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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  October 3, 2014 7:00am-9:01am EDT

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good morning. it is friday, october 3rd, 2014. welcome to "cbs this morning." a new american victim of ebola, the network news crew facing quarantine and the challenge in stopping the virus here. 83 million accounts exposed as america's biggest bank is rocked by cyber thieves. and millions face severe weather today. we're on the scene of heavy damage. but we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. helping to cover an outbreak in liberia. >> the network is flying him and
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the whole crew back to the u.s. for quarantine and treatment. >> meanwhile the man in dallas who unknowingly brought ebola into america is quarantined. >> over 100 people who say they may have had contact with duncan. >> if citizens feel sick, they should call 911. >> powerful thunderstorms in texas pushed over huge trucks, trees knocked down and damage. >> right now it's a jungle. >> jpmorgan chase revealing a cyber attack in july is far worse than anyone thought. >> 76 million households, 7 million businesses had information compromised. >> through the intersection. went across lanes. very dangerous. >> a suspected serial bank robber led police on a serious pursuit in california. >> off the side of the freeway, wow. >> and president bush had this
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to say about his brother jeb. >> a loan officer almost caught up to them. they started hurling the chainsaw. >> all that -- >> now going for the deep ball. he's got it for the touchdown. >> the parkers, 42-10. >> it is a turnover. what a play by rice. >> arizona's going to beat them, 32-24. >> -- and all that matters. >> julia pierson reportedly said it needed to be like disney world. they could get into the white house but they could never remember where they parked. >> -- on "cbs this morning." >> i'm a seen your vice president here. >> whoa. >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" presented by toyota. let's go places. captioning funded by cbs
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welcome to "cbs this morning." a freelance cameraman is the fifth to test positive for ebola. 33-year-old ashoka mukpo was diagnosed thursday. he just started working with an nbc crew in liberia. >> they say ashoka mukpo's condition was caught very early. none of them have shown any ebola symptoms. >> in dallas this morning a woman link to another ebola patient said she's tired of being quarantined. thomas eric duncan is the first person to be diagnosed with ebola in the united states. >> authorities ordered four people to not leave the apartment where duncan stay before he was hospitalized. manuel bojorquez is at the hospital treating duncan where they figured out how he slipped through the tracks. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the texas health presbyterian hospital says a flaw between the
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way they interact with electronic records led to the miscommunication that allowed h time go home after his first visit to the u.r. last week. they say the flaw has been fixed but the fallout is far from over. the apartment where four people were quarantined was assessed for deaccontamination thursday. this is where he was staying before being admitted to the hospital and diagnosed with ebola. parts were power washed and food and water delivered. residents came out briefly to bring supplies inside. his 21-year-old son is one of the people inside this apartment. >> everything is okay. we have food. we're fine.
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>> reporter: access has been limited. >> we have different nationalities and language barriers we're trying to work with. >> reporter: david bousa is upset more haven't been diagnosed. >> they should be screened. >> they should be screened. >> it hasn't happened. >> it hasn't happened. >> contact with people has grown to 100. that includes three more children who were in school on thursday. duncan remains in isolation at this texas hospital but if he recovers he could face legal problems in his home country. liberian officials released a copy of the passenger health screening form duncan filled out before boarding his flight from liberia to the u.s. they believe he lied when he answered questions regarding whether he had contact with anyone with ebola. he said no. he tried to transport a sick neighbor to the hospital days
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earlier. that woman later died from ebola. >> he's gone there and in a way put some americans in a state of fear. >> reporter: it's unclear whether he knew the woman he helped was infected with ebola. they say he does and they plan to prosecute him. he remains in serious condition here. charlie? >> manuel, thanks. after leaving liberia two weeks ago duncan traveled on united from belgium to dallas and then on from dallas. dr. jon lapook is with us. good morning. >> good morning, charlie. >> turning to the united states, who should be at risk? >> the cdc keeps telling us it's those who are in contact with direct body fluids. those people in the apartment. they're in quarantine and the people they had contact with. >> but the story continues to change day by day.
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yesterday it was 18 people. now we're hearing from health officials that he could have been in contact with as many as 100 people. i know they're casting a wide net but should we be concerned? >> we should be. we're told we have a row best health care system here in the united states. that is true. we're not africa. that is true. if somebody comes here, they'll be identified quickly if they're identified correctly, put into isolation, quarantined, contacts followed. that didn't happen here. the guy came in, said he was from liberia, handshaking. how about walking down the hall and saying, hey, the guy from africa has symptoms. >> and you also have to depend on the honesty of the person, right? >> no question. >> he filled out the form and said he had no contact with anyone who had ebola. >> it's not clear in fairness to him. the patient who had bleeding, it
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could have been a complication of bleeding and it wasn't till he came here that the other symptoms became specific. >> here's the question. is there growing concern in the united states that this may be a greater than we thought? >> we have to emotionally immune nice people in a way that almost certainly there will be other cases that will come here. it's magically thinking. united airlines said there's zero risk essentially, that other people could have contacted ebola because he was asymptomatic but now united airlines is contacting patients who were on those planes. why? >> i don't know why they made that decision. the cdc says and i specifically asked that question, they said they don't do that. >> an abundance of caution. >> let's trust science. what cdc is saying.
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right now you've got to rely on the science and the experts and the cdc and public health. >> is there some concern about overreaction? >> absolutely. there was a twitter feed. i looked this morning. why should we believe you. why should we believe a person named lapook. he's making fun of my name. they're saying why should we believe the cdc. they're always lying to us. yes, i think there's a lot of panic out there and on facebook and social media. there's a serious problem but you have to be calm and rely on science. >> thank you so much. this morning australia's prime minister says his country will fly air strikes in iraq. officials say that will not happen right away. american warplanes are bombing isis targets in syria near the turkish border.
