Sunday Morning : KLAS : October 23, 2016 6:30am-8:00am PDT : Free Borrow & Streaming : Internet Archive (2024)

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captioning made possible by johnson & johnson, where quality products for the american family have been a tradition for generations >> pauley: good morning can i'm jane pauley this is "sunday morning." in ways large and small, the genes we inherit from our forebears shape our lives. and in too many cases can sometimes cut young lives short well before their time. now a cutting-edge therapy is confronting one terrible genetic legacy head on and achieving

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in our cover story. >> calliope joy carr age 6, is slowly dying of a rare genetic disorder. giovanni price, also 6, has the same disease. but look, he could be any normal first grader. >> he doesn't know the miracle that he is. and he doesn't know he's not supposed to be running and jumping and playing. >> that miracle and the future of morning." >> pauley: phil collins is a music superstar who glow has dimmed somewhat in recent years. this morning he talks candidly with our jim axelrod for the record. ? >> the song's the same, but the singer, well, that's a different story.

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soul. >> i got five kids, you know, and until recently i haven't lived with any of them. and that, you know, that's a personal thing that i have to deal with. >> a very different side of the superstar later on "sunday morning." >> pauley: now you see them, soon you won't. conor knighton is on the trail of the sha ripping glaciers at >> the tripod is carefully positioned. the framing has to be just right. when dan fa*gre is replicating old pictures he makes sure everything is exactly the same. to show just how much has changed. >> i consider myself a scientific pap pap for the glaciers. >> scientists have focused on these montana mountains as a poster child for climate change.

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national park loses all of its glaciers? ahead on "sunday morning." >> pauley: when it comes to fine print, the lawyer turned author john grisham has fewer pierce. his enthusiasm for his craft still shines brightly as anthony mason found out during a recent visit. >> do you still get excited to see the hard cover arrive? >> sure. every time. >> he sold nearly 300 million books, gut gone grisham's legal thrillers don't always get respect. >> in the early days rightly irritating. makes you hate critics. >> this is your first dual number one? >> he's been rewarded in other ways with 28 consecutive number one best sellers. john grisham, later on "sunday morning." >> pauley: lee cowan takes us to ma magic and colorful

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york times" columnist, maureen dowd. faith salie puts in a good word for swearing. and more. first, here are the headlines for this sunday morning the 23rd of october, 2016. it's a multi-media mega deal. at&t is buying time warner, owners of the warner brothers studio, cnn and hbo and more. for some $85 billion. at&t, as you knows a phone provider and also owns directv. the deal faces still scrutiny from regulators. defense secretary ash carter is in irbil, iraq, this morning. carter arrived for an unannounced visit yesterday and met with the prime minister to discuss the offensive to retake mosul. americans are supporting the mission with airstrikes and advisors on the ground. isis has held the city since

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at a campaign appearance in pennsylvania, donald trump said yesterday he will sue the women accusing him of sexual he misconduct. an 11th woman is now speaking out publicly. a member of the swedish academy awarded bob dylan the nobel prize in literature is calling his silence sis receiving the honor i am polite and arrogant. no comment from dylan. surprise. to their loyal , known as the loveable losers. but now the chicago cubs are winners, capturing their first pennant since 1945 after beating the l.a. dodgers last night 5-0 in game six of the nlcs. they play the cleveland endians in the world series starting tuesday. stay tuned. now today's weather. a pleasant fall day is in store for much of the country. not so in the northeast, though,

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cool. rain and even snow can't be ruled out. showers will also dampen the pacific northwest. in the week ahead, hot and sunny in the southwest. elsewhere, time to grab a jacket. next, how hiv helped give him a new lease on life, later -- >> they look almost nice people, gentle people.

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>> pauley: the genetic legacy each of us inherits is a powerful force. in a few extreme cases, it can even be deadly. still, thanks to science, genetics need not always be destiny. as martha teichner shows us in our cover story. >> amy and brad price's home in omaha, nebraska, is crazy with all the kids around. there are seven of them ages 2 to 11. but if you look closely you'll see small memorials to one more. liviana, who died in 2013, at the age of 5 1/2.

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late infantile metachromatic leukodystrophy. mld. that destroys brain cells and is caused by a single, faulty gene. >> she was happy all the time. >> she loved pretty dresses. >> or a tutu. >> always had on tutus. >> she was talkative, addicted to caillou the animated tv series. a lively was two. >> her knees were going a little knock-kneed and she had been just randomly falling down. >> her doctor said, nothing to worry about, but she quickly got worse. >> i was in the kitchen doing something i heard her crying. i turned around i said, what's wrong? mommy, my legs don't work. >> liviana was diagnosed in the fall of 2010. >> she's sitting on the bed in

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to die. >> these are faces of mld. many children with the disorder are dead by the age of 6. and it runs in families. if it hadn't been for liviana, amy and brad price would never have known to have their other children tested. they learned that their infant son, giovanni had inherited the faulty gene, too. >> i get a call from contract's office. >> did you just know? just been told two of my kids now are going to die. >> except that's not what happened. doing research online, amy price discovered the existence of a medical trial in milan, italy. is of an extraordinary gene therapy treatment for mld that would save giovanni's life and

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was born with mld. her's, too, the treatment works only only children who like them have not yet started showing symptoms. dr. alessandra biffi over saw the trial. >> the patients go to the surgery room for collection of the stem cells on monday and receive their cells back on friday. >> a patient's stem cells contain the faulty gene. which the doctors have learned how to fix. amazing, right n then they need a vehicle to insert the good gene into the stem cells before those are put back into the patient's body. here's what's really amazing. that vehicles is the hiv virus, reengineered so the children can't get aids. why the hiv virus? is it particularly efficient? >> yeah. it's very -- >> getting around the body?

