tv CBS This Morning CBS September 16, 2016 7:00am-9:00am CDT
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captioning funded by cbs good morning. it is friday, september 16th, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning.? donald trump reignites controversy over his stance on president obama's birth place. his campaign says the president was born in the united states, but trump, himself, refuses to answer the question. the government blasts samsung and records the recall of nearly a million smartphones and people are urged to stop using them immediately because of the risk of explosion. and what is inside your tattoo? the fda warns about dangerous side effects from ingredients also used in printer ink and car paint. we begin this morning with a
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>> he was asked one more time, where was president obama born? and he still wouldn't say america. >> trump under fire. but dodging birther questions. >> i feel donald trump can't win because tonight he was very clear that he believes that barack obama was born in the united states. >> donald trump hasn't said anything. donald trump has not said anything. >> well. >> the media is not going to force trump to say anything he wouldn't s of him being a birther but he did and that came out of hillary clinton! >> new york city police officers guns drawn and chasing a crazed man through the street armed with a meat cleaver. >> the police gave him an opportunity to end it peacefully. >> the dangerous storm of the year is coming into focus. >> a monster. >> samsung issuing a recall and could cost the company more than $1 billion. >> now is the time to act.
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again, joined colin kaepernick's protest and this time she did it wearing red, white, and blue. >> a passenger walked away from a crash landing that overshot the runway. >> the jets have won it. >> a good way to face one of your favorite players? beer is a wonderful thing. >> i want to give you the gift of balloons. >> yea! >> and all that matters. >> when you look into the >> yes! announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota.
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welcome to "cbs this morning." donald trump's campaign is conceding that president obama was born in the united states, but the republican nominee, himself, is not saying that. the question came up as another new poll find the presidential race in a statistical tie. hillary clinton leads trump to 40% when third dunn party candidates are included. >> trump said he wasn't ready to answer the question before president obama was born. an adviser put out a statement saying that mr. trump believes that mpresident obama was born n the united states. >> reporter: financing efforts in hawaii donald trump to prove president obama was born outside
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compelling president obama to release his birth certificate." but it did not quiet trump. >> a lot of people feel it wasn't a proper certificate. >> he called the document a fraud on twitter for years and insisted president obama was born in kenya. in 2015, trump again questioned the president's citizenship and falsely tried to pin the rumor on hillary to campaign. >> hillary clinton wanted his birth certificate. hillary is a birther. whether or not that was a real certificate because a lot of people question it, i certainly question it. >> in the 2016 primary republican season, trump used the birther issue again. this time against rival ted cruz. >> wasn't born in this country. nobody knows. they are looking right now to figure it out.
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born in the united states worked for ted cruz in the republican primaries and in 2011 president obama said he would release his tax returns when president obama released his birth certificate. >> hillary clinton tweeted this. president obama's successor cannot and willot that led the racist birther movement period. nancy cordes is in washington where hillary clinton spoke out last night. nancy, good morning. >> good morning. clinton has called trump bigoted before but last night here in washington she brought up what she called several new examples like when we called a black pastor a nervous mess just
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the president was born here despite what his campaign now says he believes. was born here despite what his campaign now says he believes. >> every time we think he has hit rock bottom, he sinks even lower. >> reporter: trump's campaign reversal came an hour after clinton released a barrage of tweets calling his candidacy the most divisive of our lifetimes. >> he was asked, one more time, where was president obama born? and he still wouldn't say hawaii. he still wouldn't say america. >> reporter: she had trump's comments have now gone beyond innuendo or doing whistle. >> from what launched his presidential campaign to his racist attacks on a federal judge. >> reporter: clinton told the hispanic garnling that she would send a comprehensive immigration
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>> i will reach out to republicans and say, this is your chance, to help millions of families and show that your party, the party of lincoln, is better than donald trump! >> reporter: cbs news/"the new york times" poll finds voters think clinton would do a better job of trump handling immigration and a much better job on foreign policy. but trump has an edge on the economy. the number one issue for voters. in clinton used her recent illness and campaign absence to make a political point. >> i can afford to take a feud off. millions of americans can't. they either go to work sick or they lose a paycheck, don't they? >> reporter: clinton said that she roealizes she needs to give americans something to vote for and not against and will try to talk about policy as much as and stay positive but a few hours
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washington blasting trump. >> thanks, nancy. dan senor was senior adviser for mitt romney and paul ryan for the presidency in 2012. is it in donald trump's interest for us to be discussing the birther issue this morning? >> no. it's astonishing six plus weeks out he is still talking about these issues. these are the kind of issues if you think they are to your political advantage only to your political advantage deep in a primary, not now. >> why is he i agree what they say my campaign says? >> i think he is undisciplined. a lot of the clinton folks, a lot of the clinton campaign has been wondering over the last couple of weeks whether donald trump could put some discipline around himself and the campaign. i've heard from a number of folks how he performs at the debate if they want to provoke him and he can play crazy and play up the temperament issue
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discipline and the old donald trump could return. >> dan, he keeps saying, i don't bring it up, you guys bring it up. i'm not even discussing it any more. >> welcome to a presidential campaign where you have hundreds of reporters breathing do you remember your throat and asking you questions and try to provoke you and your opposition will try to provoke you. the pressure you're under as a presidential campaign is nothing like you've experienced before. donald trump as experienced as he is in the media is still a first-time candidate. >> donald trump laid out a tax plan yesterday cuts. he also included higher spending which is a break with republican orthodox. >> on issue after issue, what is amazing about trump he is effectively running against both parties. he running against the democrats and against traditional republican ideas. on the spending front, introducing a new entitlement is jarring to any republican who is physical to conservative over the last few years.
