Transcripts For KYW CBS This Morning 20140805 : comparemela.

Transcripts For KYW CBS This Morning 20140805



morey university hospital. >> the fears of an outbreak with a new york city man being treated for possible exposure. get out! hurry! >> in las vegas, heavy rain cars just washed off the streets. and flash flooding also a big problem on florida's gulf coast. six inches of rain falling on naples. >> crews battle wildfires. >> israel withdrawing all of its troops from gaza. >> at this time we have a flight attendant that hit her head on the ceiling. a flight attendant and three passengers suffered injuries. >> and everybody sat down and like what just happened? and a credit card warning at p.f. chang. >> and that car slamming through the front door narrowly missing shoppersous. >> all that -- >> and a young seal decided to join them. look at that. >> what a pitch by carrara! wow! >> and "all that mattered" -- >> former white house press secretary james brady has died. >> brady became a strong advocate against gun violence during an assassination attempt to ronald reagan. >> are you bitter? >> well it's not classy. and i try to be classy as you know. >> a guy dressed as a teenage mutant ninja turtle proposed to his girlfriend. he knew she was the one when she agreed to be seen with him. [ laughter ] >> announcer: this morning presented by toyota. let's go places. welcome to "cbs this morning." welcome back norah. >> good to be back. a lot of news today. we begin with this any moment, a plane carrying the second american with ebola arriving in the united states. with nancy writebol on board. she's the missionary worker fighting the deadly virus. >> and a team at emory university hospital is waiting for her is our chief medical correspondent dr. jon lapook. he spoke to doctors waiting to treat her. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, nancy writebol remains in serious but stable condition. the doctors here are set up to deal with anything from kidney failure and lung failure. the airplane left liberia, inside the second missionary the only the second american to be brought into the united states with ebola. some people say the virus is only spread with direct body fluids. that creates fears. >> i've had a number of individuals who have e-mailed me and said you have introduce the plague into the united states. and aren't you going to be feel guilty when people start dropping in the streets from ebola? >> reporter: when they say that to you what's your response? >> my response is to educate them on the way this infection is spread. >> reporter: dr. kent brantly and nancy writebol received an experimental medication. >> unfortunately by the time we use the serum, most of the virus is already inside the cells of the patient. and the serum will not have any effect on those particular viral particles. >> reporter: writebol's son jeremy says although his mother is suffering, she is showing signs of improvement. >> she's eating a little bit. able to take in fluid. so we're cautiously optimistic. feel like this is going to be a good thing for her. and we're prayerful that she'll pull through on this. >> reporter: not much is known about zmat the experimental drug used to treat writebol and brantly. no way to know whether or not it's working. it's at the point where their natural immunities are kicking in and producing antibodies anyway. it's hard to know whether it's the medication or their own immune system or a handful of both. the cdc, expecting a man in new york city after checking into mt. sinai hospital yesterday. he had a fever and stomach problems. the man said he recently came from west africa where the virus is spreading. vladimir duthiers is at mt. sinai hospital where we could learn the test results within the next 24 hours. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, the new york state hospital says after speaking with officials and the cdc it is quote, unlikely, that this patient has ebola. they're not taking any chances. the patient underwent a series of tests monday. those test samples are going to be sent to the cdc to be processed. they may even come back within the next day or so. for now, the hospital is not releasing much information on the patient's current condition box of privacy reasons. this outbreak of ebola in parts of west africa and the two americans infected with the disease overseas has many here in the united states on edge. officials here at mt. sinai are urging the public to remain calm. >> i think the most important thing, people should understand if this were a case of ebola which we do not know that it is not transmitted by casual contact. and everything that happened in mt. sinai happened in a rapid fashion that we were certain that the patient did not pose any risks to other patients or to our staff or visits at mt. sinai. >> reporter: and monitoring the case in conjunction with state and federal officials. if the patient does test positive pour for ebola. they are prepared to handle it. >> vladimir, we welcome you to cbs. >> thank you happy to be here. and the americans heading to west africa to fight the ebola outbreak. one of the doctors talks about the mission and the risks. that's ahead on "cbs this morning." luck ran out on las vegas after a storm dumped an inch of rain in just an hour. take a look at this. >> get out! hurry! >> that is u.s. highway 95 floodwaters swept several cars downstream yesterday. drivers had to be rescued. there could be more rain today. in naples florida, a record broke, and if that's not enough a tropical storm training hawaii. meteorologist megan glaros of wbzz is tracking that storm and other areas. >> monsoonal rains in portions of the west. we're expecting slow-moving rains and thunderstorms from montana to nevada down into new mexico. excessive rainfalls and flooding will be a possibility there. hurricane bertha is now tropical storm bertha that continues to churn out in the atlantic shooting the gap between the east coast and the island of bermuda. now we expect right now with 65-mile-per-hour sustained winds that will it stay offshore moving north and east and will not have a direct impact on the coastline. however we will see rough are surfs in portions of mid-atlantic and the mid-atlantic into the east rip currents could be a factor. and in the pacific, there are two tropical systems, one, category 3 hurricane iselle expected to impact the hawaiian islands wednesday into thursday. and we're also watching julio which hob a category is hurricane getting close to the hawaiian islands this weekend. wildfires in northern california are closing in on a small town this morning. flames are within 400 miles. several hundred homes are threatened in burney. 2,000 people have been warned they may have to get out. the fire has burned 100 square miles. heavy smoke and ash smoking the air. with fire crews and lightning may spark new fires. in southern california people are still digging out of the mess after a massive mudslide. one driver was swept away and killed. roads blocked by flooding and mud, reopened yesterday after some 2500 people got stranded. a 72-hour cease-fire is under way this morning in gaza. so far it's working unlike any attempts for a truce over the last few weeks. all israeli ground troops are outside of the territory. charlie d'agata is in tel aviv. charlie, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. and where the cease-fire is still holding, there's one last barrage of rockets from gaza just before the cease-fire went into effect. 