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the other three are being treated. >> a deadly school shooting in arizona. >> the shooter is in custody near residence hall. >> northern arizona university in flagstaff. >> are you happy he's gone? >> happy is not the right word. relieved. >> many are trying to convince paul ryan to fill the void. >> rivers could begin spilling over their banks today. >> another drone has landed in a park near the white house. now two people have been cited. >> the 2015 nobel peace prize has been awarded to a group called the national dialoguing quartet in tunisia. >> the likelihood of hitler to accomplish his goals would have been greatly diminished if the people had been armed. >> this is not a terrorism-related incident nor is it related to what happened in france months ago. >> dramatic rescue of 39 undocumented immigrants in texas discovered stuck inside an 18-wheeler. >> an out of control driver hit several cars in north carolina. all that -- >> a terrifying bridge collapse in new zealand. four tourists plunged 25 feet. amazingly, they walked away. >> that closes out the game. >> how difficult was it playing through this illness tonight? >> i can't explain it. it was amazing. i got nothing left. >> putin is devoting his own military just to barely hold together by a thread his sole ally. >> he's challenging your leadership, mr. president. >> on "cbs this morning." >> donald trump proved once and for all that he does indeed have the hispanic vote. >> i'm hispanic and we vote for mr. trump! yes, mr. trump! this morning's eye opener is presented by toyota. let's go places. with just to "cbs this morning." republicans in the house are split in two and scrambling to find a leader. a sudden and unexpected decision on thursday turned the election of a new house speaker into chaos. >> majority leader kevin mccarthy, the front runner, dropped out of the race to succeed john boehner. two other candidates, chaffetz and webster, are still in the running. paul ryan is still saying no to members who are begging him to run for speaker. nancy cordes is on capitol hill where republicans are trying to pull themselves together. >> reporter: good morning. house republicans are meeting behind closed doors, regrouping. we've been asking them what is the path ahead. no one seems to know. they don't know how long it's going to take to find a leader. and they don't know who would want to lead them in this highly charged environment. >> my statement stands. i haven't changed anything. >> reporter: party leaders are begging wisconsin's paul ryan to run for speaker as the gop rushes to fill a power vacuum. >> i think i shocked some of you, huh? >> reporter: majority leader kevin mccarthy pulled out of the speaker's race at the last possible moment after a vote he was examined pected to win. his announcement left lawmakers reeling, including his two opponents. mccarthy had faced opposition from the same 40 hard line conservatives who wanted to unseat the current speaker, john boehner. one said mccarthy's exit from the race is a victory for the american people. >> they want congress to actually respect conservatives and other members of the congress. that has not happened very much in the last four and a half years. >> reporter: not everyone saw it that way. >> we can't allow a small minority of 30 to 35 people to had come the house of representatives. >> reporter: florida republican iliana rose lehtinen called it a fight for the soul of the gop. >> we need someone willing to negotiate and talk to those on the other side. those are not bad ways to govern. >> reporter: walter jones sent a cryptic letter to conference chairwoman cathy rogers saying pif any candidate for speaker hs committed any misdeeds, he should withdraw from the race. mccarthy was asked if that had anything to do with his decision. >> no. >> reporter: you can put a rest to it right now. >> no. come on. >> reporter: it's now unclear who will be leading the house, which needs to vote to raise the debt ceiling by the end of the month and has to figure out how to get the government funded by december. speaker boehner says he will stay on until a replacement is chosen. but ironically, he resigned because he said he was trying to avoid the very kind of leadership crisis we're now witnessing. >> nancy, thanks. cbs news's john dickerson, moderator of "face the nation," is with us. he'll interview two republicans on sunday that demonstrate the split between the house establishment and the freedom caucus. john, good morning. what happened to march kat-- mccarthy? what's happening to the republican party? is the tail wagging the dog? >> there's wagging all over the place, the dogs have run amok. the problem is no one can get 218 votes, the number of republicans you need to be elected speaker. even before mccarthy made this bombshell announcement, i was talking to a member who said, he could win in the conference but they didn't think they could win 218 on the house floor, which would be a public embarrassment for him. there's still nobody who could get those 218 votes. >> the number of republicans in the entire caucus is? >> 247. >> can anyone win? is it clear that paul ryan has the votes? >> their argument in the freedom caucus is, we were given the majority and we have buckled and not stood firm. now that they've gotten john boehner out and kevin mccarthy out, they're feeling good. why would they want to buckle? >> what do they want? >> they want a variety of things. they want a harder line from the republican leadership to enforce conservative principles. they say, we want the house leader to take on mitch mcconnell, the republican leader in the senate, and make him be tougher. it's very rare for the speaker to tell the senate majority leader what to do. it's a very high bar. and kevin mccarthy said basically, i couldn't meet their demands. >> paul ryan is being laid out as the compromise candidate. is it clear he has the votes of the freedom caucus? >> paul ryan, the chair of the house ways and means committee, his announcement that he didn't want the job came out so fast it almost broke the sound barrier. paul ryan has had lots of fights with these conservatives over fiscal matters, over the debt limit. it doesn't make intellectual sense that he would be the bridge-building consensus candidate. if he wants to be president, there is no road to the presidency through the house speak speakership because it's such a tough job, as we're seeing. >> can anyone control these people who represent the freedom caucus? can anybody in the republican party? >> for right now it doesn't look like anybody can. >> unless they get their way, they're willing to take the house down? >> yes, because they think the house has been selling out republicans and conservatives for the last many years. and it's finally their chance to stop that. >> thanks, john. on "face the nation" on sunday, john will have the latest on the race for speaker for the house, goes one on one with donald trump, plus his rival dr. ben carson, this weekend here on cbs. we're following a breaking story in arizona, another deadly shooting on a college campus. police say two students got into a fight outside a dorm at northern arizona university in flagstaff. four students were shot, one killed. an 18-year-old suspect is in custody. the motivae is unclear. president obama is on his way to roseburg, oregon right now to comfort the families affected by the umpqua community college shootings. the president responded with a call for stricter gun laws saying the violence has become routine. our major garrett confirms this morning that president obama is now considering using his executive power to expand the background checks. he wants to impose new requirements when someone buys from a high volume gun dealer. those dealers would be retired to obtain a license from the bureau of alcohol, tobacco, and firearms. we're following a story about a drone that crashed near the white house. it went down on the ellipse next to the white house's south lawn near the washington monument. police handed out tickets to the owners of the drone and confiscated the aircraft. they say it's not related terrorism. breaking news from the pentagon, the defense department will modify its troubled program to train syrian rebels to fight is. a senior official tells cbs news the obama administration will focus its policy to directly supply weapons and ammunition to vetted opposition forces already fighting on the ground. russia is denying reports this morning that some of its cruise missiles missed their targets in syria on wednesday. russia says it