Transcripts For KGAN CBS Overnight News 20151020

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from maine to maui, thousands of high school students across the country are getting in on the action by volunteering in their communities. chris young: action teams of high school stunt are joining volunteers of america ananmajor league basebalal players to help train and inspire the next generation of volunteers. carlos pea: it's easy to start an action team at your school so you, too, can get in on the action. get in on the action at actionteam.org. 'cause you'll be in my heart yes, you'll be in my heart from this day on now and fororermore... narrator: if animals are our best friends, shouldn't we be theirs? visit your local shelter, adopt a pet. you'll be in my heart no matter what... if you were a hippie in the '60s, you need to know. it's the dawning of thege of aquarius. yeah, and something else that's cool. what? osteoporosis is preventae. all: osteo's preventable? right on! if you dig your bobos, protect them.. all: cbs cares! well, folks in the northeast for winter coats this morning. it was 17 degrees in montpelier, vermont. in massena, new york. and in the town of mexico, new york autumn leaves disappeared in a blanket olakeeffect snow. nine inches fell over the weekend. theye digging out in southern california, too. last week six feet of mud covered highway 58 north of l.a. mireya villareal reports i won't be melting away on its own. >> reporter: david quintana is seeing his truck for the first time in ve days. i think it's going to be taled. i think it's going to haha a lot of electrical probobms and probably some war in the motor. >> reporter: he was one of hundreds of people stuck on highway 58 when torrential rains hit the area. >> i turned and i looked and off the mounta there was just a river of water coming down. anani was really concerned that we w we going to get washed away. >> reporter: more than 150 cars and trucks were towed, some to the mojave airport, where drivers scraped off mud and tried to salvage what was inside. back on highway 58 transportation crews were scraping mud off the road. debbie cochran and her daughter, jessica mcdonel,hot this video of the mudslide frfr inside theieitruck. >> luckily we weren't farther up where the cars were buried more. >> reporter: the pair waited nearly 12 hours inside their vehicle to be rescued. >> the carin front of us we floating around, banging into each other. it was really scary, and we were really lucky that we didn't get as much damage as most of these otr cars >> reporter: there are still dozens of cars here at the airport that either need to be picked up or they need to be towed. and crews right now are trying to scrape up mud, nearly 1 million cubic yards of mud still out there on highway 58, enough to fill 305 olympic-sisi pools. ott,t,hey're hoping to do o at by thursday of this week and open up the roads. >> mireya villareal reporting for us tonight. mireya, thk you very much. well, open skies are becoming a problem too. today the ansportation department said it will require most owners of recreational drones to register. kris van cleave reports. >> reporter: the number of drone complaints to the faa has surged from 238 for all of 2014 to 969 and counting so far this year. one of the biggest challenges is finding the operator, mething this registry aims to make easier. transptation secretary anthony foxx. how do you pn to enforce thi particularly with people who already own drones? what's their incentive to register them? >> we would expect retroactive registration. this tasasforce will have to come up with thoho solutions. >> reporter: but how are you going to enforce that? are you going to send the drone police after people? >> the signawe're sending today is that when you enter the serious matt. this isn't riding your atv on yourwn property. >> reporter: a new task force will have just a month to recommend how the system should work and which drones should be registered. >> we can't continue to vilify this technology. it's incredible. it will be a game changer in terms of the economy, in terms of entertainment. >> reporter: michael droback runs the small uav coalition. some of its members will be on thtask force. >> can they do that in a month? >> do i have concerns about how short of a timeline this is and what it will mean for ou^ industry? of course. >> reporter: secretaryoxx gave very f f specifics about thehe registry -- about what the rerestry would look like. scott, no information on what information will be required or who will have access to . >> kris van cleave in washington. thanks, kris. tonight israel is building wallto stop gun and knife attacks by palestinians.s. thererhave been weeks of r rewed violence. barry petersens ere. >> reporter: it was murder at random last night at a bus stion. the attacker and an israeli soldier were killed. as was hefftoom zoroom, an innocent african immigrant in israel looking for work. soldiers mistook him for an attacker and shox him. then he was beaten by israelis who thought he was a terrorist. heheater died at aospipil. the palestinians are calling this their days of rage. three weeks of ongoing knife and gun attacks like this one in a tel aviv suburb last week. the attackers