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tv   CBS Weekend News  CBS  October 1, 2023 5:30pm-6:01pm PDT

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to one matched all six numbers in yesterday's power ball drawing. the jackpot now jumps to a little over $1 billion. it's the second largest jackpot this year. the lottery says two tickets didn't match enough numbers to score winnings of $2 million. five tickets won $1 million. the next drawing will be tomorrow night. another chance to lose, right? >> another chance to lose. that's tonight, funding fallout. a last-minute spending deal averts a government shutdown for now. nikole killion on what a bill and the president's message to
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lawmakers. >> stop playing games. also, the battle brewing for republican house speaker kevin mccarthy to step aside. lawmakers within his own party angry to work with democrats to pass a temporary measure. >> so it be, bring it on. let's get over with it. trump on the trail before his trial. the former president expected to face a judge monday in a civil fraud trial in new york. what the outcome could mean for his business empire and political future. skateboard recall. the one-wheeled models linked to at least four deaths. plus, it's time to pay up. as the pandemic pause comes to an end, millions of americans are expected to start making payments again on their federal student loan debts. >> former president jimmy carter turns 99. his family plans to mark the milestone. and later, the greatest day in hip-hop history. how the stars aligned 25 years ago for a picture paying hochage
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to homage to the trail blazers in jazz. >> we knew that was history. this is the "cbs weekend news" from new york, with jericka duncan. good evening. thanks for joining us. we begin tonight in washington where president biden is urging lawmakers to finish their work after congress barely avoided a government shutdown this weekend. funding was due to run out today, but will now be be temporarily extended through the middle of next month. a bipartisan vote vote saturday has angered some house republicans with one gop lawmaker pushing to oust speaker kevin mccarthy soon this week. cbs' congress correspondent nikole killion has been following it all along and starts us off from capitol hill. good evening, nikole. >> reporter: good evening, jericka. the funding fight may be over but the political infighting continues here on capitol hill,
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and president biden says he's had enough. >> stop playing games. get this done. >> reporter: an exasperated president biden blamed house republicans for putting the federal government on the verge of a shutdown. >> i'm sick and tired of the brinksmanship. and so are the american people. i've been doing this all of their lives, a long time. i've never quite seen a republican congress or any congress act like this. the president urged lawmakers to keep their commit on aid to ukraine after it was abruptly dramaed from the final package. the stopgap measure only funds federal agencies for 45 days through november 17th. and including 16 billions in relief for communities hit by natural disasters. >> the bill has passed. >> reporter: the bill passed the house and senate with overwhelming support late saturday. and congressman matt gather blasted mccarthy for working with democrats, accusing the former speak of reneging and
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threatened to remove him from the speakership later this week. >> we need to move on with new leadership that can be trustworthy. look, the one thing that everybody has is nobody trusts kevin mccarthy. >> you'll survive? >> y i'll survive. he more interested in tv interviews, he wanted to push us into a shutdown. >> reporter: house republicans are split on a potential move. >> it's an absolute waste of time. >> reporter: which would likely require support from democrats. >> absolutely, absolutey, i think kevin mccarthy is a very weak speaker. he clearly has lost control of his caucus. >> reporter: congressman graets has been informally court something democrats. but he couldn't say if he enough votes to remove the speaker. if that vote happens this week, democratic leaders say they'll hold a meeting to determine how to proceed. jericka. >> nikole killion on the hill tonight, thank you. former president donald trump hit the campaign trail this weekend ahead of a day in
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court tomorrow in new york, for a civil prod trial. cbs' skyler henry joins us now with what the outcome of the trial could mean for his political future and business empire. skylar. >> hey, jericka, good to see you. the former spread expected to be in the same courtroom as the judge he insulted on social media. his legal team failed to get this trial delayed in next year. now prosecutors are seeking $250 million in damages, in addition to trying to prevent the former president and his sons from running any businesses in new york. ♪ >> reporter: former president donald trump hit the campaign trail at southeast iowa sunday. and went on the attack. >> every time the radical left democrats, marxists, communists and fascists indict me, i consider it a great badge of honor. >> reporter: a civil trial to determine damages in the fraud case against the gop front-runner begins tomorrow.