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temperament and discipline. >> you could make the argument running against both parties is a smart political move. >> to change election saying i'm against the system and not beholding to anybody even my own par party. >> can we talk about hillary's health? she walked out to yesterday to "i feel good" by james brown. >> i think it's only an issue when the voters don't see a candidate. you can miss a feud on t week they will watch the two on a stage and debate. she will be fine and people will forget about this health issue. it will be a nonissue.
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underestimate how far voters are willing to go to get change. it's easy for the clinton campaign to say, oh, it's still trump. he'll never win. in a change election you're playing with fire that is your attitude so a close race is better to be widened. >> dan senor, thank you for being here. samsung galaxy 7 phone users are told to turn off their phone immediately. dozens of phones have caught reportedly fire since its release last month. the government says samsung has not done enough.
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the message this morning is turn this phone off! as this demonstration shows, even a small lithium ion battering can cause blistering flames if it malfunction. the u.s. product safety's commission elliott kay. >> if it starts charging or gets overheated, stepway fr waway fr phone. >> reporter: it calls it a serious fire hazard. >> please, please power and return it. >> reporter: samsung's u.s. president apologized thursday. >> we did not meet the standard of excellence that you expect and deserve. for that, we apologize. >> reporter: the faa says the only way to fly with the phone is by turning it off, keeping it unplugged on board and out of checked baggage. >> i've never seen a single product singled out like this do not turn this phone on a plane. we strongly suggest this or if
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>> reporter: dan ackerman of cnet says. >> the process took a lot longer than anybody thought because samsung tried to do it by themselves at first. >> reporter: kay from the cpsc agrees. he says samsung should have brought in the government right away to handle the recall. >> it's not a recipe for a successful recall for a company to go out its own. and that, in my mind, anybody who thinks that a company going on its own is going to provide h and, more importantly, for the consumer, need to have more than their phone checked. >> reporter: strong words there. 97% of these phones that were sold in the united states and a million or so have been sold in the united states have the defective battery. only about 130,000 have been brought in for a refund or exchange for a fixed phone and there are reports the cpsc is
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suspect down. >> the family attorney says accounts from witnesses differ from the police and are calling for an independent investigation. >> we're told he wasn't doing anything wrong. >> a regular typical, 13 year old. always laughing and smiling. and instead of planning for a football game this weekend, the family is planning for a funeral. >> according to "the washington post" since the beginning of 60 deadly shootings by police of people holding toy guns. >> a 13 year old is dead in the city of columbus because of our obsession with guns and violence. >> reporter: columbus city officials urge for calm into the investigation of his death. in 2014, rice was holding a
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police officer. >> we don't have enough facts to know how this relates to any other shooting. that's why we do an investigation. >> columbus police were not wearing body cameras and are not expected to until next year. mason is a nine-year police veteran and was cleared of any wrongdoing after shooting and killing an armed suspect back in 2012. a grand jury will determine if any criminal filed following wednesday's incident. charlie? >> new york city police are investigating a man who attacked new york city police ver. attacked a man with a meat cleaver. the attack happened last night near manhattan's penn station. police say the suspect hurt one officer with this meat cleaver and off-duty cop was slashed in the face and recovering in the hospital.
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government forces cut off rebel held areas of aleppo earlier this month. a congressional committee is urging president obama not to pardon former national security contract edward snowden. a report shows the majority of documents that snowden sold were military secrets not related to privacy concerns. it also characterized him as a disgruntled employee. snowden responded on twitter saying the american people deserve better. the congressional court was issued a day before the release
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prevent price hikes of crucial drugs. this is a cbs 58 morning news . update.good morning everyone i'm jessica tighe with this cbs 58 news update.it's 7:26. 3 a story that shocked people in kansas... has a wisconsin connection.we've learned a woman who was set on fire at work... is originally from fond du lac.investigators say... 26-year-old "katie ann blanchard"... was doused with fire... and ?stabbed with scissors? at fort leavenworth. police have identified the accused... as 54-year-old "clifford currie." he's now charged with ?assault-- with intent to commit murder. ? blanchard grew up in fond du lac--- but moved away in 2004. her sister says... blanchard is currently in "critical condition."the fbi and the u-s army ?military police? are investigating the case. coming up on "cbs this morning"---is the ?ink in your tattoo? healthy for you?anna werner takes a look at the
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tattoo industry. 3 forecast...today: decreasing clouds, mild. high: 47tonight: increasing clouds, mild. low: 39thursday; partly sunny. high: 52friday: partly cloudy. high: 47forecast...today: decreasing clouds, mild. high: 47tonight: increasing clouds, mild. low: 39thursday; partly sunny. high: 52friday: partly cloudy. high: 47forecast... today: decreasing clouds, mild. high: 47tonight: increasing clouds, mild. low: 39 high: 52friday: partly cloudy. high: 47forecast...today: decreasing clouds, mild. high: 47tonight: increasing clouds, mild. low: 39thursday; partly sunny. high: 52friday: partly
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when you went into many, senator, did you think to yourself i'm going to kill it with millennials? >> 74 years. >> they found you pretty quickly. >> i have spent -- am concerned about young people with those issues. i spent a lot of people fighting for senior citizens. we ended up doing terrible with senior citizens, for whatever reason, but we did great with young people. and i think these young people have so much hope and vision and desire to see this country become what we all know it can become, and that was an extraordinary experience. >> now, i want to ask -- >> that is bernie sanders
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myers sitting next to shane woodley. >> shalene woodley. >> right. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? this half hour, punch lines with a political edge. the presidential race is a major source of laughs for late night tv. while politicians are choosing to appear on comedy shows more than ever before. >> new concerns about the risk of tattoos. the fda says many pigments in the ink are the same as car paint. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. >> i vote no on the tattoo. >> i vote yes. >> it would be small and discrete. >> if charlie does it, i'm doing it. >> where would it be?
