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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  November 15, 2022 3:12am-4:30am PST

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running for president, and it's going to be a very professional, very buttoned-up announcement. >> reporter: it's a move that is being publicly discouraged by some in the party. >> it's basically the third election in a row that donald trump has cost us the race, and it's like, you know, three strikes you're out. >> reporter: with his new book out tomorrow, former vice president mike pence is taking aim at trump, for telling the capitol attackers he lacked the courage to block the 2020 results from being certified. >> it angered me, but i turned to my daughter, who was standing nearby, and i said, it doesn't take courage to break the law. it takes courage to uphold the law. the president's words were reckless. it's clear he decided to be part of the problem. >> reporter: tonight, there are indeed growing debates over who should lead republicans in the house and in the senate. even senator mitch mcconnell is under preurem som collesme game a the
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party's disappointing midterm performance, which many now attribute to the former prene that big announcement tomorrow. norah. >> yeah, just before thanksgiving. all right. robert costa, thank you. well, overseas, president biden's highly anticipated meeting with chinese president xi lasted for more than three hours at the g20 summit in indonesia today. tensions over trade, taiwan, and the war in ukraine loomed over their first face-to-face encounter since mr. biden took office. cbs's nancy cordes is in bali where both leaders committed to improving relations. >> reporter: it was a meeting two years in the making. both presidents vowing to de-escalate tensions as the rest of the world looked on. >> i'm not looking for conflict. i'm looking to manage this competition responsibly. >> reporter: president joe biden and president xi jinping lead the two largest economic powers, and they've been publicly at odds over trade, technology, human rights, and spying,
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rattling neighbors and allies. >> translator: the world expects that china and the united states will properly handle the relationship. >> reporter: in the 3 1/2-hour meeting, the two men discussed russian aggression and taiwanese independence. china's military has stepped up its drills near the self-governed island, and after the meeting, they called u.s. interference in china/taiwan affairs a red line. but in a press conference, mr. biden expressed optimism. >> i absolutely believe there need not be a new cold war, and i do not think there's any imminent attempt on the part of china to invade taiwan. >> reporter: both leaders are here in bali for the g20 summit, a meeting of top officials from the world's 20 largest economies. russian president vladimir putin is a notable no-show. the white house is hoping to use his absence to push china to condemn russia's faltering invasion of ukraine, something china hasn't done yet.
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>> i didn't find him more confrontational or more conciliatory. i found him what he's always been, direct and straightforward. >> reporter: putin may not be here, but leaders at this g20 summit are still slamming him for causing many of the economic problems their countries are now dealing with, including high fuel prices, food shortages, and inflation. norah. >> nancy cordes in bali, thank you. we turn now to a scary incident this morning in eastern kentucky when a school bus rolled into a ditch and crashed. kentucky state police say all 18 students and the driver suffered injuries, some of them critical. several were taken to area hospitals. hospitals. the ages of the students giving tuesday, giving tuesday, giving tuesday.
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giving tuesday is a global effort that encourages people to do good. this year, when you choose shriners hospitals for children, you're choosing kids like me, and me, and me. this year please support shriners hospitals for children, because when you do you're not just giving to a hospital. you're helping change the life of a kid like me and me and me. i give to shriners hospitals for children because i want to be a part of something amazing. i know my gift to shriners hospitals for children makes a difference in the lives of children. our support gives kids a bright future. when you support shriners hospitals for children you're joining thousands of other caring people like you who have helped kids like me, and over 1.4 million other kids do amazing things. when you call the number on your screen right now and give $19 a month, just $0.63 a day, you'll be making a life changing difference
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for a kid just like me. your support helps us do amazing things we never thought would be possible, and this is how we say thank you. thank you! thank you. because of your support, we can say thank you by having the life we wouldn't have had without shriners hospitals for children. yay, shriners... yay shriners! with your monthly gift, we'll send you this adorable love to the rescue blanket as another way to say thank you. plus, it's your reminder of all the children who now have hope because of your support. go online right now to loveshriners.org to give your monthly support so more kids like me get the care we need to be kids. thank you for giving. please call right now to give. if operators are busy with other caring donors, please hold patiently or go to loveshriners.org. when cold symptoms keep you up, try vicks nyquil severe.
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just one dose starts to relieve 9 of your worst cold and flu symptoms, to help take you from 9 to none. for max-strength nighttime relief, nyquil severe. to the climate crisis and its often heartbreaking consequences. somalia is one expect where millions of people are suffering from severe drought and famine. cbs's debora patta supports in depth from inside a somalia hospital where starving children are fighting to stay alive. we do want to warn you that some of these images are disturbing. >> reporter: these are climate change's youngest victims. a severely malhnourished child s hospitaled every minute in som somalia. they know it's hotter than it's
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ever been. and after more than two years of drought, there is nothing to eat. we just arrived here at this hospital, and already a 10-month-old baby girl is being admitted with severe malnutrition and complicated by pneumonia. baby fatun opens her mouth to cry, but there are no tears, only a silent scream. beds fill up quickly at the pediatric icu ward in baidoa. every child here is in dire medical need. moments later, another new arrival and another emergency. 2-year-old malyun is dying. her oxygen level should be close to 100, but the reading is just 37. she's bloated from severe malnutrition. her starving body is turning on itself. with blood sugar crashing, she doesn't even flinch as the nurse
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injects her with glucose. her family is sick with worry. these scenes take a mental toll on the medical staff, says dr. syed youssef. >> it's so hard for you as a doctor. >> we sometimes have nightmares. >> reporter: and those nightmares keep coming back. the next day, malyun went into septic shock. we were in fact capturing her final hours, her final breaths. she has been hungry her whole life, and last night, she died. >> a t tta, c suffering happening around the world. we turn now to ukraine where our cbs news crew was in the newly liberated city of kherson today, as the president of ukraine hailed russia's retreat as the beginning of the end of the war. but he acknowledged the heavy price of the fight.
