Skip to main content

tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  October 26, 2017 3:12am-4:01am PDT

3:12 am
been to the dentist, maybe, like you said, 10 years, 15 years. they know they don't want a denture. and then, of course, to the denture wearer, that they've been in dentures maybe 10 or 30 years, and they're skeptical, maybe. >> sure. >> what do you say to them? >> we'll come in, we'll talk about a customized plan to help you achieve the smile of your dreams, because we want to help you to be able to unleash your human potential. >> it's a free consultation, right? >> it's a free consultation. >> so they might as well come in, right, and get a consultation? >> i don't care how hopeless you think it is, we can help. >> thanks for coming on the show. >> thank you for having me. >> great info. you've been watching "the wellness hour." i'm randy alvarez. for now, i wish you good health. >> thanks for watching "the wellness hour," the leader in medical news, with your host, randy alvarez, the authority on health issues. >> i didn't realize how bad my smile was, with fillings and root canals. i had to do something. i looked at partial bridges. i looked at dentures. out of all the options, clearchoice was the only choice
3:13 am
for me. >> at clearchoice, we bring hope to millions who suffer from missing or failing teeth with dental implants that look, feel, and function like strong, natural teeth. >> all the specialists, with all the technology they need, are in one spot. it makes delivering this 21st-century world-class dentistry very easy to do, and we do it in one day. >> i can laugh. people crack a joke, and i smile. it was a life-changing thing. >> call today to schedule your free comprehensive consultation and i-cat 3-d imaging scan. we'll even talk financing options while you're here. >> they not only helped to rebuild my smile, but helped me to rebuild my self-confidence. they really set me free. i mean, look at this smile. >> at clearchoice, you're about to discover wh you've been missing all these years. call clearchoice today. >> america is getting more and more beautiful every day. smiles are brighter, confidence is higher, outlooks on life are improving daily. why?
3:14 am
because people are calling or going online to schedule an appointment at clearchoice dental implant centers. clearchoice is leading america's smile freedom movement. more people trust us for implants than any other brand. and it all starts with that first call or click. schedule today and your consultation will include a 3-d ct scan. it's time to put caps, crowns, bridges, dentures, and gum disease in your past and let your true self shine into the future. don't hide your smile another day. join the thousands who have set their smiles free. call or go online now. let's make america more beautiful one smile at a time.
3:15 am
3:16 am
already fighting on the battleground in iraq and syria. anthony. >> margaret brennan at the pentagon. thank you. coming up next -- would you give amazon the key to your home? fred would do anything for his daughter.
3:17 am
get in, fred! even if it means being the back half of a unicorn. fear not fred, the front half washed his shirt with gain. and that smell puts the giddy in "giddy-up"! ah... the irresistible scent of gain flings laundry detergent. you can't help but smell happy. i had this chest cold, but my medicine kept wearing off. (coughsah! hey, chad! i missed you. ah! i was in the tree watching you, and then i fell. i'm not eating pizza from the trash.
3:18 am
then i discovered mucinex. huge difference. one pill lasts 12 hours, and i'm good. oh, here kitty, kitty...ah! not a cat, not a cat! why take 4-hour medicine? just one mucinex lasts 12 hours. start the relief. ditch the misery. let's end this. there was an old woman who lived in a shoe. she had so many children she had to buy lots of groceries. while she was shopping for organic fruits and veggies, burglars broke into her shoe. they stole her kids' mountain bikes and tablets along with her new juice press. luckily the geico insurance agency had helped her with homeowners insurance. she got full replacement on the stolen goods and started a mountain bike juice delivery service. call geico and see how affordable homeowners insurance can be. call geico you were borne to travel... borne to rock... borne to piggyback... and you don't want anything stopping you from doing what you love. so if you're looking to give your immune system extra support...
