tv CBS Overnight News CBS October 10, 2016 3:00am-4:00am EDT
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an it's self leveling so it will penetrate deep into the crack. it will fill cracks up to and inch wide, and you can sprinkle a little sand on the surface if you need to match a texture. over filling is ok, but it does set up in about 10 minutes, so you do need to remove any excess material before then, and then scrape it flush with the rest of the concrete. it changes from a dark grey color to a light grey one as it cures. and afab safely coat or paint it, but it's a good idea to sand it down a little bit, give it a little bit of tooth. now for our coating were using a 2 part epoxy. and you can either stir this by hand with a stir stick or you can do it mechanically with a drill and a mixing paddle. either way you don't need to let
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so you probably want to cut in along the edges with a brush to keep it nice and tidy. then a paint roller works just fine for applying it over the rest of the concrete. now the coating dries pretty smooth, so the kit comes with these flakes you can spread out and give it a little bit of texture. so what works pretty well is coating the floor in sections that are small enough so that you can easily distribute the flakes while it section. keep doing that all the way across the floor and you'll have a beautiful surface, ready for cars, in just a few days. [upbeat music] check out our store at hometime.com. shop hometime.com! hometime.com. shop hometime.com! if you're approaching 65, now's the time to get your ducks in a row. to learn about medicare, and the options you have. you see, medicare doesn't cover everything - only about 80% of your part b medical expenses.
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the carpet that we're using is 100% wool, comes from sheep in new zealand. and not only is it a natural product, but it's also non-allergenic, doesn't promote bacteria growth, and it's not going to emit harmful gases. we have two different carpets for the two floors, but they both have the sa soft to the touch. upstairs in the bedrooms, we have a style called worstead elegance, which has kind of a small checked pattern, in a color called sandstorm. in the master bedroom, we have a style called worstead weave. this has a pattern of checks that are about 1/2 inch by 1/4 inch, and the color there is called sesame. both of these are fairly neutral in color and texture, so they should work
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to getting an occupancy permit. so i got to tell you, that is a big load off. - it is. well, hopefully, you can join us next time as we do a few more things here and wrap it all up with a bow. i'm miriam johnson. - and i'm dean johnson. see you next time. [upbeat music] hometime is brought to you by quikrete,
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welcome back to the "overnight news." round two of the clinton-trump presidential debates turned out to be a verbal slugfest. here is more of what the candidates had to say. >> wikileaks released purported excerpts of secretary clinton's paid speeches she refused to release. one line in which you secretary clinton purportedly say, y need both a public and private position on certain issues. so, two, from virginia asks, is it okay for politicians to be two-faced? is it acceptable for a politician to have a private stance on issues. secretary clinton. your two minutes.
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something i said about abraham lincoln. after having seen the wonderful steven spielberg movie called "lincoln." it was a master class watching president lincoln get the congress to approve the 13th amendment. it was principled and it was strac. and i was making the point that it is hard sometimes to get the congress to do what you want to do. and you have to keep working at it. and yes, president lincoln was trying to convince some people he used some arguments. convincing other people he used other arguments. that was a great -- i thought a great display of presidential leadership. but you know, let's talk about what's really going on here,
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community just came out and said in the last few days, that the kremlin, meaning putin and the russian government, are directing the attacks, the hacking on american accounts to influence our election. and wikileaks is part of that as are other sites where the russians hack information. we don't know if it is accurate information. and then they put it out. we have never in the history of where an adversary, a foreign power, is working so hard to influence the outcome of the election. believe me they're not doing it to get me elected. they're doing it to try to influence the election for donald trump. maybe because he praised put spin, he agrees with what mr. putin, maybe he wants to do business in moscow. i don't know the reasons. but we deserve answers.