fired 27 missiles at 11 positions in north and northwest syria. they had been launched from warships more than 900 miles away in the caspian sea. u.s. officials believe at least four of those missiles landed in iran. the russian escalation is one of the topics that steve kroft asked president obama about in a new interview for this sunday's "60 minutes." >> a year ago there was saber rattling over the iranian border. now it's going on in syria. you said a year ago we're the indispensable nation. president putin is challenging that leadership. >> in what way? >> he's moved troops into syria, for one. he's got people on the ground. two, the russians are conducting military operations in the middle east for the first time since world war ii. bombing the people that we are supporting. >> that's leading, steve? so let me ask you this question: when i came into office, ukraine was governed by a corrupt ruler who was a stooge of mr. putin. syria was russia's only ally in the region. and today, rather than being able to count on their support and maintain the base they had in syria, which they've had for a long time, mr. putin is devoting his own troops, his own military, just to barely hold together by a thread his sole ally. >> he's challenging your leadership, mr. president. >> steve, i've got to tell you, if you think that running your economy into the ground and having to send troops in in order to prop up your only ally is leadership, then we've got a different definition of leadership. >> steve kroft is here. good morning. >> wow. >> you've interviewed him many times, he was especially feisty this time. what did he say about what russia is doing in syria? >> norah, i can't really say very much about what's in the interview, because the white house as embargoed it until sunday. mostly he defends the positions he's taken already. we talked about pretty much everything. we talk about isis, we talk about -- a lot about vladimir putin, the inability of the united states to identify and recruit and train any kind of a moderate force in syria. we talk about his leadership, whether it's strong or whether the u.s. is projecting strength or weakness in the middle east. >> can you say what he said about him appearing to be very feisty? why do you think that is? >> i'm surmising that some of it has to do with the fact that he's a lame duck. in fact when we are doing a little walk and talk and shooting some b-roll after the interview, he did say he's finding the whole experience of not being on the ballot to be liberating. >> liberating? >> yes. he said that it's sort of taken fear out of the equation, he doesn't have to be quite so careful about what he says. and i think you're seeing some of that. i think you maybe saw a little bit of it, a foreshadowing of it in the comments he made after this last school shooting. i think he's really -- he's sort of holding his ground. >> and he knows these things will extend beyond his watch and his ability to impact. >> right. we also talked about boehner and we talked about the situation with the republicans in congress. >> can't wait for "60 minutes" on sunday. >> we also talked about hillary clinton's e-mails. >> good. hillary clinton, joe biden, donald trump, all of that when you watch steve's full report on sunday's "60 minutes." new dangers this morning in south carolina after deadly flooding. the disaster is blamed for 19 deaths in the carolinas. it caused as much as a billion dollars of damage there. flood warnings are up as waters head to south carolina. david begnaud is in andrews, where people are being urged to get out. >> reporter: good morning. water that caused catastrophic flooding in the capital of columbia has made its way east. we're in the town of andrews. there are homes with water inside. one man who lives just down the street told me he saw water rising at an inch an hour at one point yesterday. the governor says the flooding will be widespread over the next 72 hours, as more and more people are asked to voluntarily evacuate. >> if they come knock on your door, please leave. don't risk your life for this. the water is coming. >> reporter: south carolina has been devastated by flooding not seen in the state's history. more than a dozen people have been killed. hundreds more rescued. now, tens of thousands of people in low lying areas along the coast know they may need to abandon their homes over the weekend as a second wave of water approaches. >> we're seeing damage at levels we haven't seen. it's coming here. >> reporter: in dorchester county, already submerged by water, many people decided they would stay put. >> most people are still in their homes. >> reporter: really? there the river is expected to reach record-breaking flood levels within the next 72 hours. >> everything from up north is draining down this way. i don't know when it's going to stop. >> reporter: statewide, 70 dams are now in jeopardy of failing. 16 have already been breached. in the capital of columbia, people are being told to conserve water. national guard troops are repairing a breach in a canal that is vital to the city's water supply. now that the sun is out, people are starting to come back into the flooded-out communities to check on their homes. this man who parked his boat here is about to hop inside and head down the street to see if he has any flooding in his home and what he may be able to move out. the governor says this new round of flooding could last 12 days. >> david, thanks. an american hero is recovering this morning from a second violent confrontation. spencer stone is shown in a video being stabbed in a fight on thursday in sacramento. he's one of three americans who stopped an act of terror this summer on a french train. ben tracy has more. ben, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. doctors here say stone came through surgery well but he is still heavily sedated. the stabbing took place after stone and his friends left a nightclub not far from here in downtown sacramento. this surveillance video was taken just after midnight thursday. spencer stone on the far left, in the long sleeve white shirt, can be seen both throwing and taking punches in a brawl outside a nightclub with a group of men. eric cane, seen here in blue, witnessed the fight. he says it appeared stone was defending a woman who was punched in the face. >> they knew each other or something. they had been hanging out before this happened. >> reporter: stone was stabbed a total of three times in his upper torso. the video shows what appears to be a large blood stain on his shirt. >> i saw a big red mark on the back of his shirt. there was another random person who walked by who said, i think you got stabbed. >> reporter: this man was driving by in his cab. >> they do this. they stabbed him again and again, this side, this side. >> reporter: lately thursday police released this video of the suspects fleeing the scene. they have not been caught. >> this incident is a very unfortunate altercation between two groups of folks who were enjoying the night life in midtown sacramento. >> reporter: the stabbing happened near the same sacramento streets where stone, a member of the air force, and two friends were celebrated in a parade just last month. the three men tackled a potential terrorist who was heavily armed on a train to paris. stone was slashed in the neck and his thumb was nearly cut off in the attack. he was awarded the purple hard for his injuries at a ceremony at the pentagon. >> this incident is not related to terrorism in any way. >> reporter: doctors say they are confident stone will make a full recovery. >> i suspect given his history of recent events, he's quite a fighter. >> reporter: doctors say it's too soon to know when he will be released. they say so far he is recovering well. >> ben, thank you so much. the world's most secretive country lets reporters in for a big celebration. >> ahead, soueth doane in north korea. >> the news is back right here on "cbs this morning." where personal attention is a big deal. and analytical capabilities ghtful strategies that make edward jones one of the biggest financial services firms in the country? 