21 of them. 8 of them were shot down by the iron dome defense system. israeli forces are holding fire. israeli soldiers headed home this morning. their pullout of gaza is complete. but in case that peace doesn't hold combat troops remain perched on the border ready to strike should hamas pull the trigger again. hamas rockets were answereded with israeli air strikes right up until the moment the cease-fire came into effect. government spokesman mark reggi said they'll be ready. >> we'll be watching to see if hamas does too. >> reporter: israeli military said the main mission of destroying hamas' tunnels has ended. the temporary truce is a chance for peace talks in cairo to take hold. but there's a long way to go. israel wants hamas to give up its weapons. hamas wants israel to lift its blockade on gaza. neither side has budged. but at least, a break in the fighting brings an end to the bloodshed for now. and unlike the last cease-fire that crumbled within hours this time israeli forces are already out of gaza and both sides are talking. norah. >> we'll be watching charlie, thank you. now to a scare for airline passengers heading for asheville, north carolina. their flight hit severe turbulence and made an emergency landing. and many people on board felt it would be their last trip. >> i'm thinking like this is going to be a plane crash. >> reporter: as allegiant air flight 916 reached its cruising altitude over northern florida, the plane dropped sharply and without warning. passengers and crew members were sent around the cabin injuring four people. >> it felt like a passenger ride, when you see those people going up and down in a movie, that's basically what happened. >> reporter: with 147 passengers and 6 crew members on board, shortly after takeoff, it started experiencing severe turbulence plunging some 11,000 feet in a matter of minutes. >> are you a medical emergency? >> at this time, we have a flight attendant that's hit her head on the ceiling. we have medical personnel standing by i'd like to debtget her on the ground asap. >> reporter: the flight was diverted to clearwater where it landed safely. two people were take to the hospital with minor injuries. a spokesman for allegiant air said at the time of the incident, the seat belt sign was illuminated. nicholas harrington said his brother was among those not wearing his. >> he must have pulled some neck muscles. he's not able to maneuver his head around. >> reporter: passengers will have to continue their trip this morning. a small price to pay now that they're safe. >> thank goodness i'm on the ground now. that's the most important thing. it wasn't my day, thank goodness. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning," vicente arenas miami. >> a new report shows no matter where you fly the cost is going up. the average round trip fare including taxes topped $509 in the first half of this year. that is $14 more than last year. jeff pegues is outside reagan with the numbers behind the price hike. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. it's not your imagination. it is hard to find those bargain fares. the average cost of airfare has gone up almost 11% and the summer is no exception. the reason airline consolidation but also airlines are adding fewer seats. but if you talk to the airline industry, they say, don't blame them, blame the government. according to airlines for america, over the past 13 years, base domestic airfares have grown 15%. while taxes on those airfares have soared 46%. the group says higher fares are necessary in order to cover rising costs, maintain air service levels and to acquire new equipment but when you combined higher fares, fees on bags and service reductions increasingly it is the passenger getting less bang for the buck. for example, american airlines just announced that will be dropping in-flight meals for some passengers on most flights under 2 hours and 45 minutes. norah. >> all right jeff thank you. and he didn't want to become a victim in his own home. a michigan man says that's why he shot and killed a 19-year-old woman last year. >> this poor girl she had her whole life in front of her. i took that from her. >> theodore wafer faces a murder charge in the death of renisha mcbride. officials say the 19-year-old was disoriented after a car accident after she showed up at his door. wafer said he was scared after she showed up as a shadowy figure. wafer claims self-defense. his trial continues this morning. more than 300 people on a boat tour suddenly found themselves stranded in the middle of lake tahoe. their paddle of the boat hit a sandbar at reagan beach near sierra nevada. the passengers were stuck four hours before rescued by the boat. everybody is okay this morning but the tahoe queen remains stuck on the sandbar. former white house press secretary james brady is remembered as a gun victim who became a tougher advocate for gun laws. he was 73 years old. bill plante was our white house correspondent during the reagan years. bill, good morning. >> good morning, norah. reagan loved brady. brady was here only a couple of months, we all loved him. but he spent only a few months at this lectern briefing the press but he's still very much a part of the briefing room. in fact, he was named back in 2007. >> reporter: he was a rotund, gregarious washington insider known as "the bear." possessed with a sharp wit, a love of the political game and a taste for good food and wine. but just ten weeks after starting this dream job, as ronald reagan's white house press secretary, jim brady took a bullet to the brain in the assassination attempt on the president. >> white house press secretary jim brady has also been taken to the hospital with a head wound. jim brady's condition said to be unknown. >> reporter: his wounds were so severe staff members on the screen assumed the worst. national security adviser richard allen recorded the scene in the white house situation room. >> we better just have a moment of prayer and silence for jim brady who died. >> reporter: after nine months and many surgeries, brady left the hospital. flashing his signature thumbs up determined to walk the rocky road towards recovery. how would you say you're doing, how are you coming along? >> i think from an ambulatory standpoint, i'm coming along fine. my cane and i can get just about anywhere. >> reporter: the tragedy turned brady and his wife sarah into advocates for gun control. they lobbied hard for a federal background check and waiting periods for gun purchases. round reagan supported the effort. >> i support the brady bill and i urge the congress to amend. >> reporter: president clinton signed the brady handgun violence protection act into law in late 1993 with jim brady at his side. and three years later awarded him the presidential medal of freedom. and through it all, brady never lost his wit. we spoke in 2006. are you still bitter, or no? >> well, it's not classy to be bitter, and i try to be classy, as you know. >> boy did he stay classy. he lived with courage and resignation with that hand that he was dealt for 33 years, norah. >> it's harder to say any better than bill said but he was a great guy. >> great guy. of course as he mentioned, the press room named after james brady. i've seen him in the press room before where he became a strong advocate. >> i interviewed him many years after that always about gun control and always that spirit that defined him. it's 7:19. ahead on "cbs this morning" -- is google doing the right thing or invading your privacy? >> announcer: this national weather report sponsored by jcpenney. when it fits, you feel it. a fast-growing disease is killing bats across the country. >> don dahler is in new jersey. >> there used to be tens of thousands of bats living in this mine in new jersey. now it's down to a few hundred. they're dying by the millions and that's not only going to affect what your groceries cost but what your life is like in your own backyard. i'll have that coming up. >> thehe news is back here in the morning on "cbs this morning." stay tuned for your local news. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. hi. we need this to tow my science project. ah, a do it all tundra, good timing. our annual clearance event only happens once a year. we built a shuttle. a shuttle? yeah, carbon fiber wings, it works. better get an a. you mean, he better get an a. that's what i said. agree to disagree. no during toyota's anual clearance event, get 0% apr financing on a 2014 tundra. offer ends september 2nd. for great deals on other toyotas, visit toyota.com this is gonna be great for my shuttle. my shuttle. toyota, let's go places. discover brookside 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what's that? that is poison ivy. because you need to know what you're getting yourself into. i put it in my mouth. get the trio tablet powered by t-mobile with free data for life only at walmart. good morning i'm ukee washington we kick it off with katie and your forecast. >> good morning, everybody things actually looking pretty nice for us out there today. sunny, feeling like the dog days of summer, at least for one day before we eventually see another drop on the thermometer. here's how things are shaping up currently on storm scan3. not too much to speak of. couple clouds, frankly very low-lying cloud cover as some of the area shore points generally through southern new jersey meanwhile different view here in the live neighborhood network outside lower merion high school. bright sunny sun glare issue for most of you 70 degrees at that particular site. meanwhile, shooting for 09 today. that sun will do us certainly solid here if you are looking for the heat. we get all the way up again to 90 degrees, starting to feel little bit of the humidity as well tomorrow, late in the day specially shower or storm rumble through. bob? >> morning, 7:27. problems on i95, in the construction zone. live look southbound side, disable tractor-trailer, in the right lane, what's tough only three lanes to begin with, no shoulder, so that takes all of 95 down to two lanes, coming into philadelphia. and we're bumper to bumper from academy road on in. and double trouble on the turnpike westbound heavy willow grove all the way overthrew mid-county. ukee, back to you. >> next update sat 7:55, up next on cbs this morning fighting ebola. anan american doctor travels to west africa to help contain the outbreak. we're on the "cw philly" on i've never been on television before. but really sometimes, i do watch -- i watch the news. and i'm a kid. and watch the powerball. i've never, ever been on live television. i've never, ever been on live television. >> reporter: you are excited? >> yeah i went down the superslide. and i went down -- >> using the words apparently out of the mouths of babes supposed to be talking about notch whatting the news. this happened on live tv at the wayne county fair. a cute and articulate little boy stole the show. he kind of looks like our executive producer. saying i always watch the news and one day i'm going to run cbs. i think that's very funny video. you guys know it's true. too bad we don't have a picture of chris because the audience would appreciate that. maybe you can get it before the show's over do it half screen. moving on welcome to "cbs this morning." coming up a new battle over online privacy versus public safety. has google crossed the line by reporting an alleged criminal? rikki klieman looks at what google's actions mean for those using e-mail. >> i hope i still have a job. and a newlywed shows how a drone made their day even more special. that's ahead. and this morning's headlines. "the washington post" says the former first lady of virginia may have tried to pitch a dietary compliment to mitt romney. an aide said she stopped her but she did speak to his wife and testified at the trial of mcdonnell and his wife. they're accused of using gifts and even told anne romney it would help cure her m.s. the medical records in california may soon be stored in one database. two are joining together to create the system. they're going to call it cal-index. doctors would be able to access it instantly but it faces personal challenges and privacy concerns. black officers in the army are being dismissed at a higher rate of whites. more than 10% of black majors are being dismissed compared to 5.6% of white majors. in all, getting pink slips because of this cut. and "the wall street journal" saying p.f. chang restaurant breach and thieves may have gotten credit card and debit information. p.f. chang offering protection to customers. no one is immune to the deadly ebola virus in west africa, not even health care workers. the cdc says 100 health care workers have been infected so far about half of them have died. and elaine quijano is here. good morning. >> with proper precautions they'll be safe but an undeniable risk account for 10% of all cases. a boston doctor is on her way to west africa to help. she says it's like going to battle. >> i think of it if we have a dangerous war going off in a distant shore, our soldiers don't say hey, we're scared. we're not going to go. >> reporter: dr. nahid badahlia is headed there. >> reporter: she's director of infection control at boston university's national emerging infectious diseases laboratory. an one of 50 u.s. health care workers flying to west africa try to stop the deadliest ebola epidemic on record. >> she basically knows what the risks are about. >> reporter: dr. ron morales is helping dr. bhadelia prepare for her trip. >> the basic crux of protecting oneself from ebola is not getting any of the body fluids of the patient to you. >> reporter: so far 100 people have died in guinea liberia, nigeria, and sierra leone. you among the dead one of sierra leone's top doctors, the victim of the disease he was dedicated to fighting. >> i think ebola shows a cultural stress in. we've seen in movies and stuff. it is another infection. we've done a wonderful job of dealing with highly communicable infections. and we will take care of it. >> dr. bhadeliale says ebola can be controlled. the cdc it will send 50 additional disease control expert to the region by the end of the month. >> thank you, elaine. now to a difficult debate on online privacy. the controversy involves google. but this time the user say convicted child predator. prosecutors believe that john henry used his e-mail account to store child pornography. he's already a registered sex offender. >> houston police said google detected it and alerted authorities. whatever you may think of him, some critics accuse google of trolling through seemingly private accounts and e-mails. cbs legal analyst rikki klieman is with us. good morning. how did google work with law enforcement? >> well google has a policy and it says very clearly that it is going to look for evidence of child pornography. it's gone on the offensive about a year ago and said if we can find it, we're giving it to law enforcement. so what happens in this case it uses this algorithm, finds this image that appears to be child pornography, tells law enforcement. law enforcement then gets a search warrant. and lo and behold on the mobile device and on the tablet there are images of child pornography. >> so what exactly do they do to try to find it? >> it's a fascinating process, charlie. you know lots of law enforcement agencies throughout the country have been looking for algorithms that could help them out with things not only like child pornography but to identify chatter of terrorism and disturbances keywords. what google has is hashing. what this algorithm does it's actually like a it looks at a picture. and it can tell if a picture is of a child. and when it finds that it gives up the information, as it should. >> so