3:19 am
only airborne plus beta-immune booster is made with a crafted blend of vitamins and minerals, plus an added ingredient proven to boost your natural defenses. keep doing what you were borne to do. airborne plus beta immune booster. you're lucky you're cute. lysol max cover with 2x wider coverage kills 99.9% of bacteria. one more way you've got what it takes to protect.
3:20 am
to prevent packages from being stolen from your mailbox or your doorstep, would you give a delivery service access to your home? starting next month, some amazon shoppers will have that option. here is anna werner. >> use amazon -- >> amazon's cheerful video, presents the key program as a simple convenient way to have your packages dropped off inside your home. here's how it works. for $249, you buy a special smart door lock, along with an in-home wireless camera aimed at the door. when the delivery driver arrives, amazon gets a notification. the company activates the camera and unlocks the door remotely. the driver can open your door and put your package inside. he steps outside and asks amazon to relock the door. you can watch the delivery happen live or view a video sent later. nvenient in theory, sure. but on twitter one user called it a hilariously bad idea.
3:21 am
another asked, convenient or too creepy? a third said tongue in cheek what could possibly go wrong? cybersecurity expert john cilios says hacking. >> biggest risk is the hackers who get ahold of the database of door code. literally if they can hack the nsa, they can hack, a database of, you know, entry code into, an entire block's worth of homes. that part its what scares me, not how amazon will use it. how the hackers will use it. >> but with 11 million packages stolen every year, yahoo! technology writer and cbs sunday morning contributor david pogue says. >> to me the comparison is not should amazon be allowed to open the front door and drop off a package and possibly then ransack my house? the question is is that a better option than leaving my expensive order on my front porsche when i am not home to me that's the risk. of theft. >> sr. vis available to amazon
3:22 am
prime members only. if anything were to go wrong it offers a satisfaction guarantee. anthony. >> what could possibly go wrong? anna werner, thanks. coming up. a "60 minutes" investigation into contaminating flooring lead to a multimillion dollar settlement. that cough doesn't sound so good. take mucinex dm. i'll text you in 4 hours when your cough returns. one pill lasts 12 hours, so... looks like i'm good all night! why take 4-hour cough medicine? just one mucinex lasts 12 hours. let's end this.
3:23 am
not all fish oil supplements provide the same omega-3 power. megared advanced triple absorption is absorbed three times better. so one softgel has more omega-3 power than three standard fish oil pills. megared advanced triple absorption. finish jet-dry dries them better dishwasher? and with the brillant results from a bosch dishwasher, your dishes emerge so clean and dry, you'll need a new use for your kitchen towel. finish jet-dry and bosch. for cleaner, drier dishes. it's always disappointing, when something gets watered down. at air wick, we believe scent should be experienced the way its intended: pure. discover air wick pure freshmatic, with no added water. and now, try pure free
3:24 am
lumber liquidators agreed to pay $36 million to settle lawsuits over contaminated wood flooring. a 60 minutes investigation found that laminated flooring made in china contained formaldehyde which can cause cancer. the flooring between 2009 and 2015 has been discontinued. news about this broadcast. cbs news president david rhodes announced today, jeff glor will be the anchor of "cbs evening news." jeff is an experienced journalist, good friend to all of us here at cbs, and we will be proud to pass the baton to him next month. the broadcast will be in the best hand you can be sure of that. and i will finally get a day off. congratulations, jeff. up next, remembering fats domino, a 5'5" giant of rock 'n' roll.
3:25 am
♪ ♪ >> announcer: this p
3:26 am
3:27 am
music came alive in the 1950s thanks in great part to antoine domino junior, better known as fats. fats domino died yesterday at home in louisiana. he was 89. he helped create a new style of music called, rock 'n' roll. >> once again, fats domino. >> fats domino a show stopping piano player with a soothing baritone voice. ♪ i'm walking >> most powerful and popular of a generation of keyboardists. domino rocked into public consciousness in the 1950s. with the "fat man."