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>> it goes back here. >> i didn't know what that was. >> he doesn't know what that was. >> okay. >> shall we move on? >> yes. let's. yes. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. "usa today" says the obama adminisration is launching a new strategy in the fight against the heroin and opioid crisis. nearly 100 people die each day. that makes heroin and opioid memo next week to all united states attorney offices and she is urging prosecutors to share information across state lines to identify overprescribing doctors and traffickers. bloomberg reports on a huge recall from chrysler for seat bag problems. there are concerns that seat belts might not tighten and air bags might not deploy in a
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vehicles involved, go to our website cbsthisthis morning.com. "the washington post" reports the blue angels will stop performing a man engineer that led to the death of one of its pilots. on thursday, a 32-year-old marine captain died as a result of pilot error. he was killed in june while preparing for an air show in tennessee. the pilot crashed after attempting a stunt. investigators say it was too low and too fast. >> "wall street journal" says a crew of a cargo ship remain stranded at stuck in the middle of the ship's bankruptcy troubles. the men were sailing from south korea to the persian gulf. as of wednesday, the company had 89 ships carrying as many as 14 billion dollars in cargo stranded and their ship could run out of fuel in november. the "new york post" reports on police commissioner bill bratton stepping down today.
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and it included stints in cities like boston and los angeles, as well as new york. bratton told us last month about his decision to leave. >> it's the right time for me personally. i'm 68 years of age. and so the right time for me professionally. the nypd is in excellent shape. >> bratton has taken a job in the private sector. james o'neal has taken over as the new commissioner. hillary clinton wille appearance on "the tonight show" next week. donald trump, bill clinton and bernie sanders all made guest appearances last night. politicians are more often choosing these programs for big interviews. don dahler is outside the ed sullivan theater in new york home of "the late show with stephen colbert." >> reporter: michelle obama will appear here next tuesday. the latest political figure,
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hillary clinton to visit stephen colbert. for the candidates, late night television can be risky. but it's an invitation too hard to pass up. >> a lot of people are worried that hillary clinton isn't healthy enough to be president. and a lot of people are worried that donald trump is. >> reporter: in an election season like no other, the candidates hillary and donald trump have proven to be irresistible punch lines. >> tomorrow, hillary clinton is going to be cleared e-mail charges by judge judy. >> being a punch line is not the same as appearing in person for a politician late night interviews and they offer a chance to highlight a candidate's personality and reach a different audience. >> could i mess your hair up? >> reporter: donald trump played along as "the tonight show" host jimmy fallon poked fun of him thursday night. over the past 12 months, donald trump hit the late night circuit seven times. hillary clinton appeared eight
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conference of journalists to address her health, hillary clinton did it with jimmy kimmel. >> take my pulse. >> oh, my god. there is nothing there! >> reporter: but late night interviews can be risky. her favorable backfired weeks later when she nearly fainted in new york city. >> she had she is not dead but as we know, she is a liar. >> reporter: her husband took to the daily show last night to try to set the record straight. >> used to be called when i was young, walking pneumonia, but sometimes you can't walk any more and you got to rest, so >> the author of a new "time" magazine story on late nights and the changing political landsca
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this rancorous election season. >> that is true. >> they give the comedian a lot to work with. >> it started a long, long time ago when richard mixon went on "the mike douglas show." a move is partly inspired by the mylan controversy. cbs news reports on the 500% 2009. they would force drugmakers to justify drug price hikes. >> if a pharmaceutical corporation wants to raise drug prices more than 10%, they are going to have to give notice that they are going to do that, and then they are going to have to justify that increase. we already do that for insurance companies. this kind of transparency and
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? tattoo ink like infections and allergic reactions. anna werner is looking in those concerns. >> reporter: good morning. you think something injected under the skin would have to be tightly regulated but in this case, it's not. until recently, this issue has been low on the priority list for the fda.
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proof approve for use in tattoos so what are consumers really putting into their skin? san francisco hairstylist jar samuel loves his salvador dolly inspired tattoos. >> i like the art of it. i like the expression of the art. >> reporter: when its comes what is going under his skin? >> sort of out of sight, out of mind, ha ha. >> reporter: you don't spend too much time thinking about it? >> i want liked i haven't given it too much thought. >> reporter: some don't until they get sensitivity, allergic reactions and infections. >> my foot kept getting bigger and bigger and bigger. >> reporter: sarah is the sister of a cbs news employee says this tattoo she got in 2012 quickly became infected and sent her to the emergency room. >> they told me it was a pretty bad infection and put me on antibiotics and some crutches,
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weeks until it healed. >> reporter: at this new york city tattoo parlor, the owner who goes by the name bang bang, says he takes careful precautions which include rubber gloves. >> lots of glove changing in this job. >> reporter: and sterilized instruments. >> the drowse in tattoo shops is what you don't see so that is why it's tough. it's micro bacteria and diseases and germs that we have to clean and sterilized and we need to give extreme care to the preparation. >> reporter: but it't then there is the ink. san diego dermatologist or tease studied the issue. >> what is concerning about tattoo ings inks is we don't know what is going into the tattoo inks. >> reporter: the fda notes many pigments in inks are industrial grade colors used for printers' ink or automobile paint. >> it can cause many different
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allergic skin rashes, or inflammatory reactions or even types of skin cancer. when you go in to get a tattoo, it's important that you're aware of that and don't think that it's just harmless paint going into your skin. >> reporter: the fda reports seven voluntary recalls of tattoo ink since 2004. one that came after 19 people contracted a serious infection from contaminated ink. this owner says he trusts ink suppliers, but agrees inks nationwide deserve more scrutiny. >> i think that in the future, they do need to really test what is inside of them. >> reporter: so the fda is in the process of trying to do just that. now the agency recently came up with new ways to look for harmful toxins in those inks and is trying to develop methods to identify just what is in those color pigments, but couldn't tell us whether any new regulations will come out of all of this. >> it just looks like it hurts.
