea or insulin may cause low blood sugar. it's time to turn things around. lower your blood sugar with invokana?. imagine loving your numbers. there's only one invokana?. ask your doctor about it by name. they are some of the most memorable images in sports history. the winning touchdown in the 1958 nfl championship game. s
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allow neil lifer. now most of his famous works are going up for auction but not all. he is auctioning off some of his personal collection of famed 20th century photographs as well and many signed by the original photographer, including steve mccurry's portrait of an afghan girl that once graced the cover of "national geographic." and this picture of a tiananmen protest standing against a column of tanks and this image flag at iwo jima. the auction is the first week of december. neil says he will keep about 60 to 70 pictures but he needed to downsize and wants others to enjoy the photos. >> the chicago cubs are one win away from their first pennant since 1945. we will look ahead to the series
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all-star. your local woman: barbara comstock is too right-wing to represent me. woman: or me. woman: barbara comstock would overturn roe vs. wade. barbara comstock: i think roe vs. wade should be overturned. woman: barbara comstock. man: too right-wing for northern virginia. narrator: house majority pac is responsible for the content of this ad. fios is not cable. we're wired differently. so we wired the wagner's house with 100 meg internet. which means in the time it takes mr. wagner to pour a 20 oz. cup of coffee, tommy can download 30 songs, that's the power of fiber optics. this is your last chance to get super fast 100meg internet, tv and phone for just $69.99 per month online. hurry, our best offer ever ends soon.
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packed with flavor, one hero was on a mission to save snack time. watch babybel in the great snack rescue. you want a piece of me? good, i'm delicious. creamy, delicious, 100% natural cheese. woman: barbara comstock is too right-wing. woman: barbara comstock is against marriage equality. man: she even voted to allow federal contractors to discriminate against gay employees. woman: barbara comstock. too right-wing for northern virginia. narrator: house majority pac
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? welcome back to "cbs this morning: saturday." i'm jeff glor. >> i'm jamie yuccas. this half hour, coming up, he is a towering figure in the history and a monument to map. we will take you to the crazy horse memorial and incredible story from dream to reality. a look at the papacy. under lock and key for centuries the opening of the pope's summer r residence. >> anthony mason will talk to bob weir about his life and bob will perform in our "saturday session." the fbi and department of
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complex cyberattacks targeting some of the popular websites in the u.s. >> the first series of hacks started friday morning. twitter and netflix and spokesive were knocked offline for some users. a foreign group called new world hackers claimed responsibility for the cyberattack about the american web company at the core of the attack has not been able to confirm that. >> 17 days to go now before the presidential election and the candidates are making their closing arguments in swing states. today in gettysburg, expected to outline what his priorities would be in his first 100 days in office, if elected. on friday, trump took a swipe at first lady michelle obama for criticisms she made about hillary clinton during a 2008 democratic primary. >> wasn't she the one that originally started the statement, if you can't take care of your home, right? you can't take care of the white house or the country. where is that?
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>> cliin cleveland on friday, clinton said trump is threatening democracy saying he may not concede the election if he lose. chicago is the place to be for baseball fans. if the cubs can beat the los angeles dodgers tonight they will win their first national league pennant since 1945. i feel like i can't say it because i might jinx tickets might go on sale this morning. >> you're a twins fan but you root for chicago? >> i am. my parents are from chicago. >> bill murray in the white house briefing room on friday. he met with president obama who did not approve of murray's attire. >> he was wearing a cubs jacket, which for white sox fans is a
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american humor on sunday. that is when a potential game seven would be played. for a preview of tonight's game and more, we are joined by mlb analyst and former major leaguer harold reynolds. >> pleasure. thank you for having me. >> the last time the cubs in this position game six was 2003. >> they blew it! >> she sounds like a real cubs fan. they are the most nervous fans >> there are dodgers fans out there as well. that was the bartram when ste interfered with the flyball. kyle hendrix may be the best pitcher in baseball this year, certainly one of them. but the dodgers have clayton kershaw. >> well, that is the thing.
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kenley jensen. i feel the cubs are on a good roll. they turned things around the last couple of days and playing pretty good ball. it could be interesting and chicago will be crazy like our person sitting over here like jamie. the cubs fans are nuts! >> you want to see them break the curse, don't you? >> well, you do but, you know, the dodgers haven't been there since '88. >> that is not that long >> the dodgers have an extraordinary legacy as well. these are great franchises. >> if the cubs win, they have to go on to play cleveland. cleveland did very well against the toronto blue jays. so what do we think would happen there? >> i think a great matchup. whoever cleveland plays against. they are a little bit different than everybody else in the fact andrews miller has been like the best player right now. the pitcher they have been using fourth inning and fifth inning and ninth inning. he is an amazing weapon so neither club has that weapon.