can move with ease since palestinian and israeli areas are often side by side. israeli nava segev'salcony overlooks a palestinian neighborhood. being so close sometimes makes her home,a target. israeli police have justivided the two areas with concrete barriers, but that hasn't calmed her fraying nerves. >> we live with a feeling ever momentntomething can happe and that's a terrible feeling. >> reporter: same area, palestinian side, where hosseidaoud, a retired school adnistrator, believes the palestinian attackers are lone wolves. >> i don't believe that they have a leader for this. i think this is someing individu >> reporter: no one knows exactly what triggered the violence. scott, it may have been about the mosque inside the old city of jerusalem and unfounded rumors that the israelis were going to allow more access to the jews and resict how muslims could use it. >> barry petersen in the holy land for us tonight. barry, thank you. two more american children were killed by gunfire over the weekend. in chicago 3-year-old ian santiago was shot accidentally by his 6-year-old brother with a gun found on top of a refrigerator. the boy's father is charged with felony child eangermt. and in hempstead, , w york 12-year-old deja joyner was hit in the head by a stray bullet fired from outside her home. police are investigating whether the gunfire was gng raeld. what to do about gun violence is the subject of our new series called "voices against violence." we're hearing from all sides of the issue. tonight the father of alison parker, a reporter for wdbj, our cbs station in roanoke, virginia who was mumuered alongside photographer adam ward. >> i'm andy parker. my daughter alison was a journalist that was murdered on live television, and that's why i've joined this effort to change things in this country, because we are at war. we have domestic terrorism. d through our grief we take action. and the first thing i would do would be to impress upon the lehat are pro guguthat we're not trying to take their guns away. we're not ying to repeal t second amendment. we can't do that. the nra pumps millions and millions of dollars into campaigns, and it's all coming from gun manufacturers, with the extreme portions and factions of the nra and the gun lobby there is no middle ground. i'm going to be goininout with the governor to call out t tse cowards that are blocking legislation to do sensible gun legislation. i believe that if we are successful, and i think k will , virginia's going t tbe the momol for 2016 for the rt of the country and they can look to this state to see change coming. >> the view of andy paer, th father of reporter alison parker. we have important news for women tonight. is any amount of alcohol safe and it's cats versus dogs in a new poll. the "cbs overnight newew will be righghback. huh, fifteen minutes could sav you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. yeah, everybody knows that. well, did you know that playing cards with kenny rogers gets old pretty fast? you got to know when to hold'em. . know when to fold 'em. know when to walk away. know when to run. you never count your money, when you're sitting at the ta... what? you get it? i get the gist, yeah. geico. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. well, things in the bedroom have always been pretty good. yeah, no complaints. we've always had a lot of fun, but i wanted to try something new. and i'm into that. so we're using k-y love. it's a pleasure gel that magnifies both of our sensations. right, i mean, for both of us, just... yeah, it just takes all those awesome feelings you usually feel and it just makes them... rawr... know that alcohol during pregnancy can harm the fetus, but is any amount of alcohol safe? and dr. jon lapook has thehe jon? >> scott, the american academy of pediatrics is reinforcing previous recommendations saying, "no amount of alcol intake should be considered safe." the risk increasess alcohol consumption increases but even one drdrk a day has been linked to delayed g gwth. even though these recommendations ve been in place for more than 30 years, roughly 10% of women still drink during pregnancy and 3binge. that's four or more drinks at once. the effect -- a recent study of first-graders found 2.5% to had idence of fetal alcohol spectrum disorder. >> but you know, some doctors say if you want to have a glass of wine have one glass of wine. is that nosafe? >> scott, this report says there's no cononrmed consensus right t w about the dangers s an occasional drink of alcohol duringregnancy. but i spoke to the lead auor and she said, look, we know for a fact tt alcohol can have`a fetus. so she said why take a chanc >> dr. jon lapook. jon, thanks very much. the reviews are in, but can that's next. oprah winfrey is going on a diet again, this time for a ton of money. today she spent $43 million for a 10% stake in weight watchers. she says that she plans to use the company's mobile app and work with a personal coach. the deal, though, is already paying off. sharesesf weig watchers doubled today. amazon thinks it knows a fake when it sees one. it is suing morehan 1,000 pele, accusing theheof making money by giving rave reviews online about products that they've never tried. and new yorkers are apparently genuinely fond of their dogs. a suey out today by siena college finds dog people outnumber cat people more than 3 to 1. 