Skip to main content

tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  January 25, 2017 3:10am-4:01am EST

3:10 am
well, late today the senate voted overwhelmingly to confirm nikki haley as ambassador to the united nations. haley was in her second term as governor of south carolina and has limited experience in foreign policy. her diplomatic skills may be tested soon if the president follows through on his pledge to move the u.s. embassy in israel from tel aviv to jerusalem. that would essentially be u.s. recognition of jerusalem as israel's capital. palestinian leaders also claim the holy city, and they warn that the embassy switch would be an act of war. seth doane is there. >> it's very important, very important. >> reporter: jerusalem's mayor nir barkat showed us what he would like to see. >> that could easily become the embassy. all you need to do is change the plaque. >> reporter: barkat knows it's
3:11 am
not that easy but sees the move as cementing israel's long standing claim on jerusalem. but the palestinians also claim the city as their capital and fear the move would spark violence. >> this is an earthquake. this is not just moving an embassy, it's an earthquake. >> reporter: senior palestinian adviser husam zomlot said moving the u.s. embassy would greatly reduce the chances for peace. >> moving the embassy to jerusalem is taking away a great deal of hope toward the future. moving the embassy, the u.s. embassy, dismantling the foundation of the peace process will definitely open the gates for those who want to see violence. >> reporter: jerusalem touches a nerve, it's home to religious sites claimed by muslims, jews and christians. aren't you concerned this could hurt the peace process, could spark violence? >> we would not have a state if we were deterred and concerned
3:12 am
about the threats we receive every once in a while. >> reporter: since president trump was sworn in, more than 3,000 new homes for israeli settlers have been approved, illegal under international law. husam zomlot worries what president trump's vocal support for israel means for palestinians but hopes his reputation for pragmatism will prevail. >> he's a businessman. he knows that if you actually go and give the other side all they want, then they will have no interest for a deal. >> reporter: white house spokesman sean spicer said today that president trump would like to grow closer with israel, and, scott, that's a pledge israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu would like to capitalize on. >> seth doane in jerusalem. seth, thank you. as margaret brennan mentioned, president trump leaned on auto executives today to build more cars in america. one killer of auto jobs has been automation, but mark strassmann
3:13 am
has found one plant where robots are creating jobs. >> reporter: success rode into manning, south carolina, on a bicycle built by two. man and machine. every 13 seconds another one rolls off this assembly line. >> typically bicycle spokes are dropped in one at a time by hand. this machine does it automatically in only about 30 seconds. using the same amount of people, we can do about three times as many hubs in a day. this is the main assembly line. >> reporter: arnod kamler is the ceo of bca, the bicycle corporation of america, his family's business since 1905. the company has a factory in china, but kamler recently moved 10% of bca's business back to the u.s. why? wages for chinese workers have soared out of sight. kamler bought this abandoned factory and created 140 jobs, a lifeline in this distressed
3:14 am
industrial town. but the only way to make it work was investing in robotics. >> we're creating jobs with the automation and being able to be price competitive with china now, and it will get even better in the future. >> reporter: $6 million of automation does the work of more than 100 workers. i don't think a lot of people would look at that as a potential threat. that robot over there will be over here one day. >> we're not replacing other jobs with these robots. what we're doing is we're adding equipment that makes us more efficient. >> reporter: production manager albertus jones sees these machines as coworkers. >> a lot of people have the misconception that automation decreases jobs, but it's a different type of job, a more skilled job. >> reporter: without the automation, the business model doesn't work, so there aren't the jobs. >> that's right. >> reporter: a new model that could allow american manufacturing to ride high again. mark strassmann, cbs news, manning, south carolina.
3:15 am
coming up next, we're entering a new era of better forecasts thanks to a new satellite. and later, there's something different about the stars up for oscars this year.
3:16 am
ok, it says you apply the blue okone to me.y this. here? no. ah ok, here? maybe you should read the directions. have a little fun together, or a lot. k-y yours and mine. two sensations that work together, so you can play together. k-y yours and mine.
