tv CBS This Morning CBS November 2, 2016 7:00am-9:00am CDT
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captioning funded by cbs good morning. it is wednesday, november 2nd, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning.? breaking news. a manhunt is under way in central iowa, after officers who were ambushed and killed. >> with six days to go, hillary clinton tries to divert attention from the fbi e-mail investigation. donald trump hopes a hidden vote will put him over the top. and for the first time in centuries, researchers uncover the burial slab where jesus is said to have been laid to rest. we will show you what they found. we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener."
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was was any interaction between officers and whoever who shot them while they were in their cars. >> a deadly police shooting in iowa. >> agencies are scouring the area trying to find who is responsible for this situation. >> don't get distracted! focus on the kind of country and world that we want to help create. >> if she were elected it would create a presidential constitutional crisis and government would grindo unbelievably unglorious halt. >> the fbi should do its job and shut up. >> iraqi special forces the outskirts of mosul, they entered. >> this offensive and move forward into mosul. the oklahoma highway patrol released dash cam video showing the fierce gun battle between accused michael vans and the police.
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school bus and commuter bus collid collided. >> it looked like a bomb exploded in the bus. >> where is my firearms at? >> all that. >> addison russell! we are going to a game seven. >> do you ever look at donald trump and say how come i had to apologize and he might be president? >> and all that matters. >> let's get to the big news. one week from today, the presidential election will be over. >> it's probably a bad sign but that is where the calendar just stops. >> on "cbs this morning." >> starbucks is rolling out a new green cup that is meant to be a symbol of unity. >> some people are saying they were angry when they went to get their red cup and got a green cup. if you're one of those people who are upset by this, you need to switch to decaf! announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by
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welcome to "cbs this morning." we begin with breaking news from des moines, iowa. two police officers were killed in an ambush attack overnight. a manhunt for suspects is under way. >> the first killing happened in urb urbandale and the other is des moines. >> reporter: des moines police say both officers found so the in their cars and believe ambush style attack. first officer shot 1:00 local time this morning in urbandale while respond to go a car. he was found dead in his car and brought in law enforcement across the area. 20 minutes later, a des moines police officer was found shot in his car a mile from the first shooting. he was rushed to the hospital, but died there a short time later. des moines place say all
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>> there is clearly danger if you're a police officer. these guys were gunned down sitting in their car doing nothing wrong. so there is definitely some danger out there. there is somebody out there shooting police officers. we hope we find him before anybody else gets hurt. >> reporter: the names of the officers killed have not been released. right now, investigators do not have a description of a suspect. all urbandale schools are closed today as a precaution. >> thank you, vlad. turn to the election. there is one have you heard? it is six days away! hillary clinton's campaign is refocusing on donald trump and turning away from the latest investigation of her e-mails.
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the tappic for which she probably has the most ammunition -- women. >> i want all of the girls in america to know -- you are valuable! don't let somebody else like this bully tell you otrw >> reporter: at three florida rallies, clinton kicked through trump's most notorious comments about the opposite sex. >> he calls women ugly, nasty, all the time. he doesn't see us as full human beings. >> reporter: to proof, she
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alicia machado. it's a closing argument aimed not just at female voters but the men who love them, too. >> i wouldn't feel good as a father voting for somebody like that. >> reporter: ads were released with the same message. >> i can't vote for a man who says such horrific things about women. >> reporter: president obama warned that trump is unlikely to change. >> if you before you were elected, you will disrespect women once you're president. >> reporter: in ft. lauderdale a protester interrupted clinton that said her husband is a racist. >> i am sick and tired of the negative, dark, divisive, dangerous behavior of people who adore donald trump! >> reporter: clinton insisted the race is not as tight as new polls suggest, yet they have
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already packed schedule on friday. the schedule changes. nancy, thank you so much. donald trump is focusing on battleground states looking for last-minute support. trump is holding three rallies in florida today and then he goes to north carolina tomorrow. polls show a very close race in both states. he campaigned yesterday in pennsylvania and wisconsin where hillary clinton has a larger lead in the polls. major garrett covered trump's rally in o'claire, wisconsin, night. major is in minneapolis this
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presidential campaigns tighten down the head coach stretch but a new math aspect the way donald trump and those around him look at this race. they believe there is a hidden trump vote worth four to five percentage points. battleground states that appetite, trump campaign believes they are they had in states like michigan and wisconsin and ohio. trump is looking for votes wherever he can find them, even those already in hillary clinton's column. >> who is from minnesota? >> reporter: hundreds of voters traveled from minnesota to northwest wisconsin tuesday to hear donald trump's closing arguments. >> this is a message for any democratic voter? who have already cast their battle for hillary clinton. and who are having a bad case of buyer's remorse. >> reporter: for the first time, trump delivered what he called a public service announcement for