they're not physically going through your e-mail one by one? it's flagged in some kind of way? some people would say, rikki, listen, if you get a child predator off the streets i'm okay with that. >> i think most people would say that because it say child predator. what happens here the debate from the child advocacy experts say wait a minute, just because i have a google account or search engine does that mean everything i do is fair game. if you look at google's terms of use agreement it sure is fair game. one of the things we do have to think about, though, when people talk about privacy, what about consenting adults? what about sexual texts? what about people who exchange information whether by photograph or by other means, by words? >> so what's his defense in this? >> his defense, when he goes forward with this he has two choices. he's going to say, shall i plead guilty? or shall i have my lawyer do what we call a motion to suppress, which is to say the seizure of this information is the result of a violation of the fourth amendment, unreasonable search and seizure because google should not be the policemen of the world. well perhaps with child pornography, other people would say aren't we glad that google is cooperating with the center for missing and exploited children. don dahler with a healthy emergency spreading across america. >> bats are creatures of myth and misunderstanding. now they're dying off by the millions. and that would impact your life. we'll tell you how coming up on "cbs this morning." ♪ time keeps on slipping slipping slipping into the future ♪ add vanishing deductible from nationwide insurance and get $100 off for every year of safe driving. which for you, shouldn't be a problem. just another way we put members first because we don't have shareholders. join the nation. nationwide is on your side. ♪ turn around! ♪ ♪ every now and then i get a little bit tempted ♪ ♪ by the chocolate all around ♪ ♪ turn around brian! ♪ ♪ this bar has protein oh yeah!♪ [ female announcer ] fiber one. listen up... i'm reworking the menu. veggies you're cool... mayo, corn dogs...you are so out of here! ahh... the complete balanced nutrition of great tasting ensure. 24 vitamins and minerals. 9 grams of protein... with 30% less sugars than before. ensure, your #1 dr. recommended brand now introduces ensure active. muscle health. clear protein drink and high protein. targeted nutrition to feed your active life. ensure. take life in. what happens when women use dove bar for 7 days? 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>> yes. >> that's regrowth. so she'll not be -- >> never, never. >> reporter: white nose syndrome kills bats two ways it destroys their wings making them impossible to get insects and it forces them outside in the dead of winter where they die of starvation. >> this is the most devastating wildlife disease that i another. >> reporter: boston university grad student aryn wilder is trying to find out where it's going next. >> we can use that information to tell us how that population is connected and how white nose might move through the population. >> reporter: scientists traced the problem to the howell carve rans in new york state. they believe someone infected the bats with a fungus native to europe. it's now been found in 25 states. just this month, arkansas sealed its caves to stop the fungus. bats can eat twice their body weight every day. flying mosquitos and bugs. if you multiply that by 6 million fewer bats that's billions of bugs not getting eaten. >> many of those cost farmers millions of dollars a year. >> reporter: steve henry is manager of the great wildlife refuge in new jersey. he and his team have seen a drastic reduction in a certain species of bats. have we seen a distinction in species of bats? >> i think there are species of bats perilous close. >> i think they're endangered. i don't think they're going to come back in our lifetime. >> because bats typically give birth to only one pup a year. kashmer says she has an effective treatment. it's a mild vinegar solution that killed the fungus. she believes if that solution is sprayed in mines and caves where bats live that it could stop the infection. so far, gayle, no government agency has been willing to dry. >> all right,don. >> charlie says, why not,don? >> we don't know why not. they're still studying the problem. and they want to get a solution. >> okay. all right, thank you,don. i don't know bats just creep me out, all due r taylor swift has more than 42 million twitter followers, and after looking at this video, i'll get she'll pick up a few more. ♪ we are are never, ever ever getting back together ♪ >> inside her private concert for a 6-year-old boy next on "cbs this morning." ♪ ♪ ben! well, that was close! you ain't lying! let quicken loans help you save your money. with a mortgage that's engineered to amaze! there's only two of us... how much dirt can we manufacture? 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clearance event, get 0% apr financing on a 2014 tundra. offer ends september 2nd. for great deals on other toyotas, visit toyota.com this is gonna be great for my shuttle. my shuttle. toyota, let's go places. ♪ ♪ we are are never ever ever are getting back together ♪ >> perfect. >> taylor swift gave an unforgettable performance for a fan at boston hospital on sunday. 6-year-old jordan is battling rare diseases including leukemia and he said i love this song. >> oh, we'll be right back here on "cbs this morning." living with chronic migraine feels like each day is a game of chance. i wanted to put the odds in my favor. so my doctor told me about botox® an fda-approved treatment that significantly reduces headache days for adults with chronic migraine. 15 or more headache days a month each lasting 4 hours or more. it's proven to actually prevent headache days. and it's injected by my doctor once every 3 months. the effects of botox® may spread hours to weeks after injection causing 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members plan to stay for life. mmmmmmm. look out. now there's even more of the amazing cinnamon taste you love on cinnamon toast crunch. crave those crazy squares even more. this allergy season, will you be a sound sleeper, or... a mouth breather? well, put on a breathe right strip and instantly open your nose up to 38% more than allergy medicines alone. so you can breathe and sleep. shut your mouth and sleep right. breathe right. >> good morning, aim natasha brown. right over to the weather forecast with meteorologist katie fehlinger. hot, hot. >> it will get there. too little of comfortable start, little steamy granted but certainly got our hands full with the heat, that will be building here today. and in the meantime, though, weak zone of high pressure going to keep control for the most part. so we should end up with more sun than anything, hence storm scan3 basically empty. little hazy at the shore right now, meanwhile it is mostly sunny and hot. later on in the city we think we will get to you 09 degrees, seven oppilate err tonight under partly cloudy sky we do start to see the temperature get knocked back with time here specifically on wednesday. there will be some late day showers or storms. and then we are in for nice stretch of days thursday, friday and into the weekend. bob? >> tractor-trailer throwing temperatures for a loop. southbound 95, only two lanes open at girard avenue. this is the stretch where there is no shoulder, there is only three lanes to begin with, and we are bumper to bumper now from bridge street all the way in through center city. double trouble on the turnpike. westbound, an addition able near willow grove. and an accident near ft. washington. and a new traffic pattern on the northeast extension's lansdale interchange. natasha, back to you. >> thank you bob. next update at 8:25, up next on cbs this morning, why some find new ad campaign for clothing retailer offensive. see ♪ it is tuesday, august 5th 2014. welcome back to "cbs this morning." more real news ahead, including anger over an ad campaign. is it ever okay to say your shoes are perfect for husband hunting? no. but first, here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. >> nancy writebol remains in serious but stable condition. they're set up here to handle any possible complication that could arise. the patient underwent a series of test. those test samples have been sent to the cdc to be process. >> get out! hurry. >> monsoonal rains continuing to portions of the west heading from montana. >> wildfires closing in on a small town this morning. 