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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  July 26, 2016 3:12am-4:01am PDT

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would ask that question of everybody running. because i think every one of us should be held to the same standard. i often feel like there is the hillary standard. then there is the standard for everybody else. >> what is the hillary standard? >> well it is, a lot you saw at the republican convention, unfounded, inaccurate, mean-spirited, attacks with no basis in truth, reality. which take on a life of their own. >> why do you put yourself through it? >> because i really believe in this country. boy do i believe in it now more than ever after seeing what was presented last week. i truly believe that given the chance americans will vote for people who are not promising fear and bigotry and smears. but promising opportunity and the kind of change that will empower people to make the most out of their own lives.
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>> now we are going to turn to john dickerson, our cbs news political director and anchor of "face the nation." clinton spoke of a show of unity at the convention. not happening. >> conventions are about control and choreography, forces have not had a good record this election so far. here at the opening. voters are interrupting again. and it is fitting that the bernie sanders are angry about the democratic national committee trying to control events. i was talking to a democratic, top democratic strategist who said we are all committed to making sure this convention comes off without a hitch. there are people in the hall committed to something else. you hear it in the bernie chants. one thing extraordinary here. unlike republican convention where we were last week, when hillary clinton's name was mentioned created unity. everybody roared. here when donald trump's name is mentioned doesn't do the same
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thing. they want to get to optimism. togetherness. hillary clinton's record. sow seed of doubt about donald trump. they can't get to that until buzzing about, bernie sanders stops. bernie sanders job and elizabeth warren, two envoys to people here, to help hillary clinton get to her message. >> thank you so much. >> the democratic national committee's computers were hacked months ago, and tens of thousand of e-mails. the clinton campaign blaming the theft on rush yeah. more about that to night from julianna goldman. >> reporter: for a second day, clinton's campaign manager, robbie mook, accused vladamir putin of meddling in the u.s. election. >> what experts said when the breach happened at the dnc was that they believe it was russian state actors. who took these e-mails. russian state actors were feeding the e-mails to hackers for the purpose of helping donald trump.
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a in june, it said it identified advanced methods consistent with nation state level capabilities. neither the clinton campaign, the white house, nor lawmakers briefed on the hack definitively linked the leak off to the government today. yesterday, donald trump's campaign chairman, paul manafort called it absurd. >> the clinton campaign what they don't want to talk about is what is in the e-mails. >> a putin trump bromance is. >> putin is somebody, people are respecting around the world. >> putin praised trump and a number of trump advisors kept ties to the kremlin.
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a putin ally fled to russia after 2014 after corruption allegations. scott, the fbi announced it was investigating the dnc hack and promises to hold accountable those who pose a threat to cyberspace. >> julianna goldman. thanks. hillary clinton did not keep a low profile during the republican convention last week. neither is donald trump now. here is major garrett. ♪ >> reporter: beginning three days of barn storming during the democratic convention, donald trump and mike pens appeared in the home state of hillary clinton's runningmate. virginia senator tim kaine and pounded away. >> he is not very popular. he is a political hack. never heard of this guy. >> trump still stinging from criticism of the gop convention delighted in divisions in democrats and the downfall of their party chief. >> debbie, you are fired! get out, debbie.
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out. debbie was totally loyal to hillary. and hillary threw her under a bus. it didn't take her more than five minutes to make that decision. >> reporter: trump's next stop, winston-salem. he has work to do in the surrounding county. trump lost the county to ted cruz in the gop primary at the same time. collected 10,000 fewer votes than hillary clinton during her primary. what's more. president obama carried this county twice. 200 # and 2012. >> major garrett. thank you. coming up next from coming up next from philadelphia -- te takbbq trophies:hese best cracked pepper sauce... most ribs eaten while calf roping... >>yep, greatness deserves recognition. you got any trophies, cowboy? ♪ whoomp there it is uh, yeah... well, uh, well there's this one. >>best insurance mobile app? yeah, two years in a row. >>well i'll be... does that thing just follow you around?