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the city under russian control for nearly nine months has no electricity or running water and remains within firing distance of russian artillery. comedian jay leno is vicks vapostick. strong soothing... vapors. help comfort your loved ones. for chest, neck, and back. it goes on clear. no mess. just soothing comfort. try vicks vapostick. who says you have to spend more on skincare to get results?
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i power up my skin with olay. it works. guaranteed. try niacinamide for strength, retinol 24 for smoothness and vitamin c for brightness. i like to use them all! olay. face anything. one prilosec otc each morning blocks heartburn all day and all night. prilosec otc reduces excess acid for 24 hours, blocking heartburn before it starts. one pill a day. 24 hours. zero heartburn. when you really need to sleep. you reach for then really good stuff. zzzquil ultra helps you sleep better and longer when you need it most. its non-habit forming and powered by the makers of nyquil. we learned today that former tonight show host jay leno is recovering from serious burns. the comedian was take ton a burn center in los angeles after one of his cars burst into flames in
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his garage over the weekend. leno suffered injuries to his face and hands. the 72-year-old said it was a gasoline fire and that he just needs a week or two to get back on his feet. former first lady michelle obama opens up about the anxiety she's faced. that's coming up next.
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in a new interview, former first lady michelle obama is opening up about her personal struggles, promoting her new book "the light we carry: overcoming in certain times," mrs. obama spoke of her mental health during the isolation of the pandemic. >> i struggled like a lot of people to find a sense of hope in all of this. now that i'm here in this position now that i'm the michelle obama that people have seen and known, they can't imagine that i would have doubts and fears and anxiety. but we all have them, and i still do. and i think that if you don't have the tools to get out of it, you can just spiral and spiral
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down, further down. >> mrs. obama says she works on her mental health every day to silence the o" in
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finally tonight, the inspiring story of a cancer survivor and concert violinist who recently gave the performance of her life. here's cbs's carter evans. ♪ >> reporter: it's a performance christina chen thought she may never give. >> i remember feeling like i don't know, i don't know if i'm going to make it. >> reporter: on the day she gave birth in 2018, a nurse discovered a tumor masked by christina's pregnancy. >> so 12 hours after my daughter was born, we found ourselves an oncologist. pretty wild. >> reporter: but her chemotherapy lead to something extremely rare. >> so the treatment for your
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cancer. >> right. >> caused your leukemia. >> right. >> she would need a stem cell transplant to survivor and a match within her own race would be ideal. but only 9% of donors on the nation's largest registry are asian. >> it was hard not to feel despair and sorrow. >> in this case, andrew was the perfect match, and we never looked back. >> reporter: her perfect match, andrew qin. >> hi. >> hi, andrew. >> reporter: this is their first meeting since the procedure. >> i just hope that you know that you're always -- we always carry you with us. >> yeah, it really hits home. it's like, wow, it's one person in a family, mother of two. >> reporter: and a concert violinist, celebrating her second chance in a duet with her doctor. carter evans, cbs news, los angeles. and that's the overnight news for this tuesday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back later for "cbs mornings." remember you can follow us online at any time at cbsnews.com. reporting from here in the nation's capital, i'm norah o'donnell.
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this is cbs news flash. i'm wendy gillette in new york. cbs news projects democrat katie hobbs is elected arizona governor, defeating republican kari lake. the counting of votes took nearly a week after election day. lake was endorsed by former president donald trump. and trump has an announcement of his own tuesday night at his mar-a-lago estate in palm beach, florida. he's expected to announce his bid for re-election in 2024. president biden's plan to forgive student loan debt has hit another snag. a federal appeals court panel in st. louis has agreed to a preliminary injunction that halts the program while an appeal is ongoing. the plan would forgive as much
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as $20,000 in debt for those making less than $125,000 who received pell grants. for more news, download the cbs news app on your cell phone or connected tv. i'm wendy gillette, cbs news, new york. >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." tonight, the president of the university of virginia says classes will be canceled for a second day tomorrow as the community searches for answers. the suspect is in custody after a deadly shooting rocked the charlottesville community. and tonight in an interview with our cbs news affiliate wtvr, the alleged gunman's father said his son was paranoid and getting picked on. police say the shooting took place just after 10:15 p.m. last night on board a charter bus as it returned to campus from washington, d.c. the three killed were all members of the uva football team.