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last week, judge arthur emmeron ruled trump and trump organization repeatedly lied about his net worth. trump denies this. >> claiming you have money you that do not have does not amount to the art of the deal. it's the art of the steal. >> reporter: new york attorney general letitia james is squeaking a quarter billion dollars on the ban on trump running businesses in new york. >> it's absolutely possible, that at the endch this trial it will be devastating for the trump businesses. >> reporter: cbs news legal contribute jessica levinson says while the financial hit to the family business may be significant, the outcome may not impact trump's political ambitions. >> there's very little possibility that this could affect the president's re-election chances. >> now, the judge in this case has indicated that this trial could take months. he also said that he dissolved
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some of trump's companies which could force the former president to lose control of several of his assets including trump tower. jericka. >> all right. skylar henry, thank you. tonight, a massive search is under way for a 9-year-old girl who police say was abducted while camping with her family in new york. the family members say charlotte went for a bike riding just after 6:00 in a state park north of albany. they found her bike 30 minutes later. today new york governor kathy hochul called this every parents' nightmare and vowed to find charlotte. student loan payments started after a three-year pause. cbs' astrid martinez. >> reporter: jessica said the freeze on student loan payments offered her a chance to build a business in podcasting. what does repaying these loans mean for you? >> i think it just means there's less money that i have to invest not only in myself, but the
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community that i support. >> reporter: starting today, 43.6 million borrowers just like her are back on the hook. >> they were using the money that was going to student loans, now they were using it for food and transportation and housing. so, now they is have to squish that back into their budget. >> reporter: a recent survey finds nearly half of borrowers will be dlin went under payments. >> i'll give you my equipment to ease the burden of student debt. >> reporter: in june, the white house offered a plan up to $20,000 in loan forgiveness in millions of dollars. >> it really sucks they promised the public something they can't deliver on. >> reporter: some borrowers may qualify for the safe plan. she hopes that resuming payments on her loans won't stop the company from growing. >> i spent the last 3 1/2 years building my business. and i'm emotionally invested in my business. >> reporter: and right now some
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borrowers have a 12-month grace period where they can have payments and their credit won't get hit but they will still be charged interest rates. jericka. >> thank you. kurdish militants have claimed responsibility for a terror attack in 2uturkey this morning. this video shows a car driving up the interior main gate in ankara. one person gets up and runs from the building seconds before the explosion. police shot and killed the other. this happened just hours before parliament was scheduled to go back into session. well, more american workers are hitting the picket line calling for higher pay and better benefits. after the writers guild of america secured a new contract, other unions are hoping for the same success. cbs' tom waite reports tonight from los angeles. >> welcome to "the late show" i'm your host stephen colbert >> reporter: "late night" is back. after a five-moll hiatus, the
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network shows will air new episodes on monday. they were one of the first casual tigs of the writers guild strike which ended after a tentative deal with studios. but many productions remain halted in the screen actors guild can strike their own deal. actors are hopeful as studio executives plan to attend when tox resume tomorrow. los angeles hospitality workers are also hoping for a deal in the coming days with casinos on the trip. they voted to authorize a walkout if no agreement is reached. >> we're going to bring the best damn contract we've seen in our life. >> reporter: and as more autoworkers join the picket line this week the biggest auto strike in history may start wednesday. >> workers seem powerful and they do have a lot of power. >> reporter: almost 400,000 u.s. workers have gone on strike in the past year. usc economics professor larry harris said the boost from increased funding and retirements are keeping the
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labor market tight. >> unemployment rate is low. workers are feeling confident they can strike for higher wages. >> and a big blow to california workers and strikers, governor gavin newsom vetoed legislation that would have given striking workers unemployment benefits. but governor newsom says the state cannot afford it. jericka. >> tom waite tonight in l.a. thank you. jimmie carter has 99 reasons to celebrate. former georgia peanut farmer who became president-spend his birthday with his family. millions of people have been sending carter personal messages. here's cbs' mark strassmann. >> reporter: they're celebrating a birthday in tiny plains, georgia. jimmy carter's birth place, 99 years ago today. >> i think we're just going to get down there and hang out as a family, you know, just be a really strong private event. he can't party like he used to for hihis 99thth birththday so >> repororter: nonee of us can. >> n none off us can.
