tv CBS Overnight News CBS October 21, 2016 2:37am-3:37am PDT
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they don't threaten immediate arrest. and will never ask for credit cards or personal information over the phone. casey davis says she's embarrassed but wants others to >> if i could spare someone the mental strain and the financial burden that i went through, i would be completely like honored to do so. the "cbs overnight news"
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october is national breast cancer awareness month, and one of the most visible side effects of breast cancer treatment is hair loss. a new therapy in the u.s. is helping women keep most of their hair. barry petersen shows us the science behind cold caps. >> reporter: women say one of the most difficult things about chemotherapy for breast cancer is losing their hair. when the treatment kills cancer cells, it kills healthy hair cells right along with it. but for many women it doesn't have to happen. there's a technique called cold caps. used for decades in europe but almost unknown here. these brave women took us along their journey to save their hair and with it, they say, their identity. >> this one takes an hour. >> reporter: there's nothing unusual about the chemotherapy drugs marinel wolfe is getting
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>> you want to do your chin strap? >> reporter: what's unusual is on her head. a cold cap chilled with dry ice to 30 below. as it warms, a new one is strapped on tightly every 20 to 30 minutes. this goes on for eight hours. >> it's not really pain. it is an overall feeling of i just want this off my head. >> reporter: in the most recent study roughly 66% of women kept more than half of their hair. doctors have different ideas about why it works. one theory is that it constricts blood flow, keeping the chemo from reaching the scalp. another is that it freezes many of the hair follicles and the chemo is simply shut out. >> is it working? >> it is working. i have the majority of my hair. the oncologist told me this morning that i would have been completely bald had i not used the cold cap. >> reporter: she gets moral
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yes, that's me. we are together on this journey. why is maintaining your hair important to a woman? >> i think it gives you a sense of control. it gives you a piece of dignity. >> reporter: it doesn't work for all chemo drugs or for cancers carried through the blood like leukemia. there are concerns that blocking the chemotherapy could let cancer spread to the scalp. >> the women who choose to do the cold cap are really motivated. >> reporter: dr. tessa seigler is an oncologist at new york's weil cornel breast cancer center. >> our opinion is that the risks are very, very small if any. >> reporter: seigler sees two good effects. one for patients. >> i think some of it is a look good feel good. >> reporter: the other effect for doctors and how they respond to women who still have their hair. >> we've been surprised at how our interactions are a little bit different. >> in what sense?
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for sure. >> reporter: using these caps can cost a patient several thousand dollars out of pocket because they are rented by the month. this version circulates coolant through one cap. it is far less available since it must be leased by hospitals. users then pay by the treatment. called dignicap, it received approval by the food and drug administration last december. but neither is reimbursed by insurance. san francisco helped to found hair to stay, for women who can't afford the cold caps. their organization has offset the cost for more than 170 women. >> i think that insurance needs to step in here and to level the playing field. >> how does that feel? nice and snug? >> it feels good, yes. >> reporter: in new jersey susan melchian demonstrated the dignicaps for us. she decided it was worth the
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no price on beating cancer. >> i can go out and just be who i am and not have the breast cancer define me. >> what does that mean, not have the breast cancer define me? >> not live the cancer but live going through the struggle or the treatment of it. and coming out the other end and being fine. >> extraordinary women. all the women we spoke to for this story, doctors and patients, stressed the importance of awareness. there canbe hefty out-of-pocket costs. but women can't even make the choice if they don't know about it. this treatment option and most doctors are not talking about. i'm happy to report that my wife marinel had her last chemo four months ago. look at her hair. it looked that good through the
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? music ? extraordinary starts here. new k-y intense. a stimulating gel that takes her pleasure to new heights. k-y intense. bryan cranston is one of the most highly acclaimed actors in hollywood. but his big break came later in his career. cranston landed his first leading role at age 50, playing walter white on "breaking bad." he followed that tough act with even more success.