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>> how well did the children do? it will take years to know for sure. but so far, so good. >> at least 70-80% of them have an outstanding benefit coming from the treatment. some of the treated children were going to school and having a normal life. >> look at giovanni price, six now. in first grade. look at his sister cecilia, ceci twice a year they have to go back to milan to be tested and mob stored. >> tell me about dr. biffi? >> oh, gosh. >> i call her my angel. our angel. she took us in like family. >> so why italy not the united states? gene therapy has a checkered history. in the '90s hyped as the next big thing, research here

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including a death during clinical trials. >> you see all that typical virus -- >> but more than 15 years later it's back. one sign, dr. biffi is now head of the gene therapy program at dana farber boston children's cancer and blood disorders center. >> do you believe that gene therapy is finally coming into its own? >> i think, yes, absolutely. demonstrates what's possible. offering promise to the 30 million americans who suffer from some 7,000 rare diseases. trials for the experimental treatment ceci and giovanni price received in milan have not begun in the united states. they are two of only 24 children in the world with mld to receive

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dub bee. >> compare giovanni -- start your spa treatment. >> to calliope joy carr also sixf bala cynwyd, pennsylvania, outside philadelphia. she can turn her head a little. she can still smile and laugh. but that's about all. she was diagnosed at two. for her parents, college professors patrick carr and maria kefalis coming to the terms with the disease was wrenching. >> the time is in slow motion. >> the social worker said, it's good to try to cry in the shower to save it from your family and

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rage and grief, maria decided that she had to find some way of helping mld children. it was too late for cal, but she was desperate to give her daughter's life meaning. >> we're not wealthy people. we don't know very influential people who could write a big check for a million dollars. we'll start selling cupcakes. >> the calliope joy foundation wa it's been slow going, but the money added up. and when maria learned about the italian trial and the fact that amy price had to keep going back to milan with giovanni and ceci it was clear she would use the money to help families get to italy. >> she sent me a picture of giovanni playing in his front yard.

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paralyzed. i thought, i got to be a part of this. i need to help this happen again and again. >> maria kefalis has turned cupcakes into weapons of war. her war against mld. >> seems silly, but i don't know what else to do. >> she's raised more than $25 $250,000 and helped where she could. but she's hi so far not a single gene replacement therapy has been approved by the f.d.a. trial in italy is closed to new patients. it could be years before any children with mld will be allowed to receive the treatment in the united states. >> now it's just impatients. now it's like, when do we get this here? tell me what you need me to do. >> until then she continues to fight her battles --

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the price children, proof to her that the war can be won. >> you keep using the word miracle. in what way is all of this a miracle? >> our son's still with us. that's the miracle. >> and cecilia as well. >> pauley: ahead, the latest wrinkle.

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e roasted hazelnuts and cocoa, nutella adds a smile to any morning. nutella - spread the happy! but there's so much more to it. here's how benefiber? works. inside us are trillions of good microflora that support digestive health. the prebiotic fiber in benefiber? nourishes them... and what helps them, helps you.

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>> pauley: and now a page from our "sunday morning" almanac can october 23, 1814. 202 years ago today, the day london doctor joseph carpue performed what is widely regarded as the western world's first modern plastic surgery operation. pioneered in ancient egypt, plastic surgery was long dr. carpue observed it firsthand. his subsequent successful operations, and his writings about them, caught the attention of the medical world. fast forward to today, when plastic surgery figures prominently in tabloid speculation about any number of hollywood stars. plastic surgery has even played a starring role on tv in shows

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>> i need a bigger set of torpedoes to give myself competitive glenn you want breast implants. >> popular as plastic surgery is here in the united states is even more popular in beach-body minded brazil, as cbs news discovered during a visit in 2005. tall, tan, young and lovely as she is, she's getting a little extra help these days. >> right after actually, within the clinic, i felt already. something like, okay, people are looking now. i like it. >> pauley: when it comes plastic surgery all is not vanity. according to the american society of plastic surgeons the number of americans who had cosmetic surgery last year was about 1.7 million. but more than three times as many, yearly six million people had reconstructive surgery for

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? fifty years ago, humpback whales were nearly extinct. they rebounded because a decision was made to protect them. making the right decisions today for your long-term financial future can protect you and your family, ask a financial advisor how retirement and life insurance solutions from pacific life

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? before it became a medicine, it was an idea. a wild "what-if." so scientists went to work. they examined 87 different protein structures and worked for 12 long years. there were thousands of patient volunteers and so after it became a medicine, someone who couldn't be cured, could be. me. ? >> that was a great it. you must it.

