tv CBS Overnight News CBS October 14, 2016 2:22am-4:31am CDT
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right? >> yes. love those. >> go ahead and plate them up. >> okay. they're so beautiful, cathy. oh, my gosh. >> and i'll get the asparagus on there. and i have one more little trick to show you. >> oh, you have a trick up your sleeve? >> oh, yeah. watch this. this is called deglazing. so, if you just give that a little swirl and then pour it over the steaks. >> i'm swirling. >> beautiful. >> this is like a five-star-restaurant meal. >> and i'm just gonna add one little love pat of garlic butter. >> okay. perfect romantic dinner for two. look at everything you've made here, cathy -- sizzling steaks, delicious pork chops, lemon-infused chicken. mmm! all cooked perfect, all cooked evenly. cathy, with red copper, you have shown us how nothing sticks to the ceramic surface and how cleanup is a breeze, how the durable anti-scratch technology resists the toughest punishment, how concentric cooking rings and infused copper perfectly sears the food quickly and browns
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but in the oven, proving that red copper is the most versatile pan you're ever gonna own. when it comes to red copper, it's love at first sight. watch this. >> thanks, guys. well, we're here at a popular shopping mall where people are getting their first chance to experience the incredible red copper cookware in action. let's check it out. >> whoa. it is slippery sliding. >> it's not sticking. its just sliding around, dancing on the pan. >> oh, wow! >> i can't believe. and there's no oil in there? >> nope. >> nothing. >> wow. that's amazing, man. >> you're moving an egg around without fat in the pan. i can't get over that. >> that's out of this world. >> it should be scratched, but it's not scratching. i just love it. >> i'm whisking, and i'm not scratching. i love it. >> that freaks me out -- that egg just rolling around in there. >> wow. i can't believe that. not even -- not even a scratch. >> you see this? ain't no cleanup! i can wipe this stuff off with a
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>> as a chef, this is what i need in my kitchen. >> well, look at this. you just flip it out, wipe it up, and that's it. >> well, as you can see, red copper is wowing first-time users with its nonstick, scratch-resistant, and overall high-end performance. seeing is believing when it comes to red copper. back to you guys. >> and you'll love it, too! >> and, joe, remember -- red copper is the only pan that's red on the outside, copper on the inside... >> and it says red copper right there on the handle. so, go ahead. call the toll-free number or go online right now. it's time to order your very own red copper cookware. you're gonna be glad you did. >> announcer: has food sticking to your pan gotten out of hand? tired of treating your cookware like a baby so it doesn't get nicked and banged up? sick of scraping, scrubbing, and all the scratches? what you need is red copper cookware, the revolutionary pan made with nonstick ceramic and super-strong copper, now with
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technology. look. with red copper, no scratches means no sticking -- always a clean pan. red copper is lightweight yet super-strong so it won't scratch, peel, or chip into your food. watch. regular nonstick coating can scratch off and go right into your meal. yuck! but red copper's durable surface resists the toughest punishment. no safely use metal utensils without the worry. it's also the best baking pan, and everything slides right out. distribute heat evenly so there's no hot spots, just perfect results every time. now cook healthy, crispy chicken fingers with little or no fat or oil. chop steak and onions for a melty philly cheesesteak. absolutely no sticking. or whisk eggs without a mixing bowl. truly a time saver. the breakthrough? a technological discovery that combines 100% pure copper with ceramic, creating a durable and
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cooking surface -- electric, glass-top, or natural gas. so, now you can saut?, sear, and serve in just seconds. red copper is pfoa- and ptfe- free so you can feel good about it. but watch this. burnt chocolate bar comes right out. sticky cheesy? not in this pan. even a melted plastic cup is no match for red copper. amazing. go ahead. flamb? desserts, broil flaky fish, or bake chicken pa everything slides right out. other ceramic pans have only 9.5 inches of cooking surface, but red copper gives you a full 10 inches. it's the bigger, better copper pan. the best part? nothing ever sticks, so you'll never scrub. it's even dishwasher safe. regular copper pans sell for over $200 and are such a pain to clean. but during this special tv-only offer, you can get the full 10-inch red copper pan for just
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you'll also receive cathy's quick meals and desserts recipe book free, like her pineapple upside dump cake or her easy, cheesy chicken quesadillas. >> every red copper pan comes with my guarantee. try it in your home for a full 60 days, and i guarantee you'll love it as much as i do. and if red copper ever fails, we'll replace it, guaranteed. >> announcer: but wait! call or log on in the next 10 minutes and you can double the offer and receive a second set. keep one for yourself and give the other to a friend or relative y plus, receive our new forever sharp copper knife. just pay a separate fee. razor sharp and foods slide right off. so durable, it crushes this rock to dust and still slices a tomato with ease. this incredible value is not available in any retail store and supplies are limited, so pick up the phone or go online right now before time runs out and order your very own red copper pan. >> don't let scratches and sticking ruin another meal.
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>> with red copper, it was truly nonstick. i didn't have to use any oil if i didn't want to and things slid right out. >> red copper -- it can go from thst is super-versatile. it's amazing. >> welcome back, everybody. america's favorite cooking expert, cathy mitchell, is here showing us her revolutionary nonstick cookware, red copper. >> well, joe, you know, i love that red copper is durable and goes from stovetop to oven, but my favorite is it's a nonstick baking pan with a handle. so, i've saved the best for last -- my blue-ribbon-winning cherry cobbler. >> ooh, i love cherry cobbler. >> well, the cherries are already in there. now, i've got 2 cups of baking
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lemon/lime soda and stir that up. and watch how it bubbles up. you see, that's what's gonna give it those high, light biscuits -- all that extra carbonation. and once you've got that stirred in, then you can star dropping it by dollops right on top of those cherries. this makes the lightest, fluffiest biscuits you've ever had. they practically float up out of the oven. >> [ laughs ] talk about homemade, too. oh. >> oh, wait till you taste these. and you could eat these biscuits morning, noon, and night. i think they are that good. so, we'll get those big dollops of cobbler right on the top. and that's gonna pop in the oven for about 10 to 15 minutes, and when it comes out, there's what you've got. >> oh! that's beautiful! >> well, let me serve some up for you now. i like to start with some fruit in the bottom of that beautiful cup. and then we'll get one of those nice, light biscuits. >> simple enough for me to make, too, right? >> absolutely. and use apples or peaches -- whatever you like. serve it with ice cream, whipped cream, or how about some raspberry sauce? >> yes. yes. yes. >> yes, yes, yes?
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>> i'd like to find that out right now. >> [ chuckles ] okay. there you go. >> i'm the lucky one. cheers. mmm! mm-mmm. this is the best. and this pan is the best! it's nonstick, it's oven safe, it resists scratching, easy cleanup, but here's the question. do chefs love red copper? watch this. >> announcer: presenting the red copper reality challenge, featuring three masterful chefs. each one is here to prepare a difficult, sticky, demanding dessert using only one red copper pan. >> toffee maple apple crepes? this pan better be good. >> i got carnival candied popcorn and a pan. >> double chocolate s'mores in a pan? this red copper's gonna get a workout. >> announcer: next, the chefs open their baskets and realize there's more to this culinary challenge. >> no butter, no oil, no way. >> the big question -- how will red copper perform in these extreme conditions? >> i put the maple syrup in the pan.