3:28 am
>> because i went to. >> his dynamic style and warm vocals drew crowd and inspired musicians some who began as fans would later perform with him. rolling stone likened him to benjamin franklin, beloved for the revolutionary change he's brought to r & b, a blend of new orleans parade rhythms and rock 'n' roll. ♪ i found my thrill >> reporter: perhaps best known for his rich ren daidition of blueberry hill. ♪ sunset i fund my thrill ♪ >> the song entered pop culture as an anthem for young lovers. ♪ on blueberry hill ♪ ♪ >> reporter: fats domino had 37 top 40 singles, selling 65 million record in a career that spanned five decade. ♪ ♪ along the way he broke racial barriers.
3:29 am
and transcended genres crossing over into country music. a global star, he never forgot his new orleans roots. almost dying at home in the lower ninth ward during hurricane katrina. >> sorry it happened to me and everybody else. ♪ all over the country people want to know whatever happened to fats domino ♪ >> touched by the outpouring of concern, he reminded fans he was alive and well, in the title track of his last album. ♪ and i'm where i want to be ♪ ♪ and that's the "overnight news" for this thursday. 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 york city, i'm anthony mason. thank you for watching.
3:30 am
welcome to the "overnight news." i'm jericka duncan. the white house scrambling to contain the gop family feud that threatens to derail president trump's stalled legislative agenda. the president insisted there is great unity within the republican party as he kept up his war of word with arizona senator jeff flake. as for the upcoming battle over tax cuts, the president predicts both flake and senator bob corker another gop critic will vote with him. nancy cordes has the more. >> reporter: arizona republican jeff flake's call to arms was met with mutiny as gop colleagues refused to open fire on mr. trump.
3:31 am
>> i am still on good terms with the president. >> very focused on results. >> put our led down and start ledge lating. >> holding back partly because the trump white house is key to their agenda on issues look tax reform. >> we have a president. >> the yeas are 50. nays are 50. >> just last night. vice president pence cast a tie-breaking vote enabling republicans to block an obama era rule that would have allowed consumers to band together to sue banks for wrongdoing. >> the vice president votes in the affirmative. and the joint resolution is passed. >> well have great unity. >> the president insisted today that party friction has been overblown. he repeatedly mentioned the standing ovations he got, at yesterday's lunch with senate republicans. >> i think the press makes me, more uncivil than i am. people don't understand. i want to an ivy league college. i was a nice student. did very well.
3:32 am
i am ape very intelligent person. >> as for flake. >> his poll numbers are terrible. he has done terrible for the state of arizona. a state that likes donald trump very much. >> but the senate chaplain, barry black, hailed flake's courage and asked for intervention. >> lord, provide us with more patriots who will stand for right regardless of the consequences. the people of puerto rico are still picking up the pieces of their shattered island which was devastated last month by hurricane maria. roads and bridges remain washed out and tens of thousand of homes were destroyed or damaged. and much of the island remains without power. well, now, a no bid government contract to fix the power grid is coming under fire. julianna goldman has the story.
3:33 am
>> it has been more than a month since hurricane maria ravaged puerto rico leaving the power grid in shambles. today, 75% of the island is still without power. lawmakers are asking why a small montana company was granted a $300 million no bid contract. >> my biggest concern we don't have enough information as to the process that went through that. >> republican congressman, rob bishop chairs the house committee that oversees puerto rico. the government company, prepa signed with whitefish energy, two person two-year-old company whose largest previous federal contract had been for $1.3 million to upgrade lines in arizona. prepa filed for bankruptcien july amid the island's on going debt crisis. bypassed utilities and muchable aid system activate ford storm recovery. the $300 million contract is the biggest yet for puerto rico's recovery effort and for whitefish which relies on
3:34 am
subcontractors for their work. >> this atears to be a small company are they capable of doing the job, that, that, i think they're being asked. >> republican senator, chair of the energy committee expects a hearing on puerto rico in the next week. and democratic senator maria cantwell is calling for an investigation. >> here ready to light up puerto rico. >> the subcontractor rates are raising questions. $4262 per hour for supervisor. $319 for a lineman. and its ties to the administration are under scrutiny. whitefish backed by hpc investments. founder and partner, gave $33,000 to the campaign of then texas governor now energy secretary rick perry. colinetta and his wife gave $2,200 to president trump. >> i'm andy techmansik. >> he knows, ryan zinke. whitefish based in his hometown.