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that's's exaxactly riright. > jimmymy carter,, happy bir. > reporter:r: amemericans cee with him. the famous. >> happy birthday, president carter. and the every day. a jimmy carter peanut gallery of well-wishers, the white house wooden cake, 39 candles for the 39th president. it's some salute considering most americans alive today were born after jimmy carter left the white house in 1981 and were back here to plains. >> having a great day. >> the father of the town, he's the heart of the town. and we just celebrate him every day. >> but this sunday in particular. >> this sunday in particular. >> reporter: when carter entered hospice back in february. his family thought he had days left. instead, he lived to see his 77 wedding anniversary with rosalynn carter, and years later
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a birthday fuss. >> you don't get more from a life than they have. and they know that, they understand that. and he's really at peace with where he is. >> reporter: the carters will celebrate the day as true southerners with family, fried chicken and caramel cake. his favorite. mark strassmann, cbs news, plains, georgia. >> sounds like a fun time. straight ahead on kr"cbs weekend news" skateboard hazard. the company recalling their popular skateboard because of injuries and even deaths. plus, takeling wage disparity. and a story behind a classic photo in hip-h-hophistory y 25 years later. (c(coughing, s sne) i'm quitite harmlessss, realally. and d when peoplple ask, “but arenen't you lininked to dangererous flu cocomplication. ( cocoughing, snsneezing.) ...l.like pneumomonia, heart t attack, and d hospitalizizations?” (coughing,g, gasping.).) ...i.i just say,y, “but i'm jujust the flulu.” (sniffs)s) (elevavator dings)s)
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or m missing visisual spots st make it t hard to sesee fs like thihis one, or troublele with low w lt that m makes driviving at nigt a real chahallenge. if y you've beenen diagnosededh amd anand notice v vision chan, dodon't wait.. ga i is irreversrsible. it's imimportant toto catch it t e. talklk to your e eye doctorr ababout ga and leararn more att gagawontwait.c.com (hamlet) it's beggin'! talklk to your e eye doctorr ababout ga smoky beggin'... meaty beggin'... tasty beggin'... beggin'!!! oh, i love you. (vo) dogs go bonkers for beggin'! and try beggin' pizza flavor. (hamlet) pizza! ♪ here's a nationwide recall for onewheel electric skateboards. the u.s. consumer products safety commission and future motion announced the recall of 300,000 of the skateboards. future motion received dozens of
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reported incidents including four reported deaths between 2019 and 2021. along with reports of traumatic brain injury, concussion and paralysis. the company says the skateboards can stop balancing the rider while in motion. well, today, an inspiring season debut for buffalo bills safety damar hamlin. he stormed on to the field to a roaring ovation moments before the bills took on the miami dolphins. this is hamlin's first time on the regular season roster since suffering a cardiac arrest on the field back in january. the bills won 48-20. tomorrow's powerball jackpot has surged past the billion dollar mark. nobody won last night's $960 million drawing. in fact, no one has matched all six numbers in 32 consecutive drawings. monday's jackpot is an estimated $1.04 billion and climbing. it would mark the fourth largest payout in powerball history. still ahead on the "cbs
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requirements for job listings. now, only seven other states have similar laws. cbs' barry petersen reports from denver on how staggering the disparity is. and not just between men and women. >> reporter: in 1963, president john f. kennedy signed the equal pay act to end what he called the unconscionable practice of paying female employees less wages than male employees for the same job. that year, women earned an average of 59 cents for every dollar men earned. fast forward 60 years later and the unconscionable practice continues. women only earn about 84 cents on the dollar. edith molten lived with that daily in her former job organizing industry workers. >> i had more experience than some men that i was working with. but yet, they had more valuable roles. got paid more as well. which made me realize that sometimes my experience wasn't
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valued the way that their experience was valued. even though i had more expeperience than n they had int time. >> reporter: and women must still work longer to earn a man's yearly pay. for all women, they catch up in march of the next year. it's april for asian american women. july for black women, october for latinas, and november of the following year for native-a-american women. and even with colorado's new toughened wage transparency law, women are still fighting old stereotypes. says louise milerland of the women's foundation, colorado. >> when a woman projects confidence in herself and her abilities and she knows her worth, that can be seen and perceived as threatening to the social norms. in our workplace and in our communities. >> reporter: still? still, really? i'm serious, still? >> i wish this weren't true.