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the suspect, 22-year-old christopher darnell jones jr., is a student and was a member of the team during his freshman year in 2018. jones was charged today with three counts of second-degree murder and three counts of using a handgun in the commission of a felony. but police still haven't revealed a motive. cbs's catherine herridge is going to start us off tonight from charlottesville. good evening, catherine. >> reporter: good evening, norah. tonight students are coming to this football stadium with flowers as a makeshift memorial takes shape after a day of tears across this university campus. >> we just received information the suspect is in custody. i just need a moment to thank god, breathe a sigh of relief. >> reporter: that emotional moment hung in the air as uva police chief timothy longo confirmed suspect christopher darnell jones jr. was apprehended after a more than 12our manhunt. >> he was still a student, but to my knowledge, he was no longer on the football team. >> reporter: campus officials say five students were shot at the end of a class field trip as
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they returned sunday night. devin chandler, lavel davis jr., and d'sean perry, all members of the uva football team, are dead. two other students were injured, one critically. >> my heart is broken for the victims and their families and for all those who knew and loved them, and they are all in my prayers. as ive said before, when i see our students, i see my own kids. >> reporter: what is believed to be the bus where the shooting unfolded now a crime scene. authorities detailed recent complaints about jones possessing a gun in september though a weapon was not found, as well as a hazing incident. but in that case, the witnesses did not cooperate. >> i mean, i heard gunfire. >> reporter: senior christian anton said the shooting happened not far from his campus room. other witnesses too afraid to be identified described the door of the bus opening and injured students spilling onto the road. >> we're all impacted, you know, not just me, not just my roommates, but everybody here on campus was impacted by it.
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>> reporter: authorities said the initial charges of second-degree murder will likely be upgraded as investigators discover new evidence, norah. >> catherine herridge, thank you very much. tonight, tsa employees across the country are getting a wake-up call after a passenger with two box cutters was able to board a frontier airline flight. the plane was diverted, and the passenger was detained. kris van cleave reports the incident has unfortunate echos of 9/11. >> is that him? >> reporter: landing in handcuffs. this man accused of threatening passengers on a frontier airlines flight with a box cutter, arrested late friday. >> and i looked down, and he had the box cutter with the blade that he was trying to put the blade into the actual mechanism. >> reporter: 192 passengers and crew were on board. several military veterans helped restrain the man until landing. >> i was kind of angry at the time, so i really was wanting to, like, do something physically to the person.
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>> reporter: tonight the tsa is briefing all screeners nationwide about what went wrong, and the officers who dealt with the suspect at the cincinnati airport will be retrained. the tsa says while the bags were scanned, the image review capabilities were not fully used. one of the man's two box cutters was discovered during a secondary search, but it was returned after its blade was removed, which is against procedure according to the agency. don pistole is a former tsa administrator. >> once the box cutter was discovered, it should have been a much more thorough screening. >> reporter: incidents involving disruptive passengers are down 80% in 2022 after soaring during the pandemic. but so far, there have been nearly 2,200 this year alone. including this one early sunday where a passenger holding a toddler allegedly choked a flight attendant and refused to sit down during landing. that flight attendant is expected to be okay. now, after the 9/11 hijackers
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were able to gain control of four airliners with box cutters, cockpit doors were reinforced. security experts we talked to says it doesn't appear either of these incidents would have posed a viable threat to control of the airplanes or to the pilots. norah. >> kris van cleave with those airport scares. thank you. well, tonight democrats hoping for keeping control of the house of representatives are dimming. the cbs news characterization at this hour is that the house leans republican. cbs news estimates the gop will win a minimum of 214 seats while democrats are estimated to win at least 210. the magic number is 218. cbs's robert costa takes a look. >> reporter: lawmakers returned to a transformed and uncertain washington monday with senate democrats ready to celebrate. >> these elections have shown that the maga republican way is not where the american people want to be. >> reporter: maintaining their grip on the majority, democrats framed it as a rejection of election deniers and trump disciples. >> i will always fight for you
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no matter what. >> reporter: saturday night's victory in nevada by incumbent catherine cortez masto gives democrats at least 50 seats in the chamber with a chance to increase their majority if incumbent raphael warnock can beat republican herschel walker in the december 6th georgia runoff. >> but i think as we're celebrating the fact that we now have a 50-50 majority, we all know that this job is not done yet. we still have to win in georgia. >> reporter: both parties remain on edge about who will control the house. some republicans are debating who should lead them and pressuring the front-runner for house leader kevin mccarthy, who had hoped a red wave would sweep him to power. >> if we can't have a peacetime speaker, we need a wartime speaker. >> reporter: all this as former president donald trump plots a comeback. >> president trump is going to announce on tuesday that he's running for president, and it's going to be a very professional, very buttoned-up announcement. >> reporter: it's a move that is being publicly discouraged by some in the party.
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>> it's basically the third election in a row that donald trump has cost us the race, and it's like, you know, three strikes you're out. >> reporter: with his new book out tomorrow, former vice president mike pence is taking aim at trump for telling the capitol attackers he lacked the courage to block the 2020 results from being certified. >> it angered me, but i turned to my daughter, who was standing nearby, and i said, it doesn't take courage to break the law. it takes courage to uphold the law. the president's words were reckless. it's clear he decided to be part of the problem. >> reporter: tonight, there are indeed growing debates over who should lead republicans in the house and in the senate. even senator mitch mcconnell is under pressure from some colleagues. it's a blame game after the party's disappointing midterm performance, which many now attribute to the former president just before that big announcement tomorrow. norah.
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>> all right. robert costa, thank you. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. when a cold comes on strong, knock it out with vicks dayquil severe. just one dose starts to relieve 9 of your worst cold and flu symptoms. to help take you from 9 to none. power through with vicks dayquil severe. ah, these bills are crazy. she has no idea she's sitting on a goldmine. well she doesn't know that if she owns a life insurance policy of $100,000 or more she can sell all or part of it to coventry for cash. even a term policy. even a term policy? even a term policy! find out if you're sitting on a goldmine. call coventry direct today at the number on your screen, or visit coventrydirect.com. restless nights fogging up your day? tonight, try new zzzquil pure zzzs sleep plus next day energy with melatonin to help you fall asleep naturally...
