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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  February 4, 2020 3:42am-3:58am PST

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is going to play well for biden at all. >> because he is the establishment? >> he is the establishment. even though he knows all the world leaders and, you know, i don't think that means as much as somebody that's an outsider here. >> reporter: bernie sanders is doing well in iowa. >> but i feel in howard county, it's still scary. go be sois i don't know how he'll do in iowa, but up here a moderate candidate is going to do well. >> i-18. >> reporter: the veterans calling out bingo numbers at the county fair ground seem to agree. all three of you voted for obama in 2012 and then switched to trump. >> yes. >> reporter: and all three are swifing back? >> i'm switching back. >> i'm switching back. >> that's what's at stake. >> reporter: all three are leaning towards pete buttigieg, or at least leaning away from trump. >> when trump went into office, he got rid of all the people i thought he were going to help him do what he was going to do. we're all retired military. we're not smarter than generals. >> reporter: nearby at the local
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union hall, we found another disaffected trump voter. >> honestly, what really turned me off of him was just the way he is. >> r neighbor, sarah burke i aan of pete buttigieg. >> i just think as far as maybe trying to beat trump, we need to get somebody else in the mix that wasn't kind >> reporter: he says he's leaning republican, but not at the eventual democratic nominee has a better plan for agriculture. >> i don't know if anybody can be certain until you can evaluate both. i'm not going to say absolutely no matter who is on the other side i am or am not going to vote for donald trump. >> reporter: you're a potentially persuadable voter? >> absolutely. >> reporter: it's a powerful position to be in. >> i hope so. >> reporter: yet on a friday night in another corner of the county, things look a little different at kcd bar. 2008 you voted for obama. >> yes. >> reporter: 2012, obama again. 2016, you voted for trump. >> yes.
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>> reporter: you know that they don't really get along, right? >> right. >> reporter: owner vicky ator warns democrats may have hurt themselves with all this impeachment business. >> i think peoplere soepter: an? >> hey, everybody, can i have your attention. >> reporter: she wasn't lying. >> raise your hand if you think trump is gbk aees with the fol at the kcd bar. she is hoping to cut into president trump's margin of victory. her margin of success is instead of a 20-point win, a ten-point win. and oh, by the way, her pick as nominee, mayor pete buttigieg. a teenager from michigan says he wants to tell the world about the dangers of vaping. 17-year-old daniel amet is believed to be the first person
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to undergo a double lung transplant due to damage from e cigarettes. dean reynolds has his story. >> how do you feel? >> i'm starting to feel a lot better. >> reporter: daniel ament is very lucky to be alive. >> there is good days and bad days. >> reporter: he started vaping about nine months ago. everybody else was. but by september, he was gasping for breath. his mother tammy recalled his health crisis. >> he went from not being able to breathe a little tiny bit to not being able to breathe at re lung transplafopital i 40 days went by and you don't have any memory until after the lung transplant. >> i lost all my memories, they ve you a medication that makes you forget. >> i couldn't talk or move because my muscles had all atrophied. i didn't even have enough strength to lift up my hand. >> reporter: he lost 50 pounds. needing help to get out of bed
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or up the stairs. now he is speaking out against vaping. >> i think my story will compel to understand the dangers that i was unaware of. >> reporter: and yet daniel is having trouble getting that message akrorks even to his own brother. his twin brother can't stop vaping? >> right. >> reporter: daniel blaeor whats brother's stubbornness. what do you tell your brother? >> that he is being stupid, but he doesn't really listen. monit modified dreams o by now, you've heard about the colonial penn three p's, right? (alex trebek) the three p's of life insurance on a fixed budget are price, price, and price.
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upwards of a half million for the victory parade for the world champion chiefs. pat mahomes and the gang will show off the lombardi trophy, the first time the chiefs have captured one in half a century. but did you ever wonder who makes that trophy? tony dokoupil has the answer. >> reporter: only one name stands for excellence in no fewer than eight different sports. >> rafa nadal! >> reporter: from the courts of the u.s. open -- >> the $10 million first place prize. >> reporter: to the green lawns of the pga. to the track at belmont and the fields of the world series.