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>> pauley: a range of mountains appeared like magic in america's western desert a few months back. the peaks have attracted any number of visitors, including our own lee cowan. >> i-15 in nevada just outside las vegas, arguably one of the more bland stretches of pavement on the planet. but out in all that khaki is something that has motorists rubbing their eyes in disbelief. this is no mirage. very bright. >> it does sort of call to you from the road in 5 way that nothing else in the middle of the desert necessarily does. >> made of painted limestone, these technicolor towers appear both ancient and modern, both native and foreign. that is precisely why it is art says david walker of the nevada museum of art.

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years, where artists would like to engage a larger public and would like to have scale. >> they look almost like people, just giant, nice people, gentle people. it's the vision of uro rondinone a swiss artist living in harlem who calls his desert friends the 7 magic mountains. what do you want people to take away from this? >> it's not something experience. i always say you don't have to understand an artwork. you have to feel it. and. >> and people have been making connections with it ever since ugo unveiled it this past may. >> it's so colorful, it's huge. it's not something you'd expect to see out here in the desert. it's real surprising. >> droves of the curious have been braving the desert heat, not to mention warnings of venomous snakes to, come investigate the oddity for

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>> one, two, three. >> it's a social media magnet. >> cool, huh? >> a backdrop for all manner of things, both real and a little surreal. like the costumed aliens who showed up when we were there. still, the work is not for everyone. there are some people who say that it's marred the desert, not big fans of it. what do you say to those people? >> i say to those people, many experienced the landscape, the nevada desert, for the first time when they come with their children they see the beauty of this landscape. >> he took the boulders from the landscape itself. each he hand pick fred a nearby quarry, some weighing more than 50,000 pounds apiece. >> we moved them stone by stone. one by one. >> the stones were shaved flush with the help of a huge diamond

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internal skeleton that would hold the boulders in place. and then came layer after layer of that bright day-glo paint. it's the contrast that you wanted. between the artificial and the natural. >> exactly. i tweeted use natural materials but make it artificial. >> its it's worth coming down here for. >> thank you. >> bigger than i thought. >> it is? >> it's size is historic. project out here in more than 40 years. michael heizer made rift, a zigzag trench dug in a dry lake bed here in nevada back in 1968. two years later, the spiral jetty, was envisioned by robert smithson, since then, nothing has been created on that kind of scale. the nevada museum of art wanted to reprise that tradition, especially right here, where ugo's art would get the maximum

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people going to and from las vegas. >> it's just a very small percentage of people to go a museum or a gallery. so i love the idea of public art and having it in the open for everyone to see it. >> it's not forever, however. in two years, 7 magic mountains, is scheduled to be dismantled. the is sentinel, is that once beckoned the curious from the mind's eye. >> you financed one of your films. >> let's not talk about that one. >> pauley: still to come, author john grisham holds court with anthony mason. ? and later, singer phil

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i'm catherine cortez masto and i approve this message. i don't know what i said, ahh, i don't remember. narrator: and joe heck says i have "high hopes we'll see donald trump become president." trump: you know, you could see there was blood coming out of her eyes, blood coming out of her wherever. narrator: heck says he "completely supports" trump. i love war in a certain way. narrator: and heck? reporter: do you trust him having his finger on the nuclear button? heck: i do. reporter: why do you say that?

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wrong for nevada. >> it's "sunday morning" on cbs. here again is jane pauley.

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pelican brief" with julia roberts and denzel washington was a hit film based on just one of the highly successful novels by john grisham. he's written enough fine print to fill a large book case, not to mention furnish a whole office as anthony mason discovered. >> these two desks were -- these were in "the film." >> john grisham's office looks like a movie set decorated with props from the films made and the door? >> that was sues sa san sarandos law office in "the client." >> when's your boss coming back? >> why, may i ask? >> "the client" is the story of a lawyer. >> i'm reggie love. >> played by susan sarandon in the 199 film, she represents a boy who may know where the body of a murdered u.s. senator is buried.

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>> first we got to be sure the body's even there, right? >> suspense like this has helped grisham sell nearly 300 million books. >> do you still get excited to see the hard cover arrive? >> sure. every time. these came in two days ago. >> "the whistler" the sale of a corrupt judge and an indian casino is the latest thriller for the author, who's had 28 consecutive number one "new york times" fix best sellers going back too to "the pelican b >> here's the cool stuff, foreign ed glick how many countries are you published in. >> up to 48 or 49 language isz it's been quite a journey for johnny grisham junior as he was called in south haven high in mississippi. the son of a cotton farmer, grisham would get his law degree from ole miss. >> this is your first business card? >> yes. back when i was a hungry lawyer.

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>> i had a hard time saying no to people in trouble. i really had a hard time. just because folks needed help. when you do that as a young lawyer it's hard to make a buck. >> to make an extra buck, grisham started writing. why did you think you could do it? >> i didn't know if i could do it. i knew i was going to i used to walk in a book store reich this see all of these books on the walls i would say, who wants to hear from "what do i have to add to all this. >> where did that bug come from? you hadn't really been writing before. >> i had never written anything. i had never studied writing. i had a great story. >> simple as the story. >> it was a courtroom drama that i fictionalized that became "a time to kill."

