tv CBS Overnight News CBS September 21, 2018 3:12am-4:00am PDT
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so if i'm a scammer, i can go annoy seattle for $500. >> reporter: and if you send out enough lines, someone will bite. >> you will be taken under custody by the local cops. >> you get a call where it says it's the irs, you got to pay us today or we're going good to your work tomorrow or arrest you in front of your kids. if you think you might owe money, it's a really compelling scam. >> the number one way to deal
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with robocall say the experts is never answer the phone when you see a number you don't recognize. but that's getting tougher to do with scammers now using programs that make calls with familiar numbers or even with your own number. those you're more likely to answer. >> it's amazing to think that half of all calls potentially could be robocalls. wow. all right, jim, thanks. we have a follow-up now on a fire that tore threw a senior citizens complex in washington yesterday. six residents were treated for minor injury, but david martin reports this could have been much worse were it not for few good neighbors. >> reporter: the smoke went up from a senior living complex, and the marines came rung. >> these are our neighbors. they needed help. we had to act. >> reporter: the fire was about 200 yards from their small outpost in downtown washington. when think got there, a construction worker told them all they needed to know. >> he yelled there is more people in there. and that's when the marines decided we needed to go get them. >> i don't think there was really any thought to it. it was we need to get these
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people out of here before anything serious happens. and just the instincts kicked in to go. fightingquipmenty eathing masks? >> no, sir. >> reporter: there were firefighters there of course and residents of the neighborhood as well. but safe to say the marines were the youngest and fittest, which mattered because some of the residents were trapped on the fourth floor. >> it was a pretty bad fire if you're on the top floor. some paralyzed, impossibly people in there. >> we actually picked people up as best we could and had the wheelchairs at the exit or put them in the litter outside the building after we carried them down four flights. >> reporter: all 190 residents got out alive with only six sent to the hospital. marines have a saying, no better friend, no worsen my. in this firefight, they proved the best of friends. david martin, cbs news at the marine barracks annex in washington. coming up next, the wanted poster may be a thing of the past. how police are taking a manhunt
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into the 21st century. and later, a young man accuse of trying to steal an american airlines plane. are you taking the tissue test? yep, and my teeth are yellow. time for whitestrips. crest glamorous white whitestrips are the only ada-accepted whitening strips proven to be safe and effective. and they whiten 25x better than a leading whitening toothpaste. crest. healthy, beautiful smiles for life.
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police in california have taken a highly unusual step to catch an accused killer. they've created their own podcast, hoping that deputy adveising listeners will help them find their man. tony dokoupil is following this. >> 911 emergency? >> yeah, my wife, my wife's dead. >> reporter: it was a chilling case that rocked the community. in 2012, authorities say peter chadwick, a father of three strangled his wife quee, nicknamed qc in their home in newport beach, california, before placing her body in a trash dumpster in san diego. chadwick plead not guilty to the murder but vanished before trial. >> listener discretion is advised. >> reporter: now the newport beach police department is hoping to find chadwick by
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generating public interest and tips through a podcast called countdown to capture. >> i'll tell you about the life he led, the lies he told, and how he abandoned his children. >> reporter: episode 1 details what police found when they entered the home. >> on the side of the jacuzzi tub, there are shards of broken glass. >> reporter: the allure of a true crime podcast is often the idea that listeners can help solve the case. >> no one has ever been able to provide any shred of evidence. i had no r reason to kill her. >> reporter: like the podcast "serial" where amateur sleuths immediately began swapping leads online, and it led to a new trial for accused murderer adnan syed. newport beach are hoping listeners to its podcast are similarly hooked. cbs analyst paul violas. >> i truly believe we're going see a move in the needle in successfully closing cold cases by the use of the podcast. >> reporter: invtigators say these grainy images by
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surveillance video showed peter chadwick for the last time. he had been reading books about living off the grid and withdrew millions of dollars before he went missing. now chadwick's attorney tells cbs he does not believe the prosecution should comment on a pending case, let alone put out a six-part podcast, but jeff, the newport police department tonight is saying that dozens of calls have already come in from listeners saying they have new information. >> fascinating case. tony, thanks. still ahead here tonight, the government says major defects have been discovered in the prototypes for the president's border wall. a women's natural lubrication varies throughout her cycle. this can effect how pleasurable sex can be. to supplement your lubrication for even better sex try ky natural feeling. the lubrication you want, nothing you don't.