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stick a bit. added the apples and the toffee. no problem at all. dumped them out, wiped the red copper pan clean. >> the popcorn's popping in the red copper pan without any oil. this might actually work. >> so, the red copper's heating up, and it's actually melting perfectly. >> caramel squares melted in seconds into liquid magic. switching from one sauce to the next -- the cleanup is easy. it just comes right out of the pan, on to the next sauce. >> so, i had to crush up my graham crackers, and, you know, this red copper felt pretty durable, so i just figured i'd use it as a mallet. it worked out perfectly. so, i topped it with my graham crackers and my marshmallows, and this pan's going right in the oven. >> no oil, no butter, and the crepe slid right out of the pan. wow! >> last step -- red candies. not sticking. >> so, the double chocolate s'mores look perfect coming out of the oven. i was psyched to put it on the plate. i bring it over. it slides right off. >> the pan held up like a champ. the dish came out great. this is the kind of cookware i'm gonna use in all my restaurants. red copper, you made a believer out of me.
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that wipe clean with ease, red copper, you're my pan. >> i've cooked all over the world and used a lot of different saut? pans, but this red copper is pretty impressive. i'm sticking with this one. >> everything you see here was made fast and easy with the revolutionary red copper cookware. >> well, like i say, whisk it, biscuits, sunny-side up it, even upside down it. and, joe, remember -- red copper is the only pan that's red on the outside, copper on the inside... >> and it says red copper right and, cathy, we've got our desserts. >> i guess it's the end. >> it is. cheers! >> announcer: has food sticking to your pan gotten out of hand? sick of scraping, scrubbing, and all the scratches? what you need is red copper cookware, the revolutionary pan made with nonstick ceramic and super-strong copper, now with advanced anti-scratch technology. look. with red copper, no scratches means no sticking -- always a clean pan.
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and everything slides right out. red copper is perfect for any cooking surface -- electric, glass-top, or natural gas. red copper's cooking rings distribute heat evenly so there's no hot spots, just perfect results every time. the breakthrough? a technological discovery that combines 100% pure copper with ceramic, creating a durable and slippery long-lasting surface. red copper is pfoa- and ptfe- free so you can feel good about it. other cera 9.5 inches of cooking surface, but red copper gives you a full 10 inches. it's the bigger, better copper pan. the best part? nothing ever sticks, so you'll never scrub. it's even dishwasher safe. during this special tv-only offer, you can get the full 10-inch red copper pan for just $19.99. you'll also receive cathy's quick meals and desserts recipe book free. >> every red copper pan comes with my guarantee.
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love it as much as i do. and if red copper ever fails, we'll replace it, guaranteed. >> announcer: but wait! call or log on in the next 5 minutes and you can double the offer and receive a second set. plus, receive our new forever sharp copper knife. just pay a separate fee. razor sharp and foods slide right off. so durable, it crushes this rock to dust and still slices a tomato with ease. this incredible value is not available in any retail store and supplies areim pick up the phone or go online right now before time runs out and order your very own red copper pan. >> don't let scratches and sticking ruin another meal.
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>> as an avalanche of women make new stunning accusations. >> he was like an octopus. >> trump fires back. >> they're pure fiction and outright lies. >> and the nypd giving us terrifying truth today. >> kim kardashian back on social security. >> what she just deleted twitter. >> kevin hart's coast-to-coast take over. >> i'm doing new york, philadelphia, i'm doing d.c. a look at his laugh-out-loud stand up film and. >> the new "star wars" trailer everyone's talking about. >> plus how to get away with murder zb murder. >> we don't know how to get in the ambulance. >> you're coming in hot.
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>> now from the entertainment picatol of l.a. >> hey everyone i'm mario lopez. coming up breaking bad talks about why he was almost a suspect in a murder case. first, today, donald trump takes on explosive new accusations and the tv actress responded for the first ari zucker breaking her silence today. >>o d you find those offensive silence. >> they are offensive comments, yes they are. >> eleven years later almost answering the big question.
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>> that was an interesting apology. >> the interview as donald trump threatens a legal war firing back at new claims of abuse. >> they're pure fiction and outright lies. >> jessica lien is telling "new york times" he was g bropedy trump. >> he was like an octopus with six arms, all over the place, if he stuck with the upper part o f the body i gotten -- might not have gotten that upset but when he started putting his hand up my skirt, and, that was it. >> the times also he reporting a one-time receptionist in trump tower alleges the billionaire kissed her directly on the mouth in 2005. his letter sending this. >> these events never, ever happened. it will be part of theawsuit we'r le preparing against them.
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welcome the opportunity to have a court set him straight. >> i don't want my kids looking up to somebody like that. >> trump also dooenying former utah u.s. he kissed her on the lips in 1997. >> if i was meeting my boyfriend for lunch that's the kind of kiss it would have been. >> in 2005 pushed her against the wall and forced his tongue down her throat. and an alleged incident in other room. >> i'm like a kissing magnet. >> why didn't they make it part of the story. the story was beautiful. milania on and myself on our first anniversary. i was one of the biggest stars on television with "the apprce" and wentiould have been one of the biggest stories of the year.
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shot at this accuser. >> take a look at her, look at her words, you tell me what you think, i don't think so, i don't think so. >> now to the other stories threatening today, a big headline broke this morning where j.lo shoots her cop drama "s shade of blue. >> on the the set of new yorkp co drama, were fired near by however there was no threat to the cast and production was never shot dun. j.lo was already done film scenes and was no longer on set. nypd tells us no calls were made. kim kardashian in therapy, so traumatized from her gun apartmen eal in this paris
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the kardashian's have televised last sessions. >> i don't think any of us know what we're doing. >> this is the last post. she's been in a black out since but made a brief return to 13 people she follows on twitter. brian breaking bad star had his own walter white moment. >> i am the danger. >> he and his brother were where everyone hated the chef. >> we all talked about how each one of us would kill peter wong if we had the opportunity. so i said, i'm just thinking that i would slice him up, not dice him up. >> problem was, the chef actually did get murdered right around the time brian left town. and they were looking for us. they put an apb out andng looki for us. we were somewhere north of the
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people's princess shocking passengers taking her first solo trip without prince will aiamsnd everyone snapped these picks as kate walked on the plane for the 50-minute flight. >> that's why everyone 4r06s her. loves her. she's the best. everyone also loved kevin hart who justked pic up a star onhe cohosted with ellen. >> sand a busy man going for laugh in the runner's world. >> and got to keep those running shoes on, kevin hart is a man on the move. >> you're everywhere. >> i'm trying to be, man. >> what's going on? >> tonight i'm doing three
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>> all or his stand up concert fill "what now" making us laugh. making hallie berry swoon. kevin raking in $80 million a year topping the highest list of comedians and it's no surprise. >> we sold the football stadium >> i leavet to jimmy to keep him grounded, tonight things get down right scary on the "tonight show". >> we did a haunted house, you all might lose a little bit respect for me. >> nothing but mad respect for this guy, what now, in theaterers tomorrow. move over benleck it aff
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accounts brewing. >> ben is working for some of the world's most criminal organization it's. >> my clients following me. >> why would they follow you. you're an account. 'v >> ie never seen anything like your character. >> he was born with a gift of math and numbers and his father was a fraid he would be victimized and he trained him relentlessly. >> he risks his life doing accounting for some of the scariest people on the planet. >> you work with ben how many times now? >> just two. >> for justice league. >> yeah this was the first one. we shot this leek a year and we shot this like a year and half ago. >> jusetic league. >> a lot of great actors have played that part and now it's my turn and i'm trying to be true to who the character is. >> you're directing the next
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>> jk simmons will be in it. >> that's your boy right there. >> yeah. yeah. >> i'll be the new guy. >> matt damon's going to get jealous. >> ben and his new best friend round one the accountant in theaters tomorrow. ? >> up next "extra"'s on the top secret set how to get away with murder with viola davis. >> we don't know who is he under the sheet. >> and away with secret spoilers. >> who is under the heat. >> good question. >> and star dealing he's not going to let hol succelywoodss go to his head. >> i've seen a lot of e! true freshm true hollywood videos. all that coming up.
