tv CBS Overnight News CBS November 20, 2018 3:12am-4:00am PST
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speaker again of the house is in jeopardy. 16 democrats release the a letter today saying they plan to vote for new leadership. nancy pelosi could come up short of the number needed to win that post, which she held from 2007 to 2011. a cbs news poll out tonight finds 49% of democrats want pelosi to be speaker again. 40% prefer someone else. this is traditionally a big week for high school football. buttar many parents and kids a strong debate continues over the risks and rewards of the game. this season two high school football players have died of injuries sustained on the field. countless others have been
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concussed. for tonight's "eye on america" report, jericka duncan went to pennsylvania, where a family with a famous football name is split on whether to stay on the fie field. >> this is your chance to be one of the best teams. it's your time to battle for your brothers and your family. >> reporter: high school senior conor ditka, number 71, plays for the number 3 ranked football team in awful pennsylvania. and this sport hasn't been easy on his body. >> i've broken my left arm. i've broken both radius and ulna. i broke a bone, the skcaphoid i my hand. i've had stress fractures in my back. >> reporter: con sxr his younger brother timmy have been playing football since the seventh grade. it's in their dna.
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their dad played, and their great uncle was nfl hall of famer mike ditka. >> we love football in this family. in fact, we had to convert sam because she was not a football fan. but if you marry into this family you have to be. >> reporter: but this past summer timmy took a different route, like a growing number of american boys. he quit football. timmy's decision was prompted by a serious injury on the field when he was just 12 years old. >> and i get a phone call from the trainer saying your son has sustained a concussion on the field. >> wa what do you remember about that day? >> i remember falling, hitting my head, and being super dizzy. it was a delay in my thought process. sometimes my eyes wouldn't follow as fast where i was trying to look. >> he was out for about eight weeks, and then we sat down and talked about it. he seemed really emphatic about wanting to get back to it. >> reporter: with a doctor's clearance and the promise that he'd stop if he got another concussion, timmy got back in the game.
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but this year he stopped for good. focusing instead on a less punishing sport. >> i'd gone to nationals with my volleyball team. as my dad and i were in the airport on the way back, i looked at him and said, i think when we get home i'm going to quit football. i just don't want to take that risk. >> reporter: these days timmy isn't the only one choosing to watch from the sidelines. nationally, the number of boys playing high school football has dropped by roughly 72,000 since 2009, a 6.5% decrease. art walker has been the head football coach at north allegheny for 14 years. he says the size of his team, roughly 80 players, is down 25 players compared to six years ago. when you hear a parent talk about their personal concerns about their son getting injured on the field, what do you tell them? >> my son's a sophomore. and he's the smallest member of our football team. out of 82 kids he's the smallest
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one there is. i'm comfortable because of how my coaches teach and how my coaches coach them, to not put players in dangerous situations they don't have to be in. >> reporter: it's the conference semifinal game. conor's team is undefeated. do you wish your brother could have been out here with you? >> i do. i would have liked to have gone at least one year playing with him. it was a decision that was completely his own. >> you see how aggressive it can be. you say to yourself what? >> i'm happy that i'm not hurt. >> reporter: the tigers lost, ending their season. conor was injured in one of the final plays. the next morning x-rays confirm a broken hand, a reminder of the toll football can take. >> did you ever think twice about whether or not you should continue playing football? >> i did not ever think twice. i always wanted to just get back
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they are among the biggest annoyances of this age. robocalls. the government says it shares your frustration and is now forcing cell phone carriers to take action. anna werner tonight reports on one company's work to block scammers. >> this is susan with credit card relief. >> you qualify for a 75% savings. >> reporter: experts say by early next year nearly 50% of all cell phone calls will be scam robocalls. >> i knew the phone number. i could see that it was a scam, and i could send it away. >> reporter: at t-mobile vice president grant castle showed us his company's latest tool, an app called "name i.d." that allows users to block specific types of calls. everything from nuisance calls -- >> i have a business model that literally put $500,000 in my pocket. >> reporter: -- to political calls, even prison calls.