3:35 am
interior department and whitefish say zinke played no role in the contract and the company says colinetta didn't either white fish officials were willing to work for $2 million up front while prepa was considering, wanted $25 million. tonight puerto rico's governor will be reviewing the contracting process. anthony. when rock 'n' roll was born in the 50s and 60s, stars, elvis, chuck berry, jerry lee lewis and fats domino. his piano and baritone set the stage for acts that followed him. well fats passed away of natural causes just across the river from his beloved hometown of new orleans. he was 89. anthony mason has the story of his life and remarkable career.
3:36 am
>> once again, fats domino. >> fats domino a show stopping piano player with a soothing baritone voice. ♪ i'm walking >> most powerful and popular of a generation of keyboardists. domino rocked into public consciousness in the 1950s. with the "fat man." >> because i went to. >> his dynamic style and warm vocals drew crowd and inspired musicians some who began as fans would later perform with him. rolling stone likened him to benjamin franklin, beloved for the revolutionary change he's brought to r & b, a blend of new orleans parade rhythms and rock 'n' roll. ♪ i found my thrill >> reporter: perhaps best known for his rich rendition of blueberry hill. ♪ sunset i fund my thrill ♪ >> the song entered pop culture as an anthem for young lovers. ♪ on blueberry hill ♪ ♪
3:37 am
>> reporter: fats domino had 37 top 40 singles, selling 65 million record in a career that spanned five decade. ♪ ♪ along the way he broke racial barriers. and transcended genres crossing over into country music. a global star, he never forgot his new orleans roots. almost dying at home in the lower ninth ward during hurricane katrina. >> sorry it happened to me and everybody else. ♪ all over the country people want to know whatever happened to fats domino ♪ >> touched by the outpouring of concern, he reminded fans he was alive and well, in the title track of his last album. ♪ and i'm where i want to be
3:38 am
i had this chest cold, but my medicine kept wearing off. (coughsah! hey, chad! i missed you. ah! i was in the tree watching you, and then i fell. i'm not eating pizza from the trash. then i discovered mucinex. huge difference. one pill lasts 12 hours, and i'm good. oh, here kitty, kitty...ah! not a cat, not a cat! why take 4-hour medicine? just one mucinex lasts 12 hours. start the relief. ditch the misery.
3:39 am
let's end this. i was wondering if an electric toothbrusthan a manual.s better and my hygienist says it does but they're not all the same. who knew? i had no idea. so she said, look for one that's shaped like a dental tool with a round brush head. go pro with oral-b. oral-b's rounded brush head surrounds each tooth to gently remove more plaque. and unlike sonicare, oral-b is the only electric toothbrush brand accepted by the american dental association for its effectiveness and safety. my mouth feels so clean. i'll only use an oral-b. oral-b. brush like a pro.