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? so on set visits for movies or some of your favorite tv shows, there's story lines and plot twists you try to get the actors to give up. >> and into one does it better than renee. stars of "how to get away with murder". >> a massive fire. a dead body. and one big mystery. >> we don't know who was in the ambulance. >> we don't know who is under the sheet.
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>> expecting viola davis to offer spoilers? in fact the shows how i to get away with murder. >> no one knows anything yet. >> biggest question is how to get the cops to spill secrets. >> who is under the sheet. >> yeah good quest ion. >> okay question number one. >> don't go looking for answers. >> you know who it is? >> we recently found out. >> what was it like not >> yeah? >> yeah it was pretty terrible. >> really? >> yeah. >> why? >> well, i like having a job. >> the fire? how does the fire start. >> good question. >> you're coming in hot with these questions. >> like afire. >> almost like a fire. >> what they will reveal. >> when will we find out who is under the sheet. >> i want to saysode -- epi am i allowed to say it? >> nine. >> just before that everything
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>> we're about to shoot episode eight and you're not going to be able to get ahead of it. >> get ready.ow to get "h away with murder" tonight on abc. she plays the defense attorney willing to win at any cost with me now, hi daniel. >> he's high-powered jake based on fame lawyer carrying on a secret producer in "notorious". >> good tv. >> good tv. >> a lot of people ask you're on this new show what do you tell them it's about? >> it's about the intersection of law, criminal defense and media and how alibis and headlines have a tic relationship. symbio >> have you met him. >> yeah but haven't spent much time with him.
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>> yeah it's a good thing. >> this is his break out role. >> my modest success has been slow and coming to me. i've seen a lot of e! true hollywood movies, i want to hold on to my soul and center. but go enjoying the process. >> be sure to watch notorious on abc. >> 9 p.m. >> coming up we break down "star wars" story trailer. the includes. the twists, anclues. d >> guess who is back. and gwen stefani and blake shel htonappy family get away. plus we're teaming up to build you the perfect winter
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? extra, extra! save the dream. >> yes, i'm fired up the final trailer for "star wars" rogue one a "star wars" story was released today and i have so many questions. >> i can't help youn o that. ask me about nickle package or a-gap. >> okay bill belichick. well the trailer the rebels steal the plans to get a good look at darth vader. the movie hits theater december 6th. i might have to set up a "star wars" marathon with these ladies. now let's get to the other stories on social media. gwen stefani and blake shelton
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at an amusement park with her kids. >> i love how comfortable her kids look like with blake. >> he fit right in. package deal. >> after the park they went to the house she grew up in. >> very cool. >> throw . >> howback weird to be at the bn street house right now. >> taylor swift and girl squad new york night. models joined tai tlor to join the kinf leon, with bff who is married to the band's singer. >> all of their models are success. they all got to going on. >> we want to the ask facebook what do you think it would be part of taylor swift squad.
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good voice. few cats. ashley graham kicking off her 21st birthday going topless by the pool enjoying the sun in the cancun resort and spaeating tr her girlfriend as well. >> nicki minaj havg pose like a chair so she can, you know, sit down. >> i like her make over frmtz if classy. >> i love that blouse. >> she's classy but still edgy. >> yes. we'll read more about "marie claire" around october 18th. time to break out new clothes and my boots. >> i thought it meant time for post-season baseball.
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tops. >> oh, man, never. >> the temps are dropping but fashion is heating up. >> from fall to winter it's great to get transition pieces you can layer from your wardrobe. >> h & m with the toastiest trends to keep why snug and stylish. >> we're mixing classic with tailored. white buttonn wit dowh coat, super chic, comfy and warm. >> can't go all-black look. >> be sure to mix different textures and materials. we have a moto jacket in faux leather and cross body bag, she >> this ist. shee a must have. >> a long tailored coat. >> paired with sexy cut out top and leggings, for the evening and go plaid and preppy for the
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now before we go how you can join hfollywood's biggest names in an effort to prevent als. >> they came out to battle als at last year's walk to defeat the disease. >> i'm a team captain. i'm here to support her. >> she's like a second mother to me. >> i think it's really important that she knows we're all here for her that and that we care. >> join nancy's a-list friends and join the walk to defeat als this sunday in l.a. >> next "extra" brian cranston opening the dark chapters of his life.
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chest. >> he was once a murder suspect. >> then scarlet hear every a-list confession. >> exciting to see how far i'm come. >> next "extra." >> welcome home mr. t. faked. but so far, hasn't given us any specific examples of that. >> major garrett, nancy cordes, thanks very much. make note of this. trump's running mate, mike pence, will be a guest on "cbs this morning." don't miss it. the fbi is checking out a bomb that was found in a backpack yesterday outside nedderland, colorado outside the police department there. an officer picked up the
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colleague had left it. the bomb was active, but it did not explode. the man accused of setting off bombs in new jersey and new york last month was arraigned in his hospital bed today. ahmad rahimi pleaded not guilty to charges he tried to kill officers as they captured him. rahimi, an afghan-born u.s. citizen, was wounded in a gun battle with lyndon, new jersey police. more than 30 people were injured when one of the bombs in manhattan.
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embarrassed by a prostate exam? imagine how your doctor feels. as a urologist, i have performed 9,421 and a half prostate exams. so why do i do it? because i get paid. und... on this side of the glove i know prostate exams can save lives. so, if you are a man over 50, talk to you doctor to see if a prostate exam is right for you. if we can do it, so can you.
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those hacked e-mails are a plot by the russians to disrupt the election, at least according to the u.s. government, which also alleges that the russians are trying to break into state voting systems. one of those attacks was in arizona, where we find jeff >> reporter: the hacking attempt on arizona's voter database started in rural hila county when an elections worker opened an e-mail attachment. >> very scary stuff. >> reporter: michelle reagan, arizona's secretary of state, says it was malware meant to attack these servers holding the voter information of 4 million people. >> we had a cybersecurity team in place. >> reporter: reagan was alerted by the fbi. experts believe the russian government is to blame.
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>> shock. and dismay, obviously. because we've never had to worry about foreign invaders coming in and trying to mess with our confidence in our election system. >> reporter: arizona, illinois, florida and nearly two dozen other states have seen similar scanning, probing, or breaches of their election systems. >> the russians have a different doctrine than we do. >> reporter: for over a decade jim lewis has advised the u.s. government on cyberattacks. >> they're using i a way to achieve their political goals. they don't need the red army anymore. they have the internet. >> reporter: president vladimir putin and other senior russian officials have denied involvement, calling u.s. accusations nonsense. >> the biggest thing we were worried about was did they take any information? >> reporter: reagan says she is confident the voter database wasn't compromised. but she says the attacks continue.
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intrusion attempts, about 11,000 of them posed a serious threat. reagan and 32 other secretaries of state have asked the department of homeland security for help. >> i liken it to when you're being invaded by russia you don't call in your national guard. at some point you have to say, you know, i need the army. >> reporter: changing actual vote totals is difficult because most voting connected to the internet. but throwing confusion into an already contentious election, that's a lot easier. and scott, that's what officials believe the russians are trying to do. >> jeff pegues for us tonight. jeff, thank you. and another note. cbs news will be bringing you live coverage of the third and final clinton-trump debate. that's in las vegas next wednesday at 9:00 eastern, 8:00
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a powerful category 3 hurricane, and don dahler is there. >> reporter: since 1851 bermuda has only had seven major hurricanes come close. number eight has just arrived. category 4 nicole has just gotten close enough for to us start experiencing the early rain bands and high winds. within hours nicole slammed ashore with a fury this island has rarely seen. huge waves crashed over the protective reef that cut the legs out from under what could have been a deadly storm surge of over even with the fierceness of this storm most of the damage was contained to downed trees and some flooding. one minor injury was reported. with the cleanup now under way, the people here count themselves lucky. don dahler, cbs news, bermuda. overnight u.s. warships fired missiles into rebel-controlled areas of yemen on the arabian peninsula. this was retaliation for missiles that were fired on a u.s. navy ship in the red sea.