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and where is it? that story, traffic and weather coming up right after the break. stay right there. i could help people around me. so being a construction supervisor for p gives me the opportunity to give a little bit back to my community. i have three boys. they're what keep me going every day. our friends, families live in the area. and it is important for all of us that we keep our community safe. good morning. i'm liza battalones. delays continue approaching the walnut creek interchange southbound 680 heavy now from the 242 area leaving concord. stays slow to highway 24 because of earlier problems. the good news, westbound 24 is fine now approaching the maze. but the bay bridge toll plaza still stacked up through the maze with those metering lights on. roberta? >> from our kpix 5 studios in san francisco, let's head outside take a look at the transamerica pyramid where we have blue skies for the blue angels today and also the parade of ships beginning at 11 a.m. we are at 46 degrees. wow! in santa rosa. going up to a high there today of 86. 70s, 80s and 90s today. a strong of 90s inland areas each day through wednesday. i love the people "people" magazine. i didn't like that they screwed around. just leave me alone. but milania looked good. i looked like hell. come here. let me have that. where are you from? >> i'm from colombia. >> and is this a setup? did i ever meet you before? >> i'm hispanic and i vote for mr. trump. we vote for mr. trump! yes, mr. trump! we love you! >> that is one very enthusiastic hispanic supporter endorsing donald trump. trump appeared at a rally in las vegas yesterday. he's been accused of using offensive language about hispanics. this supporter walked off with an autograph from donald trump. >> is she from columbia or lives in columbia? >> she just said she's from columbia and loved donald trump. i think that's going to in an ad sooner or later. >> it's a great country. coming up, a rare look from inside north korea's capital. seth doane is there. he hears from selected citizens who say they're glad to show north korea's good side. that's ahead. the "new york times" reports on this year's winner of the nobel peace prize. the committee made the announcement this morning. it assisted a group won for its contraction contribution to the building of democracy in tunisia. the "washington post" reports on the u.s. navy possibly sending a ship to disputed waters in the south china sea toward man-made islands set up by china. china claimed international waters as its own. washington does not ready those claims. >> "business insider" has information about a drug whose price was boosted 5,000%. the ceo promised to drop the price of daraprim but it's still being sold for the high price. the ceo defended the price for the drug. the company did not respond to a request for clarification about the current price. the "los angeles times" reports on a deposition of bill cosby. a civil lawsuit claims he assaulted a woman at the play boy mansion in 1974. she was 15 at the time. in an earlier deposition he was asked, "when you got the quaaludes, was it in your mind you were going to use them for young women that you wanted to have essential with?" cosby replied yes. since then more than 40 women have come forward. table. i think this is a moment that gloria allred that represents these women is waiting for. >> waiting for, indeed. you have a young woman, judith huff, why is she allowed to go forward when no one else is? very simple. she claims she was a victim of childhood sexual abuse and the civil law says if you are a >> if you are a child victim and you go through years of psychological abuse but somehow can't tie it up as to why you are under this mental anguish, once you tie it up in your own mind and say bill cosby in this incident was the cause, then you can go forward. >> there's no statute of limitations? >> very good. and mr. cosby says, wait a minute, she tried to sell her story to the national inquirer, she knew this was tied up long ago. but that's why we're here, the court decided it's not going to intervene. >> what's going to happen today? >> the deposition could go on for days and days. it's up to gloria allred. she doesn't have to stop. she is going to ask bill cosby not only about judith huff. she represents at least 20 of these other women. so she will finish up with judith huff and then she can go forward on each and all of these allegations, because it's a deposition, it's about discovery. anything relevant to this case, anything that could have some tie in discovery. >> do you think this will eventually become public? it's sealed until december, but will it eventually become public? is it on camera? >> i wouldn't be surprised if it's on camera. i would put it on camera if i were gloria. the judge is going to look at both depositions, he's going to an argument in december and decide what if anything becomes public. remember, mr. cosby has choices here. he can answer truthfully and he can say he doesn't remember, and finally, he can simply not answer, and gloria will get those questions certified for him to be instructed to answer. >> thank you so much. this morning north korea is preparing for a massive celebration. a huge military parade tomorrow marks the 70th anniversary of the ruling workers party, a rare excuse to let western journalists into that closed-off country. seth doane is in pyongyang, north korea's closed-off capital city. >> reporter: good morning. it's so rare that foreign journalists to be granted access, that we agreed to things we normally wouldn't, like allowing government minders to follow us everywhere we go. here in north korea it is unusual just to drive down the street, so it seems newsworthy. we boarded our flight to north korea back in beijing. the in-flight magazine has glossy propaganda photos of its leaders, setting the tone for our trip. the first people to meet us at pyongyang's airport were government-assigned minders, who will be with us every step of the way. the trip is carefully choreographed. we can't choose where we're to go. today we're being brought to the birthplace of kim il sung. he's credited with founding north korea and is the grandfather of current leader kim jong un. there were no surprises, as you can imagine. then what appeared to be a wrong turn through a rundown residential neighborhood. we didn't stay long. a look at the metro. deep below ground, old subway cars pull in and out beneath elaborate chandeliers. patriotic music is piped in. this is hardly just a casual stop at the subway. it is a deliberate effort to show us infrastructure at work. one of the things kim jong un has said is that he wants to improve people's everyday life. the question is, is that really happening? we just want to talk to this lady here. trying to get an authentic everyone with government minder in tow is hard to do. >> my recommendation is don't go for the old man. >> reporter: this 27-year-old woman told us she has a good, comfortable life, and seeing foreign media here makes her proud. why proud? because it means people want to come here, she said. you see the imprint of the % government nearly everywhere you turn. people wear pins depicting former leaders. >> translator: this is my heart. >> reporter: do you wear that pin every day? >> translator: this doesn't come off even one hour. >> reporter: preparations are well underway for that massive military parade on saturday. driving down the street, we can see flags out, people practicing dance routines at street corners, or putting the finishing touches on the city, painting the lanes of the sidewalk or cutting the grass. i saw one man clipping a patch of grass with scissors. norah? >> you do see that sometimes in asia. seth, thank you so much. fascinating to see inside. >> you can't talk to the old man but you can talk to the lady in the red sweater. interesting. coming up, what may be the loneliest airport in the world. ahead, why it's missing planes and passengers. and if you're heading out the door, set your dvr so you can watch "cbs this morning" any time you like. we'll be right back. every coconut has a dream. to come out of its shell. to show all the world its true, inner beauty. and then, in an ironic twist, get covered up by chocolate and almonds. almond joy mounds. what every coconut wants. start the interview with a firm handshake. ay,no! don't do that! try head & shoulders instant relief. it cools on contact, and also keeps you 100% flake free. try head & shoulders instant relief. for cooling relief in a snap. you...and itchy eyes.more than sneezing... they also bring tough nasal congestion. so you need claritin-d. it starts to work... ...in just 30 minutes. in fact, nothing works faster. so blow away nasal congestion, fast, with claritin-d. caress presents the world's first body wash with fragrance release pearls. touch your skin to release fragrance up to 12 hours. new caress love forever. what to look at relapsing way multiple sclerosis? this is tecfidera. tecfidera is not an injection. it's a pill for relapsing ms that