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today isis says it is behind another attack in germany. a suicide bombing last night. the attacker was stopped from entering a musical festival in bavaria, so he blew himself up outside a bar. 15 people were wounded. turns out he was a syrian denied asylum by germany in a cell phone video he pledged allegiance to isis. >> terrorism is not suspected in a deadly shooting in fort myers, florida last night. two killed, 17 wounded. most teenagers. mike strassmann is following this. >> all right. gunfire in club blu.
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>> reporter: 12:38 a.m. club blu was closing when shots rang out. >> multiple victims down -- >> reporter: minutes earlier one party-goer shared this video on snap chat of the club packed with teens. as parents picked them up, witnesses said a car rolled up and gunmen sprayed the parking lot. >> pop, pop, pop, pop. like a machine gun. >> he just kept coming. like firecrackers. >> 17 wounded. one as young as 12 years old. two were killed. including, stefan strawder, 18-year-old basketball standout at lehawaii high school. >> principal jackie cory. >> i'm very sad for our community today. this was a good kid that we lost. this community needs to come together. these are our kids. we're losing our kids to shameful crime. >> reporter: sean achilles was 14. on his father's cell phone, a
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photo of the son he lost. >> he always want to hang with me. he always want to spend time with me. he is in my phone. >> reporter: the club hired security guards for the party. it said in a facebook statement, we are deeply sorry for all involved. we tried to give the teens what weep thought was a safe place to have a good time. some of the club security team were armed. one of them, scott among the wounded. >> mark strassmann at the scene of the crime. mark, thank you. philadelphia, like much of the east is boiling with the humanitarian it felt like 107 degrees here. protesters had to be hosed down. it hit 99 in washington. the metro train slowed down for fear that the tracks might buckle. in the west, two dozen large fires are forcing evacuations, one is tearing through mountains, north of los angeles. mireya villarreal is there. >> reporter: southern california fire crews faced a fourth day of
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relentless flames. the fire consumed 10,000 acres of land a day. almost equivalent of 10,000 football fields. l.a. county deputy fire chief john tripp. >> been with the fire service 38 years never had this in june and july. testimony to what we are going through with the drought. >> more than 3,000 firefighters are battling this blaze in a 105 degree heat. on the ground -- and in the air. 10,000 home are under a mandatory evacuation. the wind changed direction so many times that the speed of the fire surprised a lot of homeowners. >> it came blowing into their communities. they're having to run out. then we have firefighters having to run in with a blow torch coming at them. >> we just cannot put them in harm's way. >> 2,000 homes in the fire's direct path were saved by fire
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crews. scott, fire officials tell us they felt like they could have saved more homes if they didn't have to stop what they were ,,,,
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>> senator buckley and i will win this election. don't you forget that. >> harry truman at the last democratic convention in philadelphia. 1948. he beat him. but they didn't like it. michelle obama addresses these delegates tonight. she has come a long way since her 2008 convention debut. here's michelle miller. ♪ >> reporter: america had never seen a first lady like her. and now after 7 1/2 years, they know her well. >> and barack and i were raised with so many of the same values. >> reporter: her husband's biggest add ve cat. a mother fiercely protective of her daughter's privacy. champion for healthy eating. >> i would look to have a healthy lunch at hooper's store.
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>> staying fit using her bare arms to redefine fashion and her voice to comfort the country like she did after the orlando shooting. >> it is time for us to come together, to love each other, to support each other. >> but the climb has not always been up a crystal stair. in april of 2008, only 22% of americans had a favorable view of her. three months later this satiric satirical "new yorker" would stilt the flames of her critics well beyond election day. >> cable news charmingly referred to me as obama's baby mama. >> "essence" magazine, editor-in-chief, vanessa deluca. >> people were trying to portray her as a divisive person, and that is the furthest from the truth. >> now with an approval rating of 68%, higher than her husband's, you see more of her personality.
