tv CBS Overnight News CBS November 7, 2018 3:12am-4:01am PST
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ur hair loss, you kinda feel like it's not manly. for a long time, that's how i felt. but here's the thing, i guarantee that the moment you actually do something about your hair loss and come to hair club, the moment you see yourself with hair again, you'll wish you'd done it sooner. i took one afternoon off work and walked into hair club with a growing bald spot, and walked out with a full head of hair, feeling young again. xtrands really was the perfect solution for me, but, that's me. your hair loss might be a little more advanced, in which case, xtrands plus is your answer, or you may find that a topical solution or laser technology is right for you, or even hair transplantation. until you come in to hair club and have your free hair analysis, it's just guesswork. hair club eliminates that guesswork. you've got an entire team on your side, helping you every step of the way. here's how you can get your free hair analysis at a hair club near you.
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- [narrator] with over 900 experts across north america, and backed by 40 years of tested and proven results, hair club provides exclusive technologies and proven solutions for every stage of hair loss and every hair loss problem. just call for your free information kit and dvd at no obligation. get the facts about our full range of tested and proven solutions. this vital new information endorsed by prominent physicians can change your life. pick up the phone right now and we'll rush it to you for free. as an added bonus, we'll also give you for free, a private hair analysis worth $150. we'll identify your specific need, so there's no guesswork, customize a solution that is right for you, and back it up with our ironclad 100% satisfaction guarantee. if you are not 100% satisfied with the option you choose, hair club will apply your initial purchase price to any of our proven hair loss solutions.
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- at hair club we understand what it's like to lose your hair, and we understand what's it like to get it back, and we would like you to have that experience. hair club is uniquely positioned to treat hair loss because we offer a variety of solutions. this is why it's important to come in to hair club and have your unique, individual situation evaluated. - [narrator] call now for your free information kit and dvd, and your free hair analysis worth $150, all backed up by our ironclad 100% satisfaction guarantee. this is a limited time offer, so call today. look younger, feel younger, with hair club. (uplifting pop music) - for men, it can be embarrassing to admit that you have hair loss, or that your hair loss even bothers you. for women, the problem of hair loss can be devastating.
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- it was sort of... it was like a scar, almost, right? you can see it and there wasn't any way for me to cover it up. i did try extensions and it was a nightmare. the glue really stuck to my hair and it pulled my hair out, and that was the first and last time i ever used extensions. i thought, "okay, well what could i do next?" and so i went online, i did some research, and i found hair club. and hair club had so many options, but i really liked xtrands because it was chemical free, it was natural, and it was easy. i just was astonished. and i was always afraid to pull it back, but now i can pull it back and i don't feel self conscious about it. i mean, i could just wear it in a ponytail and i just feel so comfortable. i feel young and vibrant, and i think that's what any woman wants to feel.
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- [narrator] did you know most people have 100,000 scalp hairs that follow a natural growth cycle? and on average, you lose between 50 and 100 hairs each day. whatever your cause of hair loss, from pattern baldness, to stress, hormones, even styling product use, we'll customize the right proven solution to your specific need, and back it up with our 100% commitment to satisfaction. if you're not 100% satisfied with the option you choose, hair club will apply your initial purchase price to any of its other proven hair loss solutions. - with hair club, you have 40 years of success with teams of experts all across the country, where we're all here to help you realize you can get your hair back too. - just absolutely come in, there's nothing that you have to lose. it's a free consultation. we're here to help you, you're gonna meet someone like me, hopefully you think that i seem nice.
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i'm here to help you, that's my job, it's to be there for you. - if you're bothered by your hair loss, come on in, find out what your options are. the only thing you have to lose by waiting is more hair. - the combination of a stressful job being a police officer, bad weaves, bad braids, chemical treatments that would burn my scalp, it was a perfect recipe for devastating hair loss. i wanted to fix it, i wanted to hide the hair loss. so of course, i would continue to braid, but braiding the hair was making it worse. i'm causing stress on the roots, causing the folicles to die. weaving, trying to cover the problem again, but covering the problem was making the problem worse. i felt helpless and hopeless, i didn't know what to do. and discovering hair club is a dream come true. i look at myself now, it's given me back my youth, that's what i love to think.