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i'm caitlin huey-burns in washington. thanks for staying with us. russia's retreat from the ukrainian city of kherson has not stopped the fighting there. the two sides continue to trade artillery fire across the dnipro river as ukrainian troops work to secure the city, which has been in russian hands since the start of the war. ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy made a surprise visit to kherson, calling the city's liberation the beginning of the end of the war. chris livesay is there. >> reporter: so this is the road to kherson. we've been given a military escort, and we have to drive very, very carefully because the road is just littered with vehicle after vehicle that's been blown to pieces, not to mention craters left over from explosives and other debris from what has been nearly nine months of an effort to reclaim this area and the city. but the children of kherson can't wait any longer to come
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outside, like kiril and his friends. "we are going to play hide and seek in those trenches once we're allowed to," he president zelenskyy is wasting no time either. >> president zelenskyy, is this the beginning of the end of the war? >> we're ready for peace, but our peace for our country is all our country, all our territory. that's why we are fighting against russian aggression. >> reporter: for the people of kherson, victory and freedom have never tasted so sweet.]uuux once, they could be killed forh singing the ukrainianza nationa lóanthem. now they canen shout ÷xit. >> rw here c[orever. rwáhey are not here ) a they are not forevñ.. >> reporter: but belies wóunspeakable trauma for survivors like oh electrich:= sanderr]@r(t&háhp &hc house, where hez says 40 russia
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soldiers> you can see hisks mother's clothing all'o overc yourty own, grave? >> reporter: only at the lastí■ minute after two nights" of digging, he says, did they rdange their minds and live.e their minds and there goes one of theu■ collaborators, he says,:pointing to a neighbor het claims helped the russians occupyg8■;m kherso. >> how canly you go on]÷ livingh them? "i don't know," he says. "and i don't know how they can live with themselves." and now the rebuilding can begin. president zelenskyy also told me how grateful he was to president joe biden and congress for the american weapons that have been critical in retaking this city.
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chris livesay, kherson, ukraine. closer to home, federal investigators are no closer to knowing the cause of the tragic midair collision at an air show in dallas this weekend. all six people aboard the planes were killed. no one on the ground was hurt. omar villafranca has more. >> reporter: thousands of spectators were at the "wings over dallas" air show to see more than 40 rare world war ii-era planes take to the skies saturday. here is a p-63 king cobra fighter plane slowly taxiing in front of spectators before flying over the crowd. and this is the b-17 flying fortress bomber taking off. moments later, the crowd below watched in horror as the two planes crashed into one another and plummeted to the ground. >> oh, my god! >> reporter: first responders rushed to the crash site, but
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all six people on board were killed. no one on the ground was injured. >> i just see, like, flames and everything go flying, and, you know, just fire everywhere. >> reporter: the two aircraft involved in the incident are considered extremely rare. air shows must get special waivers to use them, and pilots must demonstrate an ability to fly low and carry out air show maneuvers. neither of the planes were equipped with black boxes, so investigators said witness photos and videos will be key to determining the cause of the collision. >> i want to express my deepest sympathies to the families who lost loved ones in this terrible tragedy. >> reporter: among those killed, terry barker, a retired american airlines pilot of 36 years and a former two-term city council member in nearby keller, texas. omar villafranca, dallas. there are now just nine days until thanksgiving, and if you haven't taken a look at the price of turkey and fixins yet,
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you could be in for sticker shock at the grocery store. the cost of just about everything you'll be putting on the table this year is a lot more expensive. so why is that? well, nancy chen went to a turkey farm looking for answers. >> reporter: an hour outside of pittsburgh, the jones turkey farm has been in the family for three generations. >> a lot of work goes into raising these. >> yes. >> reporter: but dave jones has never been challenged like this. >> it seems like this year has been much more difficult than ever. >> it tops everything. everything doubled this spring. >> reporter: from the feed to the fertilizer, the cost to run the farm has gone up, which means the cost for customers has too. >> how much did you have to raise the prices of your turkeys? >> 50 cents a pound this year, and i should have raised it a dollar a pound, but at that point i figured i'd lose too much business and i'd have turkeys left over. >> reporter: all this as farmers battle one of the worst outbreaks of avian flu, which
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has wiped out at least 6 million turkeys, hiking prices even further. and household items used to make some thanksgiving staples are also gobbling up more money. the price of eggs is up 43%. butter nearly 27%. and flour about 25%. >> is this the costliest thanksgiving that you've seen? >> oh, without a doubt. >> reporter: emily weinstein is the food and cooking editor of "the new york times." her tips on curbing costs start with the centerpiece itself, turkey. >> how do we save money on these guys? >> just by exactly the size turkey you need. don't buy a giant one hoping for leftovers. >> reporter: she says to highlight vegetable sides over meat and use frozen ones instead of fresh. >> is there a way to spread the cost here? >> if you've ever considered doing a thanksgiving potluck, this is the year to do it. ask your loved ones to bring dishes. everyone will be happy to be involved. >> reporter: and start shopping for non-perishables now. retailers like walmart are
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pricing thanksgiving staples the sa
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steve hartman and his kids are back for another installment of their series "kindness 101." today's lesson, positivity. good morning. this is meryl, my soon to be 9-year-old daughter, here to help me teach a lesson on -- >> positivity. emmett at the dictionary desk, can you define this word? >> yes, i can. positivity is the practice of extracting a sunny takeaway from a not so good situation. >> yeah, positivity isn't being happy because you won the lottery. that's easy. >> it's not too easy. >> no, not winning the lottery, but being happy in you win the lottery. >> yes. winning the lottery is going to be something that everybody is excited about. positivity is really like you have to take a bad situation look at it. >> yeah. positivity is finding joy in the negative, strange as that sounds. >> correct. >> and this is a very important
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tool to have in your tool belt. so let's look now at our library of life lessons and pull down a tale that illustrates the power of positivity. aside from immediate family, no one was allowed in the house to see 3-year-old quinn waters of weymouth, massachusetts. and more importantly, quinn wasn't allowed out. >> we basically keep him in a bubble just as a precaution. >> even a cold, a common cold, could be something that will bring him back into the hospital. >> reporter: parents jar legislate and tara say quinn's natural immunity was temporarily wiped out after he got a stem cell transplant to treat his brain cancer. ♪ we are the champions ♪ >> reporter: fortunately, the kid is a fighter, and he kept a mostly positive attitude. >> do you want a drink or anything, dude? >> no, thank you. >> reporter: but it still stunk. >> he sees all of this happening, and he knows he's stuck inside, and there would be days -- >> reporter: days when quinn was literally pounding to get out.