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this sunday on "60 minutes" james romy talks with scott pelley. >> how many are fighting? >> a dozen or so. >> do you know how many there are? >> a does about or so. >> with american passport dhous you keep them from coming home and attacking the homeland. >> ultimately an american citizen unless their passports are hooked they're entitled to come back. if someone who fought with isil wants to come back, we will track them very carefully. >> on sunday's "60 minutes" you can watch scott pelley's story on what the fbi director considers to be the next big threat for americans. that's sunday on cbs. severe weather slamming states from texas to ohio today. people in the dallas-ft. worth
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area are cleaning up after hurricane-force winding struck on thus. our affiliate is there. good morning, elizabeth. >> good morning. the extensive damage. just pieces of wood ripped apart like little tooth pics here. i'm walking on the roof that did belong to the dormitory for the women. this is what's left. even damaged cars all around. so many will be waking up to assess all this damage. the high winds and rain hit like a water pressure. some areas caught 90-mile-an-hour wind gusts. this video shows lines perched blowing out when the intense straight-line winds blew in. it rained bricks at this partial
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building colas at this historic ft. worth stockyard. several parked cars took herb damage. this college sits at the top of the hill, the city's highest point. students suffered bruises and cuts after the wind ripped off the roof, exposing everyone inside. >> the girls are absolutely distraught. they have lost all of their person items, computers. it's just been a total loss. >> you can see more damage right here. this insulation wrapped around the car and this electrical outlet mapgled up in all of this. north texas did need this. september was the driest month we had seen for september in the last 115 years. norah, now back to you. >> elizabeth, thank you so much. and america's biggest bank is reeling from one of the
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largest hack attacks in history. jpmorgan chase says 76 million households and 7 million businesses were breached this summer. initially they thought it was only 1 million. good morning. >> good morning. what we know is it happened in jeune and lasted two months before the bank was able to catch it. at first they thought it was small. it was 76 million accounts. only user contact information appears to have been taken. they say there's no evidence that account numbers passwords or security numbers have been taken. >> how is this different from retailers being hacked? >> well, i mean first of all, this is a bank so there's more sensitive information. one thing that's alarmting the hackers got deep into the jb
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morgan system before they were able to catch it. they're spending a quarter of a billion dollars a year on security and they're still affected. >> people are scared somebody might come after them. >> yes. >> who do they believe it is? >> the suspicion is it may go back to russia. that hasn't been proven yet. consumers have got to be really careful here. i got a letter from my bank saying i'm going to get a new credit card. they charged my account before i got the card. they charged $2.75 in coca-cola, why do they do that? to test to see if the charge goes through and then they go beyond that. the banks are being very aggressive but you have to be
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vigila vigilant, too, because it's happening. >> now to hong kong. this time pro democracy protesters are pushing back beyond the government. seth doane is in hong kong. seth, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. we're seeing far fewer protesters on the streets today. that may be because of the on-and-off rain we've had and the promise of talks between the government and protesters, but we're also seeing today patience of some wearing thin. pictures from local television show pro-beijing residents in one part of hong kong trying to tear down pro-democracy camps today after more than a week. some government officeses remain temporarily closed. the decision to open a die lot
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unfolded in the middle of the night. police had been photographed transporting riot supplies to where a stand-off was expected. they set a midnight deadline for the chief executive to step down. we were there as the deadline approached. police and us on one side, protesters on the other. >> you see in case there is retaliation. in case protesters do cross this bare cad. >> there was a press conference held saying he would not step down and announcing he'd apoichblted his number 2 to walk with protesters. an agitated crowd chanted to each other in cantanese, keep calm. >> what have you heard tonight? >> it's a lot of crap. >> i van, a 20-year-old
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protester worries that sevt different protesters makes it difficult to find a vision. why are you so disappointed right now? >> no one has said anything that has meaning to it. no one knows what to do next. everyone's lost. >> reporter: and that's really where we are. it is a wait and see approach here. we know up in beijing, they printed an art call calling the demands unreasonable. here in hong kong we know that protesters and protest leaders that they're held in public. say their next move will be based on how those talks go. snow thank you. in california some visitors to disneyland may want to think
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twice about riding mickey's fun wheel. it broke down yesterday and people were stranded for two hours before it was restarted and they were able to get everybody down. >> it was very hot up there. the first 45 minutes we had no communication. >> when they got off, people offered them water and ice cream. no one was hurt. an accused bank robber led the police in a high-speed chase. >> reporter: high speeding and big risks. now he's got wrong way, wrong way onto the freeway. >> reporter: this 2 1/2-hour police chase began when the suspect stoel $12,000 worth of steel loaded in his flatbed truck. >> going against traffic, high speeds. this is tough. >> at one point the driver attempted to get out of the truck on the freeway by climbing
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over the funs but he got back n in the vehicle doing a return. >> at one point we stopped for the safety of the public. >> reporter: police identified the driver as 53-year-old steven bartlett. the chase ended in a finally, desperate. >> nutrition . >> off the side of the road. just lost completely. wow. >> he was take swoon local custody for observation. it's 7:19.
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>> announcer: this national weather report sponsored by "the best of me" by nicholas sparks in theaters october 17th.
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a familiar presidential race is closer to reality. >> ahead, what george w. bush is saying about his brother jeb in 2016. >> the news is back in the morning on cbs th"cbs this mor." stay tuned for your local news. >> announcer: this porortion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. always be green. your lights, ♪ and your favorite songs, always playing. ♪ may you never be stuck behind a stinky truck. ♪ may things, always go your way. but it's good to be prepared, just in case they don't. toyota, let's go places. safely.