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done is athletically running bases and putting pressure on people and not seen that from the other clubs so they would be dynamic in that fashion. >> cleveland have had some big injuries at the end season season and persevered and have a chance to reset their proceedin rotation no matter who they play. >> they may get salazar back, one of the top pitchers hurt during the season. trevor bauer. he said i think i'll be fine. see how that goes. their pitching might be a little better than we anticipated. >> jamie was fixing some drones, thankful, uninjured before the show this morning. harold, thank you. enjoy the game tonight. should be a lot of fun.
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next visit the. up next visit the crazy hoarse monument and decades long construction. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." ? tomorrow's the day we'll play something besides video games. every day is a gift especially for people with heart failure. but today there's entresto?- a breakthrough medicine that can help make more tomorrows possible. tomorrow, i want to see teddy bait his first hook. in the largest heart
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memorial, mt. rushmore. crazy horse was among the leaders of the dakota su who attacked an army regiment in 1876 and two-day battle went down in history as custer's last stand. the sculpture may take more than a century to complete and started it in 1987. mark albert is here to show us why. >> reporter: soaring over the dense woods of the black hills s american legend and to a dream deferred. here crews are carving the history of their fearless warrior crazy horse. they were pushed out of these lands once but granite is much harder to banish. for nearly 70 years now workers have worked on this mountain. this lady's father was the first. what year did construction begin here? >> june 3rd, 1948.
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>> reporter: you're still going seven decades later. >> we are. >> reporter: why is it taking so long? >> it's a big mountain. >> reporter: the weight of forming into an icon is heavy, indeed. her father was still bending the mountain to his will at 69 at morley safer found when he visited in 1977. he started carving when 32. >> tell me, mister, how can i ask you to believe i can carve that mountain if i don't believe in myself first? of course, i'm egotistical. i believe i can do it. i know i can do it. all my life, i wanted to do something so much graeater thani could ever possibly be.
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to build a memorial to american indians. >> he said my fellow chiefs and i would like the white man to know the red man had -- >> reporter: but he volunteered to serve in world war ii and landed on omaha beach. it would steal him for the fights to come. after the allies won he turned down offers to build war memorials in europe and, instead, construct one to another leader in battle. his wife told safer it's all consuming. >> it has to come first or he would be another person selling insurance or cars or something like that. >> i said never forget. it comes first. you come second. >> reporter: and she agreed? she said, it's all right, my dear. uh-huh. now the children know that. they know that. >> reporter: what it like to be
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the mountain was your dad's first priority? >> coming third in my world was first in most other kids's lives. so the love that i got was more than most other kids got. lives. so the love that i got was more than most other kids got. >> reporter: you're very fortunate. >> yeah. >> reporter: you never looked at it if you were third place? >> >> watch out! fire in the hole! >> reporter: in seven decade, crews have blasted and hauled millions of tons of rock from the site. >> the mountain was shaped kind of like the shape of a pig's back. >> reporter: in a 1977 jeep with her childhood hard hat in the back seed, she took us up the road to the top. >> this is crazy arms we are here now. >> reporter: her father's vision peers out over the hills. the carving is more than 64 stories tall.
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wide. and all four of mt. rushmore's presidents will be able to fit under the native american leader's arm when it's finished. >> the hands are being drilled and removed with feathers and wedges and they pick it up and carry it away. >> reporter: how close are we to seeing the outstretched hand? >> i would say five, seven years. >> reporter: it's still a family affair. three of monique's siblings also work on the project, along four of their grandchildren. >> drill a lot of holes. >> reporter: including 32-year-old caleb, the third generation. >> hopefully, a thousand years from now, people will still see it. it's just kind of grounds you to, i don't know, a deeper story of america that people just weren't -- maybe won't be aware of. >> reporter: dreams don't come cheap, though. how much money do you get from the federal government for this project? >> none. >> reporter: how much do you get from the state government? >> none.