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a story for "60 minutes." [ crowd chapting "bryan" ] >> reporter: bryan cranston was born and raised in los angeles and had been a familiar face here for decades but never a star. that officially changed three years ago when the hollywood chamber of commerce embedded his name in the sidewalk. >> i have often walked down this street before. ? but the pavement never held my star before ? ? all at once i'm three stories ? knowing i'm on the street where it lives ? >> reporter: since then it's only gotten better. at age 60 he is on hollywood's a-list and a red carpet regular. and no one was more surprised than cranston. >> i didn't feel entitled to become a star. i didn't expect it. >> did you want it? >> not really. the things you want professionally are opportunities. and through my good fortune that's what's happened.
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>> reporter: and when it came late in his career, cranston knocked it out of the park. >> maybe you and i could partner up. >> you want to cook crystal meth? >> that's right. >> when we first started, we were just telling a story and trying to do our best. and it just started to steamroll and became this juggernaut. >> did you see it coming? >> no. not at all. >> chemistry is -- >> reporter: it's mi a meek and depressed high school chemistry teacher with terminal cancer cooks up a scheme to make and market a superior grade of methamphetamine to provide a nest egg for his family after he's gone. but over the course of five seasons walter white goes from milquetoast to murderous in order to survive. >> i was just infused with ideas, and i would dream about it and wake up and go oh, i have another idea about walter white. >> you clearly don't know who you're talking to.
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>> i am the danger. >> reporter: it was cranston's first real opportunity to show what he could do as an actor. >> run. >> reporter: the result was new respect and a closet full of emmys. when the show finally ended, he saw it as a new beginning and an opportunity to try something completely different. it had been years since cranston had performed on stage, yet he decided to sign on with a theater company in boston that was doing a new play called "all the way," about lyndon johnson, a very complicated character. >> it had to be an amazing challenge. i mean, why did you do it? >> it was shakespearean in size, and i thought, whoo, boy, that's a big bite to take and it scares me a little bit, so let's do it. >> reporter: and there were reasons to be scared. >> i realized, oh, my god, this is an enormous play and it's almost all me.
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and i started to panic. >> it is all or nothing. >> reporter: but in boston and later on broadway and after that a film version for hbo, his performance was so on the mark -- >> let us begin. >> reporter: -- you had to remind yourself it was cranston and not johnson. >> now, i love you more than my own daddy. but if you get in my way i'll crush you. >> look at that. look at the size of those ears. >> reporter: after winning a tony award, broadway's highest honor, he topped it off with an oscar-nominated performance in the film "trumbo." >> well, well. >> that's quite a run. >> surprising. for an old journeyman actor.
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>> oh, yes? >> okay. roll it. >> what the hell is wrong with you? >> reporter: cranston has been a working actor since his mid 20s. >> oh, yeah. >> very sweet. >> reporter: beginning with a part on the soap opera "loving." >> that attraction is our business. all right? >> reporter: and after there's been everything from the sublime to the ridiculous. good guys, bad guys. >> he's dead! >> i'm sorry, we did everything we could. >> reporter: and sometimes parts so small even cranston's forgotten them. >> what is that? women on the moon." >> five minutes for the widow. >> you ended up on the cutting room floor. that's why you've never seen it. >> "amazon women on the moon." who could forget? who wants to remember is a better question actually. >> but i promised myself -- >> reporter: in all there have been nearly 150 roles, not counting the early commercials that helped pay the bills. >> now you can relieve inflamed hemorrhoidal tissue with the oxygen action of preparation h. >> oxygen action. >> do you think you've grown as an actor since then? >> no, but my hemorrhoid has grown. >> reporter: there were guest spots on just about every show on television.
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>> jerry. >> hey, tim. >> reporter: as jerry's smarmy dentist dr. tim wadley. >> cheryl, would you ready the nitrous oxide, please? >> it was like going to comedy boot camp for me being on that show. >> reporter: and comedy proved to be something that bryan cranston was very good at. ? i just want to celebrate ? ? another day of living ? it led to his breakout role in the widely acclaimed series "malcolm in the middle." as hal, the hapless father overwh dysfunctional family. >> wait, wait, wait, wait. there's something we have to talk about. >> he was insecure, you know, not in charge. >> hello. >> he took brain vacations often. ? >> reporter: "malcolm" earned cranston a modicum of fame, three emmy nominations and a reputation as an actor who was willing to do anything. >> those are real bees? >> yeah, those are real bees.