3:17 am
3:18 am
rise above joint discomfort with move free ultra's triple action joint support for improved mobility and flexibility, and 20% better comfort from one tiny, mighty pill... get move free ultra, and enjoy living well. 60-mile-per-hour gusts had this scaffolding swinging in jersey city during the nor'easter. in philadelphia a man was killed
3:19 am
by a blowing sign. the storm flooded roads and train stations along the east coast. beach erosion is a big problem after giant waves gouged the shoreline. it's about to get a lot easier to predict storms like this, and our jan crawford found out why. >> i think that's the tornado. >> reporter: this week saw deadly tornadoes, violent waves, and torrential rain, but meteorologists soon will have a new tool to better predict incoming storms, a weather satellite more than 22,000 miles above the earth called goes-16. the national oceanic and atmospheric administration. calls it high definition from the heavens. steven volz is a noaa administrator. >> it's better, faster, higher resolution, more information and new information that we haven't had before. >> and liftoff. >> reporter: launched two months ago, it can identify images other than clouds, like ash and
3:20 am
smoke. its first images, unveiled yesterday, showed fires burning in mexico, clouds over florida and the northeast. when fully operational in november, goes-16 will provide images at four times the resolution of current satellites and will be able to take pictures of an individual storm every 30 seconds. radar systems now can only scan a storm every five to six minutes. >> greater resolution with a higher speed will allow us to see real-time storms and events as they're occurring. >> reporter: the satellite can measure storm intensity by tracking lightning strikes. experts like louis uccellini, director of the national weather service, say the satellite would have been a great help during a deadly weather week like this one. >> there's no doubt in my mind that it would have made a difference in the way we were following these systems. >> reporter: that means more accurate forecasts and earlier warnings, crucial information that can save lives. jan crawford, cbs news,
3:21 am
suitland, maryland. coming up next, this truck driver never saw the freight train coming.
3:22 am
ok, it says you apply the blue okone to me.y this.
3:23 am
here? no. ah ok, here? maybe you should read the directions. have a little fun together, or a lot. k-y yours and mine. two sensations that work together, so you can play together. k-y yours and mine. for the first time in nearly three years, lead levels in flint, michigan's water system no longer exceed the federal limit. residents are still being told to use filtered or bottled water while thousands of older pipelines are being replaced. lead levels spiked when the city switched water sources under state management in 2014. minnesota governor mark dayton revealed he has prostate cancer. he collapsed last night during his state of the state address.
3:24 am
it's not clear if this was related to the cancer. dayton, who turned 70 on thursday, has had other health issues. he did say he plans to finish the final two years of his term. in utah, police released video today showing a horrifying crash. a fedex driver had no warning that a passenger train was coming. the gates did not come down until after the crash. the truck's trailer was torn to bits. boxes went flying. but there were no serious injuries. the oscars will have a much more diverse cast of actors this year. that story is next. is
3:25 am
3:26 am
3:27 am
finally tonight, the oscar nominations are out, and "la la land" is up for a record-tying 14. and a year after actors of color got not a single nomination, seven are in contention, and that too ties a record. here's jericka duncan. >> reporter: this year the academy selected seven actors
3:28 am
and actresses of color out of the 20 acting nominations. ruth negga was nominated for best actress for her role in "loving," a story about the couple who helped legalize interracial marriage in america. >> we may lose the small battles but win the big war. >> i just want to be your man. >> reporter: denzel washington's performance in "fences," an adaptation of african american august wilson's play earned washington an oscar nomination for best actor. >> it's not easy for me to admit that i've been standing in the same place for 18 years. >> well, i've been standing with you. >> reporter: his co-star viola davis was nominated for best supporting actress. >> what about my life? what about me? >> reporter: "fences" along with "lion," "moonlight" and "hidden figures" -- >> i had no idea they hired. >> there are quite a few women working in the space program. >> reporter: are all up for best picture. it is a far cry from last year, when the hashtag #oscarssowhite
3:29 am
contributed to boycotts and protests against the academy membership. then 92% white and 75% male. the academy later set the goal of doubling the number of women and diverse members by 2020. aisha harris is a culture writer for "slate." >> the academy when they do like to nominate stories about people of color and black people, they usually tend to be about slavery, the civil rights movement or something very oppression heavy, devastating like "precious," along those lines. >> reporter: but this time? >> this time we have a way bigger swath of different types of stories being nominated. >> reporter: still, some consider this year's nominations a win, even before the first envelope is opened. jericka duncan, cbs news, new york. and that's the "overnight news" for this wednesday. for some of you the news continues. for others, check back with us a little bit later for the morning news and be sure not to miss "cbs this morning."