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during which time he was also serving in the mississippi state legislature. were you a good legislator? >> i was terrible. i had the highest absentee rate of any freshman legislator. i got sick of the job. i wrote of a lot of "a time to kill" at the state capitol in jackson, mississippi, hiding in little committee rooms killing time waiting for legislation to come to the floor. >> it's not exactly a blockbuster when it comes out. they printed 5,000 hard back copies. i bought a thousand. we couldn't give them away. i sold them out of the trunk of my car for several months at libraries just trying to unload the books to pay the invoice. >> what made you go back and write another one? >> well, i had a great idea. or an idea that i liked a lot. >> keep each other's secrets. >> i like that. >> "the firm" the story of a young lawyer who uncovers the dark side of his firm when two

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copies. >> had a little chat with the fbi. >> even before the tom cruise film was released in 1993, grisham quit politics and the law to write full time. >> it changed my life. everything was different after that. >> i don't get the sense you've ever missed practicing law. >> no, i never have. again i've been out of it now books all the time. >> that's the best way to practice law. is writing about it not having to be in the courtroom. >> nine of grisham's novels have been made into movies. most of them very successful. >> steven king told me 20 years ago, get all your money up front. kiss it goodbye. expect it to be something different. if you don't like it don't sell it. >> you financed one of your films.

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one. it almost bankrupted me. >> it did? >> it cost a lot of money. it was brilliant idea i had for a little league baseball movie. it was a total flop. >> we're cheating, okay? >> we knew what we were doing when the season started. we can't stop now. >> his baseball movie "mickey" may have struck out but grisham built a real life field of dreams. >> we start 1995 opened it in '96 with a couple hundred kids. >> after moving his family to virginia from mississippi, he couldn't find a place for his son and daughter to play ball. >> so i got mad and here we are. >> in a cow pasture 20 miles from charlottesville he built six ball fields, started an independent league with 20 teams, paid the umpires and even

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>> are you still the commissioner? >> i am the commissioner. owner. i'd love to give it to somebody. still write checks to support it. it does not cover the red ink. but i didn't build it to make a profit, i promise you that. >> for 20 years now, hundreds of little leaguers have taken the field every spring. must have been pretty proud of that. >> still proud of it. still proud of it. >> you will find his son's name on a plaque hereat park, but not the author's. grisham keeps a low profile in his adopted state. what made you come here? >> well, we didn't know anybody. that was the attraction. >> really? >> we were looking for a place to hide. >> the 61-year-old writer isn't kidding about hiding. our interview stopped suddenly when a phone rang in a back room. >> the secretary used to answer it.

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>> john grisham still likes to see his name on a dust jacket, but no where else. >> the voicemail was full the first month after she left and i have not answered the phone since. 32 months ago. i'm at a point in life where the people who matter can find me. and nobody else can. all that kind of stuff. nobody else can fin m >> i love it. yes. i'm not going to live any other way. >> pauley: next -- every time i say sugar and fudge --

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sorbent layers to stay up to three times drier, so babies can sleep soundly all night. wishing you love, sleep and play. pampers. ? ? ? ? can you say i love it? ? ? oh love it? ? ? can you say hey? ? ? hey! ? ? that's the spirit! oooooh.? ? ooh ooh ? ? wooh ooh ? ? wooh ooh ? ? sing sing, baby baby i love you. oh yes.? ? ooooh oooh.?

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>> pauley: could bad language possibly be a good thing? our contributor faith salie swears it's true. and, yes, parental guidance for what she's about to say is advised. >> do you usually think you're the smartest bleep bleep in the room? you may be right bed recent study. researchers found that people who curse a lot are more intelligent. contrary to the negative stereotype that folks who swear have poor vocabularies, a fluency in taboo language correlates with overall verbal fluency. the more words you know the more you know. the more colorfully you can express yourself with nuance, metaphor and emotion. and i'm happy to note that men and women in this experiment swore in equal measure, so let's

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there is something to all of this. i definitely feel dumber now that i'm the mother of a 2-year-old and 4-year-old. i thought it was sleep deprivation, but now i understand it's because those adore little "bleep" have been sabotaging by iq. every time i say sugar and fudge little neurons in my brain probably die. my husband is a graduate of two ivy league universities with a degree in classics and he sounds like a david when i hear him on a business call. >> you know your business i know mine. your business is "bleep." >> perhaps should not be annoyed at my mother-in-law when she uses the "f word" in front of my children. grandma, a phd is trying to enrich their lexicon to go to fine schools. also, cursing makes you feel better. in another study, participants were asked to plunge their hands into ice water for as long as they could bear it.

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to keep their hands under water 73% longer. even shakespeare acknowledges the power of the profane when he has caliban in "the tempest" declare you taught me long and my profit on't i know how to curse. now if you'll please excuse me i have to wash my mouth out with soap. it's gonna taste like "bleep." >> we're going to go live -- >> pauley: family matters with columnist maureen dowd. >> my own little basket of deplorables. it's hard to make the past dissappear, but danny tarkanian is trying. he'd rather you forget about all of his failed runs for congress, senate, and secretary of state. ...and the shady record that killed his chances every time. the property taxes tarkanian skipped out on for years...