has the power to cut relapses in half. imagine what you could do with fewer relapses. tecfidera may cause serious side effects, such as allergic reactions, pml, which is a rare brain infection that usually leads to death or severe disability, and decreases in your white blood cells. the most common side effects are flushing and stomach problems. tell your doctor about any low white blood cell counts, infections, any other medical conditions, or if you are pregnant or plan to become pregnant, or are breastfeeding or plan to breastfeed. learn more about the most prescribed pill for relapsing ms in the us, at tecfidera.com. talk to your doctor about tecfidera, and take another look at relapsing ms. this morning, an this morning an airport built with dreams is becoming one of the nation's busineest. it's sitting almost empty. it cost hundreds of millions of dollars to build. management is struggling to turn things around. dean reynolds has more. good morning, dean. >> reporter: good morning. welcome to mid-america airport in illinois. if you've never heard of mid-america airport in illinois, you're probably not alone. allegiant air flight 660 taxied up to the gate on thursday, up with four arrivals for the entire week. the airport is a good place for quiet contemplation, even meditation, because most days it is devoid of passengers or even airplanes to take them anywhere. it's been that way for nearly two decades. richard skillings is with citizens for smart growth, a local group which things the airplane is a waste of taxpayer dollars. >> it costs ten times what they generate in revenue. >> reporter: it was built to ease the burden on lambert international airport in st. louis. lambert was once a hub for twa, but when twa went belly-up in 2001, there wasn't much of a burden left for lambert and consequently little reason for this terminal. it was supposed to serve hundreds of flights and hundreds of thousands of passengers. mid-america airport has a 10,000-foot runway, a state of the art facility, and next month, passenger service to las vegas. you can also fly from here to florida, which is great except when you consider the small number of actual passengers. the original plan here was for 85 gates. but that would be about 83 more than it needs right now. mid-america has never turned a profit in its 18-year history. last year, just 16,000 people boarded here. yet it struggles on. tim cantwell is the primary struggler. was this in hindsight a mistake? >> no way was it a mistake. >> reporter: cantwell is the director of mid-america airport. he says it's a vital piece of the local economy. >> reporter: it just seems like you were brought in to bring up different reasons to justify this place, which you have. >> let's turn that back around. since i've been here we have proven the business model. not that i was brought in here to make up stuff. wait a little longer and there will be more people here. >> reporter: scott air force base is right next door, and there is a boeing assembly plant on the premises as well, which means the future of mid-america airport is probably in cargo, because right now, any passengers here probably come disguised as empty seats. >> all right, dean. that's one of those things that you just go, dog head, like, what? >> dean, who is losing out? taxpayers? >> reporter: it's the local taxpayers, the county. they're the ones who are actually on the hook for the debt, not the federal taxpayers. >> thank you, dean. >> maybe they'll drum up more traffic now that people know about it. thank you, dean. ahead, we'll take you to the white house for the latest on a drone that crashed nearby. and opportunity is everywhere. good. very good. you see something moving off the shelves and your first thought is to investigate the company. you are type e*. yes, investment opportunities can be anywhere... or not. but you know the difference. e*trade's bar code scanner. shorten the distance between intuition and action. e*trade opportunity is everywhere. trick or treat!s) hello, don't you look so cute! happy halloween! 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(bell rings... yet again) (announcer) this halloween, whether it's a little fun or full-on festive, petsmart helps you celebrate your way! save 50% on all halloween toys and costumes, this weekend only. wheall i can think abouthit, is getting relief. only nicorette mini has a patented fast-dissolving formula. it starts to relieve sudden cravings fast. i never know when i'll need relief. that's why i only choose nicorette mini. tick, tock. 25 years old and you're still playing in the mud. 15 feet in the air, that's where you feel most alive. 10 meter maids waiting to wallpaper your truck. better get out of town. 5, 4, 3... the all-new tacoma. toyota. let's go places. ♪ there's something in me... ♪ ♪ ♪ there's something in me... ♪ ♪ ♪ well, this caught a lot of people off-guard including one member of the royals grounds screw who narrowly avoided a bad situation. good thing the guy is in shape but he did get out of there, folks. >> that is scary. unlucky member of the kauffman stadium ground crew got steamrolled last night. the astros beat the royals game one in game one of the american league division series. >> i hope he is all right. why did kevyn mccarthy give up his bid to be house speaker? we are spell to his friend frank blount ahead on "cbs this morning." of somebody else's native tongue? that opens up the doors to trust. my name is kanyon. i'm a technician here in portland oregon. every morning, i give each one of my customers a call to give them a closer eta. and when i called this customer, i discovered that he was deaf. then i thought of amanda. i've known american sign language since i was about 8 years old. it's like music for your eyes. and i thought that was an amazing gift to have, to be able to communicate with the deaf. my friend kanyon asked me to help him explain how today's appointment will go. he was nodding his head and giggling a little bit. i earned his trust that day, i guess. bleeding gums? you may think it's a result of brushing too hard. it's not. it's a sign of early gum disease... which you can help reverse by using listerine(r). added to your brushing routine... listerine(r) kills up to 99.9% of germs... and helps reverse early gum disease in just two weeks. listerine(r). power to your mouth™! also try listerine(r) floss... formerly reach(r) floss. ballot... aimed at overturng california's new mandatory vaccine good morning, it's:56. i'm michelle griego. there will not be a measure on the november 2016 ballot aimed at overturning california's mandatory vaccine law. vaccine critics collected fewer than half the ballot signatures needed for the measure to qualify. the california field poll shows two dozen candidates could face each other in the runoff for barbara boxer's seat. kamala harris and loretta lynch are in second with republicans in single digits. in the next half-hour of "cbs this morning" what's next in the battle to select a new speaker of the house? stay with us. traffic and weather in just a moment. [during sleep train's the triple choice sale. big for a limited time, you can choose up to 48 months interest-free financing on a huge selection of tempur-pedic models. or choose to save $300 on beautyrest and posturepedic mattress sets. you can even choose $300 in free gifts with sleep train's most popular stearns & foster mattresses. the triple choice sale ends soon at sleep train. ♪ sleep train ♪ your ticket to a better night's sleep ♪ good morning. i'm liza battalones with your "kcbs traffic." the bay bridge commute delays began early this morning. still very slow backed up into the macarthur maze with the metering lights on. 42-minute drive time between the carquinez bridge and the maze in oakland. southbound traffic at the golden gate has been fine still very light leaving southern marin although you will now see delays south 101 leaving novato from highway 37 approaching central san rafael. and over at the richmond/san rafael bridge, backups at the pay gates slow across the span. good morning. let's head inland towards vacaville and take a look out towards lake curry where we have the abundance of sunshine. wow! visibility is unlimited! it's been cool this morning in our inland areas. 47 degrees in santa rosa. otherwise 62 in livermore after a high there yesterday of 94 degrees. ditto today. 70s beaches, 80s bay and peninsula. all the way up to 95 degrees inland. we'll keep working those 90s each day through wednesday. my name is jamir dixon and i'm a locate and mark fieldman for pg&e. most people in the community recognize the blue trucks as pg&e. my truck is something new... it's an 811 truck. when you call 811, i come out to your house and i mark out our gas lines and our electric lines to make sure that you don't hit them when you're digging. 