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>> reporter: it's an all too familiar sight. a u.s. navy ship launching missiles against targets in the middle east. but this was different. this was the first time the u.s. has fired at one of the warring sides in yemen's civil war, which pits rebels backed by iran against government forces backed by saudi arabia and the united arab emirates. the war has claimed an estimated 10,000 lives, many of them civilians, some of them killed the help of american aerial refueling and intelligence. the strike at 4:00 this morning local time came after the u.s. destroyer "mason" reported coming under attack by anti-ship missiles fired from territory held by the iranian-backed rebels. a second destroyer, the "uss nizze, launched cruise missiles at three unmanned radar stations u.s. officials believe to have been used in the attacks against the "mason."
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severely degrade the accuracy of any future attacks. the weapon fired against the "mason" was an unsophisticated version of the silkworm anti-ship missile, which has poor accuracy to begin with but carries a large warhead. this video purports to show what happened when one of them hit a ship belonging to the united arab emirates earlier this month. none of the missiles fired at the "mason" reached their target. even without could still fire missiles aimed at american ships. and if they do, the pentagon has already vowed to retaliate again. scott? >> david martin at the pentagon for us this evening. david, thank you. coming up next, elizabeth palmer is inside aleppo, syria as a trip to school turns deadly.
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your brain, and your joints really love them too? introducing megared advanced 4in1... just one softgel delivers mega support. ? dry spray? ? that's fun. ? it's already dry! no wait time. this is great. it's very soft. can i keep it? (laughter) all the care of dove... now in a dry antiperspirant spray. awarded best of beauty by allure. the u.s. and russia will meet in switzerland this weekend to try and revive the collapsed cease-fire in syria. the fighting intensified this week in syria's largest city, aleppo, leaving another 150 dead. elizabeth palmer tells us that among them were two children. >> reporter: lamar and henadi
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not lying in the razi hospital morgue. out in the parking lot lamar's grandfather is in shock. >> [ speaking foreign language ]. >> reporter: calling for god to punish her killers. but this is war. we'll never know which rebel fighter shot the mortar that ripped into 8-year-old zeina's body. surgeons did their best, but zeina died of devastating shrapnel wounds. and so did 5-year-old who never even made it out of intensive care. samir hellaq, deputy director of education in aleppo, was overcome by the senselessness of it all. "these kids committed no crime," he says. "they were unarmed. they just wanted to learn." this is exactly where that lethal mortar fell. 7:45 in the morning in a perfectly ordinary residential street in government-held
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killed? they were just walking along on their way to school. nearby, the men of telal neighborhood are clearing up after a rocket smashed into this street and killed another 5-year-old boy. it's been an especially violent 48 hours in aleppo, with bombs and artillery thundering down on the rebel-occupied east side of the city and return fire crashing into the west. samer samani's shop was tat. when you hear the bombing is heavy on the other side do you know it's going to start up here as well? >> yes, always. >> reporter: so when they're getting hit they hit back? >> they hit back. and they hit back on us, all civilians. >> reporter: civilians on both sides of this war who were never asked if they wanted to live on the battlefield.
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ts 12 hours, so... looks like i'm good all night! some cough medicines only last 4 hours. but just one mucinex lasts 12 hours. let's end this. new jersey governor chris christie is facing a legal battle now over the so-called bridgegate scandal. a citizen filed a complaint alleging that christie failed to stop a scheme by his aides to crea a order to punish a local mayor. today a judge approved that complaint and set a court date. they are known as the chibok girls. nearly 300 were abducted from a school in chibok, nigeria 2 1/2 years ago. today 21 were released in an exchange with boko haram, the militant group that stole them. a few dozen have managed to escape. the fate of about 200 others is
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today the u.n. general assembly elected a new leader. portugal's former prime minister, antonio guterres, will become secretary-general january 1st. he succeeds ban-ki moon. president obama couldn't tell you how many hands he's shaken over the years but he'll remember this one. in pittsburgh fade the president met 28-year-old nathan copeland, who'd been paralyzed accident. copeland used a mind-controlled robotic hand to fist bump the president. tiny chips implanted in copeland's brain allowed him to feel the president's touch. up next, a surprising twist of fate for a rock icon. how does it feel to be a nobel
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a healthy baby is worth the wait. ? ? travel is part of the american way of life. when we're on vacation, we keep an eye out for anything that looks out of place. [ indistinct conversations ] miss, your bag. when we travel from city to city, we pay attention to our surroundings. [ cheering ] everyone plays a role in keeping our community safe. whether you're traveling for business or pleasure, be aware of your surroundings. if you see something suspicious,
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bob dylan is performing tonight in las vegas. maybe not the first place you'd imagine the winner of the nobel prize in literature would celebrate. but dylan, who took his stage name from the poet dylan thomas, is not your typical nobel laureate. anthony mason tells us why he is joining the ranks of hemingway, faulkner, and ? hey, mr. tambourine man ? ? play a song for me ? >> reporter: in his early appearances, this one at the newport folk festival in 1964, bob dylan quickly emerged as the most influential musician of his generation, though he could be as enigmatic as his own lyrics. >> do you think of yourself primarily as a singer or as a poet? >> i think of myself mostly as a
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? once upon a time you dressed so fine ? ? threw the bums a dime in your prime ? ? didn't you ? >> reporter: with songs like "like a rolling stone," the magazine "rolling stone" said dylan enlarged the vocabulary of popular music. >> the nobel prize in literature for -- >> reporter: in announcing the award the nobel committee praised dylan. >> for having created new poetic expressions within the great american song tradition. >> the words are just as there would be no music without the words. ? johnny's in the basement mixing up the medicine ? ? i'm on the pavement thinking about the government ? >> reporter: dylan is the first singer-songwriter to be awarded the literature prize, a controversial decision. but the swedish academy said dylan has the status of an icon. ? helped her out of a jam i guess but he used a little too much force ? picasso fractured the art world
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once wrote. "he was revolutionary. i wanted to be like that." ? how many roads must a man walk down ? ? before you call him a man ? first making his mark in the folk era with songs that became civil rights anthems, the 75-year-old artist has continually reinvented himself. ? the emptiness is endless ? ? cold as the clay ? ? you could always come back ? ? but you can't come the way ? >> reporter: but dylan has always downplayed his own influence. ? come gather round people wherever you roam ? if the if i wasn't bob dylan," the singer has said, "i'd probably think that bob dylan has a lot of answers myself." ? for the times, they are a changing ? anthony mason, cbs news, new york. and that's the overnight news for this friday. for some of you the news
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little bit later for the morning news and be sure not to miss "cbs this morning." from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm scott pelley. >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." welcome to the overnight news. donald trump is threatening to sue "the new york times" for publishing the story two of women who claim he accosted them years ago. trump insists the claims are "fabricated, fiction and outright lies." the "times" stands by its story, and several other media outlets have published similar accounts. here's a visibly angry trump talking to supporters in florida. >> they will attack you. they will slander you. they will seek to destroy your career and your family. they will seek to destroy everything about you including your reputation.