3:40 am
♪ ♪ this is the cbs "overnight news." it's been said that you can be the biggest star in hollywood or rock 'n' roll, but you haven't really made it until you have been photographed by annie lebovitz. she has a book of port ritz and leibovitz sat down to discuss with charlie rose. >> i love photography. i eat it up. fee feel like an encyclopedia inside. photographing the queen. i am thinking of about cecil beaton taking the picture. she said, annie, you have really got to find your own way. >> is that the way she talked? >> annie, you must find your own
3:41 am
way. >> your majesty. i will ask you to look to your left. >> there are few kinds of royalty that sunny has not photographed. her subjects some of most prominent people in the world. famous athletes. actors, presidents, and business men, turned president. >> this is down in palm beach. leaving to go back to new york. >> latest collection spans her work from 2005 to 2016. the year she writes culture was shifting in ways that we didn't quite take in. >> why this book now? what's the story of this book? >> well, over a year ago, must have been august, like three months before the election iechl thought, you know, i think i should try to put a book out. it would end with hillary clinton in the white house. that would be my ending. >> that was your plan? >> that was my plan. >> then we had an election. >> we had an election. i really do think in the last, 20, 30 pages you can feely like
3:42 am
not knowing where to go what to do if i was throwing in there. kate mckinnon. oprah. throw her in. bruce springsteen. throw him in. we head to pick ourselves up. >> as one of the most sought after portraitists in the world. she worked with top magazine editors who as she did became celebrities in their own right. >> how did they define you? from, from, how were they definition? >> after 13 years at rolling stone it was hard for any one to tell me what to do. they were smart enough off to know to let me go do what i do and find may way. >> you were tough enough to do it? >> i love my work. >> her work regabegan in the counterculture capital of san francisco. in three years at 24 she was rolling stone's chief photographer.
3:43 am
scoring stars like john lennon and mick jagger. who in 1975, personally asked leibovitz to swap the magazine for his rock 'n' roll band. >> i was bright-eyed like i couldn't believe, you know, everything that i was walking into. >> did that begin with rolling stone? >> rolling stone. hanging out with the two biggest stars. >> you were hanging out. no. no. >> i never hung out. >> come on. >> i never hung out. >> you were part of the thing. >> i did not hang out. >> a rolling caravan, you were part of it. >> i went on tour with the rolling stones. and, two, three cities. and in 1975. the tour photographer for the rolling stones. >> she left the tour with a drug addiction that took years to overcome. but found new stability in work and long time partner, susan
3:44 am
sontag. >> i thought about the relationship with susan. thought, oh, god this is mean i will have to be good. this is going to be about my work. to know susan. >> because you, she wouldn't have it any other way. >> that's right. that's right. she's tough. she was tough. >> she said. >> she set a bar. >> she definitely set a bar. for quality of life. >> didn't have to do much to set a bar. she was the bar. >> their 15 year relationship ended when susan died from cancer in 2004. her death marked a a period of hardship for leibovtiz, lost her parents and found herself in millions in dealt. >> i would do assignments. pay for them myself. had no regard for money. had no regard for -- for -- for business. well that is completely not happening anymore. you know i just worked really hard and picked it all up and put it become together. understand my business so much more.
3:45 am
>> okay, girls. >> now 68, leibovitz lives with her three daughters in new york city. and works with her team in an office downtown. >> what would the natural light feel like? >> for all of the change her world has met with over the years she says she find herself increasing prepared for it. >> i feel more like a creative artist using foelt graphotograp. digital work is interesting. >> first word for you is artist not photographer. >> thank you. yes. i would like that. >> an artist who uses a camera. that's your brush? that's your, your -- >> it's come to that. i have had many stages of photography as there are many ways to take photographs. but i feel now, i am in that stage. of my life where i use the camera, you know in that way. >> i think you have said this. i hope you have. >> ha-ha. >> me too the way you are saying
3:46 am
it. >> you welcome age and learn from age. >> i have said that. i think it is not talked about enough. how interesting it is. >> i do too. i really do. i mean. >> it is, really exciting. and -- it doesn't mean you are going to necessarily take -- a better photograph. but you know what you are i'm only in my 60's. i've got a nice long life ahead. big plans. so when i found out medicare doesn't pay all my medical expenses, i looked at my options. then i got a medicare supplement insurance plan. [ male announcer ] if you're eligible for medicare, you may know it only covers about 80% of your part b medical expenses. the rest is up to you. call now and find out about an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan, insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. like all standardized medicare supplement insurance plans, it helps pick up some of what medicare doesn't pay. and could save you in out-of-pocket medical costs.