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getting them. it's no longer just tough people. when i was growing up, that is who did it. >> and two at the table. >> norah, do you have a tattoo? >> no. but i'm going to get one. >> you are? >> i am. >> go to the best. >> we know the best. bang bang. >> thank you, anna. i guess you're not a tattoo person? >> i don't have any tattoos. >> have you ever thought about it? >> maybe. once? once or twice. >> that often? >> i'm with you, anna. let those two rebels do it. i'm a big old square. i'm with you. ahead, the apparent road
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this apparent road rage battle features two vehicles you wouldn't expect. police say a school bus in new jersey attempted to pass a tractor-trailer illegally. the big rig begins to swerve into the bus. at one point both were driving in the wrong direction. the school bus driver was fired. >> they were playing a game of who is bigger and both lost. coming you're watching "cbs this morning." even longer than 24 hours. i want to trim my a1c. ? tresiba? ready ? tresiba? provides powerful a1c reduction. releases slow and steady. works like your body's insulin. when my schedule changes... i want something that delivers. ? tresiba? ready ? i can take tresiba? any time of day. so if i miss or delay a dose,
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this is a cbs 58 morning news . update.good morning everyone. i'm jessica tighe with this cbs 58 news update.it's 7:56. 3 milwaukee police are searching for a suspect involved in a hit and run. police say a car hit a man and took off.. around 1:30 this morning near atkinson and capitol.a 45-year-old man who'd reportedly been drinking.. was was hit by a car.we're told that car did not stop. the man hit by the car was taken to a local hospital and is expected to be ok.police are now looking for the maroon or red four-door vehicle responsible. check out the people in line... waiting to get the new iphone 7!it goes on sale today. these people are waiting at the at&t store in greenfield. some of them got in line last night.doors open in just a few minutes at that location. apple is warning customers...
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supply.the company says... ?walk-in customers? won't be able to get the ?seven plus?--- because those were all snatched up by ?pre-orders.?walk-ins... won't be able to get the "i-phone seven" in ?jet black?, either. but ?non-apple retailers -- may still have them in stock. ahead on cbs this morning--- u-s. ambassador to the united nations "samantha power".... discusses the ?fragile ceasefire? in syria... the u-n's attempts to deliver aid... and how committee 3 forecast...today: decreasing clouds, mild. high: 47tonight: increasing clouds, mild. low: 39thursday; partly sunny. high: 52friday: partly cloudy. high: 47forecast...today: decreasing clouds, mild. high: 47tonight: increasing clouds, mild. low: 39thursday; partly sunny. high: 52friday: partly cloudy. high: 47forecast... today: decreasing clouds, mild. high: 47tonight: increasing clouds, mild. low: 39
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russ feingold: so, what do you girls want to be when you grow up? girl 1: i want to be an astronomer. girl 2: i want to be a doctor! russ feingold: do you think you should be paid the same as boys? girl 1: definitely. girl 2: yep! russ feingold: well, i raised my two girls right here, and they agree with you - and so do i. unfortunately, in wisconsin, a lot of women make less than men doing the same job. i'll work for equal pay for women, and for paid leave so parents can care for a sick family member. discrimination against any women is flat out wrong. feingold: i'm russ feingold
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? good morning. it is friday, september 16th, 2016. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? there is more real news ahead, including the u.s. ambassador to the united nations, samantha her view of the north korea nuclear threat and the cease-fire in syria. last night, clinton brought up several new examples. >> is it to donald trump's interest to be discussing the birther issue this morning?
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weeks out he is still talking about this issue. >> he says you keep bringing it up. i'm not discussing it any more. >> welcome to a presidential campaign. >> samsung smartphones are under recall. >> the message this morning? turn this phone off! >> you might think something injected under the skin would have to be tightly regulated but in this case, it's not. >> 53 days left before the political season ends, for many people, any laughs are a welcome relief in this rancorous election season. candidates health in this election and no surprise people are raising the health issue because these are the two oldest candidates ever to square off in a presidential election, which means, of course, whoever wins, white house state dinners will now start at 4:30! early bird special! ? i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. donald trump now says he will likely address the
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morning in washington. an adviser put out a statement last night saying, trump believes president obama was born in the united states. trump had refused to answer that question in an interview. the statement called trump, quote, a closer who successfully obtained president obama's birth certificate when others could not but it was the president who produced the document in 2011 after years of challenges led by trump and others. here is part of what the president said at that time. >> i know that there is be a segment of people for which no matter what we put out, this issue will not be put to rest. we do not have time for this kind of silliness. hillary clinton returned to campaigning and blasted trump over the birther issue. clinton spoke in north carolina and washington, d.c. after a three day rest because of pneumonia. the newest national poll gives her a new lead over trump 41% to 40%. that is a statistically tie.