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>> admission fees and donations. >> reporter: so far it's brought in $33 million from families like this family from illinois who set up chairs and blanket after labor day to watch two ceremonial night blasts in the chilly air. >> we have to come back for this. we better not miss it. >> reporter: this blast sever september 6th honors crazy horse's death and gorechock's here. >> there is really a harsh history of how our people have been taken. so i'm fortunate that the monument here, that the mountain here gives us, you know, natives an opportunity to educate the general public about our culture and about proper respect when
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beginning. it includes northern university of north america and museum. >> the mountain is part of the whole project. the mountain is a wonderful thing, but it isn't what really will help people. it's the knowledge. the knowledge comes from learning so that university and the museum here, those are the most important things. >> to me, this is a work of art! >> reporter: and when he died in 1982 at the age of 74, he still wouldn't leave. orphaned as a child, he had found his home. his youngest daughter took us where her father is buried at the base the mountain. he rests behind his final
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in stone." >> he wanted us to know he is part of living, it is dying. and when he did die, we would be prepared to carry on. they said he couldn't carve the mountain from the grave. >> reporter: the sculptor and tower of a native american sharing a mountain and dedication for these lands for eterni eternity. for "cbs this morning: saturday," mark alternabert in black hills of >> it's the only way people to remember crazy horse. he was never photographed and where he was buried, they deliberately made it so it's not marked so people can't go to the site. >> i heard will this monument before and seeing at this level and the old footage. >> right. incredible. >> it's amazing to watch. just amazing. >> 70 years and going. >> yes. up next, "the dish." he is one of the world's leading pizza chefs and tony has brought us a taste of his award winning
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stay with us. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." >> announcer: this portioned sponsored by toyta. let's go places! own me? ?don't try to change me in any way? ?oh? ?don't tell me what to do? ?just let me be myself? the new 2017 corolla with toyota safety sense standard. ?you don't own me? toyota. let's go places. i work 'round the clock. i want my blood sugar to stay in control. so i asked about tresiba?. ? tresiba? ready ? tresiba? is a once-daily, long-acting insulin that lasts even longer than 24 hours. i want to trim my a1c. ? tresiba? ready ?
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? chef tony was born and raised in the san francisco bay area and his special is arguably america's favorite food. >> pizza! >> pizza. he started in the early '90s at >> these days he is the chef and owner of a pizza empire with 16 locations including his flagship restaurant tony's pizza in san francisco. he is a celebrity chef with frequent appearances on network tv and the food network. chef tony, welcome to "the dish." thank you for being here.
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>> chef, take us through everything we are seeing here starting in what is front of you. >> tierramisau. it is whipped with rum. >> i like that you're starting with dessert, by the way. >> you having for it. step to the grandma pizza. old style pizza from long island. you see it going across west. we are one of the few that have grandma pizza in all california. little thinner and fries on the bottom and this pan from a great place? jersey. it's really all about that pan. buccotina and that sauce goes down the route of my mom's because she made the best spaghetti sauce. when you look at buccotini is spicier than mom's.
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it's all about the sauce. you have romono and last but not least, cocktails are here. >> cheers! >> you care about ingredients because you grew up on a >> yeah. with appear rricots and cherrie >> i farmed until i was about 18. if we ran out of basil, we go out to the farm, not to the store. >> how do you go from apricot and cherry farming to pizza restaurant?
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world. i won a number of world titles in acrobatics when i was younger and in cooking. when i was younger i traveled to places from fargo to florida to naples to oregon and i started to learn regional style pizza. st. louis style pizzas are in this book. the pizza bible. different regional cheeses that go on these pizzas and roman style and neapolitan style as style pizzas that are so different. i got back from ole forge and i was just on a road trip. i was blown away. the lady was great. she says take about 35 minutes to make my pizza! still cook it at 350 degrees. really? people cook it at 500. i cook it like i do at home. the industry is amazing and i've been lucky.