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it's giving back my youth. it's taken years off my life, and it's fantastic, and i can't be more thankful. - there is a reason hair club has been in business for 40 years. there is a reason they're so trusted. it's because they only use solutions that have been tested and proven. technologies that have been fda cleared. new aesthetic solutions like xtrands and xtrands plus that not only restore your confidence, but they're not a source of shame themselves because they're so undetectable and so advanced. most importantly, the folks at hair club understand the nature of hair loss, that you can't solve a personal problem with an impersonal solution. it takes the analysis by your hair loss expert, and the experience of your stylist to customize the right solution for you. this was me before going to hair club, and this is me by the end of my visit. a same-day transformation thanks to xtrands.
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hair club had an answer for me, and they'll have an answer for you. call and set up your free hair analysis right now. - i wish i woulda done this 10 years earlier than i did. - now i look in the mirror and i just can't believe that's me. - i feel like, it's like i have a new lease on life. - [narrator] whether you have receding hair, thinning hair, or advanced hair loss, it's a harsh reality. hair loss adds years to your appearance, but now you can change that with hair club, the number one customized hair loss solution provider in north america. hair club is dedicated to giving you more hair and more confidence, so you look younger. - i'm 52, and i look better now than i did when i was in my forties. - i look better today than i did at 40. - i love it, i really do, it has changed my outlook on life. - [narrator] at hair club, we understand that coping with hair loss can be difficult, but finding the right solution should never be. with over 900 experts across north america, and backed by 40 years of tested and proven results,
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hair club provides exclusive technologies and proven solutions for every stage of hair loss and every hair loss problem. just call for your free information kit and dvd at no obligation. get the facts about our full range of tested and proven solutions. this vital new information endorsed by prominent physicians can change your life. pick up the phone right now and we'll rush it to you for free. as an added bonus, we'll also give you for free, a private hair analysis worth $150. we'll identify your specific need, so there's no guesswork, customize a solution that is right for you, and back it up with our ironclad 100% satisfaction guarantee. whether you're looking to stop hair loss in its tracks, add more volume, a little extra coverage, or complete crown coverage, hair club has the answer. - at hair club, we understand what it's like to lose your hair, and we understand what it's like to get it back, and we would like you to have that experience.
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hair club is uniquely positioned to treat hair loss because we offer a variety of solutions. - i am so much more confident. i feel so sexy with my hair. - when i looked in the mirror for the first time, it was like, "oh my god, why did i wait so long to do this?" - this whole planet has become very conscious about appearance, and i think that if you are conscious about your appearance and it bothers you, do somethin' about it. - [narrator] call now for your free information kit and dvd, and your free hair analysis worth $150, all backed up by our ironclad 100% satisfaction guarantee. this is a limited time offer, so call today. look younger, feel younger, with hair club. (uplifting pop music)
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severe storms in the south disrupted voting today in isolated districts where paper ballots replaced electronic voting machines. in tennessee, one woman was killed when a tornado ripped her home apart. tornadoes also reported in louisiana, mississippi and alabama. overnight there is a deluge in tallahassee, florida, tonight. the body of army national guard major brent taylor returned to u.s. soil overnight. as we reported last night, taylor, the mayor of north ogden, utah, was murdered saturday by an afghan soldier he was training. in a facebook post, he urged
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she is too young to run for public office and not even old enough to vote. but she is already a big winner this election day. here's chip reid. >> reporter: instead of those run of the mill "i voted" stickers. voters in culpepper county, virginia, were rewarded with the artistry of natalie nicholson all of 9 years old. >> i wanted to do the american flag and virginia, so i said why not just put it altogether so then i just did american flag
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virginia in the middle and in the middle of virginia "i voted." >> reporter: in a contest open to 4th graders her design won the most votes in the county. james is the director of elections. >> there was no one close. she did a good job. >> i'm pretty sure i know why. >> reporter: why? >> i'm sure my mom was the only one who went to her friends and was like, vote fortunately. >> reporter: it helps to have a good campaign chairman, right? >> uh-huh. >> reporter: and your mother was a good campaign chairman. "i voted" stickers have been around since the 1980s to encourage people who haven't voted to do so. there's no hard evidence it works, but natalie hopes her design will give them inspiration. do you think it's important for people to vote? >> i think it's very important for people to vote so they have a sane government. >> reporter: just nine years old, but already teaching us timeless lessons about democracy. chip reid, cbs news, culpepper, virginia. >> that is the overnight news for this wednesday.