2,000 people being warned they may have to get out. >> a break in the fighting brings an end to the cease-fire. forces already out of gaza. >> average price from the tsa has gone up 11%. >> are we seeing the extinction of perhaps a couple species of bats. >> i think there are a couple of species of bats. >> on live tv. >> i've never, ever been on live television. i've never, ever been on live television. happy birthday to president barack obama. the president turned 53. >> truth is president obama is actually 55 years old but congress blocked his last two birthdays. >> announcer: today's "eye opener" at 8:00 is presented by comfort inn. ♪ i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. the american with ebola is due to land in atlanta at anytime for treatment. suspected number with the outbreak pushes 900 this morning. it's a disease for health care workers and governments to handle. >> some fear the actual number killed in the four west african countries is more than reported. deborah patton in cape town. good morning. >> reporter: north, not only is this the worst outbreak in history, according to a doctor with medical information in liberia, it's also the first time that it's spread to urban areas. one of the areas of the disease the capital of monrovia where nearly a quarter of the population lives. the doctor who spoke us on cough confidentiality said containing the disease is extremely difficult. the death toll rose from 729 to 887 over the past week. but this doctor believes it could be at least 50% higher. he says one of the reasons for this is that people won't report ebola cases believing that an isolation ward is an effective death center. but instead, people are hiding sick and burying contagious bodies in secret. bodies remain in state long after death. and now the liberia government is saying all ebola corpses must be cremated norah. a cease-fire is holding in gaza. israeli and palestinian militants agreed to a 72-hour truce that started overnight. those living in gaza are taking care of normal business through the lull. earlier, israel pulled its last troops out of gaza, say they go destroyed all of the hamas tunnels they could find along the border. nearly 1900 palestinians and 67 israelis have died if four weeks of fighting. tropical weather is causing trouble throughout the country. take a look at u.s. highway 95 in las vegas. travelers were pulled from their cars. vehicles were washed down the roads mont. hurricane bertha weakened back to a tropical storm. that atlantic system will not threaten the united states. but a pacific hurricane is moving towards hawaii. iselle is losing strength but could hit the islands thursday night. and tropical storm julio is following the same path. a us airways flight heads to portugal hit turbulence on the ground. >> i didn't do anything wrong. >> airport authorities in philadelphia took one of the passengers off the plane. the drama unfolded just as flight 738 was getting ready to leave on sunday. other passengers say the woman started yelling and cruising at crew members. takeoff was delayed for more than an hour. the duke and duchess of cambridge are marking the 100th anniversary of world war i this morning. prince william and his wife kate stopped by a popular art exhibit. look at this. william's brother harry also paid respect. >> the red poppy 60 features more than 188,000 ceramic flowers. there's one for every soldier killed during the war. last night british landmarks went dark at 10:00 to mark the exact time that the british empire joined the war in 1914. >> a beautiful tribute. a shoe company is getting kicked around for a new ad campaign. nine west says its shoes are perfect for a walk of shame. how about husband hubting or even a drunk bunch. >> brunch? >> drunk brunch. okay. >> i know you don't engage in drunk brunches neither do i. check out the reaction of nine west facebook page. one woman calls the ad arrogant offensive, disrespectful sadding just say no to nine west. >> the author of advertising is with us. what's with this ad campaign? >> this ad campaign came out yesterday. and it's already generated a lot of controversy. folks are saying it's at the worst offensive to insinuate that this is what women would want shoes for, to hunt a husband. or, you know, to have the walk of shame after that unexpected sleepover. >> at least you don't call it a victory lap. go ahead. >> exactly. you know at the least, maybe it's a little tacky, right? and then there's some other people who have gotten into the defense and said hey, ladies lighten up it's meant to be funny. >> it reminds me of a katy perry song danced friday night we to be it to tabletops. or this one goes out to all the ladies at breakfast in last night's dress. i'm thinking who are they targeting pipe don't know any woman of any age who wants to be this girl. who are they trying to reach? >> it's true. i don't think the women in these ads or the positions they're in are aspirational. you don't want to be that woman in the walk of shame. nobody wants to be that woman husband hunting. i think they're going for a much younger audience here. a much younger consumer. and it's not constranslating for a lot of women. >> do you think from an advertising perspective this is hurting the company or helping? >> there's two things here. from a nine west perspective, i actually think it helps. here we are talking about it getting more attention than in years. and by the way beautiful shoes, right? but i do think the bigger picture is that advertising influences popular culture and popular cultural stereotypes. >> their senior vice president of marketing told "the new york times," quote we have to talk about the way we talk about occasions because women are modern now and shop for a different reason. starter husband hunters might have been called night on the town shoes. is that a good representation of the modern women? >> i don't think so. what do you think? husband hunting sounds dated. >> exactly. you feel empowered when you wear the shoes. >> right. >> what does the advertising company that put together the campaign say about it. >> well they wanted it to get attention. they thought this would position these ads to reach a younger consumer. i'm not so sure that's the case. again, here we are talking about it. i don't think this will hurt nine west. i think it will probably help it. >> i think, too, abby if he like the shoes we're we're going to buy them. >> exactly. >> thank you good to see you. president obama's oldest daughter malia turned 16 last month, now, she's growing up fast it seems. this is her making friends at lollapalooza this weekend. yep, the secret service were there. malia was one who stayed all the way to chance a rapper in the finale. a couple concertgoers said malia said hi. one concertgoer said i'm standing next to malia, as in malia obama, this is cray. like in crazy. again, making a high-flying wedding album only on "cbs this mornining." the