811 is a free service. i'm passionate about it because every time i go on the street i think about my own kids. they're the reason that i want to protect our community and our environment, and if me driving a that truck means that somebody gets to go home safer, then i'll drive it every day of the week. together, we're building a better california. good morning to our viewers in the west. it is friday, october 9, welcome back to "cbs this morning." there is more real news ahead including the house race urged upside down. the real reason ahead why mccarthy dropped out. but first here is a look at today's eye opener. i don't want this job. came out so fast it almost broke the sound barrier. four students shot, an 18-year-old suspect in custody. the water that caused catastrophic flooding has made its way to the east. we are in the town of andrews. and there are homes with water inside. >> doctors here say stone came through surgery well, but he's still heavily sedated. the stabbing took place of a at the stone and some friends left a night club. she's going to ask bill cosby not only about judy hugh. >> kim jong-un says he wants to improve people eefr day life. the question is that really happening. i think the likelihood of hitler being able to accomplish his goals would have been greatly diminished if the people had been armed. >> if carson becomes president, i would love to create my own brand of water. >> i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. police are investigating how a drone crash landed near the white house. >> the drone went down just below the white house south lawn. chip reed is at the white house with detail. >> reporter: there were two people on the grounds of the washington monument flying a drone. this is according to the secret service. they flew the drone over constitution avenue and into this area, which is known as the elip elipse, one of the most highly protected areas in washington, d.c. and here is the reason. the white house is just behind the trees over there. you might be able to see a little glimmer of the white from the white house there. an area where all security issues were taken seriously. the two people were issued citations. they were not arrested. even though they take the drone issue very seriously. this is the third drone incident that has happened near the white house, one of them the drone actually landed on the white house grounds. in that case they locked down the white house. in this case they did not. but we are told this is not in any way related to terrorism. that's the good news. chip, thank you so much. republicans have no clear idea who will replace john boehner as house speaker. kevin hk cmccarthy surprised everyone by dropping out. walter jones sent a letter that says any candidate who has committed any misdeeds should withdraw from the speaker's race. mccarthy says that had nothing to do with his decision. jason chaffetz and daniel webster still want to be the next speaker. some hope paul ryan will run, but he says no. >> frank luntz has been friends with mccarthy for 20 years. he's advised the majority leader informally and been a political sounding board it for him. frank is with us from los angeles. good morning. >> good morning. >> have you talked to kevin mccarthy in the last 24 hours? >> yes, i have. and in watching what happened, i started working up on capitol hill in 1993. so more than 20 years. and it was confused up until the last three or four day. it is now chaotic. and what was to me really pathetic, the inability of house republicans to unite, has now become a poison. and those people listening today should understand that when members come out and say we weren't respected or appreciated, house republicans are not functioning this morning and they haven't functioned for some time because this is a segment there that simply believes that it is better to blow up the process than it is to fix it. it is better to pull people apart than it is to find some way to collaborate and cooperate and to work together. >> all right. i hear you on that. so are the other reasons why he said, look, i don't need this, i'm out of here? >> how are supposed to govern when you have 247 members, it requires 218. it's simple math. if you can't get to 218 votes on the floor, you can't get anything passed. and in the end, kevin mccarthy, more than anything else, understands his responsibility, not just to his constituents but to the country you have to be able to govern and if you can't get those votes what good is it to be speaker of the house? >> it had nothing to do with the statement from walter jones if there are any misdeeds you should withdraw now? i heard interviews from lawmakers he was asking for votes and by the afternoon he pulled out and somebody said something happened within that four-hour period. >> it's crap. i would use a stronger word but i don't want you guys to get fined by the fcc. but it's just not true. >> what about the other candidates who are still in the running? jason chaffetz and daniel webster? >> they talk about we need a new face. this is not a debating society or the kiwanis club. this is the house speaker of the united states of america. you want somebody who knows the rules and procedure and you want someone who knows what regular order is and you want someone who can listen. not just to a narrow group of people but to the entire congress. i don't see any candidate other than paul ryan who has the capability of doing it. i know that they are talking to him. i know that there is a considerable amount of pressure on him. but if paul ryan says no, god help us! if we put someone in there who has been in office for two or on four years and doesn't know the process to run the house of representatives. >> john dickerson says there is not a path for paul ryan to the presidency through the speakership. do you agree? >> i know paul ryan very well, as well. in fact, i know him longer than i've known kevin mccarthy. paul ryan prioritizes his family. he has got young kids and that matters to him and i respect that. imagine someone who puts their family and their commitments ahead of politics. he is focused on his job as chairman of ways and means so i can understand why he would say no. however, i'm hoping that he changes his mind because he is the only one who can talk to the conservatives, the moderates. he is the only one who understands the rules and he's got a brain for policy which is what we need in washington right now. >> frank luntz, thank you so much. >> thank you. "forbes" called him one of the most politically influential billionaires in the u.s. charles koch is the chairman and ceo of koch industries, a kansas-based conglomerate and it had revenue of $115 billion last year his endorsement of a gop candidate spells money and influence and more money. anthony mason spoke with koch for his first television interview. >> reporter: as ceo of the second largest private company in the country, charles koch has amassed a fortune that "forbes" estimates at nearly 43 billion dollars. he and his brother david have cut federal regulations and radically shrinking the size of government. the koch's and their network of donors plan to spend $300 million in the campaign the next year. in an interview in his home in wichita, the 79-year-old ceo told me he doesn't like what he is hearing from republican candidates. you said you're not particularly high on any of the candidates so far? >> well, i didn't say that. i said i don't have the evidence that they are going to change the trajectory of the country. >> reporter: are you intending to support a candidate for president? >> well, it depends. >> reporter: if donald trump got the nomination, would you support him? >> i made a vow i'm not going to talk about individuals because if i -- just like david said he liked walker, so now all of the press is, well, we put all this money behind walker. >> right. >> and he had to drop out. he didn't put a penny. david said he liked him. that doesn't mean we are -- we picked him. >> reporter: were you surprised that walker's candidacy didn't resonate in any way? >> well, i thought it would resonate better, but he wasn't a very good campaigner. you may agree with this on a number of issues or we agree with you on a number of issues, but if you're presenting him in a way that doesn't resonate, that doesn't do any good. so we can't support you. that's -- we are not interested in -- in attacking windmills. >> reporter: there are reports you're increasingly interested in fiorina. >> that is -- listen. if is there a report about me, just say, okay, that's it. probably the opposite. and then you'll be on firmer ground. >> reporter: so you're denying that report? >> absolutely! >> freedom partners, the umbrella group that the koch support has said fiorina is one of the candidates they are looking forward to hearing more from. koch's people told me last night he is still evaluating her on sunday and we will talk to koch about his new book "good profit" about the tea party and the death threats he says he now receives every day. >> fascinating. he rarely gives interviews. >> not often. >> we will be watching. >> thank you. one state is accused this morning of giving drunk drivers a pass. peter greenberg goes there to investigate a controversial law and why some families fear it's "48 hours" investigates after a gunman attacks a family in their home. >> a couple found murdered and 8-year-old left paralyzed in their orange county mansion. did their business create deadly enemies? the story is coming up on "cbs this morning." ♪ i've been looking so long ♪ i've been looking so long ka juan nis. ka walk nis. kiwanis. .. . 