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for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back later. for the morning news and "cbs this morning," from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm jeff glor. i wanted to change the way things are going. >> it's a watershed moment in american history. >> i'm very concerned about women's issues in general. >> gun rights, abortion, border. >> education and health care, that's it. >> we are american. our hearts bleed red, white and blue. >> change is coming to washington. the democrats have won back the house of representatives. and with that will come the likely return of nancy pelosi as speaker of the house. but the republicans will keep control of the senate. the president tweets, tremendous success tonight, though for the first time he will have to deal
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with one chamber of congress run by the opposition party. major garrett is at the white house. major? >> reporter: so, good evening. this coming democratic majority of the house now been officially recognized by president trump through a phone call, we are told, by a prominent aide to nancy pelosi. 11:45 eastern time, president trump called nancy pelosi congratulated her on what will become a house democratic majority when the new congress convenes in 2019. and said he noted in her remarks, her call for bipartisan ship. that is the first olive branch extended by president trump to the incoming likely speaker of the house, nancy pelosi, second time for her. and it suggests a dynamic that is at least in flux, as president trump as you noted, norah, now will for the first time have to confront a hostile house majority that was not -- that will not embrace his agenda, will take its oversight responsibilities according to pelosi, much more seriously than republicans did, which means
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investigations, possibly this white house, possibly of cabinet officials, more aggressive than republicans pursued. pelosi would say they didn't pursue them at all and democrats will. that's one front to watch. one other thing to keep in mind, there is going to be a lame duck congress when congress returns, still under republican control. that may mean revitalizing a tax cut because the house republicans passed that right before this election, senate republicans may try to do that. that may be one of the last things president trump, with a republican congress still inclined in his agenda direction, may try to accomplish before democrats take over because the president knows another tax cut from the house democrats that he enfavors is probably not going to happen. >> all right, major garrett there at the white house. a senate race we won't know the results of tonight is mississippi. this is going to be a historic election. mike espy might look familiar. he was agriculture secretary under bill clinton. now he is vying to become the
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first black republican elected to mississippi since reconstruction. but it looks like it will head to a runoff gwen him and the current senator cindy hyde smith. let's take a look at arizona. that race, boy, awfully tight. still waiting for a lot of the vote to come in there in arizona, which will send the first woman to united states senate. there are two women, both ironman try athletes, super stars, strong bases, one to watch, and as paul i reid has reported from arizona, it may take a vote before that is fully in from maricopa county. and in maine. senator angus king is expected to win reelection to the senate. one more. nevada, let's take a look at that because jacky rosen is in a toss-up race at this point with incumbent senator dean heller who is considered the most vulnerable republican in the
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u.s. senate. she has called him senator spineless for his switching of positions there. and democrats are saying they were able to get out the vote, but it is still a toss-up at this hour according to cbs news's current estimate. jeff pegues as well. he spent some time at the department of homeland security looking for any signs of foreign interference in the election. jeff, we heard so much about this concern, about the russians and the chinese. what's happening tonight? >> well, yeah. one word we haven't talked about tonight is cyberattacks. you know, there has been this concern over the last couple of years since 2016 of the possibility of a cyberattack interfering with an election like this one. and so since 2016, the department of homeland security, fbi, intelligence agencies and law enforcement agencies across this country, both state and local, have been working to secure these elections and so far today, what we are being told by d.h.s. officials, they have not seen an uptick in any
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scanning or probing activity related to elections systems across the country. so that's good news. they are also saying they are not seeing the same level of attempts at interference that they saw in 2016 from the russians. so that's good news as well. and so they have these command centers set up across the federal government looking for signs of malicious activity. and so far, norah, they have not seen it. >> all right, jeff pegues, thank you. bob schieffer joins us now at the table, covering his 25th election here at cbs news. >> how great is that? >> i know. >> lucky us. >> proud to be here. proud to be anywhere. >> the cbs -- hey. [ laughter ] >> feeling okay, bob? >> i'm feeling fine. a it's goi >> it's going to be a long night. well, you've been here, you've seen so many of these elections. president trump has a great economy yet he didn't really run on this economy. >> this is the thing that is just dumfounded most people in
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politics. i mean, every president when he's presiding over a good economy, first wants to take absolute and complete credit for it. nothing happened before he got there had anything to do with it, and yet the president has a legitimate right to talk about how good the economy is right now. about unemployment being so low. and yet he has chosen to talk about those invaders that he calls them, those children, barefoot kids marching up toward the border. >> he said the economy was not exciting. he said it was not exciting. >> well, i think if you have a job or don't have a job, if you don't have one and you get one -- >> that's exciting. >> you said the referendum is not only a referendum on president trump, it's a referendum on us, the american people. >> and what it is and what it tells us is this country is still deeply divided. i know that's going to be bulletin information when i tell you that, but it is.