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good morning, everyone, i'm ukee washington, time for the friday forecast with fehlinger. over in the weather center our friday looks pretty good. ukee, very significant pattern change just waiting in the wings, you can actually see it right over my shoulder, the combination of our next colds front. we go ahead, start it out with storm scan3, bit of wider zoom, leading edge of clouds and even moisture, already visible here, in ohio. so it is a matter of time. meantime, we still got live enough win and moisture to have led to fog issues back through portions of bucks county, western chester county, see it in the distance, west lawn, pennsylvania. but as the dago pros rests expect more sunshine, in fact, already brightening up in philadelphia, and points east
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>> good morning, so you know, you'll have rush hour chase in the usual pockets, schuylkill vest way, 95, even the 42 freeway, traveling in that northbound direction, you are going to see delays approaching 295, down through the area of the walt whitman bridge. traveling on the ben franklin bridge, is going to be quite a feet, as well, if you're commuting westbound, 422 eastbound delays from the area of oaks down toward 202. and speed censors in the teens on the schuylkill, 59 and expect delays on the vine, as well. ukee? >> thank you, torrey. next update at clock 55, up next on cbs this morning, backlog of race kits collecting dust, and police departments all across the country. we're on the "cw philly" on these channels. good m
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according to a new report, nearly 60% of the people in the u.s. don't have access to the internet. they're called time warner customers. >> no, seth meyers. mine was working this morning. i'm not going to contribute to bashing. i like my cable. coming up this morning on "cbs this morning," it's been talked about for four years. a new clinton/bush bash for the white house. this morning there's one of those signs closer to saying yes. plus, five years of reporting by cbs news. some sexual predators remain on the streets due to a lack of crucial evidence. why justice will take years. that's ahead. "the dallas morning news" looks at a court ruling in a
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battle of texas courts. a judge will allow partial enforcement of law. it's affective will i closes all but seven facilities. the others would have to spend millions. the court is still considering the constitutionality of the entire law. bloomberg news says bernanke is having a hard time. he can't refinance. he wasn't joking. he say lenders may have gob too far and the market for first-time home buyers is not what it should be. "the wall street journal" report that ups and fedex want retail stores to get real. even after last year's big problems delivering holiday gifts. 30% of americans say they buy gifts within five days of the holidays. of those, 60% plan to do it
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again this year. >> and forbes says billionaire warren buffett has hijacked the auto business. his company is buying 78 dealerships and more than 100 franchises in ten states and he may decide to buy even more auto dealerships in the future. it's one of the most horrifying crimes but rarely do perpetrators get punished. just 3% of rapists serve time. i think about it. that's because police are ignoring their most powerful pieces of evidence. they found that rape kits are in lab rooms going untested. it's causing some police departments to testing their rape kits and there have been some astonishing results. nancy cordes is in washington. good morning. >> good morning. rape kits are administered to victims right after they're
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attacked to collect the perpetrator's dna. yet many women go through this invasive five-hour procedure for nothing because so many police departments don't test all their kits. some say it's too expensive. others say it takes too much time. the result is rapists can go undetected and attack again. >> i looked up, and the next thing i know, i have a gun pointing at me. >> this cleveland woman was standing at a gas station when she was forced into an alley and raped in 1994, but it took 20 years to identify her attacker charles steel because police never bothered to test her dna rape kit. in fact, 4,000 kits were gathering dust until mike dewine took over and decided to test them all. >> i thought the rape kits would have good evidentiary value but
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i had no idea how much. >> there were attacks on as many as seven different women. prosecutor tim mcguinty has issued 200 indictments. a third of them are considered serial rapists. >> they don't stop until they're dead or physically unable to get out of their beds and attack somebody. the sooner you empty your shelves of the rape kits the sooner you can take the serial rapists off the street. >> reporter: all right the rate is dropping. >> they rob and rape, sell drugs and shoot people. >> and yet many people still aren't testing their own rape kits. >> that's unbelievable to me. it's negligence. >> the joyful heart foundation which works to end the rain kitt backlog says las vegas has tested just 16% of its 5,000
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kits. tulsa, oklahoma, is seeking funding to test their kids and wisconsin has 6,000 statewide and is prioritizing which kits to test first. >> this is not any one city or state's problem. it's a national problem and needs a national salute. >> how many women have you reached out to so far? >> i would say since last year, 30. >> it's her job to track down women raped years ago so they could testify zbejs theiagainst attackers. >> they said they didn't feel worthy. >> he's now in prison for life. >> how has your life changed now that you nknow who your attacke was and he's behind bars and can't do it to anyone else?
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>> i feel blessed. no more wondering. now i know. >> and yet because the testing takes time, even cleveland won't be able to fully clear out its rape kit backlog until 2018. >> does it make you sick to think all of these people could have been put away 15 years ago? >> when we look back and we see and we see in hindsight had we prosecuted these individuals earlier, that those victims are unnecessary victims. >> and the irony is once the tests are done, they can locate them immediately. so far their success rate in prosecuting these criminals is an astounding 87%. >> thank you, nancy. >> great reporting. >> this morning one prominent republican is supporting the idea of jeb bush running for president. george w. bush is encouraging
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the one-time florida governor to jump into the presidential race. meantime the democrats are waiting for their own deja vu with the clintons. chip reid has more. good morning. >> good morning. george w. bush shared a little insight from his brother. we're still a long way from 2016 but we now know at least one family member thinks that jeb is leaning toward saying yes. >> i think he wants to be president. >> former president jonch w. bush has been talking to his younger brother jeb to run for president. >> i, of course, was pushing for him to run for president. he, of course, was saying i haven't made up my mind. i don't think he has. and i don't think he likes that his older brother is pushing him. >> the former governor is
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weighing his options. >> the decisions is can i do it joyfully. candidates have to lift spirits. it's pretty pessimistic right now. >> he's led many to think he's laying the groundwork for a 2016 campaign. >> hello, iowa. i'm baacck. >> meantime hillary clinton is spending time, most recently sharing what she calls her grandmother glow. >> i think my granddaughter has just as much god-given potential as a boy born in that hospital on the same day. >> a 2016 bush/clinton matchup would be different than 1982. now they have become close friends. practically family. barbara bush says she now thinks of him like an adopted son. >> i love bill clinton. maybe not his politics but i love bill clinton.