42% of those who have a dog or a cat say they have cooked special meals for them. 44% have celebrated their birthday. and 24% have dressed them up in a costume. in lononn they are working arou the clock to save time. that story in just a few minutes. woman: what does it feel like when a woman is having a heart attack? chest pain, like there's a ton of wght on your chest. severe shortnene of breath. unexplained nausea. cold sweats. there's an unusual tiredness and fatigue. unusual pain in your back, neck, jaw, one or both arms, even your upper stomach, are signs yoyore having a heart attack. don't make excuses. make the call to-1-1 immediately. learn more at womehealth.gov/heartattack. bipolar disorder is a brain condition th causes unusual or dramatic mood swings. it affects mililon of americans and compromises their ability to function. when dgnosed, bipolar disorder can be effectively treated by mood stabilizers. but most people with bipolar disord suffer for yea without help because the symptoms are missed or confused withthther illnesses, lili depression. learn how easily you can help keep this from happening to a lovedne. we end tonight in london, where a landmark has fallen on hard times. and in the race to save it every here's mark phillips. [ bell tolls ] famous clock strikes 6:00. or does it? big ben's been striking the hour for 156 years.s. [ bell tolls ] but the thing's been slipping. it was out a whole six seconds the guys who maintain it like ian westworth have been ruggling to keep bigen on time, even using pennies as weights. >> by putting on or taking off a a penny on the pendulum like this you speed up or slow down the clock by 2/5 of a second in 24 hours. >> reporter: but now big ben is on borrowed ti, so worn out it may have to be sdopped and completely overhauled before the 14-foot-long, 600-pound minute hands fall off because the bearings are shot. it would be like stopping the newspaper columnist clinton letts. bones, this old clock. >> one clock. >> one clock. and you know, the thought of it not being there or one hand flying off or, heaven forbid, the thing going digital is just too gruesome to consider. >> we rightly expect all sorts of things -- >> reporter: it would be like losing yet another old symbol of london. the much-loved hop-on, hop-off buss are gone to be replaced by these unloved models. the old red phone boxes aronly kept around fofothe tourists since e advent of you know what. and london's fous black cabs are now thatened by uber. if big ben were to go -- >> it would be a calamity, catastrophe, a disaster. and for that reason i suspect they will find a way around this. bell tolls ] >> reporter: but they're running out ofime. mark phills, cbs news, london. and that's the "cbs overnight news" for this tuesday. continues. for others check back with us just a little later for the morning news and "cbs this morning." from the broadcast center in new york city, i(m scott pelley. >> announcer: this is the "cbs i'm jericka duncan. it's being called a real-life sequel to the movie "goodfellas." and it's 37 years in the making. an aging mobster with a rap sheet a mile long is being accused of taking papa in a $6 milon heist at kennedy airport. lawyers for vincent asaro admit he's no angel but claim the whole case is based on elderly rats and snitches and all of whom either have a grudgdgor are trying t tget out of jail. anna warner has the story from u.s. district court in brooklyn. >> reporter: it was december of 1978 when masked gunmen n e nearly $6 million ininash and jewelrfrom a lufthansa carar terminal at new york's jfk airport. organized crime associate goes on trial in a case that insped a filmlassic >> and these are the guys that turnrn out to be the biggest heist in american history. the lufthansa heist. >> reporter: martin scorsese's 1990 oscar-winning drama "gdfellas" tells the story of e new york crime family that orchestratededhe brazen heist. and recounts the violent aftermath. robert de nirolayed james burke, known as jimmy the gent. he was the suspected rg leader of the crime, a 64-minute cacar in which six armed robbers broke into the lufthansaacility and made off with $6 million in cash and jewelry. >> how did they force them to open this room? >> by holding a gun to the head of the man who had the key. >> reporter: in real life prosecutors aim one the robbery's key figures was now 80-year-old vincent asaro, a reputed member of the bonanno crime family. they allege he received $750,000 as his cut of the proceeds. >> he didn't do it. had nothing to do with it. pretty much all the people that did it got murdered by jimmy burke. so i read. so the fact my client didn't get have anything to do with it. >> reporter:rosecutors are expected to introduce wiretaps and something that used to be unusual. testimony from some of them whwh were close to him. that's expected to include asaro's cousin and his former bonanno family boss. >> i think the fear from the mob has totally abated. the code of silence went out. it's history. it's gone. it's never goi to be again. >> reporter: former mobster sal polisi broke the code himself when he testified against