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unfortunately staring out a window is a poor substitute for walking out a door. quinn's connection to the outside world has been limited to whoever passes by, which hasn't been all that limiting actually. >> it started off with family la.t showi up o quinn's ffondowi windowthouoworter: it got so yor knew what might happen by. one minute it could be a dog parade. >> look at that dog. >> reporter: the next, a team of irish step dancers. everyone brought together by word of mouth and a will to help quinn get better [ applause ] >> reporter: which his parents say did start happening. >> just the positive energy from all these people that we believe has gotten him through his sickness, you know?
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we can never repay, you know. just maybe pay it forward, you know. >> reporter: being indebted has never felt so fortunate. ♪ come on without ♪ ♪ come on within ♪ ♪ you'll not see nothing like the mighty quinn ♪ [ applause ] >> quinn's parents, tara and rleth in us hello. hi.stf l, you've got t tellquinn's doing. >> oh, quinn is doing really well. he relapsed in 2021, but since that time, he received radiation, and he's been stable. >> playing tee ball now with his friends. he's in school. >> he looks great. hair. i've never seen hair on the boy. >> yes. >> yeah. >> he's got a great flow going. he's got the hockey hair, we call it. >> what struck me most after our
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first visit is that you seemed to think that positivity would actually make him better. >> i don't think it can all be just modern medicine. i think you have to have a positive outlook on things. >> so you think that thoughts can change reality? >> 100%. >> absolutely. >> they'll change the outcome, and i think it will change your outlook as you go on anything. >> and has the grass grown back on your yard? >> the grass will never be the same. >> well, thank you so much for joining us. we've been positively thrilled to have you. >> thank you for having us. >> bye. >> a really good lesson there. and a reminder that oft when >>. door closes, another winwuse
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winter is right around the corner, and there's a nightclub in scotland that found a unique way to keep the stage warm through cold months. tina krause reports. ♪ >> reporter: nightclubs are known for that powerful beat. but at this one in scotland, it's all about the heat. >> that's what's great about body heat is our audience participates in the system. >> reporter: dancers work up a sweat not just to party but to help power the club. the faster they move, the more heat they generate. >> where does that heat go? so thankfully we were able to capture it through the system. >> reporter: the body heat system traps warmth from people packed on the dance floor and pipes it underground, where the energy gets stored in rocks that
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act like a thermal battery. >> then when we need the heating for something else at a different time of day or a different part of the venue, we can transfer the heat from the rocks back into the venue. >> reporter: owners of the club have now ditched their gas boilers and hope to eventually reduce carbon emissions by up to 70%, and they say the climate-conscious concept is striking a chord with club goers. >> just by coming to an event, coming to a gig or a club or anything, you're part of that -- that kind of low carbon solution for the venue. >> reporter: researchers say dancing the night away can generate around 500 watts of energy, about five times what you give off sitting on the couch. meaning getting down to the beat may have the power to help energize not just the body but the planet too. tina krause, cbs news. and that's the overnight news for this tuesday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back later for "cbs mornings." and follow usyquuus#np'ytime on■
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cbsnews.com. reporting from capital, i'm caitlin huey-burnso i'm wendy gillette in new yo.g5 cbs news projects democrat katiy hobbs is elected arizona s go■,rnor, defeating republican ; the counting of votes took b8 nearly a week after election q day.1c6u lake was endorsed by former >9■ president donald trump.gv and trump has an i&e% announcement of his own tuesdayl vis mar-a-lago estate v in palm beach, florida.áez1 in palm beach, florida.áez1 bid for re-election in 2024.p& president biden's plan to z forgive student loan debt ha#ya hit another snag.ñ÷e&■ a federal appeals court panel ir st. louis has agreed to a ún halts the program while an yhd[c the plan would forgive as muchep
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as $20,000 in debt fo7ethose hv■ making lessw$an $125,000 who received pell grants. for more news, download the cbs news app on your cell phone or connected tv. i'm wendy gillette, cbs news, new york. tonight, tragedy in charlottesville. the hours-long manhunt is over and a suspect in custody after a university of virginia student allegedly kills three football players and injures two others. police searching for a motive tonight as a campus is in mourning. >> it's just been a really sad and hard day for everyone. >> cbs's catherine herridge reports tonight on the new details as we learn the suspect was known to campus police. high-stakes face-to-face meeting. what president biden and china's president xi spoke about for more than three hours in bali. deadly air show crash. the investigation tonight after two world war ii-era planes collide over dallas. cbs's omar villafranca is on the
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scene in texas. airline scare. h!vu=ooñ >> he's got a knife, and he # wants to stab people. oj >> the tsa under fire after a man snuck two box cutters8bq board.< cbs's kris van cleave on the ; security threat. 4j >> step back!' ■ and jay leno hospitalized 3ç after burning his face in his & own garage.jj áaying tonight about his f1covery.8ékq >> announcer: this is the "cbs k overnight news." tonight, the president of the university of virginia says classes will be canceled for a second day tomorrow as the community searches for answers. the suspect is in custody after a deadly shooting rocked the charlottesville community. and tonight in an interview with our cbs news affiliate wtvr, the alleged gunman's father said his son was paranoid and getting