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animal. control. >> reporter: and yes, he got stung. >> where were you stung? >> in the lower region. in one of he boys down below. >> sensitive spot. >> very sensitive. the beekeeper went, "sorry." i'll help you anywhere else but that. sorry. >> you are going to get up and -- >> reporter: he did seven seasons on "malcolm" and hated to see it go. but the show's cancellation moment. >> had "malcolm in the middle" been picked up i would not have been available for the pilot of "breaking bad." right now someone else would be sitting in this chair talking to you. not me. >> to watch the full report go to cbsnews.com and click on "60 minutes."
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golfing great tiger woods is speaking out about returning to the sport in a rare interview. woods has been struggling to come back after a series of injuries. he spoke to charlie rose on his pbs program. >> when do you think you're going to come back? >> i'm hoping to come back in december. >> you are? you believe you can do that? you'll be ready? something happened competing there. >> more hard work. >> more hard work. >> there it is. a win for the ages. >> here is what's interesting about you more than any golfer -- any athlete i know. it's not just you. it's us. we can't let you go. i mean, there's a sense that we never -- >> aw, you care? >> yes. but there is a sense that we never understood how it was to be so brilliant on a golf course. we didn't get how one could be
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we didn't understand how you could lose that either. you've thought about that. >> of course, charlie. i miss being out there. i miss competing. i miss mixing it up with the boys and coming down the stretch -- >> you like being tiger woods. >> i like beating those guys. and that's what i -- that's why i practiced all those hours, is to be ready to take on those guys down the stretch. do i miss it? absolutely. 100%. and to be at my age years old, i'm the first one to admit i can't do the things i used to be able to do. but most people can't at my age versus when they were younger. i have to find different ways to go about it. >> you have to find other ways to win? >> yes, i do. but i'm naturally a tactician. even when i was hitting the ball long and blowing over the top of bunkers that was the strategy. and so i used my mind and then eventually the method i used allowed me to master my craft. >> but that's why the mind is so important. you used your mind.
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father, i assume. >> correct. >> you learned mental toughness. you learned how to win. you still have that. >> oh, yeah. that part hasn't left me. i know how to get it done. i just need to get into position to get it done. >> god, tiger! >> some have said to be tiger % woods was both a gift and a burden. how was it a burden? >> it's a burden in the sense that the amount of oblig that i have or tournament anonymity that was lost. if you look back, the only regret i have in life is not spending another year at stanford. i wish i would have had -- >> that's the only regret? >> that's the only regret i wish i had. >> of all the things that's happened to you? >> all the things i've learned. that's been -- all the things i've been through are tough, yes. but they've been great for me. but i wish i would have gone one
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? this is the "cbs overnight news." >> just 24 hours after their final debate hillary clinton and donald trump came face to face again last night on a different stage. this time they brought jokes. the candidates mixed politics e. smith charity dinner in new york city. the event is known as a political roast, and here's some of what they had to say. >> we have proven that we can actually be civil to each other. in fact, just before taking the dais hillary accidentally bumped into me, and she very civilly
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[ applause ] and i very politely replied, "let me talk to you about that after i get into office." oh, this one's going to get me in trouble. not with hillary. you know, the prent to stop whining. but i really have to say, the media is even more biased this year than ever before. ever. you want the proof? michelle obama gives a speech, and everyone loves it. it's fantastic. they think she's absolutely
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same speech, and people get on her case. [ cheers and applause ] and i don't get it. i don't know why. and it wasn't her fault. stand up, melania. come on. she took a lot of abuse. [ cheers and applause ] home tonight. she didn't know about that one. am i okay? is it okay? cardinal, please speak to her. i'd like to address an important religious matter. the issue of going to confession. or as hillary calls it, the