3:30 am
from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm scott pelley. this is the "cbs overnight news." welcome to the "overnight news." i'm don dahler. president trump continues to pack his first full week in office with executive orders. the latest -- he advanced the construction of two controversial pipelines, the keystone xl pipeline which president obama blocked, and the dakota access pipeline which touched off months of protests and was eventually blocked by the army corps of engineers. mr. trump also signed a notice requiring any steel used in those pipelines to be made in america. but what's raising the most controversy in washington is another alternative fact. the white house insists president trump lost the popular vote in november because millions of illegal aliens cast unlawful ballots for hillary
3:31 am
clinton. margaret brennan reports. >> the comment that he made, he said 3 to 5 million people, you know, cost -- could have voted illegally based on the studies he's seen. >> reporter: white house spokesman sean spicer said president trump told congressional leaders yesterday that he lost the popular vote by nearly three million votes because of widespread fraud. he did win the electoral college. >> he's very comfortable with his win -- >> he must be troubled with it since he's bringing it up. >> i think he's having a discussion with some folks and mentioned something in passing which has been a long-standing belief that he's maintained. >> it's worth clarifying whether illegal ballots or illegal -- >> i think studies, there is one that came out of few in 2008, that showed 14% of people that voted were non-citizens. there are other studies that have been presented to him. it's a belief he maintains. >> reporter: spicer appears to be citing a previous study of disputed election and did not present any evidence of fraud in the 2016 election. the association that represents state election officials told
3:32 am
cbs news it is "not aware of any evidence that supports the voter fraud claims made by president trump." during the campaign mr. trump questioned the integrity of the vote. >> it's a rigged election. we're going to beat the rigged system. we're going to beat the rigged election. >> reporter: today republican house speaker paul ryan disagreed with the president. >> i've seen no evidence to that effect. i have made that very, very clear. >> i would urge the president to knock this off. >> reporter: south carolina republican senator lindsey graham. >> you're the leader of the free world, and people are going to start doubting you as a person if you keep making accusations against our electoral system without justification. >> reporter: the white house has not ruled out an investigation. >> he believes what he believes based on the information he's been provided. president trump has ordered a media blackout at the environmental protection agency. that means no press releases, blog updates or posts to the agency's social media accounts. mr. trump also barred all epa
3:33 am
staff from awarding any new contracts or grants. similar bans are in place at the agriculture and interior departments. could tying the hands of the epa affect the battle against climate change? jim axelrod has a look. >> reporter: at president trump's alma mater, the university of pennsylvania, environmental professors like bettany wiggin, listened carefully to candidate trump talk about climate change. >> all of this with the global warming, a lot of it is a hoax. >> reporter: which is why she, her colleagues and her students are racing to back up other server's information available on government websites. temporarily restrictions announced today that epa employees can no longer post or blog from government accounts stoked their fears the administration will limit access to data as it rolls back environmental protections. >> i'm really worried the facts might become more difficult to access, so there is a kind of vulnerability of internet
3:34 am
materials already. they become more vulnerable still when controlled by an administration who finds them inconvenient. >> reporter: just today, the badlands national park tweeted about climate change in defiance of the white house, and then deleted them. and while the president's nominee to run the epa, scott pruitt, disagreed with mr. trump in his hearings -- >> do you agree that global warming is a hoax? >> i do not, senator. >> reporter: just last may pruitt wrote, "scientists continue to disagree about the degree and extent of global warming and its connection to the actions of mankind. that debate should be encouraged." >> we started the hearings with a dangerous new form of climate denial. >> reporter: rachel cleetus is with the union of concerned scientists. >> this is a sort of climate denial that says, yes, it's real, but we don't know what is causing it, and it's basically yet another way to kick the can down the road and not take any action. >> reporter: cleetus says with data showing 2016 as the hottest
3:35 am
year on record and sea levels rising at alarming rates that could trigger massive flooding by the end of the century, limiting regulations on energy production could be catastrophic. >> this is a false choice. we don't have to choose between a safe climate and economic growth. we can have both. >> reporter: the centers for disease control has now canceled the conference that would have explored the effects of climate change on public health. that was scheduled for later this year. as for president trump, after his meeting with auto executives today, he said, "i am to a large extent an environmentalist. i believe in it." jim axelrod, cbs news, new york. south carolina governor nikki haley is u.s. ambassador to the united nations. the senate cleared her nomination. she's said russia can't be trusted, and she supports moving the u.s. embassy in israel from tel aviv to jerusalem. that is getting a mixed reaction in the middle east. seth doane is there. >> reporter: while there is no
3:36 am
policy shift yet, israelis we spoke to are eager to take advantage of president trump's pro-israel statements. >> it has to be here in jerusalem. >> reporter: just the suggestion of moving the u.s. embassy had folks talking this morning at the mainly israeli market in jerusalem. >> this is the right thing to do. this is the moral thing to do. >> reporter: moral? >> yes. >> reporter: why is this a moral issue? >> because, you know, the jewish people, okay, has a very long connection with the city of jerusalem. >> reporter: jerusalem, home to some of the holiest sites for jews, muslims and christians, is also claimed by palestinians as their capital. and they say shifting the u.s. embassy would show the u.s. siding with israel. it sparks disagreement even at the same coffee table. >> it's a bad idea to move the embassy to jerusalem. >> reporter: a bad idea? >> a bad idea, yes. >> reporter: why?