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picked on. police say the shooting took place just after 10:15 p.m. last night on board a charter bus as returned to cams fr washon the three killed were all members of the uva football team. the suspect, 22-year-old christopher darnell jones jr., is a student and was a member of the team during his freshman year in 2018. jones was charged today with three counts of second-degree murder and three counts of using a handgun in the commission of a felony. but police still haven't revealed a motive. cbs's catherine herridge is going to start us off tonight from charlottesville. good evening, catherine. >> reporter: good evening, norah. tonight students are coming to this football stadium with flowers as a makeshift memorial takes shape after a day of tears across this university campus. >> we just received information the suspect is in custody. i just need a moment to thank god, breathe a sigh of relief. >> reporter: that emotional moment hung in the air as uva
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police chief timothy longo confirmed suspect christopher darnell jones jr. was apprehended after a more than 12-hour manhunt. >> he was still a student, but to my knowledge, he was no longer on the football team. >> reporter: campus officials say five students were shot at the end of a class field trip as they returned sunday night. devin chandler, lavel davis jr., and d'sean perry, all members of the uva football team, are dead. two other students were injured, one critically. >> my heart is broken for the victims and their families and for all those who knew and loved them, and they are all in my prayers. as ive said before, when i see our students, i see my own kids. >> reporter: what is believed to be the bus where the shooting unfolded now a crime scene. authorities detailed recent complaints about jones possessing a gun in september though a weapon was not found, as well as a hazing incident. but in that case, the witnesses did not cooperate. >> i mean, i heard gunfire. >> reporter: senior christian anton said the shooting happened
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not far from his campus room. other witnesses, too afraid to be identified, described the door of the bus opening and injured students spilling onto the road. >> we're all impacted, you know, not just me, not just my roommates, but everybody here on campus was impacted by it. >> reporter: authorities said the initial charges of second-degree murder will likely be upgraded as investigators discover new evidence, norah. >> catherine herridge, thank you very much. we want to turn now to the investigation into that horrific midair collision at a dallas air show. two days after the disaster, the names of the veteran pilots involved have been released. we get the latest now from cbs's omar villafranca in dallas. >> reporter: spectators watched in horror as two vintage planes collided midair in the skies above dallas before crashing to the ground in a ball of flames. >> it is on the airport. we had an air collision. it's down on the airport. >> reporter: rescue crews rushed
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to the crash site but found no survivors. now investigators with the national transportation safety board are combing through the wreckage as well as videos of the incident, trying to figure out what went wrong. the accident happened during "wings over dallas," an air show featuring dozens of world war ii-era planes. a p-63 king cobra fighter appears to bank hard to the left before smashing into a b-17 bomber. investigators are expected to focus on the smaller plane. >> it was coming in at a pretty steep bank angle. it could make that really almost impossible for the pilot of the ■ larger airplane. know the names of the six people killed, all veteran pilots, som( with decades of experience. there were no black boxes on &0k those vintage planes, but today■ and an electronic flight displaú data to help determine what #&■ happened.uñ■ the preliminary@s+tj$ráh
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expected iwgfour to six weeks.gg >> omar villafranca in dallas, . across the country are getting a wake-up call after a passenger q with two box cutters was ablc4uo board a frontier airlinesxtwj; flight.w< the flight uráh"iverted, and the passenger was detained.;d cbs's kris van cleave reports çp the incident has unfortunate xñc >> is that him?> reporter: landing in ■ñ■ handcuffs, this man accused of threatening passengers on a frontier airlines flight with a box cutter arrested late friday. >> and i looked down, and he had the box cutter with the blade that he was trying to put the blade into the actual mechanism. >> reporter: 192 passengers and crew were on board. several military veterans helped restrain the man until landing. >> i was kind of angry at the time, so i really was wanting to, like, do something physically to the person. >> reporter: tonight the tsa is briefing all screeners nationwide about what went wrong, and the officers who dealt with the suspect at the
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cincinnati airport will be retrained. the tsa says while the bags were scanned, the image review capabilities were not fully used. one of the man's two box cutters was discovered during a secondary search, but it was returned after its blade was removed, which is against procedure according to the agency. john pistole is a former tsa administrator. >> once the box cutter was discovered, it should have been a much more thorough screening. >> reporter: incidents involving disruptive passengers are down 80% in 2022 after soaring during the pandemic. but so far, there have been nearly 2,200 this year alone, including this one early sunday, where a passenger holding a toddler allegedly choked a flight attendant and refused to sit down during landing. that flight attendant is expected to be okay. now, after the 9/11 hijackers were able to gain control of four airliners with box cutters, cockpit doors were reinforced and security experts we talked
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to today said it doesn't appear either of these incidents would have posed a viable threat to control of the airplanes or to the pilots. norah.