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>> you can change your vote to donald trump. we will make america great again, okay? >> reporter: nationally, more than 27 million early and absentee ballots have already been cast. that is more than half 2012 total and it includes more than 500,000 in wisconsin and 250,000 in minnesota. >> senator ron johnson, i hope you're all going to get out and vote for ron. >> reporter: sensing the virtues johnson and welcomed reince priebus and former rival governor scott walker. noticeably absent? paul ryan. still estranged from trump, ryan avoided saying his name and won't campaign for him. >> i've already got a long schedule long in place fighting for house republicans and senate republicans because that is what the speaker of the house does. >> reporter: trump needs a
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repeal for the affordable care act, he vow he amplified earlier in the day in pennsylvania. >> we will be able to immediately repeal and replace obamacare. >> reporter: trump has received very few newspaper endorsements, but he got one yesterday from the crusader, the official newspaper of the ku klux klan which put trump on the headline make america great again. the campaign called the campaign on this on his twitter feed. >> cbs news anthony salvano is with us. >> hillary clinton has the lead in pennsylvania which could be her keystone. she wins tt and doesn't need much else. in fact, only one other state really to get the 270 that she would need.
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definitely has the overall edge. the overall lead in the electoral college because unless she can still hold on to pennsylvania. >> even though we see the polls tightening, what if trump doesn't win pennsylvania? >> if he doesn't win he has to go and get a lot of other states in order to get there. that is why we can say she still has an edge. he would have to get north carolina and down based our polling and he certainly has to win florida and ohio. hillary clinton can win without florida or ohio but he has to have them. on top of that he has to flip another blue state. he has to flip maybe wisconsin and something else. so if all of that sound like it's a long string of states, it is. it is certainly possible, but he has his work cut out for me. >> a couple of weeks they said donald trump was out and had no chance and it's changing a little bit. still a long shot but changing a little bit. >> it is. i think if you look at the early
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hidden vote out there for him. >> yes. >> but in the early vote, we are not seeing it. what we are seeing is people who have voted before coming out but the idea, so far that there are republicans who don't typically vote who are coming out, we are not seeing that yet in the early vote. he'll need that if he is going to win. >> talk about the early vote in north carolina. president obama campaigning there today for hillary clinton. joe biden was there yesterday. what does the early vote tell us? >> it tells you democrats are outpacing republan point at least in registration. african-american vote is tracking where it needs to end up but she probably needs to do a little bit better than what she is seeing so far and it's older. democrats are outpacing republicans the older vote tends to favor trump so i call this about even so far. >> thank you, anthon >> thanks. we bring you all of the rumts as they come in on election night. coverage starts tuesday at 7:00 p.m. eastern, 6:00 central. watch all day on our streaming
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questions about fbi director james comey's decision to tell congress about e-mails that may have gone through hillary clinton's private servers. "the new york times" says during the summer the fbi showed more caution withnvestigations linked to the clount foundation and donald trump's former campaign chairman. the times says officials avoided steps to make the case so public so close to the election. the fbi is now using sophisticated software to sort thousands of e-mails on a laptop that husband of huma abedin. the iraqi military says poor weather has halted the offensive backed offense into mosul. they are holding their positions along the eastern edge of the isis-controlled city. an international aid group warns it puts civilians in grave danger inside of mosul. many are trying to leave. iraqi forces captured their first important building, the
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dramatic new video shows the bloody final moments of the oklahoma manhunt for a double homicide suspect. a accuser's dash three people were arrested monday for helping vance. they face felony murder charges. manuel bojorquez shows us the gunfight. >> reporter: police dash cam video showed the violent end to a week-long manhunt for suspected murder mikhail advance. bullets were shot from a cruiser speeding down an oklahoma road. vance returned fire with an ak-47. >> michael vance was our worst case scenario, period. he was a determined, violent criminal. >> reporter: a police helicopter
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vance crashed through a blockade. >> this individual actually got out of his vehicle, let the vehicle roll backward toward the officers stopped shooting on him and used it for cover like it was a tank. >> reporter: moments later, he was killed by an officer's bullet. >> it took all of us working together to bring this rampage to an end. >> reporter: that rampage began on october 23rd in oklahoma, where vance was stopped. police say he killed two relatives and stole multiple cars. >> this was more intense i thought it was going to be. >> reporter: streaming videos live on facebook while he evaded capture. a sheriff tried to pull him over after he was spotted on a farmer's land. >> vance ended this rampage the exact same way he started it. violently. and it didn't have to be that way.