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and then again, they will do worse than that. they will do whatever's necessary. the clintons are criminals. remember that. they're criminals. people who are capable of such crimes against our nation are capable of anything. and so now we address the slander and libels that was just last night thrown at me by the clinton machine and the "new yo outlets as part of a concerted, coordinated, and vicious attack. these vicious claims about me of inappropriate conduct with women are totally and absolutely fa false. >> the avalanche of allegations against donald trump has gotten under the skin of first lady michelle obama.
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question who she was talking about at a campaign rally for hillary clinton in new hampshire. >> i can't stop thinking about this. it has shaken me to my core in a way that i couldn't have predicted. it's like that sick sinking feeling you get when you're walking down the street minding your own business and some guy yells out vulgar words about your body. or when you see that guy at work close, stares a little too long and makes you feel uncomfortable in your own skin. it's that feeling of terror and violation that too many women have felt when someone has grabbed them or forced himself on them and they said no but he didn't listen. the shameful comments about our bodies. the disrespect of our ambitions and intellect. the belief that you can do
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it is cruel. it's frightening. and the truth is it hurts. this is not normal. this is not politics as usual. [ cheers and applause ] this is disgraceful. it is intolerable. and it doesn't matter what party you belong to, democrat, republican, independent. no woman deserves to be treated this way. none of us deserves this kind of abuse. >> more than a dozen states from coast to coast are asking the department of homeland security to help secure their voter databases. some states have already seen intrusions through the internet, and fingers are pointing at russia. jeff pegues reports. >> reporter: the hacking attempt on arizona's voter database started in rural gila county when an elections worker opened an e-mail attachment.
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>> reporter: michelle reagan, arizona's secretary of state, says it was malware meant to attack these servers holding the voter information of 4 million people. >> we had a cybersecurity team in place. >> reporter: reagan was alerted by the fbi. experts believe the russian government is to blame. what was your initial reaction? >> shock. and dismay obviously because we've never had to worry about foreign trying to mess with our confidence in our election system. >> reporter: arizona, illinois, florida and nearly two dozen other states have seen similar scanning, probing or breaches of their election systems. >> the russians have a different doctrine than we do. >> reporter: for over a decade jim lewis has advised the u.s. government on cyberattacks. >> they're using information as a way to achieve their political goals. they don't need the red army
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putin and other senior russian officials have denied involvement, calling u.s. accusations nonsense. >> the biggest thing we were worried about was did they tack any information. >> reporter: reagan says she is confident the voter database wasn't compromised. but she says the attacks continue. in september alone officials here say that there were 192,000 intrusion attempts. about 11,000 of them posed a serious threat. reagan and of state have asked the department of homeland security for help. >> i liken it to when you're being invaded by russia you don't call in your national guard. at some point you have to say, you know, i need the army. syrian government forced backed by the russian air force renewed their assault on rebel-held neighborhoods in the city of aleppo. at least 150 people have been killed this week alone. but not all the shelling is
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rebel artillery landed near a school, and the casualties there were children. elizabeth palmer reports. >> reporter: lamar and henadi should be in class right now. not lying in the razi hospital morgue. out in the parking lot lamar's grandfather is in shock. calling for god to punish her killers. but this is war. we'll never know which rebel ripped into 8-year-old zeina's body. surgeons did their best, but zeina died of devastating shrapnel wounds. and so did 5-year-old ismael, who never even made it out of intensive care. samir hellaq, deputy director of education in aleppo, was overcome by the senselessness of it all. "these kids committed no crime," he says. "they were unarmed.
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this is exactly where that lethal mortar fell. 7:45 in the morning in a perfectly ordinary residential street in government-held aleppo. and the kids who were hurt and killed, they were just walking along on their way to school. nearby, the men of telal neighborhood are cleaning up after a rocket smashed into this street and killed another 5-year-old boy. it's been an especially violent 48 hours in aleppo, with and artillery thundering down on the rebel-occupied east side of the city and return fire crashing into the west. samer semani's shop was destroyed in this lethal tit for tat. when you hear the bombing is heavy on the other side, do you know it's going to start up here as well? >> yes. always. >> reporter: so when they're getting hit, they hit back? >> they hit back.
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civilian. >> reporter: civilians on both sides of this war who ? music ? extraordinary starts here. new k-y intense. a stimulating gel that takes her pleasure to new heights. ugh, it's only lunchtime and my cold medicines' wearing off. i'm dragging. yeah, that stuff only lasts a few hours. or, take mucinex. one pill fights congestion
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tales of being sexually accosted by republican presidential candidate donald trump. "the new york times" printed the story of two of these women. cbs news hasn't confirmed their stories, but rachel crooks was a 22-year-old receptionist inside trump tower back in 2005. the "times" reports she introduced herself to trump and they shook hands. crooks told the "times" that shortly after he began kissing her cheek. then she said "he kissed me directly on the mouth." another accuser, jessica leeds, told the "times" trump's hands were all over me during an airplane flight. the 74-year-old says it happened more than three decades ago. >> he was like an octopus. it was like he had six arms. he was all over the place. and if he had stuck with the
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not have gotten -- i might not have gotten that upset. so when he started putting his hand up my skirt, that was it. >> the trump campaign said the entire article is fiction. "this truly is nothing more than a political attack. this is a sad day for the times." the two reporters who wrote the story, michael barbero and megan tuohy discussed it on cbs this morning. >> tell us about these allegations made in your story, megan. >> jessi shared her story with us. and said that a little over 30 years ago she was on a plane seated next to donald trump when he proceeded to grope her and put his hand up her skirt, forcing her to flee to the -- another seat on the plane. >> so that allegation comes forward. it's from 30 years ago. how do you verify it? how do you know something like that is worth putting in the paper? >> we can also -- we're happy to
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made, dates back to 2005, from a young woman who was working in trump tower at the time. she was a 22-year-old reception for bayrock, a company located there. she says she bumped into trump outside an elevator and that she introduced herself, they shook hands, he kissed her on the cheek, and then proceeded to kiss her on the mouth and she felt uncomfortable about it. so what do you do when you get -- when two women come to you -- >> did they come to you? did you put out a call for them? >> they did. >> and back to norah's question. how do you verify it? >> what we do is we interview the women, in both cases more than once, to make sure what they told us in their e-mails and, you know, lined up with what they told us in interviews. and then we also in both cases, these are women who had shared their stories with friends and family. in the case of the 22-year-old she immediately made a phone call to her sister right after this happened. she went home that night. she told her boyfriend.