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he can try all he wants, but danny tarkanian just can't bury his past. house majority pac is responsible for the content of this advertising. jacky rosen: i'm jacky rosen, and as a computer programmer, i created apps... before they were lled "apps" and i learned there's always a smart solution. as president of my synagogue, we found a smart solution to rising energy costs... creating one of the largest solar projects in the state. in congress, i'll work with democrats and republicans ve our schools, and create good jobs. i approved this message because i know we can

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>> pauley: maureen dowd of the "new york times" has plenty to say about clinton versus trump. and not surprisingly, she's found she can't please everyone. as she reveals video to mo rocca

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answers. >> do you read the comments? >> never. >> and not looking at reader feedback is probably a wise decision, if you're "new york times" columnist, maureen dowd. >> i'm always making one side or the other angry. i'm really kind of shy and introverted but when i write it has to be a tougher part of myself because that's my job. >> and her job this presidential campaign has been hitting both sides. hard. sheik excoriated hillary clinton for her long pattern of ethical slipping and sliding. as for donald trump and his performance in last wednesday's debate. >> my social security, payroll contribution will go up as will donald's assuming he can't pick out how to get out of it. what we want to do to -- >> such a nasty woman. >> the fact that she was able to goad him into calling her a

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social security and taxes was a triumph of psychological warf warfare. >> dowd's new book "the year of voting dangerously" includes many of her columns and none of those comments. do you not read the comments because you think they would hurt your feelings? >> oh, they would hurt my feelings. when i was a little i was so overly sensitive. i actually thought that if someone said something mean to you it would get in your bloodstream and it would be like leukemia and you would die. >> she may not heed her comments, but peg dedowd does. always at the ready to stick up for her little sister. >> no one better say anything to me about maureen. >> i read all of her comments. >> and? >> and i get very angry sometimes. it's like being in a god father movie you take one of their's, they take one of yours, you go to the mattresses.

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time around, she says, the national mood is uniquely terrible. >> there have been a lot of stories that couples are breaking up all over the coun country. >> a friend of mine, his wife said to him, they have been married for over 20 years, seriously if you vote for trump i will divorce you. >> right. >> have you ever seen anything like this? >> no. >> people feel very intensely that if donald trump gets elected we're going to have the zombie apocalypse. my siblings feel just as there will be the abyss. >> he he is sort of the law and order sibling? that's right, many's brother kevin a rock-ribbed republican who occasionally takes over his sister's column to hurl slabs of red meat at her defenseless readers. >> particularly like the comments that come in afterwards. >> so you read the comments? >> i keep a scrapbook of them. >> yes, he's voting for donald

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or third choice. but trump represents change. >> so does maureen's sister, peggy, she embodies change. >> we were goldwater girls. >> she cast her first vote for conservative barry goldwater. then made her way left with jimmy carter. then tacked right again for reagan and both bushes. this election she's leaning trump but -- >> she went to cuba for a vacation and fell in love with che guevar and turned communist anything can happen. is. >> you're a pretty solid conservative but had this dalliance with communism. >> and socialism. >> and you were bernie sanders voter. >> i didn't vote for obama. >> maureen dowd grew up the youngest of five in a tight-knit irish catholic family in washington, d.c. her father averages police inspector in charge of senate security. he got to see the members of that august body in some of

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so these politicians were not trying to impress him. and my brothers were pages there as well. they would see the nitty-gritty. they would see senators come in the morning drunk. then other senators' wives would be calling saying, where's my husband? , you know, because there was hot of hanke pang 'in those da days. my father tended to judge politics on whether they seemed to be good although he was a democrat. >> indeed dowd's column focuses lesson policy and more on the person. you've heard the charge that you and your legions of imitators, by focusing so much on character and personality have trivialized the process. >> i think it's just the reverse. when ever america has had a trauma, whether it's watergate or vietnam or iraq, if you look

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on the basis of the president's personality or personal demons. >> dowd met donald trump in the late 1980s and admitted early this campaign that covering him might mean, he would send out one of his midnight mordant tweets about me. something like, she started as a three now she's a one. >> i knew that we cut me off because i would be honest and he tweeted that i was a neurotic so i was very hurt, because i thought he could have come up with something much more customized. spent more time on it. like elizabeth warren has pocahontas. i was very hurt. >> like about a banshee. >> that would have been perfect. >> she's been writing about the clintons for 25 years, winning a pulitzer for her commentary on the lewinsky scandal and

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that are in conflict. the dark side where she's fearful and paranoid and secretive and has a lot of scar tissue from all these battles, that she's fought and from her husband, fighting his battles, you know, with the women who have come forward, trips upment light, idealistic side that she started with. >> her job she says is to give whoever is in power a hard time. >> even my family doesn't understand when a republican es me for four or eight years, because they're mad that i'm critiquing. then when a democrat is in they love it. >> but her family is always her personal focus group. >> all of my fellow "times" columnists have been going on these margaret mead road trips, we're going to find this strange exotic creature called the trump voter and try to understand who they are and rope with them. when i have to do is go home. my own little basket of deplorables.