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now, i'm told hillary went to confession before tonight's event. but the priest was having a hard time when he asked her about her sins and she said she couldn't remember 39 times. >> i know, your eminence, you were criticized for inviting both donald and me here tonight. and you responded by saying, "if i only sat down with were saints i'd be taking all my meals alone." now, just to be clear, i think the cardinal is saying i'm not eligible for sainthood. but getting through these three debates with donald has to count as a miracle. [ cheers and applause ] so i guess i'm up against the
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ceili ceiling. but your eminence, you do deserve great credit. for bringing together two people who've been at each other's throats. mortal enemies. bitter foes. i've got to ask, how did you get the governor and mayor together here tonight? [ cheers and applause ] now, i've got to say, there are a lot of friendly faces here in this room. people that i've been privileged to know and to work with. i just want to put you all in a basket of adorables. and you'd look so good in your tuxes, or as i refer to them, formal pantsuits. and you know, because this is a
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you don't like what i'm saying feel free to stand up and shout "wrong" while i'm talking. you know, come to think of it, it's amazing i'm up here after donald. i didn't think he'd be okay with a peaceful transition of power. [ cheers and applause ] >> but it was no laughing matter at wednesday's debate when trump refused to say that he would accept the results of the election if he the republican nominee insists the vote could be rigged. and major garrett is covering the trump campaign. >> i want to make a major announcement today. >> reporter: donald trump gasp-inducing refusal last night to accept the results of this year's election -- >> i'll keep new suspense. >> reporter: -- was still just fun and games on the campaign trail today. >> i will totally accept the
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historic presidential election if i win. >> reporter: it was no laughing matter to john mccain, the 2008 gop nominee who lost to president obama. in every previous election the loser congratulates the winner and calls them "my president," mccain said in a statement. in ohio trump said he was merely reserving judgment until the results were in. >> of course i would accept a clear election result, but i would also reserve contest or file a legal challenge in the case of a questionable result. >> reporter: trump's running mate, mike pence, told us only the extraordinary would provoke a legal challenge. >> he has every right. he has -- he has the prerogative to wait and see how the election comes out. sometimes extraordinary circumstances develop, major. >> reporter: john kerry conceded to bush in 2004, despite early exit polls suggesting he would win and questions about voting
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>> we are required now to work together for the good of our country. >> reporter: in an upcoming interview for cbs's "sunday morning" kerry said he had few regrets. >> it was a hard decision, but i think that contesting it would have left the united states with its second election in a row being questioned internationally, and i don't think that would have been good. >> reporter: today another woman accused trump of sexual misconduct. karena virginia said in 19 at her, then touched her breast during a brief encounter at the u.s. open tennis tournament. scott, the trump campaign called virginia a publicity seeker peddling fiction. >> major garrett still in las vegas for us tonight. major, thank you. the "cbs overnight news"
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nearly 72 million americans watched the debate last night. that was more than the second debate but fewer than the first. ben tracy is listening to women voters in los angeles. >> but we have some bad hombres here and we're geg to get them out. >> oh, my god. >> reporter: we watched the l three support clinton. three support trump. and one undecided. was there anything that you heard that really surprised you? >> that graphic description of abortion from donald trump. oh, my god. he hasn't earned the right to talk about such issues. donald trump has no respect for woman. zero. the way he talks to hillary, "her," and he points his finger. >> such a nasty woman. >> i feel like he would have treated a man the same way on
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trump. and he would have given a man of the opposite party the same amount of respect or disrespect. >> reporter: what do you think was donald trump's strongest moment? >> he just acted more presidential this time. his policies about strong borders, about national security, about cutting taxes, about creating jobs is what i'm looking for. >> you're not up to doing the job. >> i'm terrified of him being president. she knows what she's do i don't trust any politician, but i trust her as a commander in chief over donald trump any day. >> deep down i want to believe he's going to do the right thing. i would trust him more than i would trust hillary. >> the fbi conducted a year-long investigation into my e-mails. they concluded there was no case. >> do you have concerns about her issues of honesty and transparency?