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in the case of jessica, we talked to other people she had told as well. >> and did you talk to donald trump? >> yes. but before we get to that, we talked not just to the two women who went on the record and used their names. we talked to the people around them who went on the record and used their names. there are no anonymous quotations in this story. these are people who are putting their names and their reputations by the claims that were described in these stories. i think that's important. >> at the time that they allege these assaults they had told close friends and family who >> in the case of rachel crooks that's absolutely correct. in the case of jessica leeds she began about a year and a half ago she said to tell a widening circle of people including her son, her nephew, and more than two friends. but we talked to two friends as well as the nephew and son, who recall the details of what she told them, which lined up with what she told us. >> megan, you talked to donald trump, you said? >> right. absolutely. we would never just go ahead and publish these accounts without talking to the presidential
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on the phone with me and i spelled out the allegations. and you know, gave him a chance to respond. >> what did he say? >> yeah. don't leave that line. >> he insisted that all of the allegations were a fabrication and that the "new york times" was making them up. and he got increasingly agitated as i continued my questions and started to yell at me and told me that i was a disgusting human being. washington, d.c. isn't for its fine dining but the latest michelin guide is out and it found some great food in our nation's capital. none of the restaurants were awarded the coveted three stars, but nine got one star and three of them received two. they are pineapple and pearls, the mini bar, and the inn at little washington, which is actually 90 minutes into the virginia countryside. jan crawford was inside mini bar when the good news came down. >> reporter: chef jose andres and his staff here at mini bar
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michelin stars. jose got the call this morning from the michelin inspector. and i think excitement may be an understatement, as he has said, this is the kind of thing chefs spend their entire careers hoping to achieve. >> not good enough. >> reporter: when mercurial celebrity chef gordon ramsay lost a coveted michelin star -- >> i started crying when i lost my stars. >> reporter: he told a norwegian television station for once he didn't scream. >> it's like losing a girlfriend. >> reporter: for nearly a century this red decreed the top restaurants in the world. this week after a years-long process shrouded in mystery michelin comes to washington with a new guide and for a few select chefs new stars. we sat down with michelin's top u.s. inspector at the tasting table test kitchen in new york with the promise not to blow her cover. >> it's an award they take seriously because they don't know we've been there, they
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>> it strikes fear and awe in chefs' hearts. >> this is the holy grail for them. this is what they've been working toward their whole career. >> reporter: like all michelin inspectors she is strictly anonymous. even close friends don't know her real job. >> we're not trying to play tricks or hide from the chefs. what we are trying to do is have an honest experience the way a consumer does when they go to a restaurant. >> reporter: so you're not getting special treatment like oh, my gosh, there's the inspector. >> we sit on hold making reservations for a long time. we get terrible tables. >> it's like you're in the cia. >> cia but much better food. >> reporter: in washington michelin found some great food. like the dishes coming from cutting edge filipino chef tom kunanen. >> this is our purgita. >> this is octopus? >> yes. >> reporter: we visited with d.c. food critic to find out why
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list of 19 washington gourmands. >> kind of trendy. >> let's try it. >> oh, wow. >> you get all the textures. >> reporter: bib gourmands are the kind of moderately priced restaurants the inspectors might frequent on their night off. >> of course they meet the michelin guide criteria of quality and the cooking is excellent and the place like that is seen as a great bib may get one, two, or even three elusive michelin stars. >> the best of a 3-star restaurant is it's once in a lifetime. it's something you're going to remember forever. >> reporter: but any star is an honor. of the restaurants that make it into the guide just 10% actually get a star rating. in the u.s. only 13 restaurants hold three michelin stars. places so exceptional they're worth a special journey. that was the purpose of the guide when it was founded in the early 1900s.
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all, is a tire company. in the early days of the automobile its founders wanted to encourage travel. and what better way than a guide to fine dining? it now has 27 guides worldwide, three in the u.s. washington, long seen as a town of steakhouses and expense accounts, this week will become america's fourth. >> in the last few years it's incredible what's gone on with the restaurants in washington, d.c. there are a lot of young chefs who are expressing a very unique and distinctive personality. and similarly the chefs and restaurants that have been around for a long time are evolving. >> reporter: one of those young chefs is aaron silverman whose restaurant rose's luxury is widely considered one of the city's best. customers stand in line for hours to get a table. >> at the end of the day our job is just to make people happy. whether you're a server or a bartender who's waiting on a
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chef who's leading your cooks, like your job is to make them happy. >> reporter: but will rose's luxury get a star or will his new venture, the high-end pineapple and pearls which the "washington post" called the premier example of fine dining in the country? >> it's incredible. and i hope that we get something or multiple things from them. but the biggest benefit that i'm going to get out of that award is that hopefully we're busier and we can do more for our staff. >> now, pineapple and pearl is one of the restaurants awarded two stars. as for mini eat there you better plan ahead. there's only room for a dozen customers. a tasting menu costs $275 a head. and that's without wine, taxes,
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and 20% better comfort from one tiny, mighty pill... get move free ultra, and enjoy living well. national park service is celebrating its 100th year. conor knighton visited oregon's crater attracti attraction. >> reporter: crater lake is the deepest lake in the entire country. the pristine water in this collapsed volcano is so unbelievably blue it seems magical. it cast such a spell on early visitors they named the cone in the center wizard island. >> i love the name wizard island. >> mm-hmm. it kind of evokes a little bit of mystery. >> reporter: mystery is what brought me to this national park
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specifically, a mister tree. i've come to pay my respects to the old man of the lake. >> it's an honor to meet you, sir. >> the old man of the lake was first discovered in 1896 by joseph diller, who was a geologist and explorer, and he described him as a spectacle, curious enough to excite the imagination. >> reporter: it may not look like much, but this part of a tree has been part of this park since its a 30-foot-long log implausibly bobbing upright for 120 years. mark batenica is an aquatic ecologist for the park. as he monitors the water quality of crater lake he also ends up monitoring the movements of the old man. that's right. this seemingly unsinkable tree gets around. >> you would think that the four foot above the water would act
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he'll move all the way across the lake against the wind. >> reporter: it's as if he has a mind of his own. the old man can travel miles in a single day. today he's close to the shore. tomorrow he could be in the middle of the lake. in the 1930s the government commissioned a study of his movements. in their log of the log rangers observed the old man move over 60 miles in less than three months. and inquiring minds want to know, why sunk? rocks may have once weighed down the roots, water loging the bottom while the sun dried out the top. but mark botenica isn't as concerned with the why. >> i think maybe some questions should remain unanswered, that maybe it's part of the human condition to believe in a little bit of mystery and the interconnectedness of all things. >> so as a scientist you're okay with maybe not knowing? >> i'm okay with not knowing.
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across the water, perhaps that's across the water, perhaps that's what he's trying to teach us embarrassed by a prostate exam? imagine how your doctor feels. as a urologist, i have performed 9,421 and a half prostate exams. so why do i do it? because i get paid. und... on this side of the glove i know prostate exams can save lives. so, if you are a man over 50, talk to you doctor to see if a prostate exam is right for you. if we can do it, so can you.
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cbs cares. dozens of schools have canceled their homecoming dances this month. mireya villareal is at corona del mar high school outside los angeles. they were supposed to hold their homecoming dance last weekend. >> reporter: you know, administrators here say some of their students were drinking and being disruptive at a football game last month and that prompted the cancellation of corona del mar's homecoming dance but a lot of people are saying is this counterproductive to punish everyone for the bad behavior of just a few? corona del mar high school's homecoming football game went on as scheduled last week but this past weekend's homecoming dance was canceled. a casualty of alleged student drinking at a recent game. >> whoo!
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student fans was despicable and deplorable. >> that's just out of control. you know, when you're under age you shouldn't be drinking anyways. >> reporter: the school decided to send a clear signal. >> as a consequence of extremely inappropriate and totally inexcusable behavior the homecoming activities have been canceled. >> you're punishing everybody because of a select bunch of idiots? i mean, come on. >> reporter: at walpole high school south of boston student drinking at school dances forced the principal to halt them all except for prom. >> kind of takes away from the have fun at the dance too. >> reporter: walpole's principal issued a statement to cbs news, "we are working together to move forward and address this age-old but increasingly pervasive issue head on." >> i think some of the responsibility has to go to the parents. >> reporter: the national institutes of health says the percentage of high school students engaging in binge drinking has actually declined over the past decade. but the percentage of students drinking at levels far beyond
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concern. rod pickell and his daughter sally who attends corona del mar high school understand why the homecoming dance was canceled. >> i think sometimes actions as big as that are necessary even though it's a real bummer for, you know, the students who weren't participating. >> if it actually facilitates something positive it was the right decision. and if that doesn't happen then you certainly could question whether it was the right call. >> reporter: high school officials in portland, maine say they defend their actions and they were worried about canceling most of their dances. a lot of the reason why was because they were worried about students being drunk, showing up drunk or under the influence of drugs. one of the superintendents that we spoke with, gail, actually said he's in the education business, not the nightclub business and he defends his actions. >> and that's the overnight news for this friday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back a little later for the morning news and "cbs this morning." from the broadcast center in new
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trump, on accusations of sexual assault. >> they are totally and absolutely false. >> and the first lady on the vulgar comments he does not deny. >> it has shaken me to my core in a way that i couldn't have predicted. also tonight, hackers invade state election systems. officials blame russia. >> they don't need the red army anymore. they have the internet. elizabeth palmer with the most innocent victims of syria's civil war. >> and the kids who were hurt and killed? they were just walking along on their way to school. and who just won a nobel prize? ? the answer, my friend ? ? is blowin' in the wind ?