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a 22-year-old student pilot is accused of trying to steal an american airlines jet. it happened this morning at the orlando melbourne international airport in florida. police say that the student from trinidad hopped a fence and boarded the empty plane. two airport workers confronted the man. he ran off but was captured by police minutes later. a new government report shows six of the eight prototypes forrer the president's proposed border wall will need substantial redesign. during test teams are able to break through some of the walls and scale others. the president tweeted today that a republican spending plan is,
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quote, ridiculous as he put it because it does not include additional funding for wall. puerto ricans today marked one year since hurricane maria with musical tributes and peaceful protests. the official death toll is nearly 3,000. many died of medical conditions that could not be treated in the months that the u.s. territory was without electricity and running water. david begnaud was in puerto rico when the hurricane hit and has done extensive reporting on the aftermath. he has a documentary on the hundreds of thousands who fled. you can watch puerto rico, the exodus tomorrow on the cbs app or cbsnews.com or stream it sunday night on cbsn. up next, a first of a kind surgery on the heart of an unborn child saves her life. this portion sponsored by ancestry. unlock your past, inspire your future.
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hear. their daughter had rare congenital heart defects that meant it was unlikely she would survive after birth. >> that was incredibly difficult, and i could just see the ultrasound technician's face completely change, and we knew there was something wrong right away just by the look on her face. >> reporter: their little girl ivy was diagnosed with hypoplastic left heart syndrome. her heart wouldn't be able to pop blood to her body. but doctors told the finns there was a surgery that had never been performed before in the womb that might give ivy a chance. >> i was just very thankful that there was something that we could attempt. >> reporter: last month the finns moved from their home in jacksonville, florida to houston where ivy could receive care at texas children's hospital. she was born on friday. >> it was pure joy when she was. they placed her on my chest as at wasnghate as born, and
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weren't suret was amazing. >> it was amazing. it was amazing. >> reporter: ivy had her first open heart surgery today, one of three that are planned. >> i mean, our faith is what's gotten us this far, and just holding on to hope, knowing that this life isn't everything. and so we're just thankful for the time we've given so far, and we pray that we have many, many years ahead of us with her. >> we've kind of made it almost a pact since we found out with the diagnosis that we kind of said ivy, if you live for ten seconds or 100 years, we're going to be there and loving you with all of who we are throughout your entire time. >> we just spoke with the fin again tonight. they say ivy's surgery was successful today. she back this the icu tonight, recovering and preparing for the next step in her journey. we will keep you posted for sure.
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i'm jeff glor. we'll see you tomorrow. good night. and go ivy! this is the cbs overnight news. >> welcome to the overnight news. i'm jericka duncan. president trump's nomination of brett kavanaugh to the supreme court is taking on the air of a 48 hours episode. judge kavanaugh stands accused of sexual assault when he was just a teenager and the accuser is balking at the senate's demand that she either testify monday or not at all. professor christine blasey ford says she's been receiving death threats. she wants an fbi investigation and a guarantee that her family will be protected. senate republicans insist they can do their own investigation. nancy cordes reports.
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>> reporter: as supporters of dr. christine blasey ford rallied on capitol hill -- >> we believe -- >> reporter: and in her california town, ford's lawyers issued their latest salvo, telling the senate judiciary committee that she wishes to testify, provided that we can agree on terms that are fair and which ensure her safety. her preference continues to be, however, a full investigation prior to her testimony. >> we have to make plans for her to come. >> reporter: republicans don't want to risk a potentially lengthy fbi probe. they say the senate judiciary committee can do its own investigation. but the chair of that committee made it clear who he believes, informing democrats in a letter that judge kavanaugh sat for a transcribed interview on monday, and we have no reason to doubt the truthfulness of his testimony. kavanaugh has been prepping all week for the possibility of a public hearing, and denies ford's claim that he groped her and put his hand over her mouth at a high school party in the
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early 1980s. late this afternoon, graduates of the all girls holton arms school delivered a letter of support for ford, signed by more than one thousand alumni to the congressional office of west virginia republican shelly moore capito, who went there too. karen braylove is from the class of '63. do you think it's possible to get to the truth 36 years after the fact? >> we won't know until we try. there was terror at a rite aid distribution center in aberdeen, maryland. a female gunman opened fire inside the warehouse. she killed three people and wounded others before turning the gun on herself. chip reid begins our coverage. >> there is no question that mass shootings have become horrifyingly common, but there is one thing very uncommon about today's shooting, the perpetrator was a woman.