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the entanglements and financial relationships. >> we are going to get to that later. secretary clinton, you are out of time. >> i think i should respond, so ridiculous. look, now she is blaming, she got caught in a total lie. her papers went out to all her friend at the banks, goldman sachs, everybody else, he said things, wikileaks just came out. and, she lied. now she is blaming the lie on the late great abraham lincoln. that's one that i haven't -- okay. honest abe, never lied. thathe that's the big difference between abraham lincoln and you. >> i want to have a tax on people who are making a million dollars. called the buffet rule. yes, warren buffett is the one who has said, somebody look him should not be paying a lower tax rate than his secretary. i want to have a surcharge on incomes above $5 million. we have to make up for lost times because i want to invest
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families. i think it's been unfortunate, but, it's happened, that since the great recession, the gains have all gone to the top. and we need to reverse that. people like donald who paid zero in taxes. zero for our vets. zero for our military, zero for health and education. that is wrong. >> thank you, secretary. >> we are going to make sure nobody, no corporation, no individual, can get away with without paying fair share. >> mr. trump. the chance to respond. i want to till viewers what she is referri taxes were the number one issue on facebook. "the new york times" published three pages of your 1995 tax return. show you claimed a $916 million loss, you could have avoided paying personal taxes for years. you pay state tax thousands, employee taxes, real estate taxes. property taxes. you have not answered a question. did you use the $916 million to avoid federal income taxes?
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of course i do. so do all of her donors. most of her donors. i know many of her donors. her donors took massive tax writeoffs. a lot of my writeoff was depreciation and that hillary the senator allowed. she will allow it. the people who give her all this money. they want it. i understand the tax code better than any body that has ever run for president. hillary clinton, extremely complex. hillary clinton has friend that including they want the carried interest provision which is very important to wall street people. but they really want the carried interest provision. which i believe hillary is leaving. very interesting. why she is leaving carried interest. but i will tell you that number one i pay tremendous, numbers of taxes. i absolutely used it. and so did warren buffett. so did george soros. and many of the other people
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names, buzz they're rich. but they're not famous. we won't make them famous. >> can you same how many years you have avoided paying personal federal income taxes? >> i pay tax. i pay federal tax too. >> the cbs "overnight news" will be right back. ?living well? 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...
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today you can do everything in just one click, even keep your toilet clean and fresh. introducing lysol click gel. click it in to enjoy clean freshness with every flush. lysol. start healthing. ? yeah, click ? the syrian regime renewed assault on aleppo after the u.n. security council failed to reach an agreement on a truce to save the city. about a quarter million
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that includes one young girl sending out pleas for help on the internet. elizabeth palmer reports. >> good morning from aleppo. we are still alive. >> reporter: that's a small victory message from bana after a heavy night of bombing in eastern aleppo. since the 24th of september, she has been sending out microreports on twitter of a life in a city under attack. here its another one. a video of bana, 7rs wincing as bombs explode. the family with their three children live inside opposition controlled aleppo. we managed to get in touch with bana and her mother fatimah on skype. there you are. let's see your mom. >> this is my friend hamed. here. >> reporter: turned out the internet wasn't good enough for a stable video link. still, we were able to ask where
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bombing gets heavy. do you stay underground? >> no. we just go to the basement, because it's not safe here in our home. >> reporter: but there is lots of proof that the basement isn't safe either. collapsed buildings like this one dot eastern aleppo. everyone, even kids knows what happens to people trapped inside. what do you tell the children? >> i tell them to be strong. there is not happen to you. our god with us. you are our heroes hand i hugging them. >> reporter: still, bana's twitter plea gets more urgent with each passing day. please, assad and putin, she says, stop the bombing.
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extraordinary starts here. new k-y intense. a stimulating gel that takes her pleasure to new heights. k-y intense. expensive new weapon in their quest to crack down on distracted drivers. kris van cleave takes us along for a ride. >> reporter: this is not your average patrol car driving interstate 40 in memphis. from up here in the semicab, it's easy for ten tee highway patrol to spot texting drivers like brandy hayes. >> white pickup on my right. >> reporter: lieutenant cary hopkins radios to pull her over. >> reporter: do you text and drive?
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about it before you text next time? >> definitely. >> reporter: nationwide in 2015, 3,500 people were killed. up 9% from the year before. in tennessee distracked driving crashes could surpass last year when 116 people died and more than 6,000 injured. tennessee highway patrol captain, jimmy johnson. >> often when you see an accident now, you don't see any brake marks? >> correct. >> what does that tell you? >> that's telling us that they're manipulating that device prior to that crash and never have a chance to avoid the crash before impact. >> reporter: they weren't looking at the road? >> they weren't looking at the road. weren't paying attention to the road. >> reporter: 46 states have laws against texting. cops say it can be hard to enforce. people know they shouldn't be texting while they're driving they're sneaky about it aren't they?