3:37 am
>> because we don't need the world war iii. >> reporter: on a windy rooftop in ramallah, we met a senior palestinian adviser. he worried the move could cripple the peace process. and give extremists a reason for violence. >> it complicates our lives and it starts with president trump. we want it to start on the right foot. we wanted him to be a force for peace. >> reporter: no countries locate their embassies in jerusalem, as the status of the city has been a main point of disagreement in stalled peace talks. >> better late than never, recognize jerusalem as the capital of the jewish people, like america does in any other country it works with. >> reporter: jerusalem's mayor told us they stand ready to help the u.s. with any move. palestinian president mahmoud abbas has met with the king of jordan. the two have agreed if an
3:38 am
embassy move were to take place, they would take countermeasures, but underline they hope it won't get that far. or conquer the field? defy expectations any day with always infinity. made with flexfoam. absorbs 10x its weight. rewrite the rules. always. hey there, starting your search for the ri am!used car? you got it. just say show me millions of used cars for sale at the all new carfax.com. but, i don' want one that's had a bunch of owners just say, show me cars with only one owner pretty cool it's perfect. that's the power of carfax® find the cars you want, avoid the ones you don't plus you get a free carfax® report with every listing start your used car search at carfax.com
3:39 am
3:40 am
thousands of people who live in the deep south and northeast and along the west coast are cleaning up after four days of damaging and even deadly storms. most people had time to prepare thanks to the national weather service. and now a new satellite, the one that took these pictures, can look even deeper into the storms as they brew. jan crawford has the details. >> reporter: so this new satellite, the goes-16 is what they call it, it sits 22,000 miles above the earth and it sends its data here, to those satellite dishes over there. and meteorologists say that is going to help them better predict where and when bad weather will hit. >> i think that's a tornado. >> reporter: this week saw deadly tornadoes. violent waves. and torrential rain.
3:41 am
you can't prevent bad weather, and meteorologists will soon have a new tool to predict it using a satellite called goes-16. >> it's better, faster, more information and new information that we haven't had before. >> and liftoff. >> reporter: launched two months i ago, it unveiled its first images monday, fires burning in new mexico, clouds over florida and the northeast. when it becomes fully operational, goes-16 will provide images at four times clarity of current satellites. radar systems now can only scan a storm every five to six minutes. >> greater resolution with a higher speed will allow us to see real-time storms and events as they're occurring. >> reporter: it can help measure storm intensity by tracking lightning strikes. the experts say it would have been a great help in a deadly weather week like this one. >> there's no doubt in my mind
3:42 am
it would have made a difference in the way we were following these systems. with 30-second imagery, we would be able to see those changes with a clarity we've never seen before. >> this means accuracy for the viewers. and that's huge. >> reporter: evalyn chaft is a meteorologist at cbs in los angeles. >> we just see so much more with that picture you get and you can warn people earlier. so if we have thunderstorms here at home, we can tell you where is that cell, where that lightning is, everything. >> reporter: experts say that this new satellite will give them a better and sharper picture of weather patterns. so that means instead of just getting a five-day forecast, you might get them much further out, which i think is pretty cool, because that will make those beach vacations a little easier to plan when you want better weather. >> jan crawford already dreaming about the beach. the "overnight news" will be right back.