photographer is taking >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" at 8:00 sponsored by comfort inn. truly yours. stephen colbert puts truthiness aside for straight talk to teenagers. >> what's the best way to talk to a dad to convince him to let me sleep at my boyfriend's house. eva, going to disappoint you here. >> the advice. and his advice for a new generation coming up on "cbs this 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[announcer] word is getting out. purina dog chow light & healthy is a deliciously tender and crunchy kibble blend. with 20% fewer calories than purina dog chow. isn't it time you discovered the lighter side of dog chow. purina dog chow light & healthy. ♪ it takes a lot to get stephen colbert to drop this colbert report act. but the host of cbs' late show did it. colbert answered their questions on "ask a grown man." >> when guys teenage guys do stuff make cat calls and stuff about rape do they know that they're behavior is harmful? i think the reason why boys do this kind of stuff is to get your attention, and i would say please don't do that because i really don't like it it. now that i've solved that problem, there's this boy, he's kind of mean to you and he lies to me a lot. if he lies to you and mean to you, he may like you, but he's definitely not treating you very well. so i would not waste my time with somebody who lies to you. kick him to the curb. i would really like to know all the ways in which you can tell when a person likes you. people show they like you in all kind of different ways. they want to hear your stories. they care how you feel. they want to make your date better. they want to listen to your problems. they reach out to you. smile when they see you. ask you your problems. those are good signs that they like you. one definition of love is i think is that another person's happiness is more important than your own. >> boy, i was not expecting that. i was expecting a joke a minute. i like that stephen colbert. >> i do too. >> he's so smart. >> he is. >> he's very smart. >> looking forward to him coming to the table. only on "cbs this morning," the wedding photographer trying to top them all thanks to a drone. see how he's pushing lilts in more ways than one with a bird's-eye view of the bride and groom. that's coming up next. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by the buy power card from capital one. your card is the key. 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"yummy." hershey's miniatures. choosing is half the fun. because there's a little something delicious... for everyone. hershey's miniatures choose your own delicious. fact. every time you take advil liqui gels you're taking the pain reliever that works faster on tough pain than extra strength tylenol. and not only faster. stronger too. relief doesn't get any better than this. advil ♪ would you be willing to say i do with a drone overhead? adrianna dias introduces to us the wedding photographer going to new heights. his innovation may be flying in the face of the law. >> reporter: emily and chad breathe grew up in the small town of iowa. when they got engaged they wanted their wedding to stand out. >> weddings are pretty typical. same thing. unless you bring something new to it before that no one has done before. >> reporter: and you'll have pictures forever? >> right. hopefully, they're awesome pictures. >> reporter: the couple hired dale steerman as their wedding photographer after they saw one technique dale used to capture the big day. >> we first saw it on facebook. >> on facebook, we saw pictures of it. the wedding up there. that's kind of neat you know. we should e-mail him and see if he brings that to ours. >> reporter: so emily and chad invited one nontraditional guest to their wedding last weekend. this drone. >> it's just incredible. >> reporter: dale is one of the first wii wedding photographers in the country to use a drone equipped with a camera to take wedding photos. >> ryans absolutely love it. they're getting one of a kind images that cannot been taken without it. >> reporter: when people think of drones they think of war zones, not weddings? >> that's exactly right. that's why we changed our technology to capture when invented. it's quad capture. it sounds more personal and less high-tech and out of this world. >> reporter: but the regulation around drones remains murky. drones must not be flown for business purposes. they're technically illegal. in june new york congressman sean patrick maloney drew criticism after it was disclosed his wedding photographer employed drones. the congressman sits on the committee that oversees the faa. >> we're not here to step over the faa. we want to do it safely. we don't film over airports or hospitals. >> reporter: photographers like dale insists drones enhance their ability to get the best shot. >> we try to capture different lighting and different angles. when we've got it up in the air and we saw what we could do with it i just knew the angle was going to be remarkable. >> reporter: this wedding season drone photography gives the bridal line something old, something new, a new meaning from above. >> definitely always imagined the big church wedding with the whole family and stuff. never thought that a drone would be taking pictures. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning," aids degreeian that diaz, wellview iowa. >> people right now are googling dale sturman. how do i get that guy for my wedding. >> i just love the idea an unique perspective. >> absolutely. >> hello christmas photo. >> they got to figure out a way to make sure it's safe but it's a cool idea. congratulations to the happy couple. it's the casting decision of a lifetime. the star of boyhood shares the one rule he just had to follow while being filmed over the course of, get this 12 years when we first met him when he was 6. he's all grown up now. that's ahead on "cbs this morning." >> good morning, everyone, i'm ukee washington, officials trying to determine what caused porch roof to collapse on home earlier this morning in talcony. "eyewitness news" on the scene on the 6300 block of tulip street, the city talcony section, woman taken to the hospital with broken leg. authorities say there is no threat of collapse to the rest of the home. let's get your forecast now with katie in the weather center good morning everybody, nice day is underway but it will be hot. and a heads up to folks that may be fall into the sensitive group category. it is also going to be a day where air quality is a little less than ideal. please keep that in mine. we start off with quick check on storm scan3 edge at this at the moment. high pressure just weak in place here, but we keep the sunshine around for you here today. moving forward, in the forecast, expect that sun to be sticking around here, your high hits 90 degrees, it is hot, steamy. later on tonight we drop down to 07 degrees under partly cloudy sky. days ahead start to cool down little bit here tomorrow bridges in the next cold front which is going to feature just stray shower, thunderstorm, firing up late in the day and then behind that temperatures take little bit of modest hit with lower humidity building in as well. bob? >> morning, everybody. 