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>> any idea what the number of victims are? >> not at this time. >> one to the and, one toerfieds poured out of the rite aid center as police and medical first responders arrived, finding a horrific scene. seven people had been shot. three of the victims died. three others were seriously injured. the seventh was the shooter, identified by police as snochia moseley, a temporary employee of the facility. harford county sheriff jeff gahler. >> our suspect is a lone female suspect, age 26 who had a last known address in baltimore county. she has died at the hospital from a fatal injury, self-inflicted gunshot wound. >> reporter: she used a 9 millimeter glock handgun. her motive has not been identified. crystal watson's husband called from inside the building after witnessing the shooting. >> she didn't even aim.
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she just shot. it's so upsetting, so emotional for me right now. i just want to get to my husband. >> reporter: one woman in the building sent this text to her children. i love you. be good. take care of daddy and the pets if something should happen. there has been two other multiple shootings in harford llt an indusial park.past.lar tr twotd a gunman fatally shot two harford county sheriff's deputies. sheriff gahler had to make the announcement then too. >> both deputies who were shot earlier today have succumbed to their injuries. >> reporter: moseley was not known to law enforcement, but it's extremely rare for a woman to commit a crime like this one. according to a recent fbi study that looked at 63 active shooters between 2000 and 2013, 94% were male. if you think you've been receiving a lot more robocalls these days, you are correct. a new study says about half of all the calls dialed are made by
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robots, and it's about to get much worse. jim axelrod has that story. >> this is an important message regarding your current credit card account. >> reporter: if it feels like you're getting more robocalls these days -- >> are you looking for affordable insurance coverage? >> reporter: it's because you are. >> i'm sorry? i didn't hear you clearly. >> reporter: last year some 30 billion spam calls were received in the united states. this year that number is expected to be 10 billion calls more. >> the robocall problem in the u.s. is an epidemic. >> reporter: but most alarming says alex quilici who runs the blocking company youcall.com are the number of spam calls that are actually scam calls. of the four billion robocalls made in august, nearly 1.billion of them were scams. next year some estimates nearly half of all robocalls will be scam calls. >> we're calling you from an investigation team of irs. >> reporter: quilici's company
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makes an app that tells robocallers your number is out of order. >> you have reached a number that is disconnected or no longer in service. >> reporter: tricking them into leaving you alone. but he says technology also enables robocallers to be ever more efficient. >> it's so easy to go make an enormous number of robocalls to people. so if i'm a scammer, i can go annoy seattle for $500. >> reporter: and if you send out enough lines, someone will bite. >> you will be taken under custody by the local cops. >> you get a call where it says it's the irs, you got to pay us today or we're going to go to your work tomorrow or arrest you in front of your kids. if you think you might owe money, it's a really compelling scam. u.s. marines staged a rescue mission when a nursing home just outside their military base went up in flames.vid rtinatto. >>eporter:he st from a senioling anthe rines came
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>> these are our neighbors. they needed help. we had to act. >> reporter: the fire was about 200 yards from their small outpost in downtown washington. when they got there, a construction worker told them all they needed to know. >> he yelled there is more people in there. and that's when the marines decided we needed to go get them. >> i don't think there was really any thought to it. it was just saying we need to get these people out of here before anything serious happens. and just the instincts kicked in to go. >> reporter: did you have any firefighting equipment, any breathing masks or anything? >> no, sir. >> reporter: there were firefighters there of course and residents of the neighborhood as well. but safe to say the marines were the youngest and fittest, which mattered because some of the residents were trapped on the fourth floor. >> it was a pretty bad fire if you're on the top floor. some paralyzed, immobile people in there. >> we actually picked people up as had the wheelchairs at the exit or put them in the litter outside the building after we carried them down four flights. >> reporter: all 190 residents got out alive with only six sent to the hospital.