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bojorquez. oklahoma was rocked by a series of earthquakes overnight. the strongest magnitude 4.5 quake hit northeast of oklahoma city. there were no reports of significant damage there. the increase in earthquakes in oklahoma has been linked to waste water disposalm oil and gas production. baseball history is on the line tonight in the world series. >> addison russell forces a seven. >> chicago dominated cleveland last night winning 9-3. the cubs have fought back from a 3-1 deficit. long time fans were in a frenzy last night but holding their breath tonight. the series is even and chicago
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world series. the city of cleveland, 68. >> in the air to center. to his left. it misses it. >> reporter: if you're a sports fan from cleveland you're used to things not breaking your way. >> the throw at home. safe as the ball gets away. >> reporter: the cubs steamrolled the indians tuesday night. >> into right field. this ball is out of here sh! >> reporter: leveling the series to three games a piece. >> it a disaster for us and didn't help they dropped that ball and it went downhill. but hey, they are a good team. >> i'll be here tomorrow. i'll be dragging but i'll be here. >> you have to be nervous and excited all in one. that's what the world series is all about, right?
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it doesn't get any better than this. >> reporter: in chicago they are screaming a different tune. in only a matter of days, cubs fans shifted from desperate to down right confidence. >> we will go get it in seven. >> reporter: die-hard clevelanders say why not now? >> hamilton has been calling indian games for 27 years. a win to the world series what does that mean for this city? >> it's been passed down from mom and dad to generation to generation.
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two tickets went up on sale for stubhub and were sold for almost $20,000 apiece! >> the three of us will be there, will we not, be watching? >> yes. however it turns out, it's been a great series. i say the lord will not let chicago lose and some people say lord has nothing to do with it. they say it boils down >> talent on the field and good pitching, by the way and chicago has a great reliever. >> a great story for either city. >> good luck to them. a little known law firm may have been bent the rule to funnel money to democrats. the clinton reacts to
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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 7:26. milwaukee's city christmas tree.. will soon be on its way to city hall! crews cut it down less than an hour ago. we brought it to you live on the "cbs 58 morning news." "michael schlesinger" joins us lto tell us about the tree and
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3 coming up on "cbs this morning" a 6-year-old boy dies from a mysterious polio- like illness... and now the department of health in washington is investigating several ?other? cases. 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: 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: 47 3
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russ feingold voiceover: as i travel to all 72 counties - knocking on doors, talking to folks - what i hear the most is how hard it is to get ahead. one big reason -- we have a political system let's protect social security, make college affordable for families and fix a tax system that rewards companies for exporting our jobs. i'm russ feingold and i approve this message because we need an economy
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? it feels like a kickoff to the holiday season. doesn't it? halloween is over. now it's on to stage two of your holiday weight gain -- thanksgiving. this is the day where everyone decides betwee to your family thanksgiving out just staying home and being happy. >> holidays don't have to be bad. >> exactly right. you can love your family and have fun! >> you can. >> i love thanksgiving. >> i do too. i do too. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? coming up in this half hour, the scandal rocking one of the country's biggest local donors. the investigation reveals a law firm could be funneling illegal
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other major candidates. plus tracking a medical mystery in seattle. a growing number of children have been hospitalized with symptoms similar to polio. ahead, one family's emotional search for answers after their son's death. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. "wall street journal" said a pipeline fire in alabama caused a jump in gasoline futures prices. they shot up as much as 15% on the exchange yesterday. gas prices at the pump are expected to rise. >> britain's "guardian" says vladimir putin today order ten-hour cease-fire in the syrian city of aleppo. the pause would start on friday and russia says it gives fighters and rebels to leave the city. one group calling it a media