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and we knew that going in, and now -- you know, when you stop and think about what's happened here, it pretty much came out the way the pollsters told us it was going to come out. i wasn't sure i believed them, but, norah, i wanted to wait and see. we didn't think that the democrats probably were going to take the senate. >> that's right. >> they didn't. and we thought there was a good chance that they would take the majority in the house, and they did. >> they did. >> look, they took the majority in the house and think about what else is on the president's agenda, and that's changing things around in his own house, the white house. we're going to see a lot of people coming and going. jeff sessions is expected to be replaced at some point. rod rosenstein, his name has also been discussed. so he will be making some personnel changes that could impact the way congress -- the way the senate reaktcts as well. >> all right. much more ahead right here on cbs.
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>> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." >> welcome back to the overnight news. i am nikki battiste. election day is behind us and although some of the races are still too close to call, there is some other news out there. in new york city, jury selection resumes today in the trial of the infamous mexican drug lord known as el chapo. more than two dozen jurors have already been dismissed. some after they told the judge they feared for their lives if selected. joaquin guys m joaqu joaquin guzman is thought to have led the largest drug lord in the world.
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he oversaw hundreds of murders, kidnappings and other violent acts. from the moment he set foot on u.s. soil, joaquin el chapo guzman, the feared ex-boss has seemingly been surrounded by federal agents wherever he goes. jurors will get a taste of that if they are selected for his trial. u.s. marshals will escort them to and from the courthouse every day for their own safety. >> these jurors are going to be protected in a way that is highly unusual. >> reporter: cbs news legal analyst says the names of his jurors are being kept a secret to foil any hit men and prevent bribes. >> no one will know their names. they won't know their addresses, their occupations, this will not become information for the public or certainly not the drug cartel. >> reporter: on monday a potential juror was dismissed after she told the judge, what scares me is that guzman's family will come after jurors
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and their family. another said, i'm nervous. others were asked if they had watched popular netflix shows about drug trafficking like el chapo. >> the biggest problem with illegal money is the trail that it leaves. >> reporter: a woman who watched narco was dismissed. they increased security measures create an unfair impression he is a violent man. he has pleaded not guilty to 17 counts of drug smuggling and money laundering. >> he's a mythical figure at this point. and if you read the books, the many books that have been written about him, even by the agents in the case, they even discuss it. they don't know what was real and what wasn't real. >> reporter: guys man famously escaped from mexican prisons twice, including once in 2015 by riding a motorcycle through a mile-long tunnel. he was recap toured six months later and then extradited to the u.s. to prevent guzman from escaping again, marshals shut down parts of the brooklyn bridge when he was moved from his manhattan cell for all his pretrial
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hearings. >> no one wants to take the chance that something out of a mission impossible movie happens where suddenly a helicopter comes down and people come out of the water and the next thing we know is that el chapo is gone. that he that is not going to happen during this trial. >> from the streets of new york to the snows of mount kilimanjaro, it's the tallest mountain in africa more than 19,000 feet. one of america's wounded warriors made it to the summit on prosthetic legs. adam lost his legs in afghanistan. on top of that, he had never even climbed a mountain before. jan crawford reports on his amazing feat. >> reporter: for anyone it's a soaring achievement. >> amazing, it's amazing. >> reporter: but for adam keys, the summit of mount kilimanjaro was only part of the climb. >> when i'm walking, i only look down. i don't look up.