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dunking on the miami heat. >> oh. >> doing carpool karaoke around the white house. >> i think as she has grown in the role she realizes what she has to say carries great weight. >> michelle miller, cbs news, new york. and that's the "cbs overnight news" for this tuesday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back with us a little later for the morning news and of course, full convention coverage on cbs this morning with charlie, gayle, and norah in philadelphia. from the site of the democratic national convention, i'm scott pelley.
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>> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." welcome to the "cbs overnight news," i'm jericka duncan. >> the democratic national convention in philadelphia after outrage and scandal. debbie wasserman-schultz is resigning after the e-mail showed a conspiracy to defeat bernie sanders. a cbs news poll shows clinton and donald trump tied. both have the support of 42% of registered voters. wasserman-schultz was booed when she tried to speak at a breakfast meeting with her own delegation. >> all right, everybody, now, settle down. everybody, settle down, please.
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we have a big program today. let's hear. let's be respectful. >> meanwhile, bernie sanders took to the stage on day one of the convention. here is some of what he had to say. >> thank you. it is -- it is -- >> thank you. let me thank the 2.5 million americans who helped fund our campaign with an unprecedented,0008 million individual campaign contributions. anyone know what that average
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contribution was? right. $27. and let me thank the 13 million americans who voted for the political revolution. giving us the 1,846 pledged delegates here tonight. i look forward to your votes during the role call tomorrow night. i understand that many people here in this convention hall and
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around the country are disappointed about the final results of the nominating process. i think it's fair to say that no one is more disappointed than i am. but to all of our supporters here and around the country, i hope you take enormous pride in the historical accomplishments we have achieved. together -- together, my friends, we have begun a political revolution to transform america and that revolution, our revolution, continues.
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it is no secret that hillary clinton and i disagree on a number of issues. that is what this campaign has been about. that is what democracy is about. i have known hillary clinton for 25 years. i remember her, as you do, as a great first lady who broke precedent in terms of the role that a first lady was supposed to play. as she helped lead the fight for universal health care. i served with her in the united states senate. and know her as a fierce advocate for the rights of children, for women, and for the disabled. hillary clinton will make an
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outstanding president and i am proud to stand with her tonight. thank you all very much. [ cheers and applause ] before arriving in philadelphia, hillary clinton and her runningmate, tim kaine sat down for an interview with scott pelley. clinton claims she knew nothing about the e-mail controversy. >> brad marshal, wrote in an e-mail for kentucky and west virginia, can we get someone to ask his belief? does he believe in a god? he had skated on saying he has a jewish heritage. i think i read he is an atheist. this could make several points difference with my peeps, end quote. did you know anything about it? >> i didn't know anything about it. i hadn't read any of those. i am adamantly opposed to anyone
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bringing religion into our political process. i mean the constitution says no religious tests. so, that is just absolutely wrong and unacceptable. >> but maybe the point, madam secretary is that you have people in the democratic national committee who are supposed to be if you will, agnostic about who the nominee is going to be. and they seem to have their thumb on the scale for you. they seem to be working against bernie sanders your fellow democrat? >> again, i don't know anything. i don't know anything about, about these -- e-maims. i haven't followed it. but i am very proud of the campaign i ran. and very proud of the campaign senator sanders ran. bringing in new people into the process. i was -- you know, just delighted. honored to stand with him in new hampshire. because, we are -- we are going into our convention. unified, setting forth in our platform, the most progressive agenda that, that any democratic
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party platform has ever had. that was -- between senator sanders and -- his campaign. and me, my campaign. which i think illustrates how much we want to work together to make, make these, positive changes. >> senator? >> i was dnc chair. so i, during the first obama term. you are not going to find any body at dnc, rnc, who is a complete agnostic who doesn't have an opinion about the candidate. those of us who are in the realm. we have opinions about people. there is a difference about having an opinion about somebody. having a candidate you prefer over somebody else. a difference between that and trying to alter the outcome. the people that have preferences is not a surprise. but -- i don't see, an effort to put a thumb on the scale to tip this one. one way or the other. the vigorous nature of the campaign and positive nature of the campaign is proof that, you know these are public servants who are in it for the right reason. i think we are going to be unified going forward.