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strive spin families, the dowds are taking it in stride. >> i have been married nor 42 years, we're registered democrats. so if you ought to see counseling if you can't sort this out. >> i think there was more attention in our household when w was president. >> i was almost a fanatic for him. if maureen wrote any criticism of him, i just went nuts. >> she cancelled her y times" subscription. >> did i. after he got into the white house and years later i thought, this is ridiculous, you know. if i'm dying he isn't going to be at my bedside. maureen will. >> pauley: next -- >> told me i was going to need a transplant. >> i just said to myself, i can help, i'm going to help. >> pauley: happily ever

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i've seen what can happen as the result of hate. my son matt was murdered in laramie, wyoming, in 1998. he was befriended by two men in a bar pretended to be gay. they offered him a ride home, and when he was in their car, they robbed him and beat him. they drove matt out to the prairie and tied him to a split-rail fence, then beat him some more and left him for dead. in the aftermath of matt's death, my family saw the best of america in the love and support we were shown. so when i see the hate that donald trump has brought to his campaign for president, it terrifies me. i'd like to punch him in the face, i'll tell ya. ahh, i don't know what i said,

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n. i could stand in the middle of fifth avenue and shoot somebody, and i wouldn't... words have an influence. violence causes pain. hate can rip us apart. i know what can happen

as the result of hate, and donald trump should never be our president. priorities usa action is responsible for the content of this advertising. priorities usa action you spend a lot of time opening doors for these little guys. but congressman heck opens them for these guys -- special interests and the billionaire koch brothers. and heck supports their agenda -- special tax breaks even for corporations shipping jobs overseas. worse, heck pays for them by cutting education and raising taxes on us. congressman heck is what's wrong with washington. dscc is responsible

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>> pauley: many a path to marriage begins with a decidedly simple gift, such as flowers. definitely not the case for the wedding our steve hartman dropped in on. >> there are always a lot of people to thank on a wedding day. but the bride to be at this church outside chicago had one person to thank overall others, a total stranger, who made this possible. >> i wouldn't have been here if it wasn't for him. >> a couple of years ago, out of the blue, 27-year-old heather krueger was diagnosed with stage 4 liver disease. doctors said she had just a few months to live. >> they immediately told me i was going to need a transplant. >> that's not enough time to really find a donor, right? >> no. by that time i could really feel my body shutting down. >> enter our hero. chris dempsey is a code enforcement officer for the village of frankfurt, illinois.

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one day when he overheard a guy talking about this woman who needed a liver donor. >> i spent four years in the marine corps learned never to run away from anything, i just said to myself, hey, if i can help, i'm going to help. >> keep in mind he'd never met heather but he got tested to see if he was compatible. and when he found out he was, that's when they finally met for the first time. >> we had lunch together, discussed what the whole process was going to be. >> did you b >> no. he bought. >> the guy's amazing. >> yeah, he bought, that i remember. >> not long after they checked into the university of illinois hospital. the transplant, which involves removing about half of the donor's liver, went off without a hitch. afterward, chris and heather remained close. they got so close in fact, he was at her wedding last weekend. he had to be, really. i mean, what's a wedding without

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and so it was, that a year and a half after giving her part of his liver, she gave him all her heart. >> you are the most incredible man i've ever known. you believe in me and you make me feel amazing every single day. because of you, i laugh, smile and i dare to dream again. >> acts of great kindness are done without expectation. when chris decided to give an organ to a had no idea he was saving his own wife. but such is the way of goodness. the more likely you are to live for others the more likely you are to live happily ever after. ? >> pauley: still to come --

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and later, before, after. thinning of the teeth and leading to being extremely yellow would probably gross me out! my dentist recommended pronamel. it can help protect enamel from acid erosion. my mouth feels really fresh and clean and i stuck with it. i really like it. it gives me a lot of confidence. pronamel is all about your enamel. helping to protect your enamel. i've been taking probiotics gx from nature's bounty to help with the occasional unwanted gas and bloating. wherever i get stuck today, my "future self" will thank me. thank you. thank you! how do i get stuck in an air duct? nearly 50 years of experience has taught us: no matter what e future holds, you're always better off healthy. nature's bounty hey, jesse. who are you? i'm vern, the orange money retirement rabbit from voya. orange money represents the money you put away for retirement.

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get organized at voya.com. ? ?you don't own me? ?don't try to change me in any way? ?oh? ?don't tell me what to do? ?just let me be myself? ?that's all i ask of you? the new 2017 corolla with toyota safety sense standard. toyota. let's go places. ? >> it's "sunday morning" on cbs. and here again is jane pauley. >> pauley: with songs such as

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touched millions of fans over the years. now, after touching bottom in his personal life, he's telling his very personal story to our jim axelrod, for the record. ? >> if he doesn't look exactly like you remember him, well, it's been awhile. in fact, it had been six years since phil collins last played in public when he kicked off the u.s. open tennis tournament two months ago. ? he is 65 now, walking with a cane and a little hard of hearing. not to mention the bad wrist that keeps him from playing the drums. but phil collins wants us all to

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>> i've been made aware the last few years that people have missed me. i was checking into a hotel in happy and the bellman said something to me. it really touched me. it was like, when are you going to come back, because we really miss you. ? but as much as he wants to look forward, the bulk of spent looking back. his new memoir "not dead yet" is a candid chronicle of struggle with marriage, drinking and fame. maybe this was an attempt to gain some clarity. now you wanted to understand it. >> i think so. you know, i mean, when you've been married three times and you've got five kids, you don't live with them and been divorced

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can't always be someone else's fault. ? born and raised in the outskirts of post-war london, his book charts his beginnings as a performer playing the artful dodger in a west end production of "oliver." ? through his first run as a rock star with genesis. biggest pop icons of the '80s and '90s. ? but if you think selling 250 million records insulates you from regret, collins is proof one has absolutely nothing to do with the other. >> i think in the '80s i became very annoying.