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marines have a saying, no better friend, no worse enemy. in this firefight, they proved the best of friends. david martin, cbs news at the marine barracks annex in marine barracks annex in wash our dad was in the hospital. marinebecause of smoking. wash but we still had to have a cigarette. had to. but then, we were like. what are we doing? the nicodermcq patch helps prevent your urge to smoke all day. nicodermcq. you know why, we know how. i'm about to pop a cap of "mmm fresh" in that washer with unstopables in-wash scent boosters by downy. ah, it's so fresh. and it's going to last from wash to wear for up to 12 weeks. right, freshness for weeks! downy unstopables. for a fresh too feisty to quit. and now try downy unstopables with the original scent of tide
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this is the cbs overnight news. >> exactly one year ago today, the people of puerto rico were dealing with a full force of hurricane maria. the category 4 storm knocked out power across the entire island, washed out roads and bridges, and flooded neighborhoods. about 3,000 people were killed by the storm and its aftermath. our own david begnaud was standing outside when maria made landfall. >> the winds are ferocious right now, gusting above 120 miles per hour. >> david's been following the recovery efforts for the past year, and he's here to preview his new documentary.
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>> our team started working on this documentary some time around the spring. it was driven by the fact that after all the reporting we had done, one to two minutes on television, it just didn't seem like enough to convey how bad things really were. we saw an unbelievable struggle and a determination to be heard. ♪ >> reporter: puerto rico is a commonwealth of the united states, so its residents are american citizens, and they can relocate without any restrictions. it's estimated that nearly half of the people who have left the island so far are under the age of 24, and that's a demographic that is the lifeblood of any lar forc but despite that, we met some residents that believe it's still possible for puerto rico to get back on its feet. >> nice to meet you. >> how you? >> i like your gray hair.
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finally, somebody else is young with gray hair. >> reporter: this group of inspiring young professionals and artists believe that right now may be puerto rico's best chance to reshape this island for the better. >> about seven days after the storm, somebody said to me maria may be the best thing to happen to puerto rico. >> that's a very bold statement. >> reporter: it shocked me the hear that. you think it's true? >> i think it's true. >> we have gotten stronger. if anyone had any doubts that puerto ricans are struggling on their own, this is a country that has been fighting for its freedom forever. it's unveiled that, you know, that truth. >> reporter: what does it mean to be puerto rican? >> puerto rico is a colony of the united states, so you can't separate that. it's part of you were born in a colonized country. in the context of maria, it's about realizing that you're on ol r own, thawo do the
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your country won't do the work. >> reporter: would you rather be an independent country? >> oh definitely. >> definitely. >> definitely. >> >> reporter: all you have? >> yes. >> reporter: but the u.s. has already committed close to $50 billion, right? so it's huge. >> a lot of people contributed money towards puerto rico and its recovery. where's the money? we still have people without power. or potable water for that matter. >> a lot of the technology we take for granted these days was actually created by the u.s. military from weather satellites to the internet to siri, it all came from the defense advanced research projects agency or darpa. kylie attwood has that story. >> in red, i've immediately been alerted there is a threat over there. >> reporter: this is a ghostbusters rig on a real life mission. >> if that was a 55 gallon drum full of ammonium nitrate, that
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would be a very big blast. >> reporter: today american soldiers must be inches away to identify a chemical warfare agent or a homemade bomb. but by next year they'll be able to do that from as far as 100 feet a way. >> any chemical that is a threat to a soldier, we try to detect it first. >> reporter: ed daughterry's question is backed by darpa. >> the biggest threat right now is probably homemade explosives you. think of fertilizer, that's what they're using today in afghanistan to try and blow up our soldiers. >> reporter: with the help of darpa, the goal is to shrink this 30-pound backpack into a hand-held device. >> darpa is really an engine inside the defense department, challenging our military services to think differently. >> reporter: steven walker is darpa's director. >> it's important for darpa to understand the technology, to then be able to explain it to our war fighters and our policymakers, and not be surprised by its use or misuse by a pier adversary.