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acrobatics a little bit? i find this so fascinating. >> first american champion! >> i won in acrobatics back in the day. i won a number of world titles. >> now he has to take a drink! >> i have to down a drink! >> which i'm okay, still and talk about that one later. a lady saw me on stage back in the day. i was tossing a pizza. it was 105 degrees out and at the alameda county fair and hot and tired and o doing acrobatics on the show. this lady said can i tell you something? you should really work on your food. why? what is up? she said i don't think anyone wants to see a 50-year-old on stage tossing a pizza! i thought that was a little bit of a jab but, at the same time, i said, okay, maybe this lady is telling me something. at the time, i was working on my first cookbook. i thought i should focus on food, focus on food food food and i guess you could say a pinnacle moment in my career was food network winning the gold
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gold medal, the cup in naples like you said earlier. 2007 world pizza cup. i ended up winning and that was -- the rest is history. >> now you have 16 restaurants? >> going on 17. ashbury, san francisco is number 17. >> if you could have and share this meal with anyone past or present, who would it be and why as we have you sign this for us. >> yeah. it would be to my grandfather. he wasn't around when i started in the pizza business really to him would be awesome. >> very great. thanks so much for being here. we appreciate it. we will let you sign that. i'm ready to eat. i don't know about you. >> go for it. >> for more on chef tony and "the dish" head to our website "cbs this morning".com. >> up next, a grand opening like we have never seen. we will give you a tour of the summer retreat used by the popes for centuries and now open for
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woman: barbara comstock is too right-wing to represent me. man: or me. woman: or me. woman: barbara comstock would overturn roe vs. wade. barbara comstock: i think roe vs. wade should be overturned. woman: barbara comstock voted to woman: barbara comstock is against marriage equality. man: she even voted to let federal contractors discriminate against gay employees... man: twice. woman: barbara comstock. too right-wing for northern virginia. narrator: house majority pac is responsible for the content of this ad. fios is not cable. we're wired differently. so we wired the wagner's house with 100 meg internet. which means in the time it takes mr. wagner
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12 seconds. that's the power of fiber optics. this is your last chance to get super fast 100meg internet, tv and phone for just $69.99 per month online. hurry, our best offer ever ends soon. only from fios. afoot and light-hearted i take to the open road. healthy, free, the world before me, the long brown path before me leading wherever i choose. the east and the west are mine. the north and the south are mine.
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? pope francis is trying to make the roman catholic church more transparent and accessible to the people. it's part of the reason why today is the first full day tourists are being allowed to visit the most private rooms of the pope's summer residence outside rome. >> seth doane got to see the rooms before it was open to the public. >> reporter: popes have looked at this view for september ris but this is the first time the rest of us could look back in. but pope francis is the people's pope. this is the office of the so-called personal valet, sort of butler to the pope.
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pope's secretary. and then in this grand room is the pope's office and his desk. perched above lake albano has a bigger footprint an the vatican and used as a summer escape but francis never spent the night here. in 2014 he opened some rooms to the public but his private apartment had remained off limits >> were you surprised when the pope said open up these rooms? >> translator: yes, very surprised, he admitted. i knew the public part of this palace well but i promise you each i never entered the private apartments. it was always under lock and key and the keys were kept in rome. >> reporter: come take a look at this. the most private of rooms here. the pope's bedroom and the pope's bed.
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some of the rooms, in particular, the pope's bedroom, seems quite modest, quite small. yes, it's very small, barbdalo said and very modest. we are, after all talking about a priest. during world war ii a previous pope opened it as a shelter for those displaced by the fighting. this modern day pontiff has tried to bring the church closer to the people, now letting them for "cbs this morning: saturday,"
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session" with one of the original members of the grateful dead, bob weir. he tells anthony mason about the new inspiration for his first album in over 30 years and he'll perform in a special concert that is just ahead. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." ? ? is depression more than sadness? ? it's a tangle of multiple symptoms. ? trintellix (vortioxetine) is a prescription medicine for depression. trintellix may start to untangle or help improve the multiple symptoms of depression. for me, trintellix made a difference. tell your healthcare professional right away if your depression worsens, or you have unusual changes in mood, behavior or thoughts of suicide. antidepressants can increase these in children,
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with maois. tell your healthcare professional about your medications, including migraine, psychiatric and depression medications to avoid a potentially life-threatening condition. increased risk of bleeding or bruising may occur especially if taken with nsaid pain relievers, aspirin, or blood thinners. manic episodes or vision problems may occur in some people. may cause low sodium levels. the most common side effects are nausea, constipation and vomiting. trintellix did not have significant impact on weight. could make a difference for you. come on duck! (puppy barks) you can do it duck. hurry up duck! you can do it duck. iams. helps keep your dog healthy at every stage. so you can always look forward to what's next. if your sneezes are a force to be reckoned with... you may be muddling through allergies. try zyrtec? for powerful allergy relief.