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>> so with this new app customers have better control over what they would like to see and what they don't want to see. >> reporter: but the fcc is also pushing companies to meet new standards known by the acronym shake and stir. it's a complicated process, but the result is a sort of digital fingerprint to show the people making and receiving the calls are real, not a scammer trying to spoof or imitate a phone number. >> our viewers are sitting there saying hello, this is not news, this has been driving us nuts for years. >> it's a difficult problem. every time we make an improvement the scammers make a change. so it's an arms race to see who can trick who. >> it's an arms race. >> it is an arms race. it's escalating. >> you will be taken under custody by the local cops. >> you just don't get the calls anymore -- >> reporter: aaron foss founded nomorobo, a robocall blocking app for phones. he says those new shake and stir standards are good up to a point. >> what it doesn't do is it doesn't say if that call is legal. it doesn't say anything about
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the content. it just says that that number is allowed to be called. so we're absolutely not going to solve the whole robocall problem. >> companies say they're working on it. if they dent move to address robocalls quickly enough they may face more pressure from lawmakers from both sides, some of whom file legislation to try to combat robocalls with a $10,000 fine per illegal call if they catch them. >> i think we got two here already in the middle of the broadcast. >> i'm sure you did. >> it's a mess, but good that they're working on it anna, thank you. still ahead here tonight, a partial shutdown at the like leather, skin is stronger when it's hydrated. but 9 out of 10 men don't get the hydration their skin needs. that's why dove men + care body wash has a unique hydrating formula ... to keep men's skin healthier and stronger.
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zzzquil pure zzzs. the u.s. today partially closed the busiest border crossing with mexico for several hours to install new security barriers. cars backed up in tijuana. there were protests there over the weekend by locals who are opposed to the migrant caravans from central america. 3,000 have already poured into tijuana hoping for asylum in the u.s. nissan's stock dropped almost 6% today after the company's chairman was charged with misusing company funds and underreporting his income. carlos ghosn is a huge figure in the auto industry, leading an alliance that includes mitsubishi and renault. a 17-year-old female race car driver spent seven hours in surgery today following this horrific crash in macau. sophia floersch of germany apparently clipped another car, then went airborne, and crashed through a fence.
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when you humble yourself under the mighty hand of god, in due time he will exalt you. hi, i'm joel osteen. i'm excited about being with you every week. i hope you'll tune in. you'll be inspired, you'll be encouraged. i'm looking forward to seeing you right here. you are fully loaded and completely equipped for the race that's been designed for you.
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tracey smith. >> reporter: this is mozzeria, ranked among the top pizza places in the city and one of the first to be entirely owned and operated by people who are deaf. >> thank you. >> ah. >> reporter: melody and russell stein opened the place in 2011, and it's been a foodie favorite from the start. their 900 degree wood-fired oven is the best they could find. and so is every ingredient. where does the cheese come from? >> we bring that from italy. >> reporter: oh, my goodness. >> and we also make some in house. >> reporter: and if that doesn't make you hungry, i don't know what will. noise isn't an issue here. and neither is communication. pointing at the menu works just fine. and you can even phone in a takeout order. that glowing green light on the wall signals an incoming call. an operator picks it up and translates your order in sign language via closed circuit tv. but this is about a lot more than serving hungry customers.
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how important is it to you to have an all-deaf staff? >> oh, it's very important. if a hearing person, say, doesn't work out here, they can find a job tomorrow, no problem, while all the deaf people here have to look for years and still can't find a job. that's when i decided i would have an entirely deaf team, even if they have no work experience. >> reporter: the critics, like the "san francisco chronicle's" food editor paolo lucchesi, have been kind. >> you can feel the love in the food. and that's -- and it's just simple, delicious food, the kind of food you just want on a wednesday night. >> reporter: what does that do to your heart? >> it's still hard to believe, but i wouldn't trade it for anything in the world. >> reporter: and that speaks volumes. tracey smith, cbs news, san francisco. >> that is the "overnight news" for this tuesday. for some of you thentues.otck b the morning news and "cbs this morning."