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voters about specific issues. they prefer trump on the economy and jobs by an eight-point margin but clinton is 22 points ahead when it comes to foreign policy. >> u.n. officials say this morning that troops in syria are still holding up aid that the city of aleppo desperately need. u.n. vehicles are moving across the turkey/syria border after long delays, but the road to aleppo still need to be secured. now, this is the fourth day of the cease-fire put in place after week of deadly fighting around aleppo. syrian forces have cut off se groups. activists say many inside are wounded and others need food. >> the united states ambassador to the united nations samantha power has been a strong advocate for intervention in syria. she is the youngest permanent
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nation at 42. >> su a pulitzer prize winning author and joins us as a general assembly convenes in new york. it is an interview you will see only on "cbs this morning." ambassador powell, welcome. >> thank you. >> why has it taken so long? so long for aid to reach the people in aleppo, in the city of aleppo who are desperate? >> well, the regime has been very explicit about its tactics in this war, starve, get bombed, or vend. surrender. while russia has done an important agreement with secretary kerry and seeking to implement it we believe it can bring a material difference in the lives and we need to end the war altogether. the syrian regime, you know, death by a thousand paper cuts. they are requiring new paper work, new documentation -- >> dot russians have no influence with them? >> they have significant
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enough? >> the russians whether they are not doing enough or the syrians aren't listening. it could be an important deal because it could prevent the regime from flying over poopgs areas and prevent barrel bombing and the kind of things we have seen the regime do so long and turn the russians turn to what they were supposed to do is fight terrorists instead of vilve civilians. but we need cease-fire for seven days and which we don't have right now. >> secretary kerry said this is the last chance. do you believe this is the last chance of this plan? >> we are certainly investing in it as if it is. the suffering, as you said, charlie, of the people has been so great. this is a real opportunity. the united states and russia have been negotiating for months to get into this level of specifity but russia has to deliver a regime -- >> is there a difference between
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how much you can trust the russians and how much you can share intelligence with the russians? people are talking about that for days. >> they are. and it's favored parlor talk who is where and so forth. we have one policy xt president sets the policy and we are all moving out to implement it. i was with president and secretary kerry yesterday. >> you can't look at syria and think it's a glowing success with all of the refuge flow and with terrorist it's incumbent on us to take the opportunity that we have here presented to us. russia is not excited about a quagmire in syria either. a terrorist problem can unite people if we really focus on it and we have got to take this opportunity and drive it home. if all we do is cease hostile its and get food to people that is a better week than last week. we have to make incremental progress to bring about the political transition.
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you're a pulitzer prize winning author. the book you said, why does the united states stand so idly by? back then, you had it was american officials chose not to intervene. don't you believe that is happening today in syria? >> syria is a very complex picture. there are thousands of armed groups. the question, again, of what military intervention would achieve, where you would do it and how you would d the terrorists wouldn't be the one to take advantage of it has been extremely challenging. but the idea that we have not been, quote, doing anything on syria i think is absurd. we have done everything short of waging war against the asawed regi -- assad regime and having success against isil on the ground which is of great importance to the american people. >> president obama is going to make a big announcement about the refuges in the coming days, correct? >> next week when the heads of
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and president are doing what he does very well at these heads of state leveraging what the u.s. does to get other countries to step up. each country that gathers will make new and significant pledges on funding humanitarian assistance to refuges don't have to leave the region and taking more refuges within each country's own borders. >> may i turn to north korea? ban ki-moon of the united nations said it's urgent to do something. what can be done by the threat of north korea having deliverable nuclear weapons? >> well, it is every bit as urgent as the secretary-general said and that is why in march of this year, i and my team negotiated the toughest sanctions resolution through the u.n. that we have seen. >> why not do it? in the nature of the regime? >> this resolution or this sanctions regime would cut off so many of the avenues they have to procuring the technology to continue to advance the program
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isolated country to begin with. we need to ensure enforcement of the resolution passed and put in place new sanctions in the wake of what they have just done, but we need china, which is the -- has the most leverage over north korea and not infinite leverage but north korea is difficult and not to crack but use its influence to get north korea back to the table. it impedes the technology you neo would it's political talks that get them to give up your nuclear program and we need china to turn the heat up and that includes by closing all loopholes in the sanctions regime that exists. >> ambassador, always good to have you at the table. good to see you. >> thank you. sitting and looking at your computer screen can be bad for you. they spend hours staring at these monitors in a dark room with all of that blue light.
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ahead, "48 hours" investigates a murder involving two best friends. >> a man is found dead in his car and his autopsy find an unusual sedative and fingers point to his best friend, a well-regarded dentist. but was it murder? or did he die of natural causes? that is coming up on "cbs this morning." hey th y do people have eyebrows? why do people put milk on cereal? oh, are you reading why people put milk on cereal? why does your tummy go "grumbily, grumbily, grumbily"? why is it all (mimics a stomach grumble) no more questions for you! ooph, that milk in your cereal was messing with you, wasn't it? yeah, happens to more people than you think... try lactaid, it's real milk, without that annoying lactose. good, right? mmm, yeah. i got your back.
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hello. hi. welcome. this is the chevy malibu. it was awarded "most dependable midsize car" by j.d. power. it looks great. wow! what is happening? oh my gosh, it's going up! but the malibu's not the only vehicle that was awarded. the chevy camaro, equinox, and silverado hd were awarded most dependable as well. this is extremely impressive. there's so many! doing it once, yea, great job, four times, obviously, they're doing something right. absolutely cottonelle asked real people about cleaning... their bums. what? (laughs) (laughs) what does cleanripple texture do? catches all the stuff that you want to get out. this is really nice.
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how does being clean feel? kind of sassy. uh, breezy. hands up. weeeeeee. my bum is saying, "thank you very much." cleanripple texture is designed to clean better. go cottonelle, go commando. fact. people spend less time lying awake with aches and pains with advil pm than with tylenol pm. advil pm combines the number one pain reliever with the number one sleep aid. gentle, non-habit forming advil pm.