the late mob boss john gotti. he claims he was asked to take part in the lufthansa heist but turned it down. he says no matter what happensns to asasa one mystery remainsns where is the money?y? >> just a little taste. >> no one has ever managed to find any of the money. remember there was a few families involved and yes, some of that money went to some of the e rticipants but a lototf those guys were killed. were they killed before they got the money? that i can't say. >> reporter: now, the judge in this case has rulethat prosecuts cannot reference the brutal killings depicted in the vie "goodfellas" because asaro is not charged with those killingsgs he does face one murder charge for an unrelated murder in 1969 of ather law enforcement informant. the fastest oceanliner eve built is now rotting away at a dock in philadelphia. the "uss united states" made history in the 1950s, but if preservationists don't come up with milons of dollars by the end the month the ship is aded to the scrap yard. edward lawrence has the sty. >> reporter: for those who sailed on her it will be a day ng remembered. >>eporter: when she left port on july 3rd, 1952 the "uss united states" was considered the fastest and most luxurious oceanliner in the world. its maiden voyage across the atlantic took three daysen hours and 42 minutes, a record it was so fast the ship's propelelrs were a cold war secret. the "uss united states" would become a symbol of post-war american pride, patriotism and power. but after just 17 years on the open water the ship would be retired, never to sail again. how much does it cost to keep it afloat here? >> the costs are about $60,000 each month. >> reporter: i is been docked here, on the delaware river in philadelphia, for the past 18 years. and the conservancy that owns it can't ford to keep it here any longer. susan gibbis the exetive director. >> it presentsheast, best kind of -- the most iconic achievement in ship building and design he in this nation. it's an engineering marvel, a work of art, and it's our history. 's our shared history as a nation. it would be as if the statue of liberty was just kind of chopped off at her knees. >> how critical is this point in time? >> ware at the 11th hour. maybe the 59th minute of the 11th hour. we have never been clor to sasang the ship, and we have never been closer to losing it. >> reporter:r:ibbs has more than a vested interest. this ship is in her heritage. her grandfather, william francis gibbs, built the "uss united states." a man with no formal training in rine engineering who taught himself how to build ships. during world war ii 3/4 of u.s. naval vessels built were designed by gibbs's firm. as the war ended, he went back to work the ship he loved more than anything. his biographer, steven ujifusa, spoke to "sunday morning" back in 2013. >> he was kind of like steve jobs in that he knew aot of engineering but he was vermuch a visionary. imagine taking a structure the size of the chrysler building, turning it on its side, and pushing it through the adlantic at 44 miles per hour. that's a heck of a lot of engineering. and on top of f at make it the mo butiful ship in the >> reporter: throughout the 1950s it was traveled by celebrities and royalty. everyone from john wayne and judy garland to the duke and duchess of windsor. and it played a starring role in films like 1953's "gentlemen prefer blondes," alongside jane russell and marilyn monroe. that same year cbs's walter cronkite was a passenger on the ss united states" as he traveled to lond to cover the coronation of queen elizabeth. >> to look at her just couldld fill y with pride and wonder she just was a magnificent-looking boat. >> there were more people on this shihithan lived in the toto that i grew upupn. reporter: joeoda a s an ployee on the ship. his sponsibilities includ delivering telegrams to harry truman. and he shot this video of the president getting off the boat in france. what was it like being on board? >> it was special. i think that's the only word i could use. >> reporter: anybody who made a contribution to this world traveled on board this ship. >> reporter: but cruise ships suffered as jet planes became more popular in the 1960s. in 1967 william francis gibbs died, two years before his mamaerpiece retired from service. >> what has happened to this ship since it's be retired? >> the ship was withdrawn from service in 1969. a series of plans were advance and all failed. and so when the conservancy purchased the vessss in 2011 the first time the preservation organization had stepped up to the plate. >> reporter: for four years susan gibbs has been trying to get financing for renovation and a new home that could cost up to $300illion. ideas ranging from a hotel to a museum or fices. they have weeks bere money forces them to sell this piece of maritime history for scrap tal. edward lawrence, philadelphia.ld on the shower curtain for up to 7 days" spray. discover more ways you can use lysol i did everything i could to ma her party perfect. almost everything. you know, 1 i n 10 houses could get hit by an e eensive septic disaster. but for only $7 a moh, rid-x helps break down waste. avoid a septicisaster with rid-x. it was nearly 40 years ago that a little-known singer from england put