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we have an outstanding "saturday session" for you this morning. starring bob weir. a founding member of the grateful dead, weir has been a long strange trip his entire life. >> it started in his teens when he left california for life on a ranch. weir has gone back to those times for his album "blue mountain." you'll see him perform at the king's theater in a moment but, first, here is anthony mason's conversation with him. >> reporter: bob weir's new album of cowboy songs is his first solo record of original material in 30 years. but the roots of his new music go back even further, before his time as a founding member of the grateful dead to the early 1960s when weir had a teenage dream of finding a home on the range. >> i thought it would be a terribly romantic thing to do to
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>> reporter: you were 15 ? >> i found my way to wyoming and living on a ranch out there and living in a bunk house. i was the kid on the ranch so i got to shovel a lot of stalls. >> reporter: the nights, he says, were long and quiet. >> there wasn't -- wasn't much to do but tell stories and sing songs. and that is what we did. i was the kid with the guitar. >> reporter: that is how he was introduced to a whole new song book. >> i won't say i learned those and i've been back in that area for years, that whole aesthetic. >> reporter: how would you describe that aesthetic? >> lonesome. all along during the grateful dead years aev, every now and ti would sing a cowboyesque tune because i could. it would be a huge thing to let
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>> reporter: what is it about that sound you like? >> like the lonesome. it's blues but not exactly blues. >> reporter: weir wrote the songs with josh ritter and josh kofman who came up with the idea for the album after performing with weir some years back. when they proposed a cowboy album, did they have any idea you had this in the back of your i think we all expected it would be like marty robbins ballads and stuff like that, tv western asthet tick asthetices but it emerged as we took it on. >> reporter: he turned 69 this week and spent the year with three of the four surviving
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john mayer. are you going back to that? >> that is the plan. i'm not supposed to talk about that. we are trying to stay open for that. >> reporter: meanwhile, weir is also working on an orchestra piece and producing a tv show. >> and a book that i'm writing. so, you know, if i get bored, i don't know how that is going to happen. >> now from his new album "blue mountain" here is bob weir backed by josh coffman and members of the band the nationals. this is "only a river." ?
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? oh shenandoah i long to see you hey hey hey you rolling river oh shenandoah i long to see you ? ? ? hey hey hey only a river gonna make things right only a river gonna make things right oh shenandoah i long to see you ? hey hey hey rolling river oh shenandoah i long to see you hey hey hey only a river gonna make things right
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only a river gonna make things right only a river gonna make things right only a river gonna make things right only a river gonna make things right ? stick around. we will be right back with more music from bob weir. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." >> announcer: "saturday sessions" arepo snsored by blue buffalo. you love your pets like family
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e legalzoom, and we've helped over a million people just like you start their own businesses. legalzoom. legal help is here. you inherit lots of traits from your family. my ancestor, lady eleanor, made it big in textiles. my great-grandfather bernard wrote existential poetry. and uncle john was an explorer. i inherited their can-do spirit. and their double chin. now, i'm going to do something about it. t under the chin, leaving an improved profile. kybella? is an fda-approved non-surgical treatment for adults with a moderate amount of fullness... or a bit more. don't receive kybella? if you have an infection in the treatment area. kybella? can cause nerve injury in the jaw resulting in an uneven smile or facial muscle weakness, and trouble swallowing. tell your doctor about all medical conditions, including if you: have had or plan to have surgery or cosmetic treatments on your face, neck or chin; have had or have medical conditions in or near your neck
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i've been taking probiotics gx from nature's bounty to maintain healthy digestion and help with the occasional unwanted gas and bloating. so wherever i get stuck today, my "future self" will thank me. thank you. thank you. thank you. hang on, go go go back. thank you. do i get stuck in an air duct? it's a funny story really... ience has taught us: no matter what the future holds, you're always better off healthy. nature's bounty when cold and flu hold you back try theraflu expressmax, now in new caplets. it's the only cold & flu caplet that has a maximum strength formula with a unique warming sensation you instantly feel. theraflu. for a powerful comeback. new expressmax caplets. mastering the art of refinement
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? i built my dreams and hopes so high ? ? and watched as love moved down the line ? ? i watched it go till it was gone ? ? and then i found i could not move on ? ? i know what t ghost towns know ? ? love comes and goes ? ? love comes and goes ? ? ? now people pass and shake their heads ? ? the way the living blame the dead ?
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? cemetery's choked with weeds ? ? broken churchbells toll the breeze ? ? broken churchbells pray for rain ? ? the soul has flown the bones remain ? ? broken churchbells toll the breeze ? ? broken churchbells pray for rain ? ? the soul has flown the bones remain ? ? i know what the ghost towns ? love comes and goes ? ? love comes then goes ?
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narrator: today on lucky dog, it's a tale of two underdogs. a middle-aged lab mix facing discrimination and an empty nester looking to spread her own wings. really feel like now is the time for me to just rejoin the world. narrator: but if ollie wants a shot at a new life he'll need to put the shackles of his old life behind him. brandon: you got a lot of scar tissue on the neck there. ollie most likely was tied up by a chain for most of his life. a couple dog days in your past, huh? don't worry, it's all over. i'm brandon mcmillan and i've dedicated my life to
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