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in our "morning rounds." the eye opening impact of digital device. nearly 60% of americans are in front of some type of screen five hours or more a day. 65% of us report symptoms of eye strain dr. christopher star, welcome back. >> thank you for having me. >> what does staring at the screen do for our eyes? >> a lot of things, actually. we all sit in front of computers, as you said, many hours a day. we do a few things when we are staring at the computer. one, we tend to blink less. the blink rate typically is 15 to 20 blinks a minute. when you're staring at a computer and focusing at the
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spots and can tearing and redness and can contribute to eye strain. >> you got the 202020 rule? >> a lot of ways to prevent all of these thing. 202020 rule means every 20 minutes, take a break from your computer. look away from the computer at something that is 20 feet away or further. for 20 seconds or more. and it actually is good advice also during those breaks to sort of stand up, stretch the arms legs, get the blood flowing. if your eyes are feeling dry, put a lubricant in to lubricate the eyes. >> any special glasses you could wear? >> there are some for people above 40. i'm one of those where the near vision starts to go. you're focusing at a fixed distance that is close to your eyes all day long and you can get computer glasses to alleviate that strain and blue light is emitted from computers and some people think the blue
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strain and there might be some long-term damaging effects of blue light so you can get yellow tinted glasses which block some of that blue light. >> do you think it does cause permanent damage? >> it's still kind of early. there is evidence that ultraviolet light can catch damage to the retina and cataracts. interesting blue light goes as far as frequency and it's not far removed from ultraviolet light. possibly years and years of blue light might cause some damage. >> when i turned 40, all of a sudden, i had to go like this. >> the arm is not long enough sometimes. it's called presopia. it's a fact of life and happened to almost everybody. it's a great thing, isn't it? >> aging is a great thing?
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>> better than the alternative. >> bruce springsteen has wrote legendary anthemselves and they are legendary. he has written about his life in a much anticipated new book and he spoke to anthony mason in his first tv book about the autos t it's a suicide wrap ? announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by visionworks. find more than glasses. find a better you. since the launch of the new dannon whole milk yogurt, a natural outburst seems to have taken over the country. (security...) hi, i'm stuck in an elevator... with a cow.
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? ? born in the usa i was born in the usa ? >> that song, that is a title song for bruce springsteen's iconic album "born in the usa." decade he has written influential songs in rock history like "dancing in the dark." my favorite bruce springsteen song. "glory days" and "born to run. a book traces his rise from struggling jersey shore singer to worldwide rock superstar. it is published by simon and
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cbs news. anthony mason talked to him in an interview set to air on cbs sunday morning. >> it starts from the rock star drive. you were miserable, you were bullied, you know? it's just a litany of the usual. i believe every artist has someone who told them they weren't worth dirt and someone who told them they were the second coming of baby jesus and they believed them both and that is the fueat fire. >> reporter: that is a pretty intense heat. why did you have the confidence you could deliver on that? >> i listened to radio and said, i'm as good as a lot of those guys. no one knows it yet! maybe they never will. but inside, i felt like i had the goods, you know? i had the goods. >> he has the goods. >> sure does. he just finish his international tour wednesday night in boston. at this point, on course to be the biggest grossing international tour of the year.
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this coming week. you know? but he is still playing four hours a night. >> i was going to say, anthony, i've seen him three to four hours and he loves it too. he loves it. >> i went home from his concert exhausted and we talked to him the next day! >> what does he say about the headlines in terms about his battle with depression? >> he has faced two really big challenges as he entered his 60s. once was losing clarence clemons, his big man, the sax player and which was a big blow to the band and difficult to recover from that. the other is from 60 to 65, he had two significant battles with depression and said he literally couldn't get out of bed. he could play if he got to the studio. but he talks about that challenge and it was really -- i mean, it really knocked him back. >> was he writing during that time? >> he wasn't writing the book but he could write music. >> anthony, i can't wait to see this interview because he very rarely talks and i can't wait to see. the book is called "born to run." and it goes on sell september
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this is a cbs 58 morning news . update.good morning i'm kate chappell... c-b-s 58 news time is 8:26. a 13 year old is recovering this morning... after a milwaukee police officer's gun went off during a struggle at school.some parents told us... they were frustrated they found out through the ?media.? others got a ?voicemail message?--- but they say... it was lacking details. details. "earlier today we had a serious incident at the school involving a student and the police department." 3 milwaukee police were at elementary school near 60th and bradley yesterday talking to the student. police say she
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holstered gun went off.the teenager was grazed by the bullet and taken to the hospital.investigators were on the scene hours after the incident. damon roundtree, parent of 1st grader"47.34 why was a 13 year old struggling with the police and also i want to know how could the gun go off. was she going after the gun or what happened. 47.44 47.4458.22 if guns are involved and i feel my child is going be harmed or in danger then i would act differently and i would come and get my child 58.30 3 3 in the message-- e for "student safety" and that caused buses to be late.we reached out to m-p-s.. they directed us back to the police department for comment. ahead on cbs this morning--- a dentist is accused of killing his best friend after he was caught with his wife. in a 48 hours preview... richard schlesinger discusses details of the story and what he uncovered. we have rain chances today. meteorologist justin thompson gee has a check of ready weather. forecast...today: decreasing clouds, mild. high: 47tonight:
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? ? ? welcome back to "cbs this morning.? coming up this half hour, a rare drug turns up in a body and police suspect the victim's best friend, a but do police have the right man? "48 hours" hat only interview with that dentist. >> plus some of the personal belongings of president reagan and history wife nancy are going up for auction. ahead, you'll see the collection from a presidential football to a necklace owned by the first lady time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. donald trump son said his father plans to separate himself from personal business interest
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donald trump jr. explained why his father is not releasing his tax returns. he said the tax return is 12,000 pages and questions about it would be a distraction from his father's main message. the rap reports on a questionable choice of music of hillary clinton's campaign. ? ? i feel good ? i knew that i would now ? >> they played the song "i feel good" by james brown as she made her entrance in greensboro, the first time back on a campaign trail. someone should have told clinton that james brown died of complications of pneumonia. >> i'm not blaming you, but i'm saying that is ridiculous and not directing it at you. just talking here. i didn't say, that gayle! >> i just read this thing here and it's called a script.