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>> reporter: a few years ago, taking even one step was unimaginable. >> on july 14th, 2010, was the day i was injured. >> reporter: he was 26 years old, an army para trooper on patrol in afghanistan when his truck parked by a road side bomb. >> as soon as i opened the door the i.e.d. went off. for a while it was touch and go. >> reporter: doctors gave keys less than a 1% chance of survival. but to his mother that meant he had a chance. >> she came in and the doctor said you know who this is? i said yes, that's my mother. she started crying. i'm getting teared up right now. she just looked at the doctor and said, i told you. so, it was one of those things. >> reporter: what did she know about you that they didn't? >> i guess mostly i am determined. when i set my goal to something, i want to get it done. to prove people wrong.d i like - >> reporter: months went by before keys was strong enough to
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learn the other soldiers hadn't made it. >> and that hit me very hard. ifr i felt like i let my guys down because, you know, you're a team over there and you -- some guys looked up to me. and not for much reason. i didn't have the rank. but i was always determine. >> reporter: you were a leader. >> i tried to be. i always wanted to be. that's for sure. >> reporter: enduring over 100 surgeries, keys was determined to survive for them. >> i coded six times. i should have been dead. by any stretch of the imagination i should have been dead but i was given a second chance. >> reporter: it was a journey of hope and determination. he learned to talk and walk again. and decided he would squeeze the most out of that second chance. eventually he was competing on the hand cycle in marathons. before turning his sights incredibly to the peaks of ki kilimanjaro. >> it's crazy. >> it is. it's ambitious.
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>> reporter: climbing mount kilimanjaro, i mean, most people with all four limbs in the world could never do that. >> well, that's a little bit of drive. again, i use that as motivation to myself. if it was easy, everybody would do it. >> reporter: he saw the climb over 19,000 feet as a message to others. you're pushing yourself to the limb its to show people that they can do it. >> i am. if you have that obstacle in front of you, you can get over it. i'm shoehoping to show that you do it. it does take a lot of work. you have to lean on other people. >> reporter: his friend tyler, a medic, climbed alongside him and documented the trip for us. >> how you feeling? >> feeling great. to the top. >> reporter: a group of tanzanian guides became invested in his journey. they lifted his spirits during the hardest moments.
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they imagined it would be brutal. the outcome uncertain. >> whoa. >> don't worry, you are safe. >> reporter: but after five days of climbing on sore limbs followed by freezing nights, they reached the top. >> this is my unit in 2010. airborne all the way. >> reporter: and there at the summit, keys felt even closer to his fellow soldiers. >> and i'll leave a very special, my purple heart for everybody who has been in the service. we always appreciate it. >> reporter: his goal now, help others back home. >> welcome home, darling. >> thank you. >> so proud of you. >> thank you. it was a hell of a ride. >> reporter: and landing back in the u.s., news of his
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now that election day is finally over, you may want to take a drive out to the country and check out the turning leaves. connor knighton found a man with the camera who waits all year for this. >> reporter: as the weather cools and the leaves turn colors, the country lanes and lakes of new england turn into tourist hot spots. around $3 billion is spent over the course of a typical new england fall as visitors from all around the world head off in search of the most beautiful yellows and oranges and reds. knowing exactly where to go can be a challenge. >> yes, go back to the light, make a right. >> reporter: but it's an obsession for one colorful character. >> i've had people go, hey, you're jeff foliage. they actually recognize me. >> reporter: jeff's last name is really folger, but he goes by jeff foliage. and i would not be surprised if his veins run full of
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chlorophyl, more than anyone i have ever met. jeff. loves. leaves. >> my niche in life is the fall colors. it's such a little present. it's like christmas for me. i love unwrapping my presents and i'm running around new england, you know, finding all these wonderful colors out here. >> reporter: well, the presents at least are under a tree. here you have to find the tree. finding beautiful trees is folger's specialty. ever since he retired from the air force 15 years ago, he devoted his autumns to driving around the northeast with his wife lisa. he photographs and posts the locations of the most scenic spots on his website and facebook page so that he can share them with fellow fans of fall. >> i want to let everybody know where they can find the best locations. this is what new hampshire has to offer. maine has to offer. you know, vermont. rhode island. >> reporter: you don't work for the tourism bureau for any of