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>> reporter: darpa helped create the internet, unmanned aerial drones, prosthetic limbs and siri. it was created in 1958 in response to the earth shattering launch of sputnik by the soviet union. america was surprised when the russians launched sputnik. do you think we'll ever see something like that happen again where the u.s. is caught off guard? >> it's hard to predict the future. but darpa program managers come the work every day with their hair on fire to prevent that surprise. and the way we found to do that over the year is to create it. >> reporter: by a team of mad scientists like anne fisher. >> we're driven by crazy, that's for sure. >> reporter: how can you be just a step back from crazy? so we can take a risk and see what we can do in terms of making that risk raelizable. i think of this as my way to service to national security. >> reporter: darpa is also working on how to shrink mini robots like this into a size smaller than a human fingertip, hoping they could save lives during recovery efforts,
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detecting sign was life underneath the rubble of collapsed buildings. first, they are to prove their strength. >> we'd like to have them compete in a rock pile competition or a biathlon competition where we will have them traverse a course. >> reporter: and these drones are being developed to 1/2 get on their own. the lines here show the brain mapping a course. >> they're about to go up, find a second story window, go through the second story window, explore the entire second floor, find a staircase, descend the staircase and go out through the front door, all on its own. >> this is pretty sneaky. >> we prefer to think of it as intelligent. >> reporter: drone engineers say their main competition comes from china. >> they're challenging us in different domains where we used to have a significant lead, and it's more of a competition now. >> reporter: and what do you say to those who believe that the u.s. has already fallen behind in the technology realm? >> i'm not as negative. i think -- i think we still got a lot to offer.
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>> reporter: are they wrong? >> i would say they don't know everything that's going on. we're being challenged, no question in certain areas. but i see what we're doing at darpa in all areas, and i'm pretty hopeful that we're going pretty hopeful that we're going to continue to ♪ discover magnum double cherry truffle. and rich belgian chocolate. ♪♪ take pleasure seriously. ♪♪ about the colonial penn program. here to tell you if you're age 50 to 85, and looking to buy life insurance on a fixed budget, remember the three p's. what are the three p's? the three p's of life insurance on a fixed budget are price, price, and price.
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so-called wellness communities. manuel bojorquez paid a visit to one such neighborhood outside orlando, florida. >> reporter: for the foote family, every day can feel like a vacation, with time for 6-year-old charlie and 8-year-old jacob to splash around at the pool and play at the park. >> i lived about ten minutes away from here. we didn't know our neighbors. and i had two little boys. and i wanted them to play and to socialize, and i never -- i never found that. so when i looked for a new house, i said to my husband, i really want a place that has a community feel. >> reporter: the place natalia and her husband michael decide on was lake nona in orlando, one of the latest successes in wellness real estate. the entire 17-square-mile development is designed to optimize healthy living through amenities and events. how do you think life would have been for you, your husband and the boys had you not moved here? >> i definitely wouldn't have had free yoga. i probably wouldn't have been open to meditation.
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the boys, it wouldn't be as easy to just have ready made friends. >> reporter: here yoga and meditation classes are free, and community events ranging from gardening to live music encourage neighbors to bond. there are many communities where people don't know their neighbors. >> right. >> right. >> we run a thousand events. that's how we make a difference, by getting people together, providing a venue for people to do that and then the people do all the work. >> reporter: tavistock development's president says 14,000 residents have moved into these homes which can be customized to improve health. >> this is the shopping list review screen. >> reporter: nearly 11% of residents work in the community at what's become known as medical city. the 650 acres are home to two hospitals, two university campuses, and biomedical research facilities. as opposed to a traditional community where you build the houses and then you get the school and then you get the hospital, this is in many ways
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the reverse of that? >> yeah. we had a golf course, but it was pretty modest in the grand scale of this whole place, and then we got jobs, and we had these institutions come. and then we went into more housing. and now we're actually focused on the retail. so one of our big things right now is creating this town center and a retail environment. and it's part of the point to give people a place where they can walk to the store, to the restaurant and not get in a car necessarily? >> 100%. we call that walkability is a neo urban environment. so a new urban environment. it's kind of the best of urban with suburban. >> it's a lot easier to work from home when your child is going to day care across the street. >> reporter: for nearly a quarter of residents, the stress of commuting is nonexistent. they work from home thanks to gigabit internet with speeds 200 times faster than the u.s. household. >> you go to school here from