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it is even more dangerous because they're taking their eyes complete leap off the road. >> reporter: that's forcing officers to get creative. >> texting. >> reporter: police in san bernardino, california pose as panhandlers with signs warning drivers they're looking for violators. many miss the message and got ticketed. in moscow, idaho they use a yellow school bus. these canadian cops can spot techers a mile away with a telescope lens. >> i saw you looking at your phone. >> reporter: in massachusetts, police saw a 360% jump in rear-end crashes. they're using cops on bikes. chief victor flarety. >> a message sent the old-fashioned way with a handwritten ticket. >> you have to pay over $100. so don't look at your phone! >> national safety council estimates cell phone use accounts for one in four of all u.s., kras. it takes three to four seconds
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for some people music is a great escape from every day life. steve hartman found an example of that on the road. ? ? >> reporter: the philadelphia orchestra boasts one of the best trumpet players in the country. though he played on stage for thousand. his most impressive performance happens here in his own basen't for an audience of one. >> okay. >> for more than a year, david has been mentoring 17-year-old basset azisi, lives 7,000 miles away in kabul, afghanistan. the kid found david on facebook. got his attention by tooting his
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>> started off saying i am the best trumpet player in afghanistan because there are only two. and i was immediately taken by him. i said i have got to read the rest of what he has to say. >> reporter: what did he want? >> to get better. another reason that i wanted immediately to work with this kid. >> reporter: they worked together over the internet until baset got accepted into near traverse city, michigan. the most unlikely trumpet player in america. unlikely, because in afghanistan, some hard-liners think any one playing an instrument, especially a western one should be punished. >> they don't want music, no. >> reporter: did you feel look you were risking your safety? >> in some part, yes. >> reporter: you did it anyway? >> yeah. >> reporter: you must love the
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>> it does really highlight the power of music in people's lives. >> reporter: today for the first time in his life, baset says he can carry his trumpet in public. a liberation that he owes almost entirely to a man he never met. david not only mentored baset but helped raise $30,000 to pay for his schooling. where would your life beef without him? >> i don't know. he did a lot. >> reporter: last month. david flew in to meet baset. face to face. baset struggled for the words. but the two he finally did come up with were more than ample. thank you. lastly, as for the future. baset says he in the sure all this will lead. regardless, he says no matter what he does, he will give back. and no matter where he lives, he will not be silenced. >> that's good! >> reporter: steve hartman on the road in traverse city, michigan. that's the "overnight news" for this monday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back with us a little while later. for the morning news and "cbs this morning." from the broadcast center here
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this is the cbs "overnight news." welcome to the "overnight news," i'm reena nina, the presidential candidates returned to the campaign trail after wrapping up one of the most highly anticipated debates in modern history. hillary clinton and donald trump faced revelations last week that may have doomed them in any other campaign year. for clinton release of transcripts of private speeches she gave to wall street heavy weights. clinton retoed for months to release them herself. they show her favoring free trade and open borders.
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another to the public. but all that was drowned out by the vulgar tape of donald trump. >> hello, how are you? >> in it he jokes he is such a celebrity he can grope and kiss whomever he wants. a lot of republicans have called for him to drop out of the race. here's some of the debate. >> for the record though, are you saying what you said on the bus 11 years ago, you did not actually kiss women without consent or grope women without consent. >> i have great respect for women. nobody has more respect for women than i do. >> for the record you are saying -- you never did that? >> i said things frankly you hear the things i said. i was embarrassed by it. i have tremendous -- respect for women. and wo things? >> i will tell you, no i have not. i will tell you, i am going to make our country safe. we are going to have borders in our country that we don't have now. people are pouring into our country. and they're coming in from the middle east and other places. we are going to make america safe, and great again. make america safe again. we are going to make america wealthy again. if you don't do that, it just,
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have to build up the wealth of our nation. >> thank you, mr. trump. >> other nations are taking our jobs. >> thank you, mr. trump. >> secretary clinton, do you want to respond? >> well, like everyone else, i have spent a lot of time thinking over the last 48 hours. about what we heard and saw. you know, with prior republican nominees for president, i disagreed with them on politics, policies, principles but i never questioned their fitness to serve. donald trump is different. i said starting back in june that he was not fit to be president and commander-in-chief. and many republicans and independents have said the same thing. what we all saw and heard on friday was donald talking about women. what he things about women. what he does to women.