3:43 am
a girl with golden locks broke into a house owned by three bears. she ate some porridge, broke the baby bear's chair, and stole some jewelry, a flat-screen tv, and a laptop. luckily the geico insurance agency had helped the bears with homeowners insurance. they were able to replace all their items... ...including a new chair from crate and barrel. call geico and see how easy it is to switch and save on homeowners insurance. ♪living well come on up, grandpa don't let joint discomfort keep you down. come play with us! i'm coming. upgrade to move free ultra's triple action joint support for improved mobility, and flexibility. it also provides 20% better comfort than glucosamine chondroitin,
3:44 am
all from one tiny mighty pill.... get in there with move free ultra, and enjoy living well. ♪living well because my teeth are yellow. these photos? why don't you use a whitening toothpaste? i'm afraid it's bad for my teeth. try crest 3d white. crest 3d white diamond strong toothpaste and rinse... ...gently whiten... ...and fortify weak spots. use together for 2 times stronger enamel. crest 3d white. 48 hours of protection. ♪ i don't have to reapply this... not once! it's really soft and almost velvety... as you put it on. it's like reaaally soft. try dove advance care. for softer, smoother underarms. ok, it says you apply the blue okone to me.y this. here? no. ah ok, here? maybe you should read the directions. have a little fun together, or a lot. k-y yours and mine. two sensations that work together, so you can play together.
3:45 am
k-y yours and mine. actor henry winkler gained fame and fortune in the '70s and '80s playing the fonz on the hit sitcom "happy days." but when the show disappeared, so did he. for a while.
3:46 am
the fonz is now in his golden years, enjoying a rebirth, both on screen and in the bookstores. he invited mo rocca in to tell his story. >> look at these teeth. they're perfect, like a toothpaste commercial. >> reporter: after 38 years of marriage -- >> i think he's so handsome. >> reporter: stacey winkler still adores her husband. >> he's adorable. look at his hands. they're so tan. >> very kind of you. you're very pretty. ♪ sunday, monday, happy days >> reporter: then again, who doesn't love henry winkler? >> aaaaay. >> reporter: after all, he was the fonz on the classic tv series "happy days." >> listen up, girls, one time, one time only, line right up here, kiss the fonz for a buck. that's a bargain at any price. >> reporter: the role of the fonz was the foundation on which
3:47 am
i built the rest of my life. ♪ it built the house i live in. >> reporter: but winkler didn't always feel the love, especially in the manhattan apartment where his parents, immigrants from nazi germany, raised him. >> they had an affectionate phrase for me, and for those of you that don't understand german, that means dumb dog. they were convinced that i was lazy, that i was not living up to my potential. teachers said the same thing. so i was grounded most of my high school career. >> reporter: how old were you when you read your first book? >> 31. >> reporter: what neither henry nor his parents knew is that he was dyslexic. so dyslexic, he could barely read. >> it was horrible. it was humiliating. it was scary.
3:48 am
and i learned to memorize as much as i could from any page, and then improvise. >> reporter: how many colleges did you apply to? >> i applied to 28. and i got into two. >> reporter: he managed to get through boston's emerson college, then was accepted to the prestigious yale school of drama. after auditioning with a shakespearean monologue, sort of. >> and he loved his dog, and he would take his dog for a walk. >> reporter: yes, it was a monologue that he improvised. >> the sky was that eerie blue. i made it up. >> reporter: after yale, he acted on stage and in commercials. >> look out, the fonz is coming. >> reporter: and then at the age
3:49 am
of 27, winkler became the coolest high school dropout in america. >> what's in the box, fonz? >> my engagement rings. >> you give girls engagement rings? >> don't be silly. they give them to me. >> reporter: he was one of tv's biggest stars. but his dyslexia continued to interfere with not just his reading, but also physical coordination. riding a motorcycle, was that challenging? >> very. could not piece together the gear. the gear, the speed, the brake. there was too much. i couldn't comprehend. >> reporter: was that embarrassing for you? >> well, i wish i could so it would have looked great if i rode it, you know? but i only rode it for about 15 feet in actuality.
3:50 am
>> reporter: but winkler was so convincing playing smooth and competent, that the offers got bigger. why did you turn down the lead in "grease?" >> because i'm an idiot. that's it. no, the thing is that i had & this -- this thing, i'm not going to be typecast. you know, i'm going to beat the system. and really what i should have done is just shut up and gone to work. >> reporter: what was the toughest point in your career? >> not being able to work from 1983 to really 1991 as an actor. "happy days" is over. what do i do now? and i had no idea. and being rutterless is painful.