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>> but political watchers are still preparing for a 2016 circus. >> it would be a new and different kind of circus, a general election in which you had the clinton family with all of its history and exciting characters but you have all the people from the bush year wlos are still around and those were years of political conflict. >> as for the bush family, it's complicated with jonch. with bush saying jeff should rub. he disagrees with his mother who says the country has had enough bushes but jeb p. bush told me that earlier this year republicans need someone just like his father to run for president. gayle? >> thank you, chip. getting pressure from all sides in the family. that's nice. the clinton/bush race would be fun to watch. we will be watching. thanks again, chip. thousands of high school
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high school football teams acss the country will take to the field tonight, but for some it's been a difficult time. in recent days three young athletes died playing the game they love. the latest victim, a 16-year-old from long island, new york. elaine quijano looks at the sport and the risk even for our kids. good morning. >> good morning. tom cutinella was a student who wore number 64. he appears to have suffered a head injury during the game and although he was rushed to the hospital for emergency surgery, doctors were unable to save him.
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>> accident? you know, the game involved contact and it was the result of a freak. >> deaths among high school students very rare. he's the third to die in the last week. last friday in alabama quarterback demario harris jr. collapsed on the field after tackling an opponent. hids father said he suffered a brain hemorrhage. that same day a player collapsed during warmups. he died three days later. chris nolinski is head of the concussion research institute. >> the problem is we can't locate the hundreds of blows to
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the head the average player takes a year. >> the average lineman takes 1,000 to 1,500 hits to the head a season. sometimes it's force simms laer to a 25-mile-per-hour car crash and 7% are likely to get a concussion. former college football player advocates for stronger protocol at the ncaa. >> there are a lot of parents thinking twice before putting their sons in the sport. and if football is going to survive, you know, the way it has survived in the last few decades, there really needs to be a change. >> reporter: he says unless they take steps to improve the players' health, they need to take risks. >> they have to make changes so that football doesn't go the way of boxing.
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most folks wouldn't send their kids to the corner to box at 11 or 12 years old. >> even the very young are not immune. a virginia tech study of 7- and 8-year-olds show them receiving hits of 80 gs, the same force dealt by college players. gayle? >> elaine, thank y you
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ok, if you're up there, i coulsmart sarah.elp. seeking guidance. just like with your investments. that sets you apart. it does? it does. you're type e*. and seeking another perspective is what type e*s do. oh, and your next handhold... is there. you don't have to go it alone. e*trade gives you the support and guidance to make informed decisions. are you type e*? a dramatic rescue at sea after a lobster boat began sinking yesterday. serious waves and high winds swamped this vessel about 40 miles off the coast of rhode island. the four lobstermen made a distress call, put on survivor after 20 minutes in the ocean a helicopter crew listed all of
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them to safety. it's a happy ending to what could have been a real tragedy there. all right. he was born in a small town but john mellencamp made it big. now he's sharing a turning point more than 60 years in the making. that's ahead here on "cbs this morning."
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>> right over to katie for your friday forecasts. >> good morning, very happy friday being sent your way. we are seeing some clouds out there, right now, but much like what we saw yesterday, see mix of clouds, and sunshine. >> we sit with high pressure, so expect to see the sun throughout the day, help to warm things up to seasonable 72 later on, for now, storm scan3 remains quiet. a check on how things will shake up here today. not too much after breeze just yet, and even this evening, the entire evening looks quiet, but showers, and eventually steadier rain will move in, beginning through the overnight. so wake up to some rain in most spots tomorrow, expect the breeze to kick in and the temperatures to just drop off.
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vittoria? >> thank you so much, katie, good morning, if you are traveling on 202, we have a bit of a situation, this is 202 northbound, at high street, what you are looking at now 11 of the vehicles involved in this accident. >> being towed away, debris in the roadway, northbound 202 at high street, one lane only as a result of the accident. you will notice delays, as well. this is 95, around cottman avenue. but this shot really doesn't do it justice, still traveling in the teens out of the northeast, traveling eight on the schuylkill, spec usual rush hour delays. >> thank you, next update at 8:25, next on cbs this morning, did a palm beach only eyes try to kill her son and has she gotten a away with murder before?
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it is friday, october 3rd, 2014. welcome back to "cbs this morning." more real news ahead, including questions over the ebola response in the u.s. dr. david agus with the reality check on how it can spread. but first here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. a flaw in the way electronic records interacted led to the miscommunication which allowed duncan to go home. >> yesterday it was just 18 people in close contact. now we're hearing from health officials he could have been in contact with as many people as 100 people. i know they're casting a wide net, but should we be concerned about this uneven response? >> i think we should be
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concerned. >> a cameraman is the fifth to have contracted ebola. a private jet will bring him to the united states. >> arlington baptist college. pieces ripped apart like little toothpicks. >> we thought it was small. now we know it's 76 million, 7,000 small business accounts. >> you can see people around us putting on face masks, goggles. >> it's complicated. george bush saying jeb bush should run, disagreeing with his mother who says the country has had enough bushes. >> a suspected bank robber led police on the wrong side of the united states. >> they're waiting for him to return to the scene. i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. an armed guard this morning is
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keeping four people inside a dallas apartment. they shared it with the first ebola patient to be diagnosed in the united states. health officials say thomas eric duncan might have had direct or indirect contact with up to 100 people. so far 14 of them have been tested and cleared. >> liberian officials say they believe duncan lied on a health form he filled out before leaving the country because he checked no when asked about coming in contact with an ebola patient. on thursday another american in liberia tested positive for ebola. ashoka mukpo will be flown on a private plane for treatment. >> good morning, dr. is there really a zero risk?