on a pair of big glasses, picked up his guitar, and transformed into megastar elvis costello. well, he's got a new memoir out called "unfaithful music and disappearing ink." ananhe sat down with antntny mason for "sundadamorning." >> reporter: cross the river mersey on the ferry to liverpool. >> look how beautiful the skyline is. >> reporter: and yououail back into declan macmanus's youth. >> liverpool's really in your blood. >>t literally is in that my mother's from here, my dad's from the other side. >> reporter: a teenage declan played his first paid gigs here. >> we'e'play anywhere that h h us. we'd play schools and poetry evenings. >> reporter: then he moved to london, took our king's name, and became elvis costello. the spindly singer with the big specs and biting lyrics. don't a like you're above me just look at your shoes >> reporter: whohothe "village voice" would call the avenging dork. you were pretty angry on stage in the beginning. >> maybet came off thaway. i mean, i'm not trying to deny it now. but i i think some of it's s st the face you're born witand this gap in my teeth, you know, some people ke jane birkin it made her incredibly sexy. obviously it hasn't worked for me. but it has made some things ve said sound more emphatic than they are. so even if i'm saying something relatively reasonable or tender it comes out as a threat or provocation. >> was the elvis part yourdea? >> god, no. >> go to the office one day, they say we've got a great idea. we're going to call elvis. i thought they were kidding. put these on. they'd obviously thought it out. i was tokind of nondescript really. alison i know this world is killing you >> reporter: when his debut album "my aim is true" exploded in 1977, he still had a day job as a c cputer technician at t london beauty salon. >> you were writing songs at elizabeth arden. >> yeah. after hours. so i'd take my,guitar in the evening and i'd be playing. >> reporter: one song came to him on a tp to liverpool. >> "red shoes" literally ame to you on the train. >> yeah. >> did you have the words and the music? >>eah. the whole thing fust appeared. i won't get any older now the angels wanna wear my red shoes >> reporter: elvis would use band the attractions. shooting on the ferry ramp. and at the observatory. >> it's like having the mad cast on the hillll whwhou were a kid you u uld imagine anything going on if here, you know. >> reporter: but elvis grew up in london. "i was born in the same hospital in which alexaer fleming discovered penicillin," he writes in his new memoir, "unfaithful music d disappearing ink." "i apologize in advance that i have not been the e me boon to mankind." >>hat top one up there. >> reporter: the macmanuses lived on this quiet street in london's twickenm neighborhood. his mother worked in a record shop. his father, ross macmanus, notice the resemblance, was a singer andrumpet player in a popular big band. the love between my brothers and my siste in 1963 his dad played a royal queen mother. >> also on the bill that nig were -- >> a little grp from liverpool called the beatles. my dad brought home the beatles' autographs for me. >> so you glued them in your book. >> i glued them in my book, yeah. >> reporter: elvis was 14 when he saved up to buy his first guitar. >> did you have a guguar picked out? >> thereas one in the window. >> reporter:t was in a score across the thames river in richmond.p>> and then the day i got it was pretty great. i lked ovewith it over my shoulder, you know. >> back across the bridge? >> yeah. i'm a musician now. >> you've talked about this whole idea of the sort of fluidity of identity. >> this also gs back to my dad. >> reporter: to make extra cash his father would sing as other artists on cheap knockoff records. >> and they would do note for note covers of current hits. and he would be frank bacon and the bacoers or hal prince and the layabouts. so you kw, was it unusual to be called elvis? not if your dad's frank bacon. >> and have been. swewe dreams of you >> reporter: he's changed identities and writing partners. is it all in that pretty little head of yours >> for a kid who loved the beatles what was it like to work with mccarey? >> well, i thought it was a prank when i was told that paul wanted me to come and write songs. but you don't turn up, you know, in your short trousers with your fan club card and front pocket sticking out. obviously you ve to turn up responsibly with your itar and a couple of ideas. >> reporter: costello had the beginnings of a song about his grandmototr grappling with alzhzhmer's. veronica veronica >> we made "veronica" into a pop record that actually got onto the tadio even though it's speaking about the unraveling of the mind. never thought it would be like this but now see >> reporter: a decade later he collaborat with burt baarach. >> it ended up startjng what's become like a 20-year relationship. >> yeah. i meanwe're still writing together now. >> reporter: they're writing two musicals. >> it's midnig and the phone rings and it's burt bacharach. "elvis, where are the lyrics?" you know, it's him driving it all the time. it's pretty great. gee it's great after being out late walking my baby back home >> reporter: he jumps genres, from pop to classical to jazz. he once performed