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you know, i know a lot of people love it, but i can see that i was omnipresent and that can get up people's noses. >> the high point then seems to be one of his low points now that he has three decades to think about it. the summer of 1958 when he played live-aid inon morning, then took the concord to play in philadelphia in the evening. >> the annoying guy that thinks he can act and thinks he can -- not only does he play live-aid once he plays it twice. >> he couldn't help himself. once he hit it big he pushed hard, with no regard for consequence. ? he built a solo career. he became a sought after

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? he even had his own big band. i'm reading the chapter and i'm thinking, phil, slow down. slow down. did that thought ever cross your mind? >> not really. >> nothing could withstand that pace, certainly not any of his three marriages. these days having reconciled with his third wife and living sons, collins seems to be finding liberation in the honest reckoning. ? take his oscar nominated grammy winning hit "against all odds." he can't even play it. >> apart from writing it, i only played it twice. >> you can't play "against all odds." >> i could learn.

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>> but phil collins has written this book to reckon with much bigger things than that. ? par in 2006 his third marriage falling apart, living alone in a hotel while working on the broadway version "tarzan" collins almost let the pain kill him. >> and you discover the pain relief in the mini bar. were you aware were drinkin >> yeah. yeah. ? this man who had given so much pleasure to so many people could not find any happiness himself. the workaholic became an alcoholic. how dad did it get? >> i was at death's door, you know. i mean --

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literally, death's door? >> that's what the doctor said. i was in lausanne intensive care in a hospital. my pancreas had sort of buggared up. organs were shutting down. and the doctor said to lindsey works is my assistant, mr. collins' papers in order, because we don't think he might not make it. >> ask phil collins an honest question and you get an honest answer. >> you good? you clean? >> three years. now i feel like i can have a glass of wine. >> these days, collins gives his real kicks in san antonio, texas, of all places, remembering the alamo. the show hooked kids on both sides of "the atlantic" because phil collins grew up to become the largest private collector of alamo artifacts.

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more than $15 million when he donated it to the state of texas. you really get a sense how heavy -- >> if this all seems like a bit of a head scratcher, it makes perfect sense when you consider that for collins, the story of the alamo, like his own, is far more complicated than you might think. >> it wasn't bad members caps and good texans, it was very real. >> seems like you are in to setting the record strai >> yeah, i think it needs to be done s. >> setting the record straight is what phil collins needs to do wherever he is these days. the acoustics okay in room like this? >> like in the studio he's set up ought home in miami where he contemplates his come back. >> if i had to bet one side or the other, that phil collins is actually going to make music again that we all hear or should i take the other side that have?

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you to say, i think it's possible, yeah. ? >> maybe it will be more solo work. maybe he'll team up with his son, nick, who backed him up on drums at the u.s. open. or perhaps another reunion with genesis. >> whatever form it takes, you're not done yet. >> no, i'm not dead yet. >> sounds like a good name for -- >> pauley: coming up. alan turing makes history,

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it's just a cough. if you could see your cough, you'd see just how far it can spread. robitussin dm max is now better tasting, with the same fast powerful cough relief. because it's never just a cough. ? you never believed in fairytales. knights in shining armor or happily ever after. but you believed when the right one came along, you'd be ready. time to shine. orbit. >> pauley: it happened this past week, the righting of a

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granting posthumous pardons to roughly 50,000 men convicted of hom*osexual offenses in years past. another 15,000 men who are still living will be able to apply for pardons on an individual basis. the policy shift is informally referred to as turing's law, after alan turing, the math genius who helped break the germans enigma code during world war ii only to apparently commit suicide in 1954 after a conviction. >> i have something to tell you -- >> turing story was the basis of the recent film "the imitation game" starring benedict cumberbatch. turing was granted a posthumous pardon in 2013, britain largely decriminalized consensual hom*osexuality in 1967 and

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still, some questions remains. it's not immediately clear whether a pardon will be granted to the writer oscar wild convicted in 1895. nor is it clear that every man eligible for a pardon will seek one. if 93-year-old goat montague put it last week, to accept a pardon means to accept that you were guilty. i was not guilty of anything. coming up, on the trail at glacier national park. they were the first to have a product verified by usp. an independent organization that sets strict quality and purity standards. nature made. the number one pharmacist recommended vitamin

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we asked a group of young people when they thought they should start saving for retirement. then we asked some older people when they actually did start saving. and when we actually do is one of the reasons why too many of us aren't prepared for retirement. just start as early as you can. it's going to pay off in the future. if we all start saving a little more today, we'll all be better prepared tomorrow. prudential. bring your challenges. ? ?