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>> it's such a hard statement to say zero risk. united is contacting a personals on the two flights that were united flights. transparency is important. the way it works is a small number of partiquettes get in through a mouth or cut and they amass. then you're symptom might. what about the hour before you're symptomatic or the day before you're symptomatic? we don't know. one has to assume they weren't infected that time. how do we know he's telling the truth about when he's symptomatic. there's questions about whether he was truthful on the form. >> the other thing that i think is concerning, it's been reported about the nbc cameraman. i heard he was totally covered and they had taken extra precautions, yet this guy still got the disease which makes me think how worried should we be, david? >> well, we don't think it's
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spread by airborne, but it is spread by a small number of particles. so the science is new and the virus is different than a year or two years ago. there are small molecular changes. we in truth don't know that much about the transmission. at the same time there shouldn't be panic. at the same time there are a small number in the u.s. it doesn't spread as quickly. >> what can be done once a patient has ebola? >> right now. we don't have much except we call supportive care. you give them fluids. you can give them antibiotics. there are other infections. we don't have anti-ebola treatments. we haven't been able to scale them up. we think we may have some that work but they only exist in small numbers and most have been used. so we have several months until we have a supply that we can treat impeachment. right now it's at a critical juchks tur.
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we have to hold it in africa and we have to contain it here. >> thank you. outside schools promise more protests. the panel refuses to drop a controversial plan reassessing how the district teaches american history. anna werner is in golden, colorado, where last night's school board drew a very noisy crowd. an narks good morning. >> reporter: good morning. you know, this was an incredibly contentious meeting with more than two hours of public testimony, most of it against curriculum review. in the end they proposed a review from the superintendent but still left many in the audience unhappy. >> please be quiet so the board can conduct business. >> reporter: audience business calls for three board members to resign after they voted in favor of curriculum review. the vote followed more than two hours of public testimony from
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students, parents and teachers. >> don't think for one second that you are fooling anyone. >> thank you. >> reporter: most of them who opposed board member julie williams' proposal to review and possibly change the curriculum. >> vote no, thank you. >> thank you. >> this is not what we want. >> reporter: many here call it censorship. they should not encourage or condone civil disorder or social strife. the debate generated days of walkouts of essentially jefferson county schools the last two weeks and sickouts. but after the vote board member williams said that didn't affect the entire community. >> i think the community that's here is different than the community that's outside of this building and i believe the
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majority of the community will be happy. >> reporter: now, the proposal approved means changes to existing committees as opposed to brand-new committee but it's really not clear what this could mean in the future to changes to the kruk lcurriculum. one thing that we can say is board member williams' criteria was stripped out. norah? >> thank you very much. a deadly mystery of a woman who gunned down her
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the best part of that break, "homeland." >> oh, yeah, i'm excited. coming up is john mellencamp. it was the performance of a
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surgeon that saved his life. >> i must be because, you know, there was no reason for me to survive but i survived. zero. zero. >> glad he survived. his conversation with anthony mason ahead on "cbs this morning." and these little angels build in strength. and that little angel says, "weeeeeeeee!" 60% more sheets than charmin.
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a little boy witnessed his mother shoot and kill his father. nearly 20 years later gun violence would return in an unbelievable way. "48 hours" correspondent richard schlesinger went to one of the playgrounds of the rich and famous to review a family's history of violence. here's a preview of tomorrow night's report. >> palm beach is probably one of the richest places in the world. new money, donald trump, howard stern, old money, the fords. >> reporter: gossip columnist has been covering palm beach society for nearly 20 years. >> you're never add a loss for a story very and in 1993 it was the image of an 11-year-old boy testifying at his mother's
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murder trial that captured palm beach's attention. >> i was scared and confused. >> 911. >> there's been a shooting. >> who was shot. >> jim cueny who was a lawyer, well known, very popular in palm beach county was killed by his ex-wife linda with two kids hidden in the closet. >> the kids are in the closet. i've got a gun. >> they were established in the palm beach area. >> he's trying to kill me. >> who is? >> jim clooney. >> she shot him three times with a .357. she claims it with us self-defense. >> but from the very beginning lieutenant scott smith knew there was something strange about the case. >> after she had shot a couple of times she actually went up to him and fired off another round. that was an execution. >> linda cueny was charged with first-degree murder and her son kevin was the only eye-witness to the shooting.
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>> it was loud a. >> a trial linda dees attorney announced he attacked her with a knife and the boy testified he saw something in his father's hand before the shooting. >> it had a glaring shine. >> i think we lost the case at that time. >> it with us that time linda cooney was not guilty of murder. >> kevin's testimony was exonerated of murder. she was cleared in murder in florida, but guess what, she uses the same gun to shoot her son kevin. >> now linda cooney is back in court, this time for the attempted murder of her son. >> next witness. >> his testimony could make all the difference again. >> which way was this gun pointed when it was fired. >> but will kevin save his mother again? >> richard schlesinger, oh, my god, i gasped out loud when i
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heard that. >> so did we when we first heard the story. what's remarkable is she still had the gun 20 years later. what she did was -- the prosecutors were astonished at this in las vegas where the second trial took place. it tookes out after she was akwinlted in florida she got the gun back for reasons known only to her and 20 years later used it again. >> what would be the mow tev to use a gun on your son, especially a son who testified on your behalf? >> i don't think there's any real rationale. here's the prosecutor's theory. linda controlled her two sons. she had two sons. she controlled who they tuqued to, who they date. they had no doors on their bedroom at home. kevin, who was the son that she shot was getting ready to move out and the theory is mama didn't like that. >> he's in a wheelchair now? >> there's layers upon layers of
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tragedy in this story. >> sounds like mama's got a couple of issues. >> did he talk about the original murder at all to anybody? was there any reason to believe that he had confessed or lied anywhere along the line? >> when he was 11, he didn't lie. the question was was he brainwashed by his mother. that was the question 20 years ago. now the question is how could this have happened again. >> saturday night. you got me. >> you can see richard's full report "mommy dearest" tomorrow night on "48 hours" 9:00 p.m. eastern. 10:00 p.m. central. we'll be right back. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by mazola. mazola makes it better. than olive oil. and a recent study found that it can help lower cholesterol 2 times more. take care of those you love. mazola makes it better. never miss a chance to dance. cholesterol 2 times more. introducing a revolution in bladder leak protection.