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on more cyberattacks linked to russian's government. hackers reached computers through a flaw in microsoft's system. a patch is set to be released next tuesday. the same hackers are blamed for stealing e-mails from the democratic national committee. >> the "new york post" says probably no one at the controls when malaysia airlines flight 370 crashed. a report issued by investigators today thinks the plane ran of fuel and plunged into the indian ocean. few traces have been found of the plane since it vanished in 2014. 239 people were aboard. a cluster of polio-like illness investigation is in washington state. two of nine case have been confirmed as a rare condition known as afm. one child has died. mireya villarreal is at the seattle children's hospital where three patients are being treated.
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the effect of children range in ages from 3 to 14 years old. all of them, all of a sudden, had a disabling pain in their arms and in their legs. and while afm is not contagious there is no cause or cure. the mother of one boy who died tells me it came without warning. >> i was really scared. what is going on? >> reporter: mary joe says her 6-year-old son daniel was alway daniel died over the weekend, one of nine children in washington state recently exhibiting symptoms consistent with acute flaccid myelitis. it is weakness in one arm or legs and sometimes causes facial weakness and difficulty swallowing. >> he woke up and looked at me
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he couldn't cry because of his tear deducts. his brain wasn't letting him cry. >> to have nine potentially afm is concerning for me. >> reporter: the centers for disease control and prevention says as of september 89 people were confirmed to have afm this year and up 21 cases last year and the exact cause is unclear. >> but other common infections can do this or viruses that are entero virus is the concern right now. >> reporter: gracy fisher was diagnosed with afm in 2014 when cases spiked even higher than this year. >> i began to feel a tingling in my hands and pain in my neck. and within five minutes, i couldn't walk. >> reporter: daniel's mother still doesn't know why her son died.
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raw for you and your family? >> we thought, you know, if we shared this with people, that somebody can give us an answer. >> reporter: once doctors get a clear picture of whether or not these case are afm, then they will start to investigate whether there is a link between these cases and start to ask parents what these children have eaten and where they have been and whether they have been exposed to any chemicals o pesticides that may have led to this condition. gayle? >> let's hope they can figure that out. thank you. hillary clinton's campaign is returning thousands of dollars in donations tied to what may be one of the largest straw donors scheme ever uncovered. it involves a smau law firm that has given money to many top democrats including senator elizabeth warren and senate minority leader harry reid and
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movie "spotlight." tony dokoupil is outside the law firm's office in boston. >> reporter: the thornton law firm is far from a household name but for years democratic politician walked through these doors behind mean' walked out with checks worth tens of thousands of dollars. the thornton law firm has just ten partners but dollar-for-dollar one of the nation's biggest political donors. according to the firm's own documents leaked by a these donations they matched the amount they gave. >> once they knew we had these record they didn't deny this was the case. >> reporter: hundreds and hundreds of times, a lawyer would donate money to a candidate or political party and then almost immediately be given back that very same sum? >> that is correct. if you give a donation and somebody else reimburses you for the donation that is a clear violation of the spirit and letter of the law at the federal
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partnerships like thornton law firm to a maximum donation $2700 per candidate but a campaign fns watchdog said the firm used its individual donors. donating well above that legal limit. >> straw donor reimbursement systems are something the ftc and department of justice take seriously and people have gone to jail for this. >> reporter: the spotlight team center looked at donations from three of t 2010 to 2014. the trio and one of their wives gave $1.6 million mostly to democrats. over the stadium period received $1.4 million back in don united states. a thornton spokesperson said the donations are legal because they came out of each partner's ownership stake in the firm. in other words, they paid with their own money. it was a voluntary prime minister that only involved equity partners and their own
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donations. the firm said in a statement. >> a lot of money. >> it is a lot of money. >> reporter: massachusetts republicans are calling for an investigation. >> in the end, it's about restoring integrity to a process that folks are already extremely weary of. how confident are you this is an isolated program if only thornton does it? >> i am not confident at all. we have had a number of parties coming forward to us saying they do this at our place too. prove it? >> reporter: and "cbs this morning" has learned the nonpartisan campaign legal center will file a complaint with the federal election commission later today. in the meantime, senator elizabeth warren, who has received nearly $130,000 from this law firm since 2007 told "the boston globe" she won't return any of the money until the investigators find that the donations were illegal. >> fascinating. wow, tony.