with a 80-piece orchestra at royal albert hall. it's also where he s his wife, jazz great diana krall, play one of his songs many years ago. >> i saw diana play when we we first friends, and she played "almost blue" as an encore. i thought, hmm. >> you had a pretty rowdy life when you were younger. in 2003 did you put that >> i tried to put it away a bunch of times. you know. i mean, to my shame didn't succeed in staying true to my first wife, who i deeply love still. she gave me that beautiful son. and diana isisyou know, very understanding ofhat. the rowdy's not gone away but the rowdy's just focusededn one person.. reporter: and on twtwothers. costello and krall have twin 8-year-old sons together. >> we're on tv, people. >> you seem to be really enjoying that. >> yeah. what do you want to know about minecraft? i see you've got a husband now w did he leave your pretty fingers lying reporter: at 61 elvis costello is still learning. you used to hold him jight in your hand of t tse adventures that might seem like wildly casting around for something to people o are, you know, dogmatic about rock and roll. the adventures. >> totally. alison >> repter: and about being a man of many musical hats. my aim is true >> i have 400. >> 400? >>&no. i don't know. i always liked them. they keep your brains in. most ribs eaten while calf roping... yep, greatness deserves recognition. you got any trophies, cooy? whoomp there e is uh, yeah... well, uh, well there's this one. best insurance mobile app? yeah, two years in a row well i'll be... does that thing just#follow you around? like a little puppy! the award-winning g ico app. downloadt today. well, things in the bedroom have always been pretty good. yeah, no complaints. but i wantedo try something new. and i'm into that. soe'e' using k-y love. itit a pleasure gel that magnifies both of our sensations. right, i mean, for both of us, just... yeah, it just takes all those awesome feelings you usually feel and it just makes them... wr... dare to feel more with new k-y lo. skrch... sch... what are you doing? the dishes are clean. i just gotta scrape the rest of theood off them. ew. dish issues? cascade platatum wers through this brownie mess better than the competition,the first time. one of the most famous chefs in london, yotam ottolenghi, has a new cookbook hitting the store shelves today.y. it's called "nopi," and charlie d'agata got a taste of at's inside. >> reporter: in the heart of london's trendy soho neighborhood sits nopi, st north of piccadilly, which is what nopi standsdsor. the idea behind "nopi" the book is to challenge cooks to recreate the magic of yotam ottolenghi at home. and latest collaborator ramael scully, or just s slly as he's affectionately known. scully's the one who burned the miso paste. >> when you came outith it i thought you're gng to have to make another one. that's what you're -- >> that's what you're looking for. >> that is not a mistake. >> reporter: there's more trial than err involved in creating book. ottolenghi discovered scully working in one of his kitchens. the big man with the congenial smile in his words who broughtht bold intense flavors with asian flair to each of his creatio. >> born in malaysia, grew up in australia. my mother's side is basically we have indian and chinese heritage. on my father's se is basically irish and balinese herage. >> reporter:t was the knack of bringing those early influences together t tt caught the eye of f ottolenghi. >> is it possible for two men like you to work together? you have your ideas, you have your ideas. >> when j first started he'd say this is too much elements. take t ts out. it's taught me in a y that sometimes too much oa plate does not work being a young chef. but now he's got me three components, make it simple, make e flavors come out. and the whole thing about this dish -- >> he says as if it was easy. it wasn't t sy to get him out ofof his way. he was trained in very formal restaurants. so there was always like 17 he goes all right, chef. >> these i haven't tried yet. >> reporter: jusalem-born ototlenghi has built a c ceer on collaborating. the jewish chef who famously partned with palestinian chef sammy tamimi to bring middle easterstreet food to a global audience. the new cookbook includes 120 recipes of the restaurant's most popular dish. an asian twist to ottolenghi's signature style of combining fresh and innovative ingredients. like the quail with burnt miso butterscotch and pomegranate and walnut salsa. >> we're going to lightly spread it on top. okay, guys?? you want to make sure it doesn't overshadow the meat completely. >> we constantly learn from people around us. >> you're open -- t every chef is liki that. >> i think probably y most brilliant chefs do absorb from their surroundings. >> or maybe they d't admit it? >> or maybe they don't admit it. yeah, they might not admit it. cookbooks, who now number in the millions, may find the new one more complex. ottolenghi makes clear this is a restaurant cookbook featuring restaurant food. he says the recipes may take more commitment buthey're not out of reach of amateur cooks. the quail to less than 20 minutes to prepare. >> and that whole ethos of cooking in a restaurant is what we tried to bring to the home cook. some