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pre-k to graduate school without leaving the property in public education. there is jobs here. there is great housing choices from apartments all the way through to multimillion-dollar houses. so, you know, there really is something really here for everybody. >> reporter: most people think of orlando, they think theme park. >> yeah. >> reporter: and lakes. are you looking to rebrand the city in a way? >> in any place, especially like orlando that's the most visited place on the globe. so we're not looking to take away from any of that. i think what we're doing is we're working on the other part, the second half to the story, which is the university, education, jobs. >> reporter: families like the footes are participating in a multigenerational study that looks at the benefits of active lifestyles that may be part of the reason lake nona has gotten endorsements from some big names in the health and wellness realm. >> well-being is number one trend in the world. it correlates with everything that happens in society, including crime rates and quality ohiocial unre >> reporter: integrative medicine pioneer deepak chopra
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often visits the community for a health forum that brings industry leaders together each year. he also offers a customized version of his health app to lake nona residents. >> we are creating a city or a community of well-being, and this is happening now. it's futuristic, but i think this will be the trend everywhere soon. >> reporter: according to the global wellness institute, the international wellness real estate industry was valued at $134 billion last year. the u.s. has been a pioneer with over 350 communities that revolve around reducing stress. the industry will likely grow to $180 billion globally by 2022. >> this is something where we invite companies to come here. >> reporter: with jim leading the way, lake nona is cashing in on the trend. that soon to be built town center will boast four million square feet of shopping, hotels space. for the foote family, it's all
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(laughter) halloween time is back in disneyland and disney california adventure parks! a new school year is well under way, and future a lot of kids the return to class is less about fun and friends and more about fear and anxiety. dana jacobsen found one school, though, in north carolina where a simple note from home can make all the difference for a kid having a bad day. >> reporter: anyone who remembers middle school knows the difficulty of balancing school work, peer pressure, and growing pains. are kids ever mean? >> yeah. >> i'm curious what the connection is between the characters. go ahead. >> reporter: seventh grade candidate his students' parents to write written notes to bridge the anxiety by bridging the
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barrier between school and home. >> this is an activity that helps to bring down that barrier a little bit and bring parents into the classroom a little bit and show the child that we understand you need support in a lot of different ways. >> reporter: what did you think when you saw this idea of writing a note to your child? >> i thought it's a fun idea, but then when i saw what my wife and which were putting down on the card and thinking through what impact this could have for my daughter when she is having a bad day, and hopefully she would like hearing from us at home. >> dear marcus, this card says i am so happy for you, which might seem funny on a day that isn't the best. >> knowing that he was going to get this card and that i was going to have the opportunity to say something to him that i probably wouldn't have, it's just really special to me. >> you shine, son, and your dad i love you forever. mom and dad, xoxo. >> reporter: how does that make es m fl very supported. >> i think it's very thoughtful and it really tells me a lot about that teacher and how he
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sees the kids, not just as a student, but he sees them as a whole. >> reporter: this school's emphasize on language diversity is reflected in the notes these children receive from their parents. 13-year-old carmen escalante's mother wrote her note the spanish. why does that mean so much to you, sweetie? >> because she wrote it with love and it says you always count on me, and you have to fight hard for what you want. >> reporter: why did it matter that it was from their parents and maybe in a different language or calling them by a nickname? >> i knew that at that moment when they really needed a boost that they would bo hear it in their parents' voice, and that it would feel like it was their parents speaking into their ear and telling them what they needed to hear. >> no matter what happens today, he will always love you and be there for you. my hug is waiting for you when you get home. >> reporter: how does that make you feel? >> yeah, i almost cried. >> hmm i'll have to try that
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that's the overnight news for this friday. for some you have, the news continues. or others, check become a little later for the morning news, and of course cbs this mo it's friday, september 21, 2018. this is the "cbs morning news." the woman who's accusing supreme court nominee brett kavanaugh of assault says certain conditions need to be met before she testifies. michael cohen is cooperating. president trump's former attorney has been collaborating with special counsel robert mueller. and breaking a losing streak. the cleveland browns celebrate a victory and fans enjoy free beer.
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