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>> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." well, tonight democrats' hopes for keeping control of the house of representatives are dimming. the cbs news characterization at this hour is that the house leans republican. cbs news estimates the gop will win a minimum of 214 seats while democrats are estimated to win at least 210.÷u cbs's robert costa takes a lookñ >> reporter: lawmakers returnedj to a transformed a washington monday with senate jn cq that the maga republican way isl not where the american people i1
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want to be. ?$ >> reporter: maintaining their grip on the majoritgpás ejection of £ election deniers and trump ( disciples. 5 >> i will always fight for you d no matter what. l >> reporter: saturday night's zy victory in nevada by incumbent ç catherine cortez masto gives lv democrats at least 50 se the chamber withl(rp'ce to qb■ the chamheir majority if 2tug■ beat republican herschel walkerp in the december 6th georgia >> but i think as we're celebrating the fact that we now have a 50-50 majority, we all know that this job is not done yet. we still have to win in georgia. >> reporter: both parties remain on edge about who will control the house. some republicans are debating who should lead them and pressuring the front-runner for house leader kevin mccarthy, who had hoped a red wave would sweep him to power. >> if we can't have a peacetime speaker, we need a wartime speaker. >> reporter: all this as former president donald trump plots a comeback. >> president trump is going to
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announce on tuesday that he's running for president, and it's going to be a very professional, very buttoned-up announcement. >> reporter: it's a move that is being publicly discouraged by some in the party. >> it's basically the third election in a row that donald trump has cost us the race, and it's like, you know, three strikes you're out. >> reporter: with his new book out tomorrow, former vice president mike pence is taking aim at trump for telling the capitol attackers he lacked the courage to block the 2020 results from being certified. >> it angered me, but i turned to my daughter, who was standing nearby, and i said, it doesn't take courage to break the law. it takes courage to uphold the law. the president's words were reckless. it's clear he decided to be part of the problem. >> reporter: tonight, there are indeed growing debates over who should lead republicans in the house and in the senate. even senator mitch mcconnell is under pressure from some colleagues.
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it's a blame game after the party's disappointing midterm performance, which many now attribute to the former president just before that big announcement tomorrow. norah. >> yeah, just before thanksgiving. all right. robert costa, thank you. well, overseas, president biden's highly anticipated meeting with chinese president xi lasted for more than three hours at the g20 summit in indonesia today. tensions over trade, taiwan, and the war in ukraine loomed over their first face-to-face encounter since mr. biden took office. cbs's nancy cordes is in bali where both leaders committed to improving relations. >> reporter: it was a meeting two years in the making. both presidents vowing to de-escalate tensions as the rest of the world looked on. >> i'm not looking for conflict. i'm looking to manage this competition responsibly. >> reporter: president joe biden and president xi jinping lead the two largest economic powers, and they've been publicly at odds over trade, technology, human rights, and spying,
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rattling neighbors and allies. >> translator: the world expects that china and the united states will properly handle the relationship. >> reporter: in the 3 1/2-hour meeting, the two men discussed russian aggression and taiwanese independence. china's military has stepped up its drills near the self-governed island, and after the meeting, they called u.s. interference in china/taiwan affairs a red line. but in a press conference, mr. biden expressed optimism. >> i absolutely believe there need not be a new cold war, and i do not think there's any imminent attempt on the part of china to invade taiwan. >> reporter: both leaders are here in bali for the g20 summit, a meeting of top officials from the world's 20 largest economies. russian president vladimir putin is a notable no-show. the white house is hoping to use his absence to push china to condemn russia's faltering invasion of ukraine, something china hasn't done yet.
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>> i didn't find him more confrontational or more conciliatory. i found him what he's always been, direct and straightforward. >> reporter: putin may not be here, but leaders at this g20 summit are still slamming him for causing many of the economic problems their countries are now dealing with, including high fuel prices, food shortages, and inflation. norah. >> nancy cordes in bali, thank you. we turn now to a scary incident this morning in eastern kentucky when a school bus rolled into a ditch and crashed. kentucky state police say all 18 students and the driver suffered injuries, some of them critical. several were taken to area hospitals. the ages of the students range the ages of the students range from elementary to high school. when a cold comes on strong, knock it out with vicks dayquil severe. just one dose starts to relieve 9 of your worst cold and flu symptoms. to help take you from 9 to none. power through with vicks dayquil severe.