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>> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." the republican candidate for president stood on one stage and denied accusations of sexual assault, and the first lady stood on another and chastised him over his treatment of women. since friday at least five women have told newspapers that donald trump assaulted them, years ago. trump called the accusations lies, spun by an alliance of the clinton campaign and what he called the media. >> they will attack you. they will slander you. they will seek to destroy your career and your family. they will seek to destroy everything about you, including your reputation. they will lie, lie, lie. and then again they will do
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they will do whatever's necessary. the clintons are criminals. remember that. they're criminals. people who are capable of such crimes against our nation are capable of anything. and so now we address the slander and libels that was just last night thrown at me by the clinton machine and the "new york times" and other media outlets as part of a concerted, coordinated and vicious attack. these vicious claims about me of inappropriate conduct with women are totally and absolutely false. >> trump has already apologized for his vulgar remarks on that 2005 video that surfaced last week. in counterpoint to trump today,
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>> i can't stop thinking about this. it has shaken me to my core in a way that i couldn't have predicted. it's like that sick, sinking feeling you get when you're walking down the street minding your own business and some guy yells out vulgar words about your body. or when you -- you see that guy at work that stands just a little too close, stares a little too long, and makes you feel it's that feeling of terror and violation that too many women have felt when somebody has grabbed them or forced himself on them and they've said no but he didn't listen. the shameful comments about our bodies. the disrespect of our ambitions and intellect. the belief that you can do anything you want to a woman? it is cruel. it's frightening.
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this is not normal. this is not politics as usual. [ cheers and applause ] this is disgraceful. it is intolerable. and it doesn't matter what party you belong to, democrat, republican, independent, no woman deserves to be treated this way. none of us deserves this kind of >> now let's bring in major garrett covering the trump campaign and nancy cordes who's on the clinton campaign. major, first to you. trump also said today that very soon he would release evidence to refute these allegations of sexual assault. >> reporter: scott, those familiar with the inner workings of the trump campaign tell us that if the republican nominee had such hard evidence he would have released it publicly already. on facebook, twitter, and
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now, trump demanded "the new york times" retract a story in which two women were quoted saying trump accosted them in unwanted and sexually aggressive ways. the "times" said the story was thoroughly reported, in the national interest and said it welcomed a threatened legal challenge from trump. and only last sunday trump's campaign manager, kellyanne conway tweeted that hillary clinton was right several months ago when she said every victim of sexual assault should be heard, believed, and supported. but scott, i must tell you at this rally here in cincinnati supporters have told us they simply do not care about these allegations. >> major, thank you. nancy cordes, what has hillary clinton said about all this today? >> reporter: well, first of all, she said twice that everyone should go and watch michelle obama's speech. she also told supporters at a fund-raiser here in san francisco that she's worried that some of the rhetoric coming from her opponent will discourage voters from both sides from getting out to the polls on election day. she said somewhat tongue in cheek, scott, that if her campaign does its job and if her
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upside is that in 26 days donald trump won't be in the news anymore. >> and every day wikileaks has been leaking out more internal e-mails from the clinton campaign. what did we see today? >> reporter: 1,800 more sensitive documents. staffers talking about everything from tensions between top aides to clinton's e-mail scandal. her running mate suggested today that some of these hacked e-mails might be faked. but so far, scott, the campaign hasn't given us any specific examples of that. >> major garrett, nancy cordes, thanks very much. make note of this. trump's running mate, mike pence, will be a guest on "cbs this morning." don't miss it. the fbi is checking out a bomb that was found in a
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nedderland, colorado outside the police department there. an officer picked up the backpack thinking that a colleague had left it. the bomb was active, but it did not explode. the man accused of setting off bombs in new jersey and new york last month was arraigned in his hospital bed today. ahmad rahimi pleaded not guilty to charges that he tried to kill officers as they captured him. rahimi, an afghan-born u.s. citizen, was wounded in a gun battle with linden, new jersey police. more than 30 people were injured when one of the bombs went off in manhattan. the "cbs overnight news" will be
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those hacked e-mails are a plot by the russians to disrupt the election, at least according to the u.s. government, which also alleges that the russians are trying to break into state voting systems. one of those attacks was in arizona, where we find jeff pegues. >> reporter: the hacking attempt on arizona's voter database started in rural gila county when an elections worker opened an e-mail attachment. >> very scary stuff. >> reporter: michelle reagan, arizona's secretary of state, says it was malware meant to attack these servers holding the voter information of 4 million people. >> we had a cybersecurity team in place. >> reporter: reagan was alerted by the fbi. experts believe the russian government is to blame. what was your initial reaction?
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and dismay, obviously. because we've never had to worry about foreign invaders coming in and trying to mess with our confidence in our election system. >> reporter: arizona, illinois, florida and nearly two dozen other states have seen similar scanning, probing, or breaches of their election systems. >> the russians have a different doctrine than we do. >> reporter: for over a decade jim lewis ha government on cyberattacks. >> they're using information as a way to achieve their political goals. they don't need the red army anymore. they have the internet. >> reporter: president vladimir putin and other senior russian officials have denied involvement, calling u.s. accusations nonsense. >> the biggest thing we were worried about was did they take any information? >> reporter: reagan says she is confident the voter database wasn't compromised. but she says the attacks
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here say that there were 192,000 intrusion attempts, about 11,000 of them posed a serious threat. reagan and 32 other secretaries of state have asked the department of homeland security for help. >> i liken it to when you're being invaded by russia you don't call in your national guard. at some point you have to say, you know, i need the army. >> reporter: changing actual vote totals is difficult because most voting machines are not connected to the internet. but throwing confusion into an already contentious election, that's a lot easier. and scott, that's what officials believe the russians are trying to do. >> jeff pegues for us tonight. jeff, thank you. and another note. cbs news will be bringing you live coverage of the third and final clinton-trump debate. that's in las vegas next wednesday at 9:00 eastern, 8:00 central. today nicole hit bermuda as
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and don dahler is there. >> reporter: since 1851 bermuda has only had seven major hurricanes come close. number eight has just arrived. category 4 nicole has just gotten close enough for us to start experiencing the early rain bands and high winds. within hours nicole slammed ashore with a fury this island has rarely seen. huge waves crashed over the protective reef that cut the legs out from under what could have been a deadly storm s even with the fierceness of this storm most of the damage was contained to downed trees and some flooding. one minor injury was reported. with the cleanup now under way, the people here count themselves lucky. don dahler, cbs news, bermuda. overnight u.s. warships fired missiles into rebel-controlled areas of yemen on the arabian peninsula. this was retaliation for missiles that were fired on a u.s. navy ship in the red sea.