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it happened every day. >> reporter: for edith, change means teaching a new whole generation. what are you teaching your 10-year-old daughter about being a woman in a world where you have been disrespected as a woman worker? >> i think i'd tell her that she just needs to be very knowledgeable. because idol believe knowledge is power. >> reporter: and knowledge is progress, when everyone know what is a job pays in a 60-year journey for pay equality that is still far from over. barry petersen, cbs news, denver. well, next on the "cbs weekend news," the story behind a hip-hop remix that is classic. want luxuxury hair r repair that d doesn't cosost $50? papantene's prpro-vitaminn foformula a repairs hahair. as well asas the leadiding luy bobonding treaeatment. for sosoftness andnd resilien, without ththe price tatag. if youou know... you u know it's s pantene.
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ask yourur doctor. ♪ finally tonight, we head to 126th street in harlem. it's a place rooted in music history. all year, fans have been celebrating 50 years of hip-hop. but 25 years ago, these artists who are used to commanding the mic and the stage joined forces to celebrate a legacy while marking their own. ♪ when you chose it ♪ >> hip-hop music in 1988 was climbing its way to the top. ♪ and in the fall of that year,
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some of the genre's pioneers came together for a memorable photo shoot. they called it the greatest day in hip-hop. look at you 25 years ago. >> yeah in the front row. thank you, brother! ♪ >> fat joe, one of rap's first latino superstars was among the 177 artists that day who rubbed elbows on this harlem street with other rap legends like rockom, busta rhymes and jermaine dupri. did you realize that photo would go down in history? >> yeah, i knew it. that day, seeing so many of my peers, so many people that i look up to that i respect on another level, here together in unity, we knew that was history. >> in that very same spot, 40 years earlier, in 1958, photographer art cane took this iconic photo, featuring 57 of the world's greatest jazz
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musicians, referred to as a great day in harlem, it marked the end of the golden age of jazz. >> thank you very much. >> tina lester is the former editor-in-chief of "hip-hop magazine double xl" why did you think it was important to bring together these artists at that particular time? >> once we realized it was that anniversary, there was no way to do it on the steps. just to pay homage to the jazz legends. >> lester kwinded the 86-year-old jordan parks known for documenting the black experience to snap the picture into history. >> we had determined that, you know, nobody else can really take this picture but him. the artists, they just surrounded him with the love that he deserved. >> this year marks hip-hop's 50th anniversary. a music genre many believe was a fad. ♪ nothing can stop me i'm all the way up ♪ >> grew all the way up into a multibillion dollar industry, shaping everything from fashion,
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to sports to politics. >> hip-hop thousands and thousands -- i would like to say hundreds of thousands of people. >> right. >> and 25 years ago, great minds standing together on sacred ground made for a great picture. and a reminder of just how far we've come. hopefully, you enjoyed that piece as much as i did. well, that's the "cbs weekend news" for this sunday. i'm
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marin county firefighters received a call just before 10:30 on sunday morning. three

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