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and yet if i said that i did not have concerns i'd be lying. >> i will tell you at the time. i'll keep you in suspense. >> reporter: when you heard donald trump say that he may or may not support the result, what did you think? >> well, his answer seemed like a classic donald trump answer. >> yeah. >> but on the other hand -- >> reporter: in what way? >> you know, the donald trump way, where he just does it his way, not the way that the establishment does it. >> he's not exuding a presidential demeanor when he does not answer questions. that is not what leaders do. >> reporter: did the debates change anybody's mind? >> no. >> reporter: nobody changed their mind. >> no. >> reporter: but our undecided voter did make up hers. >> i am going to vote for donald trump. i just can't bring myself to trust hillary. >> reporter: is there anything that could happen that would change your minds at this point? >> not even jesus endorses trump. i'm still going with hillary.
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i love him. >> reporter: at the end of our conversation i asked how many of them would fear for the future of the country if their chosen candidate is not elected president. scott, all seven of them raised their hands, showing just how passionately they feel about this choice. >> ben tracy in los angeles for us tonight. thanks, ben. today an american was killed by a bomb in northern iraq. he was among the u.s. forces advising iraqi and kurdish troops on their fight to liberate the city of mosulro isis. we want to ask two of our most experienced war correspondents about the presidential candidates' ideas. elizabeth palmer is just back from syria, and holly williams is in northern iraq tonight. let's begin with what trump said about the white house announcing its mosul plan in advance. >> whatever happened to the element of surprise? okay? we announce we're going after mosul. i've been reading about going after mosul now for about -- how
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months? these people have all left. they've all left. >> so holly, is trump right? >> well, scott, i think that secrecy would have been very, very difficult. this is a multinational effort, not just the u.s., and most of the thousands of fighters on the front lines here are from iraq, from different factions, ethnic and religious groups. remember also that making it public that the offensive was about to begin gave the residents of mosul, who are being used as human shields, chance to try to escape or perhaps to prepare to rise up against isis. >> holly, trump also said advance warning gave the leaders of isis a chance to escape mosul. what of that? >> well, scott, we were on the front line today, and isis was definitely firing back. they are laying roadside bombs. they're sending out suicide bombers. now, it's true that the u.s. military told us that some isis leaders may have fled the city,
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extremists are still putting out their slickly produced propaganda videos from mosul. >> now let's go over to syria, where the dictatorship and its russian ally are bombing rebels and civilians. clinton wants a u.s.-enforced no-fly zone, and she was asked whether she would shoot down a russian plane. >> i think a no-fly zone could save lives and could hasten the end of the conflict. i am well aware of the really legitimate concerns that you have expressed from both t president and the general. this would not be done just on the first day. this would take a lot of negotiation, and it would also take making it clear to the russians and the syrians that our purpose here was to provide safe zones on the ground. >> so liz, what would the u.s. have to do to enforce a no-fly zone? >> well, the first thing it would probably do is look for strategic partners. it wouldn't want to go it alone in a very controversial operation. and it may also look for backing
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that could take months. and by then the syrian war could look very different. and those civilians who need protection from the bombing, by then may be ringed by syrian troops and unable to move into the protection of a no-fly zone. secondly, the risk of escalation is huge. not only would the u.s. have to face the possibility of shooting down a russian warplane, but it would have to destroy russia's new ground to air missile system which is now installing in would pit two nuclear-armed nations against one another on a battlefield. >> the insights of elizabeth palmer and holly williams. thank you very much. coming up next, what's in your wallet could burn a hole in your bank account. and a hailstorm for ride-sharing companies.
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extraordinary starts here. new k-y intense. a stimulating gel that takes her pleasure to new heights. k-y intense. is that ice-t? nope, it's lemonade. is that ice-t? lemonade. ice-t? e people, man? lemonade, read the sign. lemonade. read it. ok. delicious. ice-t at a lemonade stand? surprising. what's not surprising? how much money marin saved by switching to geico. yo, ice-t! it's lemonade, man!