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rolling stone" says stevie wonder will be one of the performers at the contribution to prince next month. the lineup also includes christina aguilera and chaka khan. >> i love chaka khan. >> me too. a well-liked family man was found dead in his car in upstate new york. police were stunned to find an unusual drug in his body. more surprising, his best friend, a prominent the prime. "48 hours" correspondent richard schlesinger has the only interview with the dentist charged with the murder. >> thomas coleman was dead in a vehicle, in a parking lot of the fitness plaza. >> reporter: was your first thought homicide?
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>> reporter: but the police detectives were still puzzled by what they saw. 44-year-old tom coleman had parked his car on the far side of the parking lot at the gym where he was headed. it wasn't the parking but the building. if you work out in the morning you're parking close to the building. >> the detective got surveillance video that showed something unusual. when coleman arrived early that morning. >> this is tom coleman's car pulling in right there. it's 4: >> reporter: he pulled up to another car and although the footage is very grainy, they thought that car was a white suv. >> we started thinking with the circle of people close to tom coleman and the only person with a white suv was gilbert nunez. >> it's emotional for you? >> it is. he was my best friend, truly. >> reporter: nunez may have been tom's best friend, but he
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he was having an affair with tom's wife. this is a guy who was sitting with detectives, you could say, by the way, i had an affair with the wife of the dead guy? >> he is still in love with her too. . he wanted to make that clear. >> reporter: that seems to me in any way to be unusual. am i wrong here? >> this is very unusual. >> reporter: there was something else unusual found in the autopsy. a sedative midazolam was detected in tom's body and used by those sometimes in the medical profession. >> he was a dentist. that was his profession. >> reporter: the head of the legal team said the autopsy was hardly definitive. >> it may have been a heart attack. >> this is a murder case. >> i'm innocent. i haven't done anything wrong.
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good morning. >> good morning. >> any reason the victim would have this drug in his system? >> that is one of the great mysteries of this case. it's used in dental procedures but no record of him having any procedures recently. the other interesting thing there wasn't very much in his body. so the defense was saying it wouldn't have been enough to kill him. it's sort of the jury to sort out what it all meant. >> i can't imagine any circumstances wanting to murder your best friend, but when it was unveiled in that he was boinking the wife, some could say that was a motive. >> when you peel back the layers, you find out they were pretty close. they were texting each other back and forth and all very friendly. ed, believe it or not, that mr. coleman knew about the affair and was okay with it. that's what he says. >> i don't know.
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>> i'll go first. no! no, they are not! >> oh, what do you know? >> not much. >> i've never had that experience, so what do i know? >> you can watch richard's full report death of a dentist in the "48 hours" tomorrow night and it includes an exclusive interview with the dentist and a "48 hours" double feature starting at 9:00/8:00 central. >> we work hard for you. >> you people could buy a piece of presidential history starting next week. >> so where can you find a jar of jelly beans, a piece of the berlin wall and this pair of elephant auottomans?
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to turn it into one. he wants to privatize social security putting benefits at risk. and he attacks medicare -- would turn it into a voucher program, costing seniors thousands out-of-pocket. don't let ron johnson turn social security into a johnson: ...legal ponzi scheme. narrator: senator johnson. not for seniors.
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>> reporter: an auction like this, is it about just collecting the most valuable items and putting them on display? >> no it's far more sophisticated ththanan sat on . >> reporter: 1986! the items from the private collection of president and mrs. ronald reagan are part of a narrative. >> here, we have the reagan family's thanksgiving platter and turkey >> do we know who made the turkey of the family? >> i don't know. >> reporter: of their friend. love margaret and dennis this afternoon afternooner thatcher. >> a lot of these things in the white house. so that is very, very alluring. ? >> reporter: everything up for bid was part of the reagan's
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fantastic hotel napkins. >> i would point out it's reagan's which is a single which is either his or her bar. >> i think he is thinking about his time playing his most famous character. >> do you like to play football? >> >> a little while before his time. this is probably nancy reagan. >> honestly? it looks more like jane wyman to me. i'm serious! it does! >> i didn't notice. >> reporter: there is a pair of leather elephant ottomans. these are cute, very cute. a jelly bean jar that sat on the desk of the president's desk.
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california and the west but he was raised in illinois. >> that's right. he didn't learn it gate and the famous speech. >> mr. gorbachev, tear down this wall! >> reporter: what is the asking price for this? >> this is $10,000 to $20,000. >> these prices! >> then the iconic football. >> ask him to go in there with all they have got and win just one for the gipper. >> reporter: of course, he would not have known when he made that movie how important it would be to his entire football career. >> exactly. >> reporter: apparently he and tom brady had the same ball boy. >> are you ready? >> reporter: i got you. wow. great. oops.