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to support the work of the foundation. visit ccfa.org to learn more.
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sebastien trun believes foosball at the office is time well spent. is there significance to this other than just fun? >> it's fun and there's significance to fun. >> trun is co-founder of udacity, silicon valley's startup with a new twist on learning curve.
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udasity creates interactive classes. >> i want everybody to have the same chance? in an unusual move they're linking up to teach programming skills tailored to specific jobs. >> this car is now driving completely itself. >> when i first met him back in 2005 he was a professor at stanford who built a self-driving car. >> relax. trust the car. >> trust me, trust the car. i'm not looking. are you? >> reporter: to me at the time it seemed impossibly futuristic, but truen is a visionary. there must have been a time when you said i'm going to build a self-driving car they probably thought it was laughable. >> it wasn't very convincing at the time. and we built our way up. >> reporter: now he believes that within 15 years driverless
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cars will be commonplace. he was also instrumental in developing google glass, the wearable computer that records the world around you. the very first image he shared from google glass was of his son who after all is the future. >> my son is 6 1/2 years old. everything he does is an experiment. he's relentlessly learning. he might be pouring apple juice over his dinner plait and i may think it's not a good idea. he doesn't know. that level of curiosity is unbelievably tantalizing to me. that brings it to udacity. >> it's hoped to get people addicted to learning and individual tall games. his approach is to eject prediction. >> you can't change the world without a healthy willingness to
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break rules. >> but he doesn't think education should break the bank. he launched an online program that cost $6,600. on cam pause students pay close to $45,000. it was his birthday. as a prank they moved his desk, the smallest in the company, to the break room. his workers have learned from him that nothing is sacred. >> most rules that you think are written in stone are societal. you can change the game and reach for the stars and make the world a better place. >> from lifelong learning to google glass and self-driving cars, he's a futurist with an optimist vision of the road ahead. for "cbs this morning," john blackstone, california. >> i love how he thinks. >> he's a very exciting guy. >> i think so too. so you think you've seen
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everything about jfk? here's something new. (good morning, hackers strike again. >> this time targeting 76 million customers, at jp morgan chase. the banking giant just admitted criminals stole customers contact information including names, addresses, phone numbers and e-mail addresses cents during a cyber attack in august. but it also says there is cents no sign that account numbers or social security numbers were stolen. the bank promises customers theirs money is safe. katie has cents your forecast in the weather center. >> good morning, everybody, happy friday. we can expect to see pretty pleasant day overall, starting off with some cloud cover out there, eventually, that sun will penetrate through the cloud cover, bring us partly sunny day, may not be as bright and sunny as you might like, quiet day.
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high pressure on our side. nice day overall, 72 degrees, the expected hi, very much where we should be with temperatures right now. but we eventually see our next very potent cold front live up to its name, start to bring in some showers generally overnight. i would say from midnight on, when the raindrops will first begin to fall. this will linger through at least the first half of tomorrow before it gradually pulls away. we start to clear out from west to east. sunday, polite and sunny. >> and good morning, everyone seems ton rush calming down, 476, northbound, just beyond the air of ridge pike, notice going to and from the area of the schuylkill and mid-county toll plaza, starting to look real nice out there. even as we take you now to 95, this is 95, cottman avenue. northbound would be your taillights. headlights coming toward you southbound. loosening up around cottman, which means, that we're starting to loosen up the big bulky traffic out of the northeast down to the vine. now, still there in areas, just like still there on the schuylkill expressway, but we
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are getting little bit better. no major delays for mass transit. ukee. >> next update is at 8:55, up next on cbs this morning, rock-and-roll hall of famer john mellencamp. we're on the "cw philly" on
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♪ a little diddy about jack and diane two american kids growing up in the heartland ♪ "jack and diane," one of the great mellencamp songs that put john on the map. i think you'll be singing the song all day long. >> i bet i will. i bet charlie will. that's one of the things viewers don't know about charlie. he's humming tunes all the time. >> at any moment he could break into song. becareful, america. you should see him dance. right now it's time to show you some of this morning's headlines from around the globe. the "los angeles times" -- are you having a good time, charlie? >> yes, i am. >> yes, he's enjoying it.