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(war drums beating) fight heartburn fast. with tums chewy delights. the mouthwatering soft chew that goes to work in seconds to conquer heartburn fast. tum tum tum tum. chewy delights. only from tums. the price of plastic is at record highs. a new survey shows that some department store credit cards are charging twice as much interest as bank cards. here's anna werner. >> reporter: vanessa walker of brooklyn counts five retail credit cards in her wallet. >> one of the benefits i liked about the store credit cards is that you get an initial discount and that you can use that, but i also like when you get discounts throughout the year.
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creditcards.com survey found store-branded credit cards can cost you. interest rates average nearly 24%, much higher than the national average for all credit cards of just over 15%. the highest -- cards from big lots and zales, close to 30%, and staples at over 28%. that means for a $1,000 balance at the average store card rate paying the minimum it would cost a consumer nearly $900 over 74 months to pay it off, compared to $379ve lower national average. >> this is one of the riskiest forms of credit out there. and you're much better off using an ordinary credit card. >> reporter: joe ridout with consumer action says the biggest trap with store cards is the frequently offered deferred interest deals. for example, offers of 0% as long as you don't make a late payment or miss a payment. >> if you have an 18-month 0% loan and you default on month 17 or 18, that 30% interest rate
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of the goods that you purchased going back to the beginning of the loan. that can raise the price by almost 50%, and consumers simply aren't aware of this. >> reporter: experts say those rates are higher in part because the borrowers are often first-time or riskier card holders. we reached out to several companies. zales told us the qualifications for borrowers are set by the bank. staples told us, scott, that it offers three cards with varying percentage rates. >> important to know what you're >> very. >> anna werner, thank you very much. when we come back, a fan when we come back, a fan favorite is about to take her ahh...still sick, huh? i'll take it from here. i'm good. i just took new mucinex clear and cool. ah! what's this sudden cooooling thing happening? it's got a menthol burst. you can feel it right away. wow, that sort of blind-sided me. and it clears my terrible cold symptoms. ahh! this is awkward. new mucinex fast-max clear & cool.
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infections from sexually transmitted diseases are at an all-time high. the cdc says there were more than 1.5 million cases of chlamydia last year, up nearly 6%, and nearly 400,000 cases of gonorrhea, up about 13%. the cdc blames cuts in prevention programs. online ride-sharing companies are now bigger than taxis and rental cars combined. a study finds 52% of business travelers choose uber and lyft over taxis. we'll soon have to say bye-bye to bao bao. the panda born in 2013 at the national zoo in washington will be sent to china next year. atlanta's twin pandas, mei lun and mei huan, are heading there next month.
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elections are lessons in civics. but what's needed this year is a refresher course in civility. and we're getting it, from a letter that has been rediscovered and has now gone viral on social media. bill clinton found it in the oval office the day he became president. it was left by the man he'd fe election, george h.w. bush. it reads in part, "dear bill. you will be our president when you read this note. i wish you well. i wish your family well. your success now is our country's success. i'm rooting for you. good luck." signed, george. and that's the "overnight news" for this friday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back with us a little bit later for the morning
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captioning funded by cbs it is friday, october 21st, 2016. this is the "cbs morning news." >> hillary is so corrupt. she got kicked off the watergate commission. >> it's amazing i'm up here after donald. i didn't think he would be okay with a peaceful transition of power. >> hillary clinton and donald trump trade jabs at a catholic charity event and unlike the debate, they shook hands afterwards. and stealing government secrets. a former national security
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discovery of 500,000 pages of documents, some marked top secret. good morning from the studio 57 newsroom at cbs news headquarters here in new york. good to be with you. i'm anne-marie green. for the second night in oo row, donald trump and hillary clinton were on the same stage. last night, they attended an annual dinner here in new york to raise money for catholic charities. long history of hosting presidential nominees who usually unleashed light-hearted political jabs but last night was over the line campaign rancor and trump says he maintains the right to dispute the vote. hena daniels is here in new york. hena, good morning. >> good morning, anne-marie. >> reporter: hillary clinton and donald trump rally support in must win states today, a day after trading insults at an annual charity dinner at new