8:26. problems on 202 we had one accident, on the southbound side near 29 within that delay popped up a second accident. what we are looking at here is penndot following their truck heading southbound approaching chesterbrook, where there is an accident on only the far left lane open. again, this is all heading southbound route 202 between chesterbrook and route 29. you can see the firefighters, and the police on the scene again, only this left lane is getting on through. and an accident north along 295, right at route 38 at the moorestown interchange. ukee, back over to you. >> next update at 8: 55 and up next on cbs this morning the director of the new film boyhood. for more local news weather traffic and sports, we're on the "cw philly". you can find us on these channels. i'm ukee washington, good morning. ♪ a new video shows two surfers off the coast of england, a surprise video. surprised with baby seals. the little guy was curious what the surfboarding was for. and jumped on to find on. he kept sliding off the board. he looks happy having fun with his new surf buddies. >> we have good video this morning. very cool. >> that's nice. >> he's hanging on too. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour he first told us about the arrest the ebola virus and the ways to stop the outbreak. richard sussmann is in the toyota green room we'll tell us what he's learning. boyhood is making history. it's the first film to serve over a 12-year period. they tell us how they pulled it off. that's ahead. it's time to show you some of this morning's head linings. our los angeles station kcbstv remembers one of its finest journalists, jess marlo was famous. and millions watched jess anchor the evening news and knbc. he worked with tom brokaw who called marlow first rate. he died sunday of complications from alzheimer's disease. jeff marlow was 84 years old. the san francisco globe tells us about an unique in canada. it's staffed with deaf waiters and waitresses. it's solid sign. there are cheat sheets to help. the owners said he wanted to give job opportunities to the hearing-impaired community. business is booming. "the new york times" says that keke palmer will be the first black woman to portray cinderella on broadway. she makes her broadway debut september 9th. palmer says she's thankful for this opportunity. new york daily news shows us the latest words added to the dictionary. selfie, bromance and hash tag. the revised dictionary comes out monday. >> schnitz made the list. michael phelps is calling it quits after the 2012 games in london, but this week he's jumping out of retirement and into the pool for the u.s. national championship. everyone's waiting to see if he gives the olympics another shot in 2016. phelps said he's helpier this time around since he's swimming on his own terms without outside pressure. and politico says after two terms a tiny minnesota town ousted its tiny mayor. 5-year-old bobby tufts lost his bid for re-election. bobby was just 3 when he won in 2013. his small town of dorsett has no formal government. 9 to 28 people. it's an informal title. people in the town pay one dollar to vote. the proceeds benefit an annual festival. new federal charges for the man who said he supplied the performance-enhancing drugs to alex rodriguez. anthony bosh is charged with one charge of controlled substance. he's due in court later this morning. >> bosh said his agency biogenesis sold pdes to many. rodriguez on "60 minutes" this year. bosh sat down with scott pelley and described a-rod's alleged doping activities. >> once alex rodriguez was fully into your protocol what were the various banned substances? >> -- and some different forms of peptides. >> all of them banned. >> all of them banned. >> and he knew that? >> yes he did. >> and you knew that? >> and i knew that. >> was rodriguez injecting himself with these substances? >> alex was afraid of needles. so at times he would ask me to inject. >> you've injected him? >> yes. >> personally? >> personally. >> rodriguez calls bosch's claim unreliable. 20 years ago, richard preston wrote about the horrors of ebola in his best-selling book called "the hot zone." we're pleased to have him. >> good morning. >> good morning. >> so what's different about this outbreak? >> well ebola seems to be full of surprises. this outbreak, first of all, is out of control. >> in africa? >> in africa. they've lost control of the virus. they can't track it anymore, they don't know where it's going. there's a very large number of cases, much larger than before. officially about 1600 people have been reported with ebola. i feel that the number is probably below -- that's an underestimate. >> it's close to tipping point? >> it's beyond the tipping point. the virus is out of control. and the other thing about it that's different is that now it's gotten into the cities. for the first time. >> and what's the threat to the global community? >> well i think the threat to the global community, say for us for example, in the united states, may not be so great. but the threat to the urban populations in africa looks profound to me. >> i interviewed the head of the centers for disease control and he said we can stop ebola. but they're having trouble stopping it in africa right? it's very different than the united states in terms of what they can do and its spreading. you warned when it gets to a major city like lagos in nigeria, what could happen? 20 million people in one city. >> right. you know a major tropical supercity like lagos has 21 million people in it. so it's practically the population of texas. put that into city. take away access to medical care. take away sanitation. people crowded in a pool. and what you have is a potential big problem. you know i wonder whether -- this is a question worth asking that can't be answered. is ebola virus in the process of making itself immortal in the human species? what that means is is it establishing the ability to move from one person to the other. now, the experts are telling me they don't think that's going to happen but nobody really knows. when you think about the nature of a virus. and with tiny particles. it has the kind of intelligence in a biological sense. it's not aware the way we humans are. but the greatest ambition of a virus, if you can call it that is to make itself immortal. and it does that by establishing itself in a host. and then moving forever from host to host in that species. >> richard, you first learned in the early '90s you called it ebola is like jack the ripper it destroys in eight to ten days that it takes ten years to do that is destroys with medical efficiency. what do you think about the medical response that we're seeing today? >> the medical response has been heroic, it's been unbelievable. and in particular the doctors and nurses are taking casualties. they're dying of ebola. and the people who are on the front line are for the most part, not the westerners but the african doctors and nurses confronting this virus in absolutely horrific conditions. they're wearing these space suits. bio hazard suits. they're well equipped but you've got wards with 30 people with ebola virus in beds crowded together. one doctor one nurse, wearing space suits but the virus is somehow getting through their gear anyway. and they're dying. you have people who are working for maybe $25 a week in pay. and they're going into these places and they are pretty sure they're going to die. >> but it is said that it is passed from one person to another by the exchange of body fluids. what does that include? >> well let me give you an example. one of the -- it's thought that one of the principal portals of entry, doorway, into the human body is actually the eyelid of the eye. and if you get a tiny amount of ebola flood or some particles of that virus on your tinger tip, most people most of the time touch their eyelid once in a while. you rub your eyelid. and the virus is exquisitely transmittable through that eye. and it has this ability to replicate explosively once it gets inside human tissue. >> boy, the more you hear the scarier it is. thank you, richard preston. >> good to be here. ahead, the mara: it's easy to lose your way in a place like this. ms. winnie earle: kids in paterson face lots of obstacles - but nothing