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and that name is tiffany. yes, that tiffany, the one founded in 1837 by charles louis tiffany, the one that so thrilled audrey hepburn's holly golightly in "breakfast at tiffany's." >> i'm crazy about tiffany's. >> reporter: that tiffany's makes the most famous trophy in all of american sport, the vince lombardi trophy, given each year to the winner of the super bowl. to make the life-sized ball that crowns the 22-inch trophy, master spinner vazquez spins by heating silver to a thousand degrees fahrenheit so it's soft enough to shape. and then he spins and spins and spins. silversmith rachel arde hammers out delicate signs, a technique
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edtr csing i aeryrming. you have a tool in one hand and metal in the other and you're using the hammer to move the metal. i had learned chasing in school, but i had never chased anything as big as this before. >> reporter: meanwhile, master silversmith steve light cuts and solders the base together and bathes it in acid to clean the silver for polishing and final assembly. it's also his job to host the department's annual super bowl party. >> my coworkers and i get together, and we watch the super bowl. well we don't really watch the super bowl. we make all these trophies, but none of us are really sports fans. but at the end of the game, when they're presenting the trophy, that's when we're glued to the tv. >> reporter: and those trophies do break on occasion, at least in boston. in 2018, when the red sox paraded their trophy through the city, someone pelted wit a can
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of beer. and when the patriots threw out the opening pitchway park last spring, r li trophy osehing where we were like oh, my gosh. and then i can fix that. >> reporter: but before spent months soldering, wing team, it must first pass through the steady hands of harold lin straight? >> with a ruler. >> reporter: gainer has personally engraved 15 of the super bowl trophies. >> it's a challenge, yes. >> reporter: what makes it more complicated when it's curved? >> it's not a straight cut. >> reporter: gainer also has to engrave the winning team's names at the last moment in the field when the pressure is on. >> god forbid your point breaks or something happens.
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you don't have any backup to do any repair work. close the curtain, it's time to go home. all kidding aside, i don't have to have confidence to do something like that, i feel. >> reporter: confidence is not something gainer lacks, not after 58 years at tiffany. in fact, he remembers when the created. bardi trophy was first lking about it in the shop. >> reporter: it was back in 1966 when according to legend, nfl commissioner rosell and oscar ridener, head of design at tiffany sketched the trophy on a cocktail napkin. >> it shows how spontaneous these projects can be. they're really like a sculpture. there is no guide book on how to create a successful trophy, so it's quite difficult. >> reporter: what makes a good trophy? >> they're really pieces of sculpture. they have to be representative of the sport itself. they have to be iconic and memorable.
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and they have to somehow capture , whichever one it is. so it's quite difficult. >> reporter: the lombardi design proved so popular that soon after, major league baseball created a trophy of its own for the 1967 world series. today tiffany makes that one too. >> this is heavy. oh, this is really heavy! >> reporter: all 30 pounds of it. but as i learned recently at tiffany's in new york, merely lifting a trophy does not make a champion. you got insurance on this thing? >> i would imagine so.
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do you remember back in school when they drag you into the gym for a school assembly? an assembly that was life changing. the story on the road. >> reporter: it was build as the surprise of a lifetime. and sure enough, when these high school seniors gathered for the big reveal, upth'd never seen t something they'd never forget. >> right now this next minute is life.ost important moment of my >> rter: pete he grew up here in toledo, ohio, and he says the time has come the give back. >> i think that toledo could be one of the most equitable middle market communities in this country. and so if you want to make a big difference you go to the epicenter of inequity. >> reporter: scott high school has some of the most disadvantaged students in the state, but the school is still rich with dreams. kids like senior chris rowland,
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who would love to go to college, but can't afford it, especially now. last fall chris' a lt her job and his dad died in a house fire. >> yeah. >> my dad was the closest person i had in my life. in his later day, he was colleg. he kept saying, you're really smart. you should think about going. >> he was such an awesome father. he is still going to make him proud. i know he is. >> reporter: just got to figure ownst tochris,hat path to a brighter future was about to find him. >> if you're sitting here in this room today as a soon to be graduating senior, tuition, room and board, books and fees will be paid for you, and you will go to college for free. >> reporter:nd there was more. because poverty is an inner generational problem, and because he is determined to snuff it out in this community,
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pete offered each kid a study partner. >> so too can one of your parents go to college or trade school for free. >> reporter: abina says she always wanted to be a school counselor. all together, this could cost pete up to $3 million. and now he w get other pit in td pr t s w i. ulhrouhat g dadmiith stitude. >> pretty incredible. and that's the "overnight news" for this tuesday. broadcast cenn new rk city, i'm meg oliver. it's tuesday, february 4th,
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2020. this is the "cbs morning news." caucus chaos. the first stop on the road to 2020 runs into confusion after problems cause delays and reporting of results in iowa. that's not stopping some of the candidates from claiming victory. tracking infection. how countries are trying to stop the spread of the coronavirus as more cases are confirmed. and closing the impeachment case. the senate is expected to acquit the president tomorrow.st tonight in his state of the tonight in his state of the union address. captioning funded by cbs

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