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a battle of duke versus duke. in july we showed you how they want to use duke's nickname to sell bourbon. they sued duke university which challenged the patent. they say the fight should head to the patent office. >> the times says many are clueless about mushrooms. last year there were more than 200 british illnesses, many involving kids. in 2008 the author of "the horse whisperer" had to be rushed to the hospital after making same mistake. and ""business insider"" says samsung is doing rigorous testing on its galaxy smartphone after the i phone 6 plus bending. a human's backside repeatedly sat on it to test it. it's to test the durability. the robot uses 220 pounds of
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force to make sure the galaxy phone does not bend. all right. bids is under way this morning on nerve before seen photos of john and jacqueline kennedy's elaborate 1959 wedding. 13 unpib lived negatives were taken by a backup photographer in newport, rhode island, the pictures were found after he died. other auction items include a new year's card that kennedy signed right before the president was assassinated. bidding ends on october 15th. rock and roll hall of famer john mellencamp is back with a new album. it's called "plain spoken." just as he was getting ready to promote it, he had a life-changing experience. he talked with anthony mason -- that wasn't the life-changing experience, but he talked about it. >> we'll see. >> we're see as we're looking at things in a new light. >> i don't know. i think it was pretty exciting,
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gayle. >> he's saved a lot of people's lives. in the 1950s most babies born with spina bifida did not live long but john mellencamp survived after a pioneering operation. last month after more than 60 years, he finally met the doctor who saved him. ♪ >> "troubled man" is the lead single of john mellencamp's new album. his trouble starts right at birth. but for most of his 62 years old the singer knew little about the surgery he had as a newborn. >> i didn't know i had the operation until some kid -- nine or ten said what's that big scar on the back of your neck and they said, don't worry about it. you had an operation when you were born.
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>> reporter: last month mellencamp finally met dr. robert heinberger, now 91. he performed it. >> he remembered it because i was the first one. >> spina bifida is a birth defect that opens the spinal column that can allow the spine to grow outside of the body. the hospital still has the records of mellencamp's surgery. >> this is the back of your head. >> this is the back of my hair right here. >> including a 9-day old image of john mellencamp. >> this is my ear, my neck, this is the size of a man's first. i'm 62. i just for the first time saw the growth in the back of my neck and it was like why didn't you guys shown this to me earlier because i would see how lucky i am to even be here. >> what was it like to see that for the first time? >> it was like finding out that
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your parents weren't your parents. >> uh-huh. >> i mean it was really an epiphany moment for me, you know. you couldn't thank the guy enough. >> by rights you should be dead. >> oh, sure. >> reporter: in 1951 john mellencamp was one of three babies at riley of spina bifida. >> they did three operations. one died on the table. another girl lived till she was 14 and then she died, and then me. they basically cut my head off from here to hear, laid it open, cut that thing off, and put all the nerves into my spine. >> the doctor's highly risky procedure took 18 hours. >> he charged my parents a dollar. >> a dollar. >> yeah. they paid a dollar. >> because? >> well, because i was a guinea pig. >> does that change the way you see yourself in any way?
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>> yeah, it does. >> reporter: the singer remember walking down a new york street in the 1980s, the height of his success, when he was stopped by an older woman. >> and she said do you know how many angels you have around you? i'm thinking, what? she goes, you are covered with protection. now looking back on her saying that and seeing what i've seen, maybe i believe it. >> wow. a lot of songs in that, i would think. >> well, i already think there's been a lot of songs. i just didn't know it. i didn't know where they were coming from. ♪ >> reporter: mellencamp and the doctor who saved him 62 years ago sat together for about an hour last month. >> and basically he talked about
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faith and having -- because i have very little faith in anything. he just kept grabbing my hand and saying, john, you need to find faith. >> i'm trying to take his advice to heart. >> you are. >> yeah. i'm trying to find faith in something. >> john mellencamp will start an 80-day tour beginning in january, his final show in indianapolis next summer will benefit the riley children's foundation the hospital which supported his surgery. >> that's the most incredit snoobl can you imagine finding this out in 1962? >> no. how did he find the doctor. >> it was a matter of coinciden coincidences. the doctor is in a retirement home in alabama. he found him before he was inducted into the rock and roll
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hall of fame in 2008 but finally the doctor's sons called him and said if you want to actually meet him, you'd better do it soon. he's 97. >> what a beautiful story on so many levels. john cougar. he's now mellencamp. how did he get that name. >> he was given that name when he first signed. he was able to final outrun it. >> i vel to go get some of his music. summer's over but the movie blockbusters may just be getting started including steve carell, far from
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the highly anticipated "gone girl" is hitting theaters today. the movie's already dominating two-thirds of fandango's weekend sales but it's not the only one. film critic a.o. also known as tony scott is at the table. welcome. >> glad to be here. >> ben aflaek was here the other day. he said the movie is really good. would you agree? 6 million people read the book. do you think they'll be disappointed? >> i don't think so. i don't think they'll be disappointed. i think it's a solid movie, a
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very solid thriller. david fincher directed it. it's really a masterful atmosphere, creating a sense of uncertainty, not knowing what's going to happen next. and with the two main characters, ben affleck and rose amond pike, who are they really? are they what they seem to be to us a to each other? what's going on inside that marriage and who's done it and who's done what. >> what's goinging on inside their heads. >> you have to be careful what you say. >> the performances? >> the performances are very good. affleck in particular, he kind of breaks new ground. >> because of the nude scene? >> well, you know, he certainly puts his business out there, so to speak. >> very brief, though, that scene, very small. >> people are going to have to get the dvd and slow down and
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freeze the frame and find the second where you may or may not see it. but that's not the only reason to see the movie. >> that's right. >> and not the only aspect of his performance because he's always had this thing where he can seem like a very, very nice guy and also a complete jerk and he's played both and this guy's right in the middle. in almost every scene you go back and forth. >> i like him, i don't. >> is he sincere, is he a social path, is he conning us, is he telling the truth? and he keeps switching up on you and his performance kind of drives it through that. >> let's talk about some of the mirr movies that are coming up. interstellar. >> "interstellar." there's been all kinds of hype and buildup and the stars have been everywhere and it opened the new york film festival. "interstellar" is something that paramount is keeping close to their vest. christopher nolan has directed
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it. there have been short trailers and a few images that come out on the internet. we know it's about outer space, matthew mcconaughey is in it and the director is christopher nolan. they want to create anticipation and mystery. we're going to have to go to this movie to find out what the movie is about. >> what about "the judge?" >> "the judge" i have not seen. robert downey jr. and robert duvall. >> the movie "whiplash." >> the movie i hope everyone sees "whiplash" with miles and j.k. simmons who's been in countless movies. people have referred it to as full metal jacket at juliard. it's about a music teacher and student. >> two who got a lot of attention, i think, the imitation project. >> "imitation game."