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from the broadcast center in new york city i'm jeff glor. ♪ >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." welcome to the "overnight news." i'm nikki battiste. a war of words is raging between president trump and a retired special forces admiral who led the raid that killed osama bin laden. admiral william mcraven describes the president's attacks on the media as the greatest threat to democracy in his lifetime. mr. trump calls the admiral an obama backer and a hillary fan who should have gotten bin laden years earlier. search teams in northern california continue to sift through the ashes of the , searching for remains of the nearly 1,000 people still missing. but with rain in the forecast it's a race help douse the
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flames but complicate recovery efforts. meg oliver reports. >> reporter: crews are scouring this scorched landscape to recover dna and identify the dead before the rain moves in. >> heavily, you know, ash and soot. and when the water turns -- you know, touches that, it kind of turns to sediment. so anything that we have or potentially have, you know, is going to be further buried and entombed by that. >> reporter: search teams are trying to find bathtubs or mattresses, likely places people would take cover when the fire left them no way to escape. with more than 40,000 people forced to flee the campfire, there are close to 1,00 inflate? >> that list is subject to fluctuati fluctuation, both up or down, as new information and data comes in. >> reporter: that's becaus names on the list. people who don't know they're on it and reunions that haven't been reported. as investigators dig into the cause of the campfire, pacific
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gas and electric has confirmed it had two power line failures the day the fire ignited. but in a statement the utility says in determining a public safety power shutoff it considers multiple factors including "strong winds, very low humidity levels, and critically dry vegetation. the forecasted conditions didn't meet the criteria." >> careful. >> reporter: back here at the recovery effort devastating news for 30-year-old chardonnay telly. last week cbs news was with her as she tried locate her father, richard brown. she had not heard from him since the fire struck. >> he's been through war and so many things, and there was a possibility he could have made it through. >> reporter: the remains of chardonnay's dad have now been found and identified. she says she doesn't think her father made it very farm home. nearly everyone in this area has suffered a horrible loss. this entire neighborhood burned to the ground.
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fema told us they are working to secure long-term housing for the thousands of people who lost their homes. but jeff, it is highly unlikely those trailers will arrive here by thanksgiving. between the camp fire in the north and the woolsey fire in the south there are nearly 7,000 firefighters manning the lines. over the last 13 months these brave men and women have had to battle five of the ten most destructive wildfires in california history. and it's starting to take a toll. demarco morgan reports. >> reporter: we have seen the devastating pictures coming out of paradise, but i want you to take a look at this right here. this was the home that once belonged to california fire captain joe chafis. you can see it's in complete ruins, you can barely make out the layout of the place. after speaking to firefighters yesterday many of whom have been fighting fires across the state for the past couple of months, this is proof that it's taking more than just a physical toll on their bodies. it's dinner time at this cal fire command center in chico, california. a chance for firefighters here
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to slow down. >> hi, baby. >> reporter: for chad farris it's a time to see his infant daughter's fth military last june, started the next day with liberty. and i've been going on fires ever since. >> reporter: farris is just one of the thousands of firefighters fighting fires across the state during a year when fires shoot through more than 1.5 million acres of land, an area larger than rhode island. >> fire season don't seem toned these days. >> reporter: ben holiday and joshua wilkins have been moving from fire to fire since june. >> we hit all the major fires in california and then figured, you know, come november we'd be done. it's a lot. you know, family life is very difficult. personal life is difficult. and just our personal well-being is stressed by the job we do. >> reporter: both men are from butte county, where the camp d community.