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but with the election less than three weeks away, the candidates could keep the gloves from coming off. >> here she is tonight in public, pretending not to hate catholics. >> reporter: donald trump's repeated zingers against hillary clinton quickly fell flat last night. >> everyone knows, of course, hillary's belief that it takes a village, which only makes sense, after all, in places like haiti where she has taken a number of them. >> reporter: hours after a tenth woman came forward accusing trump of sexual misconduct, clinton issued this jab, calling trump out on his comments about women. >> donald looks at the statue of liberty and sees a 4. maybe a 5, if she loses the torch and tablet and changes her hair. >> reporter: the white tie affair came less than 24 hours after the final debate in las
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pledged not to accept the outcome of the general election. >> i would accept a clear election result, but i would also reserve my right to contest or file a legal challenge in the ase of a questionable result. >> reporter: stumping for clinton in arizona, first lady michelle obama fired back. >> the voters decide who wins and loses, period. end of story. >> the clinton campaign claimed viy cyber security firm secure works said the g-mail account belonging to campaign chair john podesta had been hacked by a notorious group of russian linked hackers. wikileaks has about 27,000 podesta e-mails that could be released before election day. donald trump's campaign called
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seeker. hena daniels in new york, thank you so much, hena. the attorney general of the united states loretta lynch says she has confidence in the american election system. speaking in rome yesterday, lynch said her department is working with any state that feels it needs help to protect the process. >> it is, in fact, very difficult for any outside actor to, we feel, to try and actually impact or alter election results. we have a very decentralized election system. every state has a different system. very few of them are connected to the internet. >> lynch said any allegation of interference in the electorate process will be investigated. coming up on "cbs this morning," we will discuss the campaign and donald trump's claims of a rigged election with john heilemann, managing editor of bloomberg politics. earlier this morning, a powerful earthquake hit western japan.
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miles east of a nuclear power plant but, so far, no immediate reports of injuries or damage from the quake. a detention hearing today is scheduled in baltimore for harold martin, a former national security agency contractor, charged with stealing top secret data. prosecutors say the evidence against martin is overwhelming and the amount of information he allegedly stole was, quote, breathtaking in its longevity and scale. >> reporter: federal prosecutors say harold martin has been stealing classified documents for 20 years. the total? the equivalent of 500,000 pages of sensitive information. many of the documents are marked secret and top secret. court documents say he may have been trying to hide his online activities and was attempting to run operating systems on his machines that would not leave any forensic evidence of his computer activities.
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ten firearms, including an ar-15 style rifle and a shotgun in his house and a handgun in his car. investigators are still trying to figure out if martin was in contact with foreign intelligence officials or criminals online. this summer, computer experts found hacking code belonging to the nsa on a dark website. federal investigators are looking into whether martin was the source. martin's attorneys want him to be let out on bail, but prosecutors told the court that if released, there is a good chance he would seek refuge with a foreign country. chip reid, cbs news, washington. u.s. military officials say an american service member killed in iraq was the victim of a roadside bomb. he was assisting forces trying to retake the isis stronghold of mosul. he was the first american to die in the mosul campaign. it's reported he was a explosives disposal specialist who was fatally wounded just north of the city. hundreds of people fleeing
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in syria. the united nations says it expects more than 100,000 mosul residents will eventually arrive. a mexican judge approved the extradition of drug lord el chapo guzman to the united states. the judge rejected five appeals to avoid guzman being sent to the u.s. there are six cases against guzman in this country. mexican officials say he could be extradited as early as january, but guzman coulil the family of a california woman killed by a takata airbag wants justice. the 50-year-old california woman was the 11th known u.s. fatality known to the u.s. airbags and she was driving a honda civic a recalled long ago. honda had sent repair notices to the car owner but it had not been repaired. coming up on the "morning news."
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