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>> you can see more of scott pelley's interview with the democratic ticket on our website. this pimple's gonna last forever. aw com'on. clearasil ultra works fast to begin visibly clearing up skin in as little as 12 hours. and acne won't last forever. just like your mom won't walk in on you... forever. let's be clear. clearasil works fast. just how wet and sticky your current gel antiperspirant is. now we're going to show you how degree dry spray is different. degree dry spray. degree. it won't let you down. hey spray 'n wash is back...ws? and even better. it's powerful formula removes everyday stains the first time. which is bad news for stains, and good news for you. spray 'n wash. back 'n better. introducing new k-y for massage and intimacy. every touch, gently intensified.
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the fbi launched a probe into the e-mail scandal at the democratic national committee. the dnc claims its e-mail server was broken into by russian hackers trying to help donald trump get elected. trump dismissed it all as today's joke. senior contributor, ted koppel, spoke with the republican candidate for sunday morning. >> nobody in recent memory has a more highly developed sense of public confidence than freshly minted republican nominee for president. still, as i sat down with donald trump, late last week, i couldn't help but wonder. >> let me ask you a question, i wanted to ask you for months. >> go ahead. >> i have a sense on june 16, what donald trump was thinking, you know something, i might win the primary or two, i might win a caucus or two, but you know
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the worst thing that is going to happen the brand is going to be improved, i will be better known, more nay muss than i am today. business is going to be in, you never thought you would be sitting here on this day as the nominee of the republican party? >> it is such a great question, such an interesting question. and i think about it myself. you know i think i must have, ted, because i do look to win. and i believe that if i didn't think i was going to within. i wouldn't have didn't. some where deep down in the mind i must have said, i am going to win. >> the afternoon of his acceptance speech, trump did a walk-through and a mike check. >> i love the media. >> i was being sarcastic. saying how much we love the media. the media has been very dishonest. we put up with it. let people know about it. there is tremendous dishonesty in the media. >> it has been a mixed blessing for you. it has been a blessing. you wouldn't be where you are today --
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>> yeah, i think you are right. and, some are tremendously honest. but you have tremendous dishonesty in the media. never seen anything like it. more so in the last number of months than i have ever seen it. with that being said, you have to power through it. and i do that. and it seems to be working out pretty well. but i do look to expose it. >> when you talk about exposing the media. what the media is there to do, what we are supposed to do is keep you honest. >> yeah. >> you have had your share of misstatements over the past few months. >> well -- >> without the media, who would know about that? >> i think i am an honest person. i feel i am an honest person. i don't mind being criticized at all by the media. i do want them to be straight about it. >> trump seems to deal with unpleasant reality by ignoring or denying it. >> the ex-presidents, leaders, the one whose ran for president are pretty much arrayed against
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you. >> i don't think so. i don't think so. >> the bushes are, mccains are -- >> people like me. i got the most votes. almost 14 million votes. in the history of the republican party. talking about dwight d. eisenhower. >> now you have to convince. >> the polls are showing. >> now you have to convince democrats. >> way up with independents. >> how do you convince the doubters, people, sitting out there, a lot of people sitting out there saying i can't believe that donald j. trump is the nominee. >> my whole life. you have covered me a long time. known each other a long time. my whole life has been wing. i have won. whether i did, the apprentice, when the on television. >> you can't compare, you can't compare anything you have done before. >> tremendous success in business. in television. do a show, a big success. i write book. they're very successful. >> there is nothing like running
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for president of the united states. >> i agree there is nothing like it. >> how do you convince the doubters, people in the middle? >> i think on november 8. that's the way you convince them. all about that. >> you haven't convinced them before november 8 you are in trouble. >> right now up in many of the polls. >> what are you doing? >> you talked at one point. heard you say it several times. i can be so presidential. >> true. >> haven't seen it yet. >> i think i have. >> i still see that flare of temper. i still see that donald trump who likes to jab people in the ribs when he feels he has to. are we going to see more of that. or less of it. >> you are going after hillary there is no question? >> she is a competitor. just like when i am rung the nation. >> they' hillary, taken very nasty ad. so funny you say i am going after her.