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nutella - spread the happy! what do doctors from leading cancer centers in the country have in common? many of them now call cancer treatment centers of america home. expert medicine works here. find out why at cancer center.com. cancer treatment centers of america. when you ache and haven't slept... you're not you. tylenol? pm relieves pain and helps you fall fast asleep and stay asleep. you're a better you all day. tylenol?. >> pauley: glacier national park in montana has a name to live up to. but it's a name that seems to be

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trail. >> like most photographers, dan figure ser obsessed with getting the perfect shot. we'll hike around 12 miles together, up steep mountain passes, across icy streams, all to photograph a small slice of none none's glacier national park. visitors take snapshots of the views. but when learns he sees something different. he's trying to take a picture of what isn't there, the tons and tons of ice that have disappeared. >> oh, my gosh. >> none of that is there. >> figure sir an ecologist with the u.s. survey. >> the glacier filled this bay son using material from the park's archives the usgs has been rephotographing old black

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>> it's a little bit of interesting, a little bit of detective story. you're trying to find the exact spot that a photographer stood decades before and shoot the exact same picture, then compare the changes between the two time spans. >> in a short amount of time, the change has been dramatic. >> so, 50 years ago what would we have been looking at? >> well, 50 years ago we would have been under rice right now. >> right here? >> a lot of ice. >> the sign national park. but some models have suggested that these montana mountains will lose most if not all of their glaciers by 2030. soon, there won't be any ice left to photograph. >> you know, like a lot of people i really like the glaciers in glacier park. while i will be sad to see them go personally, i think my role as a scientist to make sure that everybody understands the pace at which they're disappearing and the reasons for that, so that, again, better decisions

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>> the reason, scientist explain, has said that climate change is fundamentally the greatest threat to the integrity of our national parks that we have ever experienced. visiting 9 parks this year i've experienced it firsthand. at kenai fee brothers in alaska the massive glaciers will survive longer than those in montana but they're still sha ripping. walking into the parkhe signs where there was one ice, 1899, 1926, 1961, all the way up to 2005. markers of where this glacier used to be. >> let me give you a little shot of what we're looking at. >> last year, president obama paid a visit to deny fjords to talk about climate change. >> that is melting glaciers and blocks of ice. >> in 2016 this glacier has

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that's a new record. >> the glaciers have been receding. the surprising thing, the thing that let's us know that this is indication of climate change is the rate of retreat has increased drastically. >> the park, ranger fiona uses photos to illustrate before and after this. is 19912. >> cover this whole area. >> from alaska to montana, photos that were originally taken to wonders are now being used to publicize how they're disappearing. it packs a punch that a chart or a graph just can't deliver. >> i think people are extremely visual. the old saying about when painting or photo being wort a thousand words, get a lot of information visually and we tend to trust that even more than what we hear. >> with these photos, the message is clear, the pace of

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? before it became a medicine, it was an idea. a wild "what-if." so scientists went to work. they examined 87 different protein structures and worked for 12 long years. there were thousands of patient volunteers and the hope of millions. and so after it became a medicine, someone who couldn't be cured, could be. me.

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>> pauley: here's a look at the week ahead op orison day morning calendar. monday is world polio day, dedicated to eradicating a disease that still strikes young victims in remote parts of afghanistan and pakistan. tuesday kickoff national magic

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monday, october 31, the 90th anniversary of the death of harry houdini. on wednesday, cbs "this morning" anchor norah o'donnell cohosts the 27th courage in is journalism award ceremony in new york. thursday sees the launch of a new luxury hotel at graceland, with family and friends of e friday is the 130th anniversary of the education of the statue of liberty in new york harbor. while saturday marks four years since so-called super storm sandy made landfall in new jersey, killing at least 125 people and inflicting an estimated $62 billion in damage. now program note.

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record our show each weekend may have noticed that your dvr didn't do its job last sunday. let's just say it was a technical problem, ours. we're at work on it by next sunday you'll be table dvr us as you always have using the listing "cbs sunday morning" promise. with that on to john dickckson t what's ahead on "face the nation." good morning, john. >> dickerson: good morning, we're in tom we'll talk to rnc chairman about donald trump and the state of the republican party. plus we'll have some brand new poll numbers from those battleground states. >> pauley: all right, john dickerson in washington, thanks. we'll be watching. and next week here on "sunday morning." turns out it really is a dog's

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>> pauley: we leave you this autumn sunday morning in the white mountain national forest in new hampshire. captioning made possible by johnson & johnson, where quality products for the american family have been a tradition for generations captioned by media access group at wgbh

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i'm jane

pauley. please join us when our trumpet sounds again next sunday

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you spend a lot of time opening doors for these little guys. but congressman heck opens them for these guys -- they spent millions supporting heck, and heck supports their agenda -- special tax breaks even for corporations shipping jobs overseas. worse, heck pays for them by cutting education and raising taxes on us. congressman heck is what's wrong with washington. dscc is responsible

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are looking for a driver connected to a deadly hit and run. what investigators say led to the loss of one man's life. >> plus president obama is on his way to las vegas to campaign for hillary clinton. we'll tell you where and when you can see the president. >> and grab your umbrellas...rain is in our forecast! katie boer can tell you what to expect during your weather now forecast. 8 news now...the valley's news leader starts right now./// "now, ((nia wong)) thanks for waking up with us i'm nia wong. all eyes are back on las vegas today as president barack obama is expected to make a return to the valley this afternoon. the president will campaign for presidential democratic candidate hillary clinton and state senate candidate catherine cortez masto. the rally is happening at cheyenne high school between four and six. we're told tickets went fast but if you want another chance

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