millionaires on the one hand to calls for a flat tax on everyone on the other. the air waves of full of conflicting claims about financial justice and fiscal remedy. with election day little more than a year away the debate is bound to get even louder. a quiet but serious appraisal from martha teichner will be our sunday morning cover story. right now warren buffet pays a lower tax rate than his secretary. an outrage he has asked us to fix. warren buffet has come out and said it s not fair. he s absolutely right. it s not fair. there s a deeper question though. why has the underlying inequality grown so much. reporter: there are as many opinions on what to do about it.. this is why we develop 9-9-9. reporter:. as there are presidential candidates. later this sunday morning, a step back from the fray. osgood: the music man will be dropping in this morning. sings no songs, plays no instrument yet his career has hit any number of high notes just the same. anthony mas
along the east coast torrential rains. republican candidates prepare take to off the gloves a new poll governor rick perry with a decisive lead over the pack. we will look ahead to that debate where perry and romney go head-to-head for the first time early this wednesday morning, september 7th, 2011. captioning funded by cbs a foggy morning in new york city. good morning. i m erica hill. i m chris wragge. rub thing e fog out of your . police don t know why a man opened fire in ihop restaurant in carson city. five people died and the gunman who is described as mentally ill. karen brown is live with us for the latest. reporter: good morning to you. one of the witnesses from inside the restaurant here behind me spoke for the first time last night to me and he described an extremely grisly scene with the shooter just seven feet away from a table full of national guard members when he opened fire. but authorities say this was not an act of terrorism. investigators sa
a sunday morning that finds millions of us here in the northeast bat oning down to weather the storm. she s just barely a hurricane but irene is still some force of nature. a category 1 storm with top winds of 75 miles an hour. it arrived here in new york city this morning after creeping up the new jersey coast overnight. thus far areen is blamed for nine deaths. we ll be tracking the storm all through this broadcast hearing from cbs news correspondents all along its path. among them mark strassmann who reports this morning from kill devil hills, north carolina. reporter: she s packd up her winds and headed north ward. a big, big breach right here. reporter: but hurricane irene certainly left plenty to talk about. and a lot to clean up besides. ahead this sunday morning, we follow the storm from here in north carolina on to parts unknown. mason: while we look ahead to irene s north ward slog, our martha teichner has been looking back and will offer us a hurricane hist
oslo followed by a shooting rampage at a summer camp that lasted an hour-and-a-half. although a suspect is in custody a full explanation remains elusive. the shock and the grief here in norway, later on sunday morning. osgood: as the past few days have certainly reminded us, hot and cold are the two extremes that define our seasonal climate. extremes that our steve hartman will be exploring this morning. if you re fired up about this summer s heat, you might want to cool it for a second. it s so hot. i wish it was winter. reporter: how easily we forget just how much worse it could be. you re not missing anything right now. it s miserable out. reporter: right now your lawn may be turning brown, but is the grass any greener on the other side of the solstice? wouldn t it be great to walk on over and warm up. cool off. i ll take you there. later on sunday morning. osgood: members of a popular band are still believin in a song long ago. jim axelrod will show us. d
deadly bombing in downtown oslo followed by a shooting rampage at a summer camp that lasted an hour-and-a-half. although a suspect is in custody a full explanation remains elusive. the shock and the grief here in norway, later on sunday morning. osgood: as the past few days have certainly reminded us, hot and cold are the two extremes that define our seasonal climate. extremes that our steve hartman will be exploring this morning. if you re fired up about this summer s heat, you might want to cool it for a second. it s so hot. i wish it was winter. reporter: how easily we forget just how much worse it could be. you re not missing anything right now. it s miserable out. reporter: right now your lawn may be turning brown, but is the grass any greener on the other side of the solstice? wouldn t it be great to walk on over and warm up. cool off. i ll take you there. later on sunday morning. osgood: members of a popular band are still believin in a song long ago. ji