3:47 am
to me, relationships matter. i've been with my doctor for 12 years. now i know i'll be able to stick with him. [ male announcer ] with these types of plans, you'll be able to visit any doctor or hospital that accepts medicare patients. plus, there are no networks, and virtually no referrals needed. so don't wait. call now and request this free decision guide to help you better understand medicare... and which aarp medicare supplement plan might be best for you. there's a wide range to choose from. we love to travel - and there's so much more to see. so we found a plan that can travel with us. anywhere in the country. [ male announcer ] join the millions of people who have already enrolled in the only medicare supplement insurance plans endorsed by aarp, an organization serving the needs of people 50 and over for generations. remember, all medicare supplement insurance plans help cover what medicare doesn't pay.
3:48 am
and could save you in out-of-pocket medical costs. call now to request your free decision guide. and learn more about the kinds of plans that will be here for you now - and down the road. i have a lifetime of experience. so i know how important that is. that cough doesn't sound so good. take mucinex dm. i'll text you in 4 hours when your cough returns. one pill lasts 12 hours, so... looks like i'm good all night! why take 4-hour cough medicine? just one mucinex lasts 12 hours. let's end this.
3:49 am
they're the unsung heroes of the news business. sketch artists when cameras aren't allowed for whatever reason, the artist who captures the moment. lee cowen had a chat with some of the best. >> reporter: as lohan surrendered the judge ordered cameras turned off leaving a sketch artist to capture the moment she was cuffed and led away. there is a scumpell -- come paling part of art drawn on the fly when the subject is famous and in court. some times i will do this, outside shape. sometimes the eye. it depend. bill roblis spent a lifetime capturing celebrities when cameras couldn't. from madonna to dustin hoffman, to oj simpson to michael jackson. >> even got the stubble on his face. >> yeah, the stubble. band-aid over the tip of the nose. people were wondering if the the nose was falling off or what.
3:50 am
>> there are notorious too. the night stalker, hillside strangler and unabomber. just to name a few. do you think of yourself more as an artist or, a journalist? >> beth. you have off to think like a journalist. but you are an artist. >> an artist with little time to plan, and no team for mistakes. >> i draw direct with a pen. no pencil. once i get the drawing to a finished state then i add the color. but usually in the hallway that the color goes on. >> this is easier to do. >> elizabeth williams has sketched many sketchy person. and she has written about them too. inill straltillustrated courtro. under intense deadline pressure not allowed any artist license. >> courtroom art is really not very creative. it's really much more factual.
3:51 am
but that's what it is. that's what it is. it's not intended to be creative. it is intended to inform. >> which is why the library of congress mounted a first of its kind, special exhibit called drawing justice. the library amassed a collection of thousand of courtroom sketches many of which gathering dustin studios around the country. sarah duke is the exhibit's curator. has drawings that date back over five decade. >> start with jack ruby in 1964. there is also the son of sam. david burkowitz. bursting out with obscenities. mob boss john gotti giving a look that could kill. >> he made it clear he did not like the way he was depicted. >> jacqueline kennedy onassis looks almost regal. rapper p diddy in puff daddy days looks positively bored. >> each drawing tells a story
3:52 am
whether it's, martha, nervously playing with her hair, or joanne woodward knitting during the newman salad dressing trial. these are just moments that, that allude us if artists don't capture them. >> have hey look at this. star quarterback, tom brady, and this is, a widely criticized sketch of hip. >> it doesn't always go so well. when jane rosenberg rushed out the sketch of tom brady during the deflategate aper ans she wasn't lampooned she was mocked. >> didn't make him look soft and beautiful. which he is. when i am working fast. lines are heavy, fast. try to pull out quick things. >> here its another one. not good enough. pnope. >> elizabeth williams her own worst critics rejects more drawings than approves doesn't settle on a face until she doodled it. >> if you took the stand. >> over and over and over again. >> you know, i am not getting
3:53 am