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>> and "chris rock." >> "the imitation game," very interesting meesh. a biographical movie about allan during who was involved in cracking the nazi code. >> enigma code. >> enigma code and kind of invented the world we live in. the computer. everything we have around us. >> it's a very good film. >> it is and it's a good season. a lot more to come. this is the time of year when i enjoy doing my job. >> break out t the popcorn. tony scott, thank you so much. up next, the most unforgettable moments of the week. you're watching "cbs this morning.
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i'and i love new york. there's no place like it in the world. one of my favorite fall activities is visiting our world-renowned wineries and craft brewers. and, award-winning distilleries and cider makers. they're located all across our great state.
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come raise a glass to your favorites. plan your fall getaway at iloveny.com/fall there's something for everyone that does it for us. >> is it friday already? >> it is friday.
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>> glory hallelujah. >> we've got a lot of highlights for you. first, tune in to "cbs evening news with scott pelley." we leave you with a look back at the week. they met with a ragtag army fighting off isis militants. >> how did they end up in so much control of so much territory. >> having knowledge i think we underestimated. >> gonzalez was sprinting until he got to the north portico and the white house front door. >> mistakes were made, proper protocol was not followed. >> i wish you were protecting the white house like you're protecting your reputation. >> duncan was allowed to go home after his first visit. >> we know how to stop ebola. we will do it here. >> protesters jam the streets. >> we cannot even have our basic human rights of voting for our leaders in hong kong. >> michael phelps has been charged with dui. >> once he's very successful, he
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always seemed to get in trouble. >> in california, byob, bring your own bags. >> absolutely people see this threat all the way to the east coast. >> i hope you understand my excuse. my family got a little bigger and i thought i should stay home where i'm needed. >> for a guy who said he would never marry again, george clooney had the most inconspicuous wedding. >> can we just talk about the dress? >> what did you get him for his wedding? >> some silver ware at kmart. the people have got to eat, right? ♪ >> she said he's in the best shape he's ever been and i'm enjoying all of it. >> that's very pornographic for my wife.
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>> 525,600 men. >> there have been headlines, governor, about you that he's not going to necessarily take your head off because he disagrees with something you said. >> i never did. >> oh, there were a couple of times people were walking around outside with no heads. >> those people deserve to have their heads taken off and i'll still do that when they need to. >> i still don't think our country is headed in the right direction. >> who is fit to take care of that in 2016. how about you? >> it may be. i don't know. >> we're ready. >> news is back in the morning. >> yes. >> all that -- >> new ad campaign for viagra features women. i wonder if they say side effects include -- >> after four hours something. >> -- and all that matters. >> he said it not me. >> -- on "cbs this morning." >> and the emmy award goes to charlie rose.
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>> eat your heart out, ben
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come on! let's hide in the attic. no. in the basement. why can't we just get in the running car? are you crazy? let's hide behind the chainsaws. smart. yeah. ok. if you're in a horror movie, you make poor decisions. it's what you do. this was a good idea. shhhh. be quiet. i'm being quiet. you're breathing on me! if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance, you switch to geico. it's what you do. head for the cemetery! well a reason why a lot of philadelphia to atlantic city is because it's so close, it's like a quick getaway. the ocean is a big draw. you can come and get some exercise, get some ice cream. love to come to the casinos, get some good food, put your feet in the water, and of course fishing. i love to fish off the pier. i'm a great fisherman. flounder, sea bass, striped bass, you name it, i'll eat it. and you can, like i say, be home within an hour.
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done it many times. >> good morning, i am area kay von tiehl. developing story for you this morning. increased police presence, at upper darby high school today after threats of violence. the school is open, as usual bye officials say anonymous threats attracted their attention. also, several instances of fights at that school, over the lasts few weeks. the threats are you can substantiated, authorities not taking any chances. all right, it is friday, hoping for nice day, and nice weekend. katie, got good news, bad news? >> basically it, we have to pepper the forecast with little wet weather, as well as some wind, and not to mention that very significant drop on the thermometer. little more region wide zoom storm scan3, next big thing, here comes, leading edge of
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the cloud are already visible for us there, across the buckeye state, but today we see mix of clouds and sunshine, high very seasonable at 72, don't get too used to this, because we do see the wet weather move in generally from midnight, and later, with the next cold front. so it will sends the temperatures bit on nosedive here. even through the afternoon, temperatures likely start to fall, but we do clear out, i think, from west to east, during saturday afternoon. that yields bright sunshine, then, sunday. but it is a much cooler seconds half of the weekend, vittoria? >> well, much different rush hour, than we were seeing earlier this morning. look at the schuylkill expressway, 76, picked up quite nicely. if you are approaching the area of city avenue. but, take it with a grain of salt. still have the slow downs in areas. if you are headed down toward the vine st. expressway in the eastbound direction of 76, and if you are traveling on 95, 95 southbound, still pretty slow, out of the area of cottman avenue. northeast philly down toward center city but the blue route picking up, pa turnpike looking pretty good. we do, however, have an
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accident, hatfield, at bergey road coy path road. if you can, try tow avoid the intersection, great news at the airport mass transit. we look great. erika? >> that's "eyewitness news" for now. talk philly is coming up at noon on cbs-3, i'm erika von tiehl. have a great day.
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