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>> we both -- everyone on our task force we're on has family here. the house is gone and whatnot. yeah, this one definitely hit home more than any fire i've ever been on, hands down. >> i pulled into our driveway and our house was on fire. >> reporter: cal fire captain joe chavis helped his wife and two young daughters evacuate before watching his home in paradise burn down. >> that was definitely hard to watch. and there's still a lot of feelings i need to deal with with that. i'm just glad to have my family whole. because there's a lot of families out there that are not whole right now. there's a lot of people that still haven't been found. knowing that there are people out there that don't have a family anymore, that hurts. >> reporter: we're so grateful for all of the firefighters out there risking their lives to save and protect all of us out here. and it is worth noting there are so many of them working around the clock. there are reportedly 1500 inmates, prison inmates also
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working in the field and they are reportedly being paid $2 an hour. but we are grateful, again grateful for everyone's job and sacrifice out here. germany says it will halt all arms sales to saudi arabia over the assassination of journalist jamal khashoggi. the cia and other intelligence services have concluded the killing was ordered by saudi crown prince mohammed bin salman. president trump says the crown prince told him he didn't do it. >> reporter: here in saudi arabia the country's leaders seem to be watching and waiting to see what president trump does next. the president is under pressure from congress, and if he now comes out and confirms that u.s. intelligence believes that crown prince mohammed bin salman was behind the killing of jamal khashoggi, that could be catastrophic for the current regime here. remember saudi arabia first denied it knew anything about jamal khashoggi's disappearance. then it finally admitted he died inside the saudi consulate in istanbul, it claimed in a
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fistfight. then last week there was a new version of events from the prosecutor here who said a team was sent to turkey to bring khashoggi to saudi arabia by force if necessary but then a team leader decided to kill him with a lethal injection. we were at a press conference here on thursday where the saudi foreign minister said the crown prince had been exonerated of any involvement. 11 people have now been indicted here. five of them could face the death penalty. those men presumably know the truth, including perhaps who ultimately gave the order to kill jamal khashoggi. and the fear is they could be put to death before they have a chance to tell the outside world what happened. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. ♪
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>> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." there's trouble brewing south of the border. more central american migrants are arriving in tijuana every day. they're hoping to cross into the united states. but they could have a long wait. and that's got some tijuana residents screaming mad. hundreds of mexicans tussled with local police. they want the migrants out of their city, claiming they bring garbage and crime. meanwhile, u.s. officials closed one of the twoedestrian crossings into southern california. with each day more migrants make it to mexico's side of the border. some have camped out in the shadow of the border fence. ill.
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instead she'll seek asylum at an official port of entry. she's part of a group of lgbt migrants who are among the early arrivals. many say they were persecuted in their home countries because of their sexual orientation or gender identity. earlier on the journey in southern mexico we met this transgender woman, who asked us to conceal her identity. she claimed she was targeted in honduras by gang members and last year more than a dozen armed men broke into her house and attacked her. >> she said she's been beat up and has a scar but doesn't like to show it because it traumatizes her more to show it. >> reporter: she says she fears for her life in honduras because gang members know where she lives and they have her photo. even if she makes it to the u.s. border and presents her asylum case, the odds are against her. more than 75% of asylum cases filed by central americans were denied from 2012 to 2017. that's not deterring this
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nicaraguan family we met in mexico. they're hoping to receive political asylum in the u.s. when we asked why, ivania marina rocha pointed to a newspaper. what is this? >> [ speaking foreign language ]. >> reporter: she says they're leaving nicaragua because of this and this is a newspaper. she says this is her family on the cover. she says her family supports those that are anti-president ortega in nicaragua and the president sees those against her as terrorists, that they have been persecuted. she says this is a photo of their house. she says the paramilitary shot at their house. she claims that pro-government forces opened fire on her 14-year-old son detonated a homemade bomb that lodged shrapnel in his leg. he now has to make the journey to the u.s. on crutches.