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>> reporter: it's an all too familiar sight. a u.s. navy ship launching missiles against targets in the middle east. but this was different. this was the first time the u.s. has fired at one of the warring sides in yemen's civil war, which pits rebels backed by iran against government forces backed by saudi arabia and the united arab emirates. the war has claimed an estimated 10,000 lives, many of them civilians, some of them killed by saudi airstrikes flown with the help of american aerial refueling and intelligence. the strike at 4:00 this morning local time came after the u.s. destroyer "mason" reported coming under attack by anti-ship missiles fired from territory held by the iranian-backed rebels. a second destroyer, the "uss nitze," launched cruise missiles at three unmanned radar stations u.s. officials believe to have been used in the attacks against the "mason." knocking out the radars will
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"mason" was an unsophisticated version of the silkworm anti-ship missile, which has poor accuracy to begin with but carries a large warhead. this video purports to show what happened when one of them hit a ship belonging to the united arab emirates earlier this month. none of the missiles fired at the "mason" reached their target. even without radar the rebels could still fire missiles aimed at american ships. and if they do, the pentagon has already vowed to retaliate again. scott? >> david martin at the pentagon for us this evening. david, thank you. coming up next, elizabeth palmer is inside aleppo, syria as a
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ugh, it's only lunchtime and my cold medicines' wearing off. i'm dragging. yeah, that stuff only lasts a few hours. or, take mucinex. one pill fights congestion for 12 hours. no thank you very much, she's gonna stick with the short-term stuff. 12 hours? guess i won't be seeing you for a while. just lost my appetite. why take medicines that only last 4 hours, when just one mucinex lasts 12 hours? start the relief. ditch the misery. let's end this. if you suffer from a dry mouth, then you'll know how uncomfortable it can be. but did you know that the lack of saliva can also lead to tooth decay and bad breath? well, there is biotene, specially formulated with moisturizers and lubricants...
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keep your mouth healthy too. biotene, for people who suffer from a dry mouth. you know your heart loves megared omega-3s... but did you know your eyes, your brain, and your joints really love them too? introducing megared advanced 4in1... just one softgel delivers mega support. the u.s. and russia will meet in switzerlan this weekend to try and revive the collapsed cease-fire in syria. the fighting intensified this week in syria's largest city, aleppo, leaving another 150 dead. elizabeth palmer tells us that among them were two children. >> reporter: lamar and henadi should be in class right now,
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morgue.% out in the parking lot lamar's grandfather is in shock. >> [ speaking foreign language ]. >> reporter: calling for god to punish her killers. but this is war. we'll never know which rebel fighter shot the mortar that ripped into 8-year-old zeina's body. surgeons did their best, but zeina died of devastating shrapnel wounds. and so did 5-year-old ismael, who never even made it out of intensive ca. samir hellaq, deputy director of education in aleppo, was overcome by the senselessness of it all. "these kids committed no crime," he says. "they were unarmed. they just wanted to learn." this is exactly where that lethal mortar fell. 7:45 in the morning in a
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aleppo. and the kids who were hurt and killed? they were just walking along on their way to school. nearby, the men of telal neighborhood are clearing up after a rocket smashed into this street and killed another 5-year-old boy. it's been an especially violent 48 hours in aleppo, with bombs and artillery thundering down on the rebel-occupied east side of the city and return fire crashing into the west. samer samani's shop was destroyed in this lethal tit for tat. when you hear the bombing is heavy on the other side do you know it's going to start up here as well? >> yes, always. >> reporter: so when they're getting hit they hit back? >> they hit back. and they hit back on us, all civilians. >> reporter: civilians on both sides of this war who were never asked if they wanted to live on the battlefield.
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asts 12 hours, so... looks like i'm good all night! some cough medicines only last 4 hours. but just one mucinex lasts 12 hours. let's end this. new jersey governor chris christie is facing a legal battle now over the so-called bridgegate scandal. a citizen filed a complaint alleging that christie failed to stop a scheme by his aides to create a multiday traffic jam in order to punish a loca today a judge approved that complaint and set a court date. they are known as the chibok girls. nearly 300 were abducted from a school in chibok, nigeria 2 1/2 years ago. today 21 were released in an exchange with boko haram, the militant group that stole them. a few dozen have managed to escape. the fate of about 200 others is not known.
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assembly elected a new leader. portugal's former prime minister, antonio guterres, will become secretary-general january 1st. he succeeds ban-ki moon. president obama couldn't tell you how many hands he's shaken over the years but he'll remember this one. in pittsburgh today the president met 28-year-old nathan copeland, who'd been paralyzed in a car accident. robotic hand to fist bump the president. tiny chips implanted in copeland's brain allowed him to feel the president's touch. up next, a surprising twist of fate for a rock icon. how does it feel to be a nobel laureate?
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woman: what does it feel like when a woman is having a heart attack? chest pain, like there's a ton of weight on your chest. severe shortness of breath. unexplained nausea. cold sweats. there's an unusual tiredness and fatigue. there's unfamiliar dizziness or light-headedness. unusual pain in your back, neck, jaw, one or both arms, even your upper stomach, are signs you're having a heart attack. don't make excuses. make the call to 9-1-1 immediately. learn more at womenshealth.gov/heartattack. you can help children in low income neighborhoods get the help they need to stay in school and go on to college. i have a dream foundation provides mentoring, academic help, and tuition to make this dream come true. learn how this program helps students build life skills while increasing high school graduation and college participation rates. visit:
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bob dylan is performing tonight in las vegas. maybe not the firspl imagine the winner of the nobel prize in literature would celebrate. but dylan, who took his stage name from the poet dylan thomas, is not your typical nobel laureate. anthony mason tells us why he is joining the ranks of hemingway, faulkner, and steinbeck. ? hey, mr. tambourine man ? ? play a song for me ? >> reporter: in his early appearances, this one at the newport folk festival in 1964, bob dylan quickly emerged as the most influential musician of his generation, though he could be as enigmatic as his own lyrics. >> do you think of yourself primarily as a singer or as a poet? >> i think of myself mostly as a song and dance man, you know.
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so fine ? ? threw the bums a dime in your prime ? ? didn't you ? >> reporter: with songs like "like a rolling stone," the magazine "rolling stone" said dylan enlarged the vocabulary of popular music. >> the nobel prize in literature for -- >> reporter: in announcing the award the nobel committee praised dylan. >> for having created new poetic expressions within the great american song tradition. >> the words are just as important as the music. there would be no music without the words. ? johnny's in the basement mixing up the medicine ? ? i'm on the pavement thinking about the government ? >> reporter: dylan is the first singer-songwriter to be awarded the literature prize, a controversial decision. but the swedish academy said dylan has the status of an icon. ? helped her out of a jam i guess but he used a little too much force ? "picasso fractured the art world and cracked it wide open," dylan once wrote.
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? how many roads must a man walk down ? ? before you call him a man ? first making his mark in the folk era with songs that became civil rights anthems, the 75-year-old artist has continually reinvented himself. ? the emptiness is endless ? ? cold as the clay ? ? you could always come back ? ? but you can't come back all the wa? >> reporter: but dylan has always downplayed his own influence. ? come gather round people wherever you roam ? "if i wasn't bob dylan," the singer has said, "i'd probably think that bob dylan has a lot of answers myself." ? for the times, they are a-changing ? anthony mason, cbs news, new york. and that's the overnight news for this friday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back with us a
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news and be sure not to miss "cbs this morning." from the broadcast center in new from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm scott pelley. captioning funded by cbs it's friday, october 14th, 2016. this is the "cbs morning news." these claims are all fabricated. they are pure pickion and they are outright lies. >> after several women came forward, accusing donald trump of sexual assault, he is slamming back and slamming journalists and assaulting his accusers. >> take a look. you take a look. look at her. look at her words. you tell me what you think. i don't think so. i don't think so. an impassioned plea. first lady michelle obama trashes trump, without ever
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