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this collection isn't all about the president. at $50,000 this necklace worn by first lady is the auction's highest value item. she was kind of controversial at the beginning concerning all of the glitter. in a 1981 interview for "60 minutes," mike wallace asked nancy reagan about her emphasis on style and elegance at a time of economic hardship. >> reporter: were you unprepared for the scrutiny you were going to get? >> yes, i >> reporter: would you like to take a second? >> i'd love to. now you can own the furniture used during that conversation and much, much more. >> prince charles, princess diana sat here and mother teresa. this is by frank sinatra and was actually based on a photograph that was taken at the statue of liberty. it was a birthday gift to nancy reagan.
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reagan a picture depicting fireworks. a little scandal doesn't hurt an auction. starting tomorrow, you can preview the items in the exhibition. bidding begins on the 21st. charlie, norah o'donnell rah, gayle? bring those checkbooks! >> thank you. >> i love mo's observations on those pieces. >> i like the piece of the berlin wall. >> that would be my favorite too. >> you liked the elephant? >> i did. but i'm not sure what you would do with them. >> that's right. proceedsm benefit the ronald reagan presidential foundation and institute. up next, a look at all that mattered this week.
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he spent 46 years at "60 minutes" where he reported more than 900 stories and to hold the record for the longest run in prime time network television. we spoke on my pbs program way back in 1993 to morley safer. any regrets about this career you've had here? >> oh, gosh, no. >> reporter: nothing? you wouldn't have done anything different? >> i mean, talk about a luck blessed life as a journalist. >> a master story teller. >> i like what jeff said, he elevated everything he did. >> what a way to go when everybody is celebrating your life. >> as we leave you, let's take a look back at all that mattered this week. have a great weekend. see you monday. ? ? riding along in my automobile ? >> these are artifacts.
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>> we are on the front line of the smithsonian national museum of african-american history and culture. >> our gandhi was jackie robinson. ? with no particular place to go ? >> as long as he had this, they could not enslave him. >> the history of african-americans had been you were in the back. >> there was a sign saying, white this way, colored that way. they get back to the same -- you would have to ee >> african-americans were always willing to serve the nation that was not yet willing to serve them. >> it was a late 1970s. people were looking for a change. ? >> the beat was a vehicle worth straight street poetry. >> i've been holding back tears. so many of the exhibits remind me of the struggle.
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>> back stronger together. >> the upside of her recent down time is she has had a chance to work on her closing message. >> why not release every possible medical record? you can't. >> people think there is something unusual about getting the flu. >> he once called the flu. we are having a flu because she collapsed there on tv. >> donald trump says he feels decades younger than his actual age. >> do you think hillary would be able to stand up here an hour? we want her better and we w her back on the trail, right? >> is trump okay? i think he has a concussion! >> we have been hearing the sporadic boom of artillery here in aleppo. clearly, the cease-fire is not perfect. >> it is rare for a tropical storm to form over land. >> there is your river on big street, baby. >> questions surrounding hillary clinton's pneumonia, or some are
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>> take this down. i'm driving along, you know? i love the colorful clothes she wears and the way the sunlight plays upon her hair. ? >> he never put my name on the label copy of the song, so i never got paid, nor did i get credit. >> wve more about haircare but it's not the woman. >> a gross stamp! michael weatherly, do you miss anthony dinozzo? >> sometimes late at night. he was a good drinking buddy! >> you had the cheeseburger before or after? >> i knew i was going to have a problem with you today!
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this is a cbs 58 morning news . update.good morning i'm kate chappell... c-b-s 58 news time is 8:56. 3 it's been nearly ?two years?... since a five-year-old milwaukee girl was ?hit and killed? by a stray bullet while sitting on her grandfather's lap. today a ?peace garden? will be dedicated in honor of laylah petersen.community members say... it will be a "beacon of hope"... to celebrate her the dedication for ?petersen's? garden is at six tonight... at "northwest catholic school" on 41-st street in milwaukee. 3 uw-milwaukee military and veterans resource center is sponsoring an event at the harley-davidson museum today. it's meant to promote awareness of the suicide rate among veterans... and showcase prevention resources. resources.there will be a motorcylce ride .....and film screening of the "project 22" documentary.there will also be a barbecue dinner. staging for the ride is at 1:30 this afternoon at east capitol drive and north humboldt boulevard.
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deparment.... is inviting the community to the "day of family health" open house.it's today from 10 a-m to 4 p-m at the northwest health center. the event will offer free services including diabetes and cholesterol screening.. blood pressure checks.. h-i-v testing.. and mammograms.? immunizations for anyone without insurance or children on badgercare are also available. now to a final check of the forecast.here's meteorlogist justin thompson gee. forecast...today: decreasing increasing clouds, mild. low: 39thursday; partly sunny. high: 52friday: partly cloudy. high: 47forecast...today: decreasing clouds, mild. high: 47tonight: increasing clouds, mild. low: 39thursday; partly sunny. high: 52friday: partly cloudy. high: 47forecast... today: decreasing clouds, mild. high: 47tonight: increasing clouds, mild. low: 39thursday; partly sunny. high: 52friday: partly cloudy. high: 47forecast...today: decreasing clouds, mild. high: 47tonight: increasing clouds, mild. low: 39thursday; partly
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wayne: i'm on tv! jonathan: a trip to napa! wayne: (high pitched sounds) you've got the car! cash! mr. la-di-da! jonathan: it's a new kitchen. wow! - i'm going for door number two! jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal". wayne: hey, everybody, welcome to "let's make a deal". i'm wayne brady, welcome to super deal week. this is our last super deal week show of the super deal week. just in case you've been under a rock on a far distant planet and you didn't know what we were doing here, yes, we're giving away things as usual. but today, if one of our traders wins the big deal, they're eligible for a shot at the super deal, where they have a one in three chance of winning an additional $50,000 in cash,
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