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>> [ speaking foreign language ]. >> reporter: he says he was with his friend and they started getting shot at and his friend pushed him down and his friend died. his friend got killed. >> [ speaking foreign language ]. >> reporter: when they retreated to the mountains, he said people helped take the shrapnel out with nail clippers. he thinks he still has some pieces still in his leg. they said "wanted" signs for the family were posted in town so, they left nicaragua, traversed guatemala, and eventually made it to southern mexico. they stayed there a month when word spread about a caravan approaching. where are you trying to go? >> [ speaking foreign language ]. >> reporter: the united states. she then looked into the camera and made a direct appeal. >> [ speaking foreign
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it's just two days till thanksgiving, a traditional celebration of the fall harvest. martha teichner went out harvesting with a renowned sioux chef. sioux as in a native american tribe. >> blackberries. >> i love blackberries. >> reporter: for me it was fun. >> yay. blackberries. >> and all this beautiful sage. >> reporter: but for chef shawn sherman, a member of the ogalala lacourta tribe. >> we're going to lay a little tobacco down first as a prayer and offering. >> reporter: foraging in the minnesota countryside. >> so this is milk weed. >> reporter: is like a spiritual return. >> that's a huge sunflower. >> we can actually cook that too. >> reporter: to a time when mative americans lived on the plants and animals that grew wild. >> you can steam, it boil it.
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>> reporter: across a country that was theirs. >> this is amazing. it's like a field of magic. >> yeah. it's a lot here. >> we're going to make a little bit of kind of a wild soup. >> reporter: sherman is on a mission, to celebrate and showcase native cuisine and give the past a future. >> you can throw a dart at a map of north america and wherever it lands is going to be culture, history, food, people, and flavor to play with right there. and so many stories to tell you can write a book. >> reporter: he's done just that. the sioux chef's indigenous kitchen. won this year's james beard award for best american cookbook. sherman spent a couple of decades cooking in fancy kitchens around minneapolis before deciding to apply what he knew to native foods. the sioux chef is the name of the catering company he started in 2014. >> it's fun to put artistry on
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the plate to make food look pretty but it's really about having these food pieces tell their story. we think about our parents and great-grandparents and the foods they ate. and for a lot of native american people who are removed from their foodways they started to lose a lot of those stories. >> reporter: when european settlers seized their lands. when their bison were killed and poverty corrupted their diet. >> so if you look at the epidemics we have in health crisis, on native reservations you see an immense amount of type 2 diabetes, obesity, heart deas, all these things based on a bad decide. >> it really shot me on a path to figure out what my lakota ancestral foods were. >> reporter: which is why sherman is taking his recipes for healthy traditional food to reservations, including the prairie island indian community southeast of minneapolis along the mississippi river, home to members of the dakota nation. >> just get what you can reach. >> just throw them in a bowl. >> reporter: this may not look like a political statement.
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enlisting kids from the tribe to help him gather and cook foods his ancestors ate. >> foods that can grow next year in the garden. >> reporter: but it is. he says he's decolonizing their diet. not on the menu, beef, chicken, refined sugar, dairy products, wheat flour. foods brought by european settlers. >> tonight we have bison with wild eronia berries we harvested. >> enjoy. >> reporter: shawn sherman's goal, not just to produce a healthy meal. but to feed the soul of a nation. >> what are you going to do to make a difference? [ cheers and applause ] >> vs. this chance to impais of poured into it. and i have a voice to help others share a voice. >> that feels pretty good.
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>> it teelz great. if you're your thanksgiving feast includes a little salad you may want to add a little balsamic figure. seth doan sampled some of the finest balsamic in all the world. where else? italy. ♪ >> reporter: in italy this is called the vendemia, or grape harvest. this lambrusco varietal won't become a red wine but something else which could take far longer to mature. >> balsamic vinegar truly begins in the vineyard. >> reporter: rolando beremendi is a chef, cookbook author and u.s. importer of artisanal italian foods. >> i think what's very important is the skin. you see how thick is the skin? it has all the tanins in there. >> and that gives it color. >> that gives it color. >> and flavor? >> as well as flavor. >> reporter: he introduced us to his balsamic supplier, francesco leonardi.