48 hours investigates after a gunman attacks a family in hair home. >> a couple found murdered and 8-year-old left paralyzed in their orange county mansion. did their business create deadly enemies? ,,,,,,,,,,,, only one state does not criminalize first-time drinking and driving offenses. wisconsin has the highest level of binge drinking according to a 2012 study. peter greenberg went to the state capital to investigate the dui divide. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. first time drunk drivers in wisconsin are typically given a fine and released after they sober up. those incidents related to excessive alcohol cost an estimated 6.8 billion each year and that is $1,200 for every man, woman and child in the state. it's gameday at the university of wisconsin and these badger fans are off to an early start. while there is no alcohol allowed in the stadium, parties outside are in full swing before 10:00 a.m. tailgates like this will happen all weekend across the country but wisconsin is the only state where first-time drinking and driving offenders will not be federally prosecuted. wisconsin state senator tim carpenter co-authored 4 of 6 bills this year to toughen drinking and driving laws and none made it to the sna for a vote. >> the assembly passed legislation last time and came in front of the senate transportation bills. >> reporter: scott fitzgerald is mantle leader of the state senate. >> if you had everyone appear before the judge, it would be very difficult, i think, for the system to deal with that right now. >> reporter: what you just said if i interpret the numbers correctly, that means so many people drunk out there they can't handle the system? >> if you went to a felony conviction i'm not sure what difference that would make. we are trying to make a approach that is more measured and the way to do that is get these people clean. >> the last time we were altogether, the family was in november. >> reporter: beyond the politics, but often in the debate, are the families forced into advocates. >> you were immediately disrupted in the worst way? judy and paul jenkins lost their daughter and granddaughter and unborn their granddaughter was carrying in this 2008 accident. the man who killed them, mark benson, was sentenced to 30 years in pretty much. it was his fourth offense while operating a vehicle while intoxicated and received among the state's stiffest penalties. >> that is a pretty current picture of them. >> reporter: but the judge says mandatory minimum sentence on first-time offenders may have prevented this tragedy. if you got pulled over for owi, what happens? >> they write you a traffic ticket. >> reporter: but you don't lose your license? >> no. >> reporter: you don't lose your car? >> no. >> reporter: and you don't go to prison? >> no. you don't have to show up in court to answer the ticket. julie is the coordinator for the policy project. despite little action in the state legislature progess is happening town after town through volunteer programs like police saturation patrols. >> these are task forces. they let the public know when they are going to be out on the road. >> reporter: it's a show of force? >> a show of force but they can pull over anyone that breaks any traffic law. >> reporter: in a state that also prohibits police sobriety checkpoints, saturation patrols have found success. since brown county launched the federally funded program in 2011 year over year ruckeductions. >> more and more people are adopting things and come down to the communities lead the way and the leaders in madison will ends up following them. >> reporter: but tim carpenter, in the state legislature for 31 years, says any change to the constant drinking and driving laws will take some more time. give me the reality check. is anything ever going to change? >> to be honest, i don't see meaningful legislation passed this session for drinking and driving and probably in 2018. >> reporter: we are seeing nothing for at least three years? >> at least. >> reporter: a new bill was introduced this week but it's considered a compromise bill because even if it passes, it would only revoke a person's driver's license after five go d dui. >> people are driving with eight, nine, ten duis and including the man who killed the jenkins daughter. >> thank you, pete. a shark attack turns into a moment of celebration for a swimmer. how one deadly foe stopped another. we will plain coming up on "cbs this morning." relief. nothing is proven stronger on aches and pains than advil. not tylenol. not aleve. nothing. relief doesn't get any better than this. advil. working on my feet all day gave min my lower back but now, i step on this machine and get my number which matches my dr. scholl's custom fit orthotic inserts. now i get immediate relief from my foot pain. my lower back pain. find a machine at drscholls.com ♪ this morning, a massachusetts man is crediting a shark with saving his life. eugene finney was swimming or hunting beach, california, with his family in july when he was attacked in the back. even with a bloody gash and some pain he didn't get medical help for days. when he did, doctors made a life saving find. >> they had discovered a growth or a tumor on my right kidney about the size of a walnut. >> it turned out to be stage one kidney cancer. doctors remove the tumor. look at the hair standing up on the arm. >> i wish there was a better way than getting attacked by a shark. >> that what scares me. he might have not have known for a long time. >> but a good thing they found it. ahead the always unpredictable grace jones. i'm curious about her. you're watching "cbs this mo in your realtime captioner is linda marie macdonald. good morning, it's 8:25. time for some news headlines. no arrests yet in the sacramento stabbing of a man who helped stop a terror attack on a french train in august. police say spencer stone was out with friends early yesterday morning when they got into a fight with another group outside a bar. he is expected to recover. a busy day today for san francisco's fleet week. today's airshow starts at 12:30 with the blue with the first of three weekend performances at 3 p.m. in the next half-hour of "cbs this morning," model actress and fashion icon grace jones. stay with us. traffic and weather in just a moment. ,, [announcer] right now at sleep train, get up to 48 months interest-free financing on tempur-pedic. save $300 on beautyrest and posturepedic. or choose $300 in free gifts with stearns & foster. the triple choice sale ends soon at sleep train. good morning. i'm liza battalones with your "kcbs traffic." getting reported of an overturn accident delaying traffic on 680 in the northbound direction approaching el cantato. the bay bridge is crowded. delays through the macarthur maze. 580 very slow. more sluggish traffic heading across the bridge into san francisco. if you want to take the golden gate instead that's been fine. a little more crowded but still no major brake lights for that southbound commute heading into san francisco. and over on the nimitz, northbound traffic beginning to crowd up approaching high street southbound traffic now loosening up no longer delayed leaving oakland heading towards the hayward area. here's roberta with a look at the forecast. these are some of the luckiest people in the world because they are going to have stunning views today of the parade of ships underneath the golden gate bridge beginning at 11 a.m. and then the airshow that begins at 12:30 right here in san francisco today. that's the scene coit tower telegraph hill temperatures right now 50s and 60s except santa rosa 47 degrees a bit crisp heading out the door this morning. later today, a couple of degrees warmer than yesterday. 