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doesn't represent who he is. but it is clear to an one who heard it, that it represents exactly who he is. >> that was locker room talk. i am not proud of it. i am a person who has great respect for people, for my family, for the people of this country. and certainly i'm not proud of it. but that was something that -- happened, if you look at bill word and his was action. his was what he has done to women. there has never been any body in the history of pom ticks in this nation that has been so abusive to women you. can say any way you want to say it. but bill clinton was abusive to women. hillary clinton attacked those same women. and, attacked them viciously. four of them are here tonight. one of the women, who is a wonderful woman, at 12 years old, was raped at 12. her client, she represented got
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she is seen laughing on two separate occasions laughing at girl who was raped. kathy shelton that young woman is here with us tonight. don't tell me about words. i am absolutely, i apologize for those words. but it is things that people say, but what president clinton did, he was impeached. he lost his license to practice law. he had to pay an $850,000 fine to one of the women. paula jones who is also hear tonight. and i will tell you that, when hillary brings up the point like that, and she talks about, words that i said 11 years ago. i think it's disgraceful. i think she should be ashamed of herself if you want to know the truth.
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secretary clinton you have two minutes. >> well, first, let me start by saying -- that so much of what he just said is not right. but he gets to run his campaign any way he chooses. he gets to decide what he wants to talk about. instead of answering people's questions, talking about our agenda, laying out the plans that we have, that we think can make a better life and a better country, that's his choice. when i hear something like that, i am reminded of what my friend michelle obadv when they go low, you go high. and look, if this were just about one video, maybe what he is saying tonight would be understandable. but everyone can draw their own conclusions at this point about whether or not the man in the video or the man on the stage respects women. but if i win, i am going to
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into your situation. because there has never been so many lies, so much deception, there has never been any like it. and we are going to have a special prosecutor. when i speak, i go out and speak, the people of this country are furious. in my opinion, the people that are, long time workers at the fbi are furious. there has never been anything look this, e-mails you get a subpoena. after getting the subpoena, you delete 33,000 e-mails. >> everything he just said is absolutely false. >> oh really. >> the audience needs to calm down here. >> told people it would be impossible to be fact checking donald all the time. i would never get to talk about
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literally trump. you can fact check him. fact check him in real time. last time at the first debate we had millions of people, fact checking. so i expect we'll have millions more fact checking. because, you know, it is -- it is just awfully good that some one with the temperament of donald trump is not in charge of the law in our country. >> because you'd be in jail. l night's presidential debate in just two minutes. you are watching the cbs
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welcome back to the "overnight news." round two of the clinton-trump presidential debates turned out to be a verbal slugfest. here is more of what the candidates had to say. >> wikileaks released purported excerpts of secretary clinton's paid speeches she refused to release. one line in which you secretary clinton purportedly say, "you need both a public and private position on certain issues." so, two, from virginia asks, "is two-faced? is it acceptable for a politician to have a private stance on issues." secretary clinton. your two minutes. >> right, as i recall, that was something i said about abraham lincoln.