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normally, he explained, what's harvested today will become a good balsamic vinegar in 25 years. it's a long process. >> i don't think there's a more beautiful product in the whole world like balsamic vinegar. >> reporter: it's called the black gold of modena. this northern italian city that's also home to some other notable italian products. ferrari, lamborghini, and m masera maserati. balsamico can be a luxury product for the table. so valuable that historically it was used as a gift among noble families or as a wedding dowry. >> it was almost like you were exchanging dna. whfamisi ts, elainedow leonardi, they first pressed the grape juice, which is then heated for 24 to 36 hours and put in giant oak barrels for at least two
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years, where it ferments. then as it reduces in a process called trovazo it's siphoned into increasingly smaller barrels of different woods. >> mulberry. chestnut. ash. >> all these different types of woods. and they each give different flavor notes. >> yes. sort of each one of them will impart and leave a beautiful mark of flavor in the balsamic vinegar. >> reporter: leonardi let us sample a balsamic they've been aging for 100 years, which could retail for more than $1,000. >> inside this little barrel there's history of four generations pressed inside this balsamico. >> you need many generations at work because this takes so long to make. >> reporter: certainly giovani leonardi explained those secrets
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are passed on through generations. he added you can't make balsamic vinegar in a day. balsamic is so important to this part of italy that there's a giant sculpture drop of it sitting in a traffic circle. though clearly it's more common at the table. >> people are going to look at this and say this doesn't seem like the balsamic vinegar i buy in the store for $5 or $10. >> no, it's not. and just like, you know, you can buy a little fiat 500, you can buy a ferrari. right? this is a ferrari. another one is a fiat 500. >> reporter: which leonardi thinks may be best appreciated simply on a spoon. >> mm. to me it just coats my entire mouth with a feeling that no other product gives me. it's more than just a food. it's balsamico.
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the vietnam war is becoming a faded memory for many americans. but not for one soldier that steve hartman found on the road. >> reporter: inside a humble home in wendell, idaho on a shelf tucked behind this picture, john metzler keeps the letter that he says got him through the vietnam war. >> it's written by a girl in the sixth grade. >> you didn't know this girl? >> nope. >> reporter: john was a 23-year-old army helicopter gunner. >> when you got up in the morning you always wondered whether you would see the sun go down at night. >> reporter: and because he had such a deadly job in such a thankless war, that little girl's note mattered. it arrived on christmas day
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1970. and it simply read in part, "dear serviceman, i want to give my sincere thanks for going over to war to fight for us. the class hopes you will be able to come home." signed donna kay. obviously, it could have gone to any soldier. but john took it very personally. >> it's not just the letter, right? >> damn sure isn't. >> does it mean as much to you today as it did when you got it? >> yeah. in fact, i think it means more today than it did when i got it. >> because she said thank you. >> yeah. >> reporter: not long ago john even asked some family members to find this donna kay. but they couldn't. at least that's what they told him. she's actually alive and well and about to deliver a second thank you message. this one. in person. >> i remember writing the letter in the sixth grade. i was amazed that i could have the opportunity to write to a serviceman and maybe make his
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life a little simpler for a couple of minutes. >> you took this assignment seriously. >> oh, yeah. absolutely. >> reporter: and she continues to take it seriously. that's why she flew all the way from florida to surprise this unsuspecting soldier. >> you're real. >> yeah. >> you're real. >> reporter: john's anonymous girl in the letter now the friend before him. [ applause ] it has become almost cliche to thank a veteran for his or her service. >> i don't believe it. >> reporter: but says we still need to say the words because they're not only appreciated, sometimes they're desperate lly needed. >> i can't believe it. >> i'm here. >> reporter: steve hartman, on the road, in wendell, idaho. >> thank you. >> oh, it's my pleasure. >> thank you so much. [ applause ] >> and that's the "overnight news" for this tuesday. for some of you the news
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continues. for others check back with us a little later for the morning news. and of course "cbs this and of course "cbs this morning." captioning funded by cbs ♪ it's tuesday, november 20th, 2018, this is the "cbs morning news." a violent day. deadly shootings break out in several cities including chicago at a hospital. >> it was like pow, pow, pow. pow, pow, pow. pow, pow, pow, pow, pow. it was extremely loud and close. the death toll keeps climbing in california as the worst wildfire continues to burn. now the search for victims is running out of time ahead of a storm. if you're traveling for the thanksgiving holiday, get ready
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