can stop their determination. mara: my dream is to be a pediatric nurse. ms. earle taught me if i work hard - i can do anything. ms. winnie earle: mara had so much potential, it was my job to help her reach her goals. mara: now, i'm headed to college to study nursing! ms. winnie earle: there are so many talented kids like mara - and they all deserve to live their dreams. fes3 many movies rely on special effects to tell a story but the new film "boyhood" uses a different technique, time. >> it chronicles and uses the same cast over a 12-year period. "the new york times" calls "boyhood" one of the most extraordinary movies or for that matter, the 21st century. >> look at that. better than a store. >> that's advertisement -- >> advertisement quality. >> yeah. >> do you think they'll make another? >> i don't know i think if they were going to have another one. it's where they would have to be. there's nothing after really. jeddy -- >> yeah there's nothing else there. >> they can't turn it into the fifth lord. >> richard linklater. director of "boyhood." the cast he cast ellar coltrane. i love this movie. critics have said ground breaking a masterpiece what you did on the screen. how did you do what you did up there, richard, the process? >> well, it was definitely a new way to tell a story. i hadn't seen a film that all the characters age and grow up over time. but i was trying to tell a story about growing up but i was really interested in the whole process of it how we change how we stay the same. how the relationship shifts around. how we sort of become ourselves at some point. you can't really do that as one little bit. >> but 12 years? >> yeah that was the only way to do it. we'd film three or four days a year and edit. making a film for 4200 days i guess. >> tell us about casting. >> well the biggest decision ever was casting this guy right here. ellar was just a thoughtful sensitive -- it's interesting when you're casting a movie, you just cast who you need right there. they're perfect. he was great. he was such a thoughtful you know, young man. i liked the way his mind worked and everything. you have to think, who are you going to be ten years from now? what kind of a teenager are you going to be. >> he's going through experiences in his own life too. >> yeah. a lot of it has to do with his family, too. i liked his parents. they're both artists. it's like a family decision. we all became a family. i always joke it's kind of like determining the next dalai lama. it's kind of like are you the chosen one? >> i'm looking at ellar 16 years old. did you have any idea that you'd number a movie for the next 12 years of your life? >> there's no way. i understood as much as i could. 12 years is a very difficult thing to wrap your head around. >> actually some people say time is the star of the movie? >> definitely truly, how time passes through our lives. you can see it. happening in the movie. a cumulative effect of watching 12 years go by through the characters' lives. the parents continue to grow up too. it's not just the kids growing up it's the parents changing. >> did you see it differently at the halfway mark than when you saw it at the beginning? >> yeah, the investment felt more. at the beginning it's the idea. it's the concept on how to make a movie. to see it actually working, when he gets mature starts to bring more to the project. more to collaborate with, brings himself with it. >> is it over? >> too soon to tell. >> i was wondering if you did, ellar, become more collaborative. i heard that richard said he didn't want me to do in the movie what i didn't do in real life? >> yeah you're kind of there, along for the ride. i was engaged a little as a kid. but as i got older, and the character required more input i was getting more input, too. >> like the first kiss and conversations with your girlfriend? >> yeah, absolutely. he made sure that i had at least interacted with girls by that point and kind of said it's time to be an with a girl for the first time. think what about you're saying. >> and did this change the way you think about acting? >> i think so. yeah, it's an incredible approach to be constantly comparing it to my own experience and using it as kind of my own journey to understand what the character is going through. even if the experiences aren't direct. just copying things from my life. but there's always something to compare it to. >> it was really wonderful. i've never seen anything anything like that. i left feeling very full about the whole process. congratulations. >> thank you. >> it's called "boyhood." it's in theaters right now. run to the theater. run. from a boy to a baby why new parents may want to consult katy perry, i love this. that's next on "cbs this morning." >> we've seen that video, that's cute. ♪ you're going to hear me roar ♪ ♪ another fan for katy perry. this video is proof that one way to stop a crying baby is just put on katy perry's song. this is called "dark horse." look at this little girl. she turns from driving happy. you can see her humming along. >> we haven't heard "dark horse" a while on the radio. >> you there go. >> that does it good morning, i'm natasha brown. two people remain hospitalized ng after a car home there is happenedlast night on linden, a portion of the house collapsed right on top of that car. critically injuring one person inside. demolition crew spent most of the morning, tearing down the rest of thehat crash. now, meteorologist katie fehlinger in the weather center how is it looking? >> good morning, we are seeing little weak area of high pressure start to makes its retreat with time here today but expect to go see generally just dry sunny very summary day unfold, see the same stalled front still nearby. not messing with us too much today. generally clear sky out there right now. pretty much what you can find, irk see a shower or storm but we will heat up easily to 90 degrees today. air quality alert issued for southeastern p a and delaware, keep that in mind. 07 degrees for the nighttime low. by tomorrow we see our next cold front come along, limits the amount of heat that takes place, few showers storms, clear it out for thursday, friday and saturday, low humidity, looks good. >> morning, 8:56. starting to get back to normal. 202 southbound, just opened up both of the lanes here, headed in through paoli we had earlier accident. only one lane was open, still little tight though king of prussia through paoli. south 95 jammed solid from cottman, in to downtown, close to hour delay because of the earlier disable tractor-trailer, tying us up. just open up all three lanes at girard, but right now stepping out the front door, an hour ride and double jelly donut delay ahead of you, that the tasha, back to you. >> thank you so much. that's "eyewitness news" for now. join us for talk philly coming up at noon. great morning, everyone. >> announcer: today on the doctors. she claims her transformation into a real life doll is almost complete, except for one little thing. >> i actually want to be brainwashed. >> a shocking treatment that may make her dream a reality. >> there's no going back at is point. >> announcer: then. >> what if nothing traumatic happened to your skin and you woke up with a huge disfiguring scar? >> the thrange skin disorder that could have this happening to you. >> i am ashamed to be a public ... >> she came to the stdoctors, desperate for help . >> it would mean everything to smile again. >> witness the moment she sees her new smile for the first time. [ applau >> announcer: and, real housewife yolanda foster's silent struggle with a debilitating struggle. >> it's a se ] ll you go through. >> i am a doctor by trade, but my most important job, hands

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