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steven spielberg movie called "lincoln." it was a master class watching president lincoln get the congress to approve the 13th amendment. it was principled and it was strategic. and i was making the point that it is hard sometimes to get the congress to do what you want to do. and you have to keep working at it. and yes, president lincoln was ng he used some arguments. convincing other people he used other arguments. that was a great -- i thought a great display of presidential leadership. but you know, let's talk about what's really going on here, martha? because, our intelligence community just came out and said in the last few days, that the kremlin, meaning putin and the
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directing the attacks, the hacking on american accounts to influence our election. and wikileaks is part of that as are other sites where the russians hack information. we don't know if it is accurate information. and then they put it out. we have never in the history of our country been in a situation where an adversary, a foreign power, is working so hard to influence the outcome of the election. believe me they're not doing it to get me elected. they're doing it to try to influence the election for donald trump. maybe because he praised put spin, he agrees with what mr. putin, maybe he wants to do business in moscow. i don't know the reasons. but we deserve answers. we should demand that donald release all of his tax returns. so that people can see what are the entanglements and financial relationships. >> we are going to get to that
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of time. >> i think i should respond, so ridiculous. look, now she is blaming, she got caught in a total lie. her papers went out to all her friend at the banks, goldman sachs, everybody else, he said things, wikileaks just came out. and, she lied. now she is blaming the lie on the late great abraham lincoln. that's one that i haven't -- okay. honest abe, never lied. that's the good thing. that's the big difference between abraham lincoln and you. >> i want to have a tax on people who are making a million dollars. called the buffet rule. yes, warren buffett is the one who has said, somebody look him should not be paying a lower tax rate than his secretary. i want to have a surcharge on incomes above $5 million. we have to make up for lost
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in you. i want to invest in hard working families. i think it's been unfortunate, but, it's happened, that since the great recession, the gains have all gone to the top. and we need to reverse that. people like donald who paid zero in taxes. zero for our military, zero for health and education. that is wrong. >> thank you, secretary. >> we are going to make sure nobody, no corporation, no individual, can get away with without paying fair share. >> mr. trump. the chance to respond. i want to till viewers what she is referring to. in the last month. taxes were the number one issue on facebook. "the new york times" published three pages of your 1995 tax return. show you claimed a $916 million loss, you could have avoided paying personal taxes for years. you pay state tax thousands, employee taxes, real estate taxes.
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question. did you use the $916 million to avoid federal income taxes? of course i do. of course i do. so do all of her donors. most of her donors. i know many of her donors. her donors took massive tax writeoffs. a lot of my writeoff was depreciation and that hillary the senator allowed. she will allow it. the people who give her all this money. they want it. i understand the tax code better than any body that has ever run for president. ll complex. hillary clinton has friend that want all of these provisions including they want the carried interest provision which is very important to wall street people. but they really want the carried interest provision. which i believe hillary is leaving. very interesting. why she is leaving carried interest. but i will tell you that number one i pay tremendous, numbers of taxes. i absolutely used it. and so did warren buffett. so did george soros. and many of the other people that hillary is getting money
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names, because they're rich. but they're not famous. we won't make them famous. >> can you same how many years you have avoided paying personal federal income taxes? >> i pay tax. i pay federal tax too. >> the cbs "overnight news" will be right back. the roses are blooming in herbal essences hair is delightfully fragranced with notes of moroccan rose and the freshness of springtime unforgettable, wherever you go the scents you can't forget... from herbal essences, blooming now! ? music ? extraordinary starts here. new k-y intense. a stimulating gel that takes her pleasure to new heights. k-y intense.
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i'm walter cronkite. good night. and that pioneer of television news broadcasting. what was edward r. murrow like? >> some times, he'll come in. i could tell from the look on his face that something is going on. and -- i don't say anything. give him a chance to work it out. >> i see. >> makeup may impact the superficial.
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richard nixon's biggest mistake after watergate, probably his decision not to wear makeup in his presidential debate with john f. kennedy. a decision which made him look sweaty and nervous. >> makeup shows up in history books when it comes to the 1960 election? >> yes. >> you made up richard nixon when? >> after he left office. i made him up twice. very gracious. certainly took makeup. >> this time. i am accepting makeup. >> absolutely. >> reporter: florence ricabono began working in tv around when tv began. an art school graduate. nickname in college, got her start doing makeup on sid caesar's your show of shows. and, the milton berle show. >> ha-ha-ha. >> reporter: in a show like that watched by millions of people? >> yes, yes. >> did you think i've got to get this right. because the a third of the country is going to be watching this. >> no, i never really thought about it. it was my job. i did the best i knew how to do.
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historical significance of it. it was just like something you did. >> and she liked doing it so much -- even after marrying and having seven children, she kept on working. >> mohammad ali. >> mohammad ali. >> next to marv albert. >> ricki keeps track of all the news makers she made over in a spiral notebook. >> i can just go anywhere randomly on m, and i put my finger down. and there is john mcenroe. >> margaret mead. she was lovely. >> mickey mantle. monkees, mcguire sisters. all of them. dudley moore. >> dudley moore was funny. >> did you use a booster seat? >> then the four guys from england. the ones who in 1964, played the ed sullivan show where ricki worked at the time. >> i heard all this din outside. and i looked out the window and saw all these young people.