this right yet. i mean this is going to, going to take me, probably, a whole page of you. to get you. look, your brow is, actually defined like that. see. so now, i know. but. >> people always ask me do you make them uglier because of, what they have done? no, you have to remain professional. you have to remain, true to what you see. >> especially when it is some one like charles manson. >> looks like he is staring right at you. >> yeah, he got into stares with media. there he is with the x carved which he turned into a swastika. he will never forget the day the hippy cult leader leapt across the defense table in a failed attempt to attack the judge. >> all of a sudden, manson hollered, somebody has to cut your head off, old man. and leaped. before you knew it, the bailiff
3:54 am
talkd h tackled him in midair. often the news worthy moments are most fleeting off the awe tonight, bernard madoff behind bars. >> borny madoff, the financier whose scheme bilked billions out of investors. the image mattered most was the iffage in cuffs, it happened so fast, elizabeth williams almost missed it. >> federal marshals came over, descended upon him and put handcuffs on him i thought to myself, holy moly they're going to put this guy in prison right now. i just, started drawing him. i thought the arms back. hand are cuffed. i got, like -- this marshal and then, tie got the, the, jail cell. the door open. one of the victims came up and took her fingers and kissed right where his hand were. and she said, that's just what i want feud see. i said, that's right. that's whey i drew it. >> i remember reporter years ago, said, here comes the
3:55 am
dinosaur. but here it is. 46 going on 47
3:56 am
3:57 am
there are 54 weeks to next year's election. the battle for governor of kansas is already heating up. four young men are already pounding the campaign trail. at least when they're not in school. dean reynold as their story. >> these four high school students are smart, politically active. forward thinking and running for governor of kansas. >> i mean, government norks come on. right? >> why not? >> why not? >> why not indeed. because it seems the 19th century state leaders never thought to include age requirements to run for governor. or any requirements. >> you can live in spain. you know, wouldn't matter. >> last year when she was 15.
3:58 am
jack ferguson filed to run as a democrat. >> i am going to go fight for what the people want. and i think when you give people true honest choice, very rare in american politics they're more likely to vote for you. >> timyler is a republican. >> of course there is a chance we can run. what matters the four of us have a chance of winning this election. >> there is really no chance of one of these kids becoming the governor of kansas. >> reporter: none? >> no. >> neil allen, political scientist at wichita state, university. >> none of the teenagers has experience in elected office. but our president didn't have any experience in elected office until elected. so, maybe we are seeing a trend. >> i encourage the legislature. >> governor sam brownback, is leaving and the office to succeed him is crowded. but the republican is undaunted. >> youthful point of view in a field of career politicians could be good in topeka.
3:59 am
>> libertarian, whose friend sea say they're not surprise his hat is in the ring. >> yeah, something he would do. nothing crazy. i am not having crazy reactions at all. >> decriminalize every drug. off awe most important as public school student, education. >> transparency. >> to cut taxes cut spending as well. >> campaign would be extra couric lar activity for them. but they saul say they can adjust their schedules to study and stump. >> say we are not serious about it. we fit the legal requirements. if we are running, we are in it to win it. >> run for class president? >> i did that. >> the party primaries are next august. election day is november 6th, 2018. dean reynolds. cbs news, wichita. that's the "overnight news" for thursday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back with us later for the morning news and of course, nbc this morning. from the broadcast center, in
4:00 am
new york city, captioning funded by cbs it's thursday, october 26th, 2017. this is the "cbs morning news." as puerto rico struggles to recover from hurricane maria, questions about the small company awarded a big contract to get the island's power back on has members of congress calling for an investigation. putting up a united front. president trump brushes aside dy divisions within the republican party. >> honestly the republicans are very, very well united.

567 Views

1 Favorite

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on