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spent $102 million on negative ad. everyone says you are going after hillary. i haven't bought an ad. >> what is it that will be different about the trump campaign now in general campaign? >> all i can do is talk about policy. which i am very good at. all i can do is talk about the things we will do for the country. rebuild our depleted military. borders, trade. obama care is a disaster. total disaster. health care plan is a total disaster. >> how important are the debates going to be? >> very important. i think they're less important than people think. you know in the other debates. in 11 debates. every poll had me winning every single debate. i look forward tight. >> you said, never debate someone who is not a debater. you are not a debater. >> i think i surprised a lot of people. but i enjoyed the debates. my biggest question when i got into this, is what's going to happen with debates. i have debated, never debated
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professionally. why life is a debate in a way. go on the stage. that's all they do is debate. they're politician ttz. i actually loved debating. enjoyed it. >> i have this image of you sitting in your jammies at night doing your texting and your tweeting and your facebook, give me a visual aim j when does donald trump text, tweet? >> there will be very little of that if i win. it's a little different. right now i m in a nasty contest. with a person who is a very nasty person. who by the way, tweets and texts and spends tremendous. >> is it you tweeting? are all the tweets yours? >> often times it is me. often times it is me. because i get out a message. between facebook and twitter, i have over 20 million people. a big audience. also, you and the media and everybody is watching. >> it allows you to circumvent.
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>> allows me to get across a point quickly in second. never anything lick that. i have such a big base, 20 million people. more than that. much more than that. think i am gaining, probably 100,000 people every few days. and that gives me a big, big base in terms of the campaign. in terms of a presidency. i don't think i would use it very much at all. >> all right. you have been kind to dupe this. a couple of things on your agenda. >> thank you very much. >> uh-huh. >> we'll have more from philadelphia, site of the democratic national i asked my dentist if an electric toothbrush was going to clean better than a manual. he said sure...but don't get just any one. get one inspired by dentists, with a round brush head. go pro with oral-b. oral-b's rounded brush head cups your teeth to break up plaque and rotates to sweep it away. and oral-b delivers a clinically proven superior clean versus sonicare diamondclean. my mouth feels super clean! oral-b. know you're getting a superior clean.
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i'm never going back to a manual brush. jill and kate use the same dishwasher. same detergent. but only jill ends up with wet, spotty glasses. kate adds finish jet-dry with five power actions that dry dishes and prevent spots and film, so all that's left is the shine. for better results, use finish jet-dry. introducing new k-y for massage and intimacy. every touch, gently intensified. a little touch is all it takes. k-y touch.
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for a lot of people, philadelphia is mostly known for its sports teams and the philly cheese steak. the city of brotherly love is steeped in history. mo rocca took a walk around time. ♪ >> reporter: the united states was created 240 years ago in philadelphia and an american first that happened here is indeed a long one. philly was the site of the first u.s. capital. and home to the first u.s. congress. u.s. mint. stock exchange. hospital. art museum. ame church. university. hunting club. zoo, taxi. air conditioning, and the site of the very first thanksgiving
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day parade. wait, there's more. you guys recognize this place. let's go. whoa, what's with the music? [ "rocky" theme plays ] >> quit it with the rocky theme. trying how to get into the building at the top of the steps. ♪ >> because the philadelphia museum of art boasts one of the world's greatest collections. monet. manet. van gogh. cezzane. mondrian. >> want to see something that will make your head spin? look no further than the museum of medical history. the jaw-dropping array of bodily specimens include the, well, the jawbone tumor of president grover cleveland. they say the city of brotherly love has a big heart.