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he said some group from england if i said wow this looks serious. so i called home. and -- i said to my husband. i can get the children into a dress rehearsal. the children didn't want to come. so, of course, now they're very sorry about that. >> reporter: ricki knew what the pop upstarts needed to pop on tv. during that now, legendary broadcast. >> i used a little eyeliner. and -- >> why did you use eyeliner? >> was black and white television. they were a music group. want to see their eyes and mouth. that's what's important. i met paul mccartney. maybe, eight years ago. and i told him, who i was, he said oh, used pancake makeup. and eyeliner. when we asked about the eyeliner. you said it will be fine. >> and it was.
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>> reporter: over the decades. ricki has drawn close to more than a few of her colleagues here. friendships that mattered dearly after her husband jay passed away in 1999. >> i was devastated if i thought maybe i shouldn't go back to work. didn't know how i could. mike wallace came to the funeral hope. mike took me by the hands he looked me in the eyes and he said you are coming back to work. i said i don't know what i am doing. he said you are coming back to and so he gave me courage. you know. >> really can't do this with my glasses on. >> no? >> it wouldn't be right to end this tribute without pointing out that ricki johnson, the woman who has made thousand of other people look good, looks pretty damn great herself. >> are you ever going to retire? >> i don't know. mo, i, i love what i do. i work with the top people in
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and, they still like what i do. so, should i just sit here and read a book? ha-ha-ha. the cbs "overnight news" will be right back. i'm a reseat dance fitness instructor actor i'm a copywriter i'm a veteran i have lupus cerebral palsy i'm blind and i'm working in a job i love i love because i was given a chance to contribute my skills and talents to show that my disability is only one part of who i am who i am who i am
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for seem people music is a great escape from every day life. steve hartman found an example of that on the road. okay. the philadelphia orchestra boasts one of the best trumpet players. but his best performance happens here in his basement for an audience of one. >> reporter: for more than a year, david has been mentoring 17-year-old, baset azisi, he lives 7,000 miles away in kabul, afghanistan. the kid found david on facebook and got his attention by tooting
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>> started off saying i am the best trumpet player in afghanistan because there are only two. and i was immediately taken by him. i said i have got to read the rest of what he has to say. >> reporter: what did he want? >> to get better. another reason that i wanted immediately to work with this kid. >> reporter: they worked together over the internet until baset got accepted into the prestigious interlochen, school for the arts near traverse city, michigan. the most unlikely trumpet player in america. unlikely, because in afghanistan, some hard-liners think any one playing an instrument, especially a western one should be punished. >> they don't want music, no. >> reporter: did you feel look you were risking your safety? >> in some part, yes. >> reporter: you did it anyway? >> yeah. >> reporter: you must love the instrument?
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power of music in people's lives. >> reporter: today for the first time in his life, baset says he can carry his trumpet in public. a liberation that he owes almost entirely to a man he never met. david not only mentored baset but helped raise $30,000 to pay for his schooling. where would your life beef without him? >> i don't know. he did a lot. >> reporter: last month. david flew in to meet baset. face to face. baset struggled for the words. but the two he finally did come up with were more than ample. thank you. lastly, as for the future. baset says he in the sure all this will lead. regardless, he says no matter and no matter where he lives, he will not be silenced. >> that's good! >> reporter: steve harartman on the road in traverse city, michigan. that's the "overnight news" for this monday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back with us a little while later. for the morning news and "cbs this morning." from the broadcast center here in new york city, i'm reena
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captioning funded by cbs it's monday, october 10th, 2016. this is the "cbs morning news." when you starve, they let you do it. grab them by the [ bleep ]. you can do anything. >> after a weekend dominated by a weekend of donald trump joking with sexually assaulteding women. his vulgar remarks dominated last night's second presidential debate. >> just for the record, though, are you sailiying on that bus 1 years ago you were kissing or groping women without consent? >> i have great respect for women.
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