70s beaches, 80s bayside, 80s peninsula through the 80s to the mid-90s in the warmest spots of our inland areas. a little breezy late day west winds 10 to 20 miles per hour. notice all the way through the holiday on monday, it's columbus day it's a stagnant weather pattern. 60s, 70s beaches, to low 90s inland. a beach hazard statement in effect on saturday for dangerous sneaker waves and rip currents. captions by: caption colorado comments@captioncolorado.com welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, she built a family and a fortune only to die in a hail of bullets in her own house. "48 hours" recreates the crime scene to investigate how a young man's fascination with a family's murder. grace jones, the superstar is talking about more than 50 years of sex and drugs and disco. ahead see how the 67-year-old performer still loves to shock. >> wow. right now it's time to show you some of this morning's headlines. dangers of not vaccinating children against measles. a new study showed 9 million children lack immunity and 1 in 8 children vulnerable to the virus. whole foods voluntarily recalling organic cheese and involves papillon organic roquefort cheese. all sell-by dates are affected. the cheese has a scale label says plu 029536. no illnesses have been reported. the "los angeles times" reports on baseball broadcaster vin scully missing the postseason. the dodgers say he has undergone a medical procedure. >> they have done it. clayton kershaw pitches a no-hitter. >> that was one call last year. scully, who is 87, is planning on returning next season. that would be his 67th consecutive year broadcasting dodgers games. the great vin scully, we wish him well. >> absolutely! "the san francisco chronicle" reports on netflix raising the price of its popular new video plan. new customers will have to pay $1 more taking the price to $9.99 and that will help the company to cover shows like "house of cards." and other original programming and the second time they have raised the price in 17 months. >> i still like netflix a lot. worth the dollar increase to me. business insiders covers a new facebook dislike button for emotional reaction and they are testing the new feature which is a choice of six emojis. it will let you set your response to any post next to the additional thumb's up. it represents love, ha, ha, yay, wow, sad and angry. >> i bet you'll use yea! that is one of your favorites. yea! >> yes. and the austin -- ha, ha. >> charlie, yea! >> which is your favorite? >> i'm with her. yea! and why not? >> university of texas longhorn steer mascot bevo the 14th has a life-threatening condition. that means the steer will not travel to dallas for tomorrow's big rivalry against oklahoma at the cotton bowl! bevo has been the scool mascot since 2004. the steer weighs 2,100 pounds and a horn span -- pardon me. 82 inches! >> for my texas friends, love you both. everybody in texas knows what that means. >> what does it mean? >> that is a longhorn and this is the texas aggies. tcu. go frogs. tomorrow night, "48 hours" investigates the murder of a couple in southern california. the killer used an assault-style rifle. the suspect turned out to be as surprising as the crime. correspondent troy roberts has been following the investigation. >> reporter: it was a crime that shocked the rich, quiet, wealthy community of san juan capistrano. a wealthy businesswoman and her ex-husband brad age 57 were asleep in their hillside mansion. >> they had been shot multiple times in the face. >> reporter: jack leonard works for the los angeles times. >> the shooter had left no room for these people not to be killed. >> reporter: that terrible night, the couple's 8-year-old son landon was also critically wounded and their 17-year-old dodged a bullet and their 15-year-old daughter was apparently asleep on another floor of the home. >> as usual, the detectives looked at the family, the people closest to the victims. >> reporter: they found that the sachs also had two older sons, miles, 21, and ashton, 19. but they lived over a thousand miles away, so detectives started looking for suspects. andrew sachs had made a lot of money in real estate mostly amassing what some reports suggest is 80 million dollar fortune but she had sharp elbows and she made some enemies. >> too aggressive? >> a shark? >> piranha. >> right after the murder, we thought it was a bad business deal. she had a lot of people she owed money to and she was worried about them. >> reporter: those kinds of leads gave detectives plenty to work with. and then there was the crime scene itself. we are here at a gun range in los angeles where we constructed a mock-up of part of the sachs' bedroom to demonstrate how close the shooter was to the victims. >> my understanding it was very close range. >> reporter: at the couple's funeral, their second oldest son 19-year-old ashton praised his mother. >> she was an incredible person and she did in 54 years most people can do in ten lifetimes. >> reporter: but it turned out that ashton was harboring a deep secret. >> investigators arrested ashton colby sachs. >> reporter: the suspect was the sachs own son the same son who eulogized his mother and father. >> troy roberts is with us. the son? why? >> who eulogized his parents just weeks earlier. it's unclear. he says that he was not the favorite child in the family, that his parents didn't trust him, his aunts tell me he suffered from mental illness, but greed definitely played a role in this. the family was reportedly worth $80 million. >> i haven't even seen the story yet and i'm irritated. as a parent, i changed your poopy diapers, i drove you around and paid for college and then you shoot me? i know there is more to this story, but it's very irritating already but i'll be watching! thank you, troy. >> very intriguing. >> gayle, that is why you have to watch. may be more to the story. >> okay. >> don't judge too early. >> you can watch troy's full report "shadow of death" tomorrow night on "48 hours" at 10:00, 9:00 central on cbs. >> gayle, judgmental king. from a pioneer model to villain. >> we love her. >> i can't wait to see her. grace jones is sharing her very wild journey. >> so when they told you you were too tall, too skinny? >> your mouth is too big, your nose is too small.,, gracnes grace jones is one of the world's most famous super models and still on the scene in a career spanning more than 50 years. she is opening up in her ironically new book called "i'll never write my memoir." and pushed by simon and shuster which is associated with cbs. michelle miller learned she's very una apologetic. >> reporter: after being two hours late to our interview, it's hard to stay mad at grace jones. even when she won't answer your questions. do you realize most 67-year-olds do not look like this? >> i'm not 67. >> reporter: how old are you? >> i'm not telling you. my experience is as -- is my experience. you know? they just bounce around. >> reporter: bouncing and behaving? >> no way behaving. no. behaving is boring. ♪ >> reporter: that attitude made jones fascinating, frustrating, and ultimately famous. never one to be shy, jones is finally detailing more than 50 years of sex, drugs, and disco. you said that you were a great keeper of secrets. >> uh-huh. and i still am. >> reporter: even after writing this book? >> yeah. absolutely. >> reporter: beverly grace jones was born in jamaica and the child of conservative religious parents but when they moved to the u.s. jones was left in the care of her grandmother and her boyfriend who grace says was abusive. >> it was a roller coaster ride of joy, of seeing myself as a small child and being defiant. >> reporter: by 18, jones moved to manhattan and tried modeling. but agencies weren't interested. so when they told you you were too tall, too skinny? >> your mouth is too big. your nose is too small. i was, like, where do you fit? >> reporter: did you ever want to change yourself? >> god, no. no way. i just had to change everybody else. >> reporter: in the '70s, jones moved to paris. european designers loved her chiseled features and physique and exotic persona. ♪ >> reporter: when she returned to new york a few years later, disco was in full swing. her regular appearances at legendary dance club