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those plasz. >> no. >> reporter: why is it important for you to share that in >> i like being helpful. >> reporter: he lives in salem, massachusetts, and can drive up to 5,000 miles in a season. > >> when you look at the news and stuff, they show broad bands of color. that doesn't tell the story. >> reporter: just because an area claims to have the best foliage, not every grove or hill is going to. jeff tries to be specific. go to this barn. or this overlook. >> it's over the bend. down the road a ways. you're going to go, wow! >> reporter: everyone is obsessed with finding peak color. folger included. for him the journey is just as fun. >> i like to say peak is more of a myth. it's really more about the experience of getting out in the woods, exploring, finding things that you really love, and you can take home the memories. >> reporter: folger has a thing
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for old churches and covered bridges. he can spend entire days wandering around a small town like north conway, new hampshire. >> i like to stop and really savor when i find these things. get a taste for it. i think that's the best way. >> reporter: and yet the clock is ticking. a few weeks dpr now, this will all look entirely different. >> oh, yeah, we're going to lose a thousand leaves off that tree overnight. the winds are right about 20, 30 miles an hour. >> reporter: there's one right there. a little bit of fall. it's happening. winter's coming. >> there you go. not that, no. >> reporter: folger has an amazing level of fall recall. part of the reason he takes pictures is so he can remember his favorite days long after the leaves have left. >> 2012, 2 october, 6:00 a.m., beaver pond in north woodstock, route 112, lost river gorge. and it was just a beautiful
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morning. the water on the pond there is perfectly still. and the reflection is just a mirror of everything on the hill. >> dr. stanley: remember this: cannot change the laws of god. when he has visited you in some form of adversity and he brings you through that, that's like he has increased the strength of the foundation of your life and
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many of the races in this midterm election were decided by young voters. some of them casting ballots for the first time. jamie yuccas spoke to students at the university of nevada las vegas. they told her why they voted and some told her why they didn't. ♪ ♪ >> my name is mikaela and i'm voting because where i'm from is texas is an extremely close race and i think every vote matters. >> my name is astoria and i'm voting because i want to be the change i wish to see in the world. >> my name is karla and i'm not
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voting because of my legal status. i've been here more than half of my life and i have no rights. >> my name is harrison and i'll be voting red in this midterm election because the government has gotten to be a little bit too swollen and there is too much government spending. we need to cut it down. >> my name is patricio. and i'm voting because i'm a naturalized citizen. i didn't have the opportunity to vote in the 2016 election and i want to use my new voice for those that don't have one. >> my name is -- i'm not voting because i didn't feel acknowledged in the last election. >> i'm in a lottery where we have a democrat kra ski and i give a dam. >> i don't feel passionate enough. >> i'm voting because voting is our super power. >> i'm not voting in the midterm elections because i'm just busy. >> hi, my name is cole and i'm voting to keep republicans in power because i want to show
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young people are conservatives. >> my name is ramon and i'm voting because we need to get trump out of here. >> my name is jude and i'm voting because it's my duty as a citizen and a human being to ensure the future for all people. >> my name is mattie and i'm voting because i'm from arizona and there is an open and contested senate seat and i want my voice to be heard. >> my name is avery and i'm voting to help those who have been disenfranchised and use my privilege for good. >> my name is christine and i'm voting because i want to protect the rights of so many women before me fought for. >> i'm david and i'm a proud voter. i'm voting because it's my duty as a citizen to vote and as an immigrant from afghanistan, we unfortunately don't have opportunities like this in certain countries. so if you're a citizen and you have the power to vote, please go out there and make a difference.
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>> that's the overnight news for this wednesday. check back with us a little later for the morning news and "cbs this morning." from thehe broadcacast center iw york city, i'm nikki battiste. it's wednesday, november 7, 2018. this is the "cbs morning news." power shift, democrats win control of the house in the midterm elections, but the gop holds on to the senate. a closer look at the changes in the political landscape. and, democrats with seats in the nat
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