recipes might be more complicated, others simpler. but overall it's a slightly more evolved way ofooking. >> you're ththe to challenge your readers. >> we wanto take them to the next step. >> reporter: it's about raising the game. dishes designed to impss guests that look harder to prepare than they were. delicious, delectable, and most charlie d'agata, london. when the engines failed on the plane i was flying, i knew what to do to save my passengers. but when my father sank into depression, i didn't know how to help him. when he ultimately shot himself, he left our family devastated. don't let this happen to you. if you or a loved one is suicidal, call the national suicide prevention lifeline. no matter how hopeless or helpless you feel, with the right help, you can get well. (franklin d. roosevelt) the inherent right to work is one of the elemental privileges of a free people. endowed, as our nation is, with abundanthysical resources... ...and inspired as it should be to make those resources ...we approach reemployment with real hope of finding a betr answer than we have now. narrator: donate to goodwill where your donatioio help fund job placement and training for people in your community. aa michigan-michigan state. it's one of the fiercest rivalries in college football. the michigan punter is getting death threats after he cost his team the game.e. am zuker has the story. >> reporter: football makes us crazy but shouldn't make us keyboard klers. blake o'neill, a native of australia, just started playing for chigan this year as a graduate student. early in saturday's game fans re singingis prais after a nster 80-yard punt but it's the last play of the game that everyone is now tataing about. >> there's no doubt michigan state is an outstanding team. >> reporter: up two points with ten seconds on the clock the university of michigan looked ready to hanrival michigan state its first defeat of the season. but then the unimaginable happened. >> he has trouble with the snap! and the ball is free! >> reporter: punter blake o'neill fumbled the ball, popping it right i io the hanan michigan state's jalen watts-jackson, who took it in for a touchdown. >> he scores on the last play of the game! unbelievable! >> reporter: michigan state won >> oh, my god! >> reporter: crushing the dreamsms of wolverine fans everywhere. >> they played their guts out. playedinning football overcame so much. and we messed up. messed up p e play at the end. >> even in t t press box our jaws dropped. wondering how the heck could this have happened? the fans stayed in tt stadium for good 15 minutes after that game ended, stunned. >> reporter: once the shock re off fans turned to social media, some hurling insults and death threats at the australian-born o'neill. in tweets that have since been deleted. sunday michigan interim athletic director jim hackett fed back k in a letter sayingng"today i awake to the shocking reality that our community who cares so much about this progm would send hurtful, spiteful and vicious comments to one of our students i'm asking that our community not lose this game twice by condoning thoughtless comments." >> mistakes are gog to happen. it's sport. you can even say you know, kid unfortunatelyou blew it. but it stops there. the fact that you're making threats against his life and making a concern for his personal safety, that crosses e line. >> hopefully hgets a shot at redempon. michigantate fans didn't celebrate very long, especially for jalen watts-jackson, the plpler who scored the game-winning touchdown, dislocated and fractured his hip on the play. he was swatting his teammates away while he was onhe ground. he underwent surgery. he's going to be out for the rest of the season. spartans are still very much in contention for the collegege football playoffs, got the b one against ohio state at the end of november and of course after that michigan ainst ohio state. >> that's the "cbs overnight news" for this tuesday. for some of u the news continues. for others check back with us little later for the morning from the broadcast center in new shflz today. charlie d'agata got a taste of what's inside. >> repter: in the heart of london's trendy soho neighborhood sits nopi, just north of piccilly, which is what nopi stand for. the idea of "nopi"@ the book is to encourage cooks to try to capture the magic of chef ottolenghi at home. with the help of his head chef skul. he's the one who burd the miso paste. >> when yocame out with it i thought u're gng to have to make another one. that's what you're -- >> that's s at you're looking for. >> reporter: there's more trial new dishes featured in the book. ought ottolelehi discovered skullyn one of his conditions. who brought bold intense flavors with asian flair to his creations. >> born in malaysia, grew up in australia. my mother's side is basically we have indian and chinese herita. on my father's side is basically irish anan balinese heritage. >> reporter: it was the knack of bringing those ear influences together that caught the eye of ottolenghi. >> is it possible for you two men to work together? you have your ideas, you have yourideas. >> when i first started he'd say this is too muchch take this ouou it's got me in a way that sometimes too much on a plate does