studio 54 were a mix of drug-fueled antics and inspired production. photographers loved her. she was amused at andy warhol. >> he was a constant playful person. >> reporter: did you feel that he was looking at you in a way no one else did? >> yeah. >> reporter: how would you define your own sexuality? >> that is such a complicated place. i have a lot of guilt around sex. i started feeling like i'm going to burn in hell! i'm not supposed to be enjoying this! and that makes me even more fighting against it. >> reporter: yet that sexuality helped fuel her career. ♪ >> reporter: she abandoned disco in the '80s and recorded six new albums. ♪ >> reporter: and took her boldness to the big screen. >> ah! >> reporter: in 1985, jones played the first female bond villain in "a view to kill." >> someone will take care of you. >> reporter: and starred alongside hollywood's famously strong. >> it's not that kind of party. >> reporter: and funny men. >> what is the matter with you? stop that! >> yeew! >> reporter: did society catch up with grace jones in pop culture? all of these women who are daring to push the envelope, to go -- >> i want there -- to be right. >> reporter: you do? >> i do! but i want them to do it in an individual way. i just want them to dare themselves to do something different. >> reporter: shock sells now? >> shock always sell. but you can shock in good taste. >> reporter: taste is relative, but at 67, shock is what keeps grace jones dancing. for "cbs this morning," michelle miller, new york. ♪ to the river >> talented michelle miller reporting. >> she did a good job with that interview. interview. >> grace is a one of a kind.,,,, it took joel silverman years to become a master dog trainer. but only a few commands to master depositing checks at chase atms. technology designed for you. so you can easily master the way you bank. as we leave you let's take a look back at the week that was. have a great weekend. >> is there a hurricane out here. and we are heading straight into it. >> the ship is gone. the "el faro" sank. >> the captain had been observing this weather system for many days. >> i'm standing in a sinkhole. it's a stadisaster here. >> we haven't seen this level of rain in a thousand years. >> did you think you were going to die? >> oh, yeah. >> we are alive and that is all that matters. >> mccarthy's announcement was so unexpected that some members were actually in tears. >> i think i shocked some of you, huh? >> russia continues air strikes in syria. >> we would never target a medical facility. >> ben carson's latest comments may be the most controversial. >> i would ask everybody to attack the gunman. he can only shoot one of us at a time. >> their staff made more than their voices heard. >> i can't imagine you say that. >> fantasy sports has become a money machine. >> you gentlemen happened to make 315,000. >> it is what it is. we move on. >> that's my point. >> the chicago cubs have a postseason victory. >> how does it feel? >> it hurts! it hurts good! >> all anyone wants to talk about is donald trump. >> donald trump? isn't e the one that is, like, ugh, you all are losers? >> there it is. photo bombing. stepping right in. >> ready for the live shot. >> who are you picking for your running mate? >> are you available? you are looking -- >> i'm very. >> smart. would you think about it? >> thank you. >> if i don't move, i'll be demoted to secretary of state or something like that. that is a joke. >> if i do well, you're going to have me back every day. >> i wouldn't go that far, governor. ♪ >> hey! that was chatting in the studio. >> selfie time. hold on. take a selfie with a hot dog. >> the guy who landed on the moon took, like, three total pictures. >> i sat in the garage with wozniak and invented the future. >> cook and lorraine jobs tried to block this movie. >> i think it's important to say they haven't seen the movie. >> you write in the book your dad ted kennedy was probably an alcoholic. you confronted him and what did he do? >> he didn't want to talk about it. >> beer is the beverage of choice in chicago. >> i quit automatically. i was done! ♪ because i got a name >> if someone told me to fly my little sugar shaker over to wherever, i would smack them across the face. ♪ outline that >> could we bring you up on stage tonight? >> i know it's your moment and it's not about me. >> all that matters on "cbs this morning." >> and we will be there. >> what should i wear?,,,,,,,,,, your realtime captioner is linda marie macdonald. the field poll shows two democrats could po ther... in the nov good morning, it's 8:55. time for some news headlines. the field poll shows two democrats could potentially face each other in the november 2016 runoff for a california u.s. senate seat. state attorney generally kamala harris and congress member loretta lynch are running first and second with a -- loretta sanchez are running first and second with republicans in single digits. the seat is being vacated by barbara boxer who isn't running again. there will not be a measure on the november 2016 ballot aimed at overturning the mandatory vaccine law in california. vaccine critics collected fewer than half the ballot signatures needed for the measure to qualify. and here's roberta with the forecast. >> good morning, everyone from the kpix 5 weather center. one thing i noticed this morning it's colder than 24 hours ago. and it's certainly clear and sunnier, as well. this is the scene looking out from oakland toward the skyline of san francisco. above the skyline beginning at 12:30 today is the airshow with the blue angels at 3 p.m. temperatures anywhere from the 50s in santa rosa to the 50s in napa. low 60s in mountain view and in livermore. later today temperatures will span from the low 70s at the beaches to the mid-80s in oakland. yeah, that's up from 84 yesterday. 86 degrees in redwood city which was in the mid-80s yesterday. 94 degrees in livermore. that was the temperature on thursday. it will top off at 95 degrees in the warmest locations inland today. the sunny dry unseasonably mild weather will continue through the holiday on monday. liza with traffic up next. the drought is affecting all of us. at pg&e we've definitely put a focus on helping our agricultural customers through the drought. when they do an energy efficiency project and save that money they feel it right in their pocket book. it's exciting to help a customer with an energy efficiency project because not only are they saving energy but they are saving water. we have a lot of projects at pg&e that can help them with that and that's extremely important while we're in a drought. it's a win for the customer and it's a win for california. together, we're building a better california. [during sleep train's the triple choice sale. big for a limited time, you can choose up to 48 months interest-free financing on a huge selection of tempur-pedic models. or choose to save $300 on beautyrest and posturepedic mattress sets. you can even choose $300 in free gifts with sleep train's most popular stearns & foster mattresses. the triple choice sale ends soon at sleep train. ♪ sleep train ♪ your ticket to a better night's sleep ♪ good morning. i'm liza battalones with your "kcbs traffic." getting reports of a new accident in alamo northbound 680 near stone valley. so it's going to be slow there. the bay bridge commute is finally beginning to unwind just a little bit. it is still slow from the foot of the maze i-80 sluggish now through berkeley and emeryville. and the golden gate commute has been like this all morning. still very light traffic leaving southern marin. expect delays for 101 heading through central san rafael. and over at the san mateo bridge all the earlier backups we have had are now gone. it is now "friday light" approaching the toll plaza. that's a look at "kcbs traffic." have a great weekend. ,,,,,, wayne: i'm on tv! jonathan: it's a trip to napa! (gibberish) wayne: you've got the car! jonathan: cash! wayne: mr. la-di-da. jonathan: it's a new kitchen! - whoo! jonathan: wow! - i'm going for door number two! jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal." now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady! wayne: hey, america, welcome to "let's make a deal." thank you so much for tuning in today. today's a special show. this is our breast cancer awareness show. we're all wearing our pins. we're wearing pink. showing a lot of love to survivors. (cheers and applause) right now i need three people. let's make a deal! (cheers and applause) you ma'au ma'am, right thee in the middle, yes, ma'am, you.

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