3:51 am
>> reporter: to fill the void, winkler became a producer. he helped to create the original "mcgiver" tv series. >> and cut. >> reporter: and he directed. and while he was away working, stacey raised their three kids. >> i knew that his first love was his work, and i knew that he had to work in order to feel valued. my belief in him could not fill him because he needed to feel that for himself. >> reporter: that's -- i mean, that's very candid. your reaction? >> my reaction is that i'm very lucky. >> reporter: and over the past 25 years, winkler has worked constantly in hundreds of movies and tv shows, including "arrested development." >> so they're not filing
3:52 am
charges. i got them to call your flee of justice "religious expression." >> this is a lawyer. >> yeah, he's very good. >> i think he's grown and evolved so much that i see less and less of that self-doubt. >> oh, there you go. nice job. >> reporter: part of that confidence comes from a pastime. >> look at that. oh, my gosh. >> reporter: that henry and stacey share. if there's one word that this requires, what is it? >> patience. tenacity. >> great shot, my friend. one more. >> thank you. thank you. >> reporter: the winklers have gone fishing. fly fishing in montana and here on the snake river in idaho for more than 25 years. what hooked you? >> the place of it. the sound of it. the green of it.
3:53 am
and what happens when you're fishing, you cannot concentrate on anything else. not a problem in the world bothers you at this moment. >> oh, get him. yeah! >> reporter: and fly fishing, winkler says, gave him the courage to conquer his greatest fear, the written word. >> i am an actor, a producer, director. with lynn, we have written 32 novels, and i am in the bottom 3% academically in america. >> we are in chapter five. >> okay. >> reporter: yes, henry winkler is the co-author, along with lynn oliver, of a series of books about hank zipzer, a fourth grader who has trouble reading. sound familiar? >> we have written 4,476 words. >> wow. and they're all good.
3:54 am
>> thank you so much. >> reporter: their books have become best sellers. >> thank you for being here. >> i mess everything up. >> reporter: and the basis for a popular series in britain. >> and just because reading, writing and math might be hard for you, it has nothing to do with how brilliant you are. ♪ these days are ours >> reporter: henry winkler, america's most famous teenager -- >> nice job, big fish. >> reporter: -- is 71 now. >> nice job! >> reporter: you learned that where there's a will, there's a way. >> i live by tenacity and gratitude. tenacity gets you where you want to be, and gratitude allows you not to be angry or frustrated along the way. at this moment, when a lot of men my age are sitting at home, i am in the golden moment.
3:55 am
>> repor
3:56 am
3:57 am
steve hartman stopped at a roadside restaurant and brought back something extra sweet. >> reporter: what makes tim's place restaurant in albuquerque, new mexico so special is that it is indeed tim's place. >> hello, how are we doing today? welcome to my place. >> reporter: tim harris was the first restaurant owner in the country with down syndrome. for the last five years, he's lived for his business. which is why his customers were shocked when tim announced recently that he was closing. >> my custers cry a lot. >> reporter: so what drives a man to give up a job he loves more than anything? a girl he loves more than anything.
3:58 am
>> i cannot wait. >> reporter: that blur in the "i love tim" t-shirt is tiffani johnson. they met at a down syndrome convention. >> i'm like, oh, my god. >> reporter: did you go up to him and say something? >> i was too scared to. >> reporter: too scared to? >> because i never met a guy like tim. >> reporter: she says it was the weirdest feeling. >> i think i got hit by a love bug. >> reporter: eventually, tim got bit by it, too. >> will you be my girlfriend? >> yes. >> reporter: he made her his steady and decided to move to denver to be closer to her. tim plans to open a new restaurant there, but it's still going to be hard leaving what he knows. in fact, he cries every time he thinks about it. >> i'm just really sad i have to lose this place. i'm really sad. >> it's incredible to watch. he's deeply grieving about the idea of this transition. >> reporter: tim's father, keith.
3:59 am
>> while at the same time being as excited as i've ever seen him about the possibility being with tiffany. >> i'm lucky to have someone that loves me. >> every time i feel sad, my girlfriend makes me a lot happier. >> i'm going to start crying here. >> reporter: when you look her in the eye, what do you see? >> i see love, i see joy, i see i have a future. >> ahhh. >> reporter: why on earth do we call them disabled? when on the important things, they can be so much more able than us. >> i love you. >> reporter: steve hartman, on the road, in albuquerque, new mexico. >> and that's the "overnight news" for this wednesday. for some of you the news continues. for others, check back with us later for the morning news and of course, "cbs this morning." from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm don dahler.
4:00 am
captioning funded by cbs it's wednesday, january, 25th, 2017. this is the "cbs morning news." breaking overnight, a suicide bomber barrels into a moelgg de-shann motel setting off a string of explosions. it's day six of the trump administration, and today we'll hear more about the president's plan for national security. judging from his tweets last night, we know a wall along the mexican border will be a key topic. >> he believes what he believes on the information he's provided. >> white house press secretary sean

131 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on