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sleep plus next day energy with melatonin to help you fall asleep naturally... plus extended-release b-vitamins. wake up feeling refreshed. pure zzzs. sleep better. wake up your best. to the climate crisis and its often heartbreaking consequences. somalia is one example where millions of people are suffering from severe drought and famine. cbs's debora patta supports in depth from inside a somalia hospital where starving children are fighting to stay alive. we do want to warn you that some of these images are disturbing. >> reporter: these are climate change's youngest victims. a severely malnourished child is hospitalized every minute in somalia, and mothers here don't need climate experts to tell them why. they know it is hotter than it's ever been, and after more than
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two years of drought, there is nothing to eat. we just arrived here at this hospital, and already a 10-month-old baby girl is being admitted with severe malnutrition and complicated by pneumonia. baby fatun opens her mouth to cry, but there are no tears, only a silent scream. beds fill up quickly at the pediatric icu ward in baidoa. every child here is in dire medical need. moments later, another new arrival and another emergency. 2-year-old malyun is dying. her oxygen level should be close to 100, but the reading is just 37. she's bloated from severe malnutrition. her starving body is turning on itself. with blood sugar crashing, she doesn't even flinch as the nurse
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injects her wimi is sick with w. these scenes take a mental toll on the medical staff, says dr. sayeed yusef. >> it's so hard for you as a doctor. >> we sometimes have nightmares. >> reporter: and those nightmares keep coming back. the next day, malyun went into septic shock. we were in fact capturing her final hours, her final breaths. she has been hungry her whole life, and last night, she died. debora patta, cbs news, baidoa, somalia. >> a reminder about the suffering happening around the world. we turn now to ukraine where our cbs news crew was in the newly liberated city of kherson today, as the president of ukraine hailed russia's retreat as the beginning of the end of the war. but he acknowledged the heavy price of the fight. the city under russian control
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for nearly nine months has no :3 remains within firing distance of russian artillery.■+■ comedian jay leno is é#d speaking out tonight after - suffering severe burns.; vicks vapostick. strong soothing... vapors. help comfort your loved ones. for chest, neck, and back. it goes on clear. no mess. just soothing comfort. try vicks vapostick.
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do you struggle with occasional nerve aches in your hands or feet? try nervivenerve relief from the world's #1 selling nerve care company. nervive contains alpha lipoic acid to relieve occasional nerve aches, weakness and discomfort. try nervivenerve relief. when you really need to sleep. you reach for the really good stuff. zzzquil ultra helps you sleep better and longer when you need it most. its non-habit forming and powered by the makers of nyquil. we learned todayúp.at former "tonight show" host jay leno isj recovering from serious burns.á the comedian was taken center in los angeles after one1 his garage over the weekend..jn
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leno suffered injuries to his face and hands.4jsi the 72-year-old said it was a ó9 gasoline fire and that he just a needs a week or two to get backh on his feet. = former first lady michelle obama opens up about the anxieta she's faced.:áu$at's coming up .
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in a new interview, former first lady michelle obama is opening up about her personal struggles. promoting her new book, "the light we carry: overcoming in uncertain times," mrs. ob e of her mllth during the isotion othe pandemic. >> i struggled like a lot of people to find a sense of hope in all of this. now that i'm here in this position, now that i'm the michelle obama that people have seen and known, they can't imagine that i would have doubts and fears and anxiety. but we all have them, and i still do. and i think that if you don't have the tools to get out of it, you can just spiral and spiral down, further down.
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>> mrs. obama says she works on her mental health every day to silence the "no" in her head. we'll be right back with a
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finally tonight, the inspiring story of a cancer survivor and concert violinist who recently gave the performance of her life. here's cbs's carter evans. ♪ >> reporter: it's a performance christine chen thought she may never give. >> i remember feeling like i don't know. i don't know if i'm going to make it. >> reporter: on the day she gave birth in 2018, a nurse discovered a tumor masked by christine's pregnancy. >> so about 12 hours after my daughter was born, we found ourselves seeing an oncologist. pretty wild. >> reporter: but her chemotherapy led to something extremely rare. >> so the treatment for your cancer --
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>> right. >> -- caused your leukemia? >> right. >> reporter: she would need a stem cell transplant to survive, and a match within her own race would be ideal. but only 9% of donors on the nation's largest registry are asian. >> it was hard not to feel despair and sorrow. >> in this case, andrew was the perfect match, and we never looked back. >> reporter: her perfect match, andrew qin. >> hi. >> hi, andrew. >> reporter: this is their first meeting since the procedure. >> i just hope that you know that you're always -- we always carry you with us. >> yeah, it really hits home. it's like, wow, it's one person in a family, mother of two. >> reporter: and a concert violinist, celebrating her second chance in a duet with her doctor. carter evans, cbs news, los angeles. and that's the overnight news for this tuesday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back later for "cbs mornings." remember you can follow us online anytime at cbsnews.com. reporting from here in the nation's capital, i'm norah o'donnell.
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this is cbs news flash. i'm wendy gillette in new york. cbs news projects democrat katie hobbs is elected arizona governor, defeating republican kari lake. the counting of votes took nearly a week after election day. lake was endorsed by former president donald trump. and trump has an announcement of his own tuesday night at his mar-a-lago estate in palm beach, florida. he's expected to announce his bid for re-election in 2024. president biden's plan to forgive student loan debt has hit another snag. a federal appeals court panel in st. louis has agreed to a preliminary injunction that halts the program while an appeal is ongoing. the plan would forgive as much
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as $20,000 in debt for those making less than $125,000 who received pell grants. it's tuesday, november 15th, 2022. this is the "cbs morning news." ready to run, president trump expected to announce his precedential bid for tonight after lackluster gop. we have the latest on a key race where a projected democrat is expected to win. police say they have caught the suspect who killed three classmates. what we know about the mass shooting. and covid concerns just hours after meeting with his chinese counterpart, there are some concerns that president biden may have been exp covid while overseas. captioning funded by cbs

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