not work being a young chef. but now he's got me three components, make it simple, make the avors come out. and the whol thing abozt this dish -- >> it wasn't easy to get h h out of his way. he was trained in very formal restaurants. so there was always like 17 elements on the plate. skully, can we le something? he goes all right, chef. >> these i haven't tried yet. >eporter: jerusalem-m-rn ottolenghi has built a career on collaborating. the jewish chef who famously partnered with palestinian chef sammy tamimi to bring middle eastern street fd to a gbal audien. the ne cookbook includes 120 rerepes of the rereaurant's most popular dishes. an asian twist to ottolenghi's signature style of combining fresh and innovative ingrednts. like the quailith burnt miso butterscotch and pomegranate and walnut salsa. we're going to lightht spread it on top. okay, guys? you want to make sure it doesn't overshadow the mea coletely. >> we constantly learn from people around us. >> y're open -- not every chef is like that. >> i think probablbl the most brilliant chefs do absorb from their surroundings. >> or maybe they don't admit it? >> or maybe they don't admit it. yeah, they might not admit it. >> fans of ottolengni's previous cookbooks, who nowowumber in the millllns, may find the any one more complex. ottolenghi makes clear this is a restaurant cookbook featuring restaurant food. he says the recipes may take more commitment but they're not out of reach of amateur cooks. the quail took less than 20 nutes to prepare. >> and that wholele ethos of cooking in a restaurant is what we tried to bring to the home cook. some recipes might be more complicate, othe simpler. but overall it's a slightly more evold way of oking. >> you're thehe to challenge your readers. >> we want to take them to the next step. >> reporter: it's about raising the game. dishes designed to impress gues that look harder to prepare than they were. delicious, delectable, and most importantly,oable a at home. charlie d'agata, london.421 and a half prostate exams. so why do i do it? because i get paid. und... on this side of the glove so, if you are a man over 50 ta to you doctor to see if a prostate exam isight for you. if we can do it, so can you. michigan-michigan state. it's one of the fiercest ririlries in college football. but things may be getting out of hand. the michigan punter is getting death threats after he cost his team the game. adam zuker has the story. >> reporter: football makes us crazy bubu shouldn't make us killers. blake o'neal native of australia starteplaying this year as a graduate student. early in saturday's game fans were singing his praises after a monster 80-yardunt but it's the last play of the game that everyone is now talking about. >> there's no doubtbt michigan state is ananoutstandinin team. >> reporter: up two points with ten seconds on the clock the university of michigan looked ready to hand rival michigan state its first defeat of the season. but th the unimaginable happened. >> he has trouble with the snap! and the ball is free! >> reporter: punter blake o'neil fumbled the ball punting it right in the hands of jalen watts-jackson who took it in for a touchdown. >> he scores on the last play of the game! unbelievable! >> oh, my god! >> reporter: crushing the dreams of wolverine fans everywhere. >> they played their guts out. played winning football overcame so much. and we messed up. messed up the play at the end. >> even in the press box our jaws dropped. wondering how the heck could this have happened?? the e ns stayed in that sum for a good 15 minutes after that game ended, stunned. >> reporter: once the shock wore off fans turned to social media, some hurling insults and death threats at the australian-born o'neill. in tweets that have since been deleted. sunday michigannterim athletic director jim hackett fired back in a letter saying, "today i awake to the shocking reality that our community who careso ch about this progr would send hurtful, spiteful and vicious comments to one of our students. i'm asking that our community not lose this game twice by condoning thoughtless comments." >> mistakes are going to happen. it's sport. you can even say you know, kid, unfortunately you blew it. but it stops there. the fact thdt you're making threats against his l le and making a concern for his personal safety, that crosses the line. >> hopefully he gets a shot at redemption. michigan state fans didn't celebre very long, especially for jalen watts-jackson, the player who scored the game-winning touchdown, dislocated and fractured his hip on the plpl. he was swatting his teammates away while he was on the ground. he underwent surgery. he's going to be out for the rest of the season. sparrnstill ve much in contention for the college football playoffs, got the big one against ohio state at the end of november and of course aftetethat michigan againin ohio state. >> that's the "cbs overnight news for this tuesday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back with us a little later forhe morning news and "cbs this morning." from the broadcast center in new york city i'm jericka duncan. halevel security breach. a hacker got his hands on the personal e-mail of two of

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