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and you can walk through the heart at the franklin institute. >> hey, mo, the heart is the side of the heart in a person 220 feet tall. >> thank you for that scientist of the franklin institute. very exciting. >> also one of the favorite kpik exhibits for fourth graders everywhere. >> any fourth grader in philadelphia can recognize a good cheesesteak. if you are looking for street food with sophistication. try roast pork sandwich with propose loan and broccoli rub from tony luke's. philadelphia founder william penn standing atop city hall. so revered is penn his search was the highest point in the city until one liberty place skyscraper surpassed it in 1987. some say that's the origin of the curse of billy penn, the championship drought endured in philadelphia for nearly 30
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years. which the phillies ended after they won the world series in 2008. ♪ ♪ by the way, the phillies, the oldest single named, single city, professional sports team in america dating back to 1883. but the country's oldest sports organization can be found here on the river. philadelphia's famed boathouse road, dates back to the 150s. and that liquid we are gliding across. locals call it water. on a day as the hot as today, water ice is essential. i'll take classic rain be, thanks. water ice was invented by rossati's over 100 years ago. thank you. >> thank you. >> how do forms of the same element co-exist. in a balance. derek pitts can you tell me how? >> sorry, mo, a secret. >> to get a feeling for what life was like.
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take a stroll through america's oldest, inhabited residential street. can you tell me how to get to betsey ross' home. go to the street. go left. take the first right. can't miss it. >> thank you. >> get yourself some stockings. >> betsey ross lived here. famous for creating the american flag. except it is not certain that she did. this was the west philadelphia home of patti labelle. famous for american music charts which she certainly did. ♪ ♪ >> this is a mural of patti labelle. ♪ ♪ it is just one of nearly 4,000 throughout the city. the largest public art project in the country which earned philadelphia a new nickname. city of murals. the latest piece. walking along it right now. finished before the start of the democratic national convention, it is 14 blocks long.
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♪ billy penn would be proud. ♪ talking about freedom,,,,,,,,,
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college can be a challenge for any young person. as steve hartman found out "on the road." >> reporter: for 20 years here in spartanburg, south carolina, danny and wife sue kept a secret from snare stheir son. they never told ryan who has downs syndrome, there are things in life he will never be able to do. when some of ryan's friend left for college. he figured he would go to. his parents said he picked the college. >> he told people he would go to clemson. >> did you brace him? >> we kept telling him. but he continued. >> reporter: although they didn't know it at the time. ryan's dream wasn't entirely out of the question. clemson does have a pre gram for people with intellectual disabilities. but it is highly competitive. more than 100 people apply for
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less than 10 openings. since ryan wasn't getting the hint. they let him try. when the admissions letter arrived they recorded it on home video. >> we are just waiting to see how he does react when it hits him. >> i got accepted? >> he says, i got accepted. and, i think those words mean an awful lot. it was just total absolute joy. >> are you happy? >> yes. >> just as happy as you were that day? >> oh, yeah. >> we were there a couple years ago when he packed for clemson. >> that's the button. >> the two year program teaches job skills and huh to live independently. >> you need my help? >> i could tell his mother especially would appreciate. >> it will be challenging isn't it? >> very challenging, yes. >> you are up for it. >> yes. >> 20 years ago there was no room on a college campus for some one like ryan. >> shall we go.
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>> reporter: today, 200 universities across the country offer some kind of program like this. >> yes. >> all right. >> ryan for one, couldn't have been more grateful for the opportunity. he took instantly to college life. proving that down syndrome can be overcome. >> always been able to control what he hears, what he sees, who he spends time with. >> empty nest syndrome. >> it is not going to be easy. >> remains incurable. >> danny marion yocum jr. >> last spring he graduated. he aplayed for 20 jobs. got two. one with occupational therapist. the other at a water slide. he does his own cooking, laundry. he is pretty much self reliant. now if we could just get typical kids to do the same steve hartman on the road. that's the "cbs overnight news" for tuesday. for some of you the news
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continues. for other s check back for the morning news and it's tuesday, july 26th, 2016. this is the "cbs morning news." >> we have got to elect hillary clinton and tim kaine. >> discord at the democratic national convention as day one of the dnc got going, boos for bernie sanders over his support of hillary clinton. but by the end of the day -- >> hillary clinton must become the next president of the united states. first lady michelle obama took the stage and took on trump without ever mentioning his name.

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