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story continues. >> follow the money. >> archeologists made a stunn discovery. the burial slab where the body of jesus is said to have been placed after his death. we invite you to subscribe to our "cbs this morning" podcast. you'll get the news of the day, interviews and some podcast originals. that's right! you can find them all on itunes and apple's podcast app.
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national geographic was doing a documentary about the restoration of the shrine when archeologists were stunned at what they discovered. for believers, it is the holiest site in christianity. deep inside jerusalem's old city, the church of the holy -- the very tomb where jesus christ is believed to have been buried. you see in ecstasy as they go in and they are seeing something they believed in all their life. footage from the documentary through layers of marble and plaster and debris, centuries of destruction and reconstruction like peeling back layers of an onion. when they finally discovered this. a marble slab with a cross carved into its surface. thought to date back to the crusades of the 1500s in the original limestone burial bed revealed to be intact. >> it's amazing to see right
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looking. >> reporter: national geograp geographic's archeologist said his knees were shaking at the revelation. >> it is considered -- this particular shrine is considered the burial place of jesus, based on the fourth century a.d. records from the first roman emperor of the roman empire, constantine. i feel we are as close as possible to saying this is exactly the spot that constae burial of jesus christ. >> reporter: after 60 hours, the tomb was sealed back up, perhaps never to be reopened again. and you can get an exclusive look at the restoration project and more of what the archeologists found by watching explorer on the national geographic channel later this month. >> charlie, absolutely fascinating. love to see all that. >> does it get any better than that as an archeologist?
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found. >> look where we are, standing right there. >> very nice. an annual halloween prank turns parents into ghouls. >> i ate all of your halloween candy. >> what? [ screaming ] >> ahead, how kids took the news when told their halloween candy was all gone. such a good prank! >> i saw grace sneak into the closet and grab the giant bag and walk out of the room. i said where are you going with that? you can have a piece but not the
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i just wanted to let you know, i ate all of your candy. >> huh? >> i ate all of your halloween candy. >> it can't be gone! >> i ate it all! ha, ha, ha! [ screaming ] >> i hate you! he ought all te all of our cand that we worked so hard to get! >> you're just joking. >> >> i ate it all. >> no! >> yes! >> i'm really sorry. >> i hate you! >> i'm not -- i'm not happy, but i'm -- i'm -- are you -- i still love you. >> oh! >> i'm not happy but i still love you, what a nice way to end it. >> i'm mot happy. >> but i still love you. >> i hate you!
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years ago where he gets parents to tell their kid the halloween candy is all gone, as you see kids still don't think that is cute or funny. >> they work hard as the one little one said. >> trick or treat is hard work! >> i'm sure that is heavily edited what some of the kids said to their parents. nearly everyone who wears contact lenses are somehow using them wrong. how the lenses can put your eyes that is ahead on "cbs this morning." the great big toys"r"us book of awesome is finally here. in stores and online now! toys"r"us. awwwesome! i've been taking probiotics gx from nature's bounty to maintain healthy digestion and help with the occasional unwanted gas and bloating. so wherever i get stuck today, my "future self" will thank me. thank you. thank you. thank you. hang on, go go go back. thank you. do i get stuck in an air duct?
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but there's important information for us: the cdc recommends all baby boomers get tested for hep c. all it takes is a simple one-time blood test. and if you have hep c, it can be cured. be sure to ask your doctor to get tested for hep c. for us it's time to get tested. it's the only way to know for sure. russ feingold voiceover: as i travel to all 72 counties - knocking on doors, talking to folks - what i hear the most is how hard it is to get ahead. one big reason -- we have a political system working overtime -- for ceos. let's protect social security, make college affordable for families and fix a tax system that rewards companies for exporting our jobs.
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that works for everyone. 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. breaking news this morning---a person ?hit and killed? near 9-th and oklahoma in milwaukee. the milwaukee county ?medical examiner? says... initial reports indicate it's a woman. ?we? have a crew that just got to the scene. once again-- a pede ninth and oklahoma in
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a ?car chase? in milwaukee overnight... leads to a ?crash.?now three people are under arrest.it happened on i-43 northboud around 11:30 last night. officials say... they were chasing a car ?taken during an armed robbery.?the suspects got on i-43... and sped off.police say... the suspects ?lost control? near brown deer road... and crashed in a ditch.?three? suspects were arrested at the scene-- a man and two female juveniles. they were ?not? hurt. ahead on cbs this morning--- the cdc says... more than 99 percent of people who wear contacts... do at least ?one thing? that could lead to a serious eye infection.what you need to 3 3 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:
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pairs as an extra description of a suspect yet. >> in six days, voters will choose a new president. a new poll out this morning finds hillary clinton and donald trump in a dead heat. the poll was conducted between friday and monday. >> the candidates and their surrogates flooded the campaign trail yesterday trying to drive home their different visions for the country. >> who here wants to elect donald trump and mike pence and make america great again?
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about america's best days are behind us. >> he says this is a movement of the american people and the american people are going to make america great again. >> america's best days are still ahead of us. don't buy into that dark, pessimistic vision! >> we will make america strong again. we will make america safe again. and we will make america great again. >> this is the moment where we decide who america is, what we stand for. you have to stand up, reject cynicism, reject fear, reject meanness. choose hope. choose hope. choose hope. choose hope. >> hillary clinton will be in nevada and arizona today. donald trump campaigns in three cities in florida.
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has been campaigning for hillary clinton in battleground states such as florida, ohio, and pennsylvania. he is also an outspoken opponent of the proposed merger between at&t and time warner. he says it could lead to, quote, higher costs, fewer choices and even worse service for our on customers. senator, good morning. >> good morning. >> let's get to the merger in a little bit. first, the election is six days away. do you think this disclosure by the fbi director has led to a tightening in the polls? d i always thought this would be a close election. i'm kind of the poster child of close election. >> 312 votes? >> yeah. that number rings a bell. and so that is why i've been going around the country and you know, i've known hillary for 23 years. she is the smart he was, toughest and hard working person
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job. >> she still has dishonesty and why do you think that persists and what do you think she needs to turn it around? >> well, i think it's been 25 years of attacks by the right. i think she made a mistake with the e-mails and she acknowledges it. but i know her and, again, i trust her to do the job that, you know, when decisions come to the president, they are decisions that only the president can make. da days" of the cuban missile crisis. >> do you think donald trump can make those decisions? >> i do not want -- i don't think he can. i think he's a man with a very short attention span. i think we have seen that. i don't think he is interested in policy.
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important turnout is as someone who won by 312, so i'm urging all of my -- everyone who supports hillary to get out there and vote. >> one question about the issues. health care. obamacare. is it a big issue? are people angry about it? >> there are some people who, for example, minnesota, they have a right to be mad about the price on the exchange. he- people get their health care through the exchange are about 4% to 5% and 80% to 85% get subsidies through the taxes, tax credit. so it doesn't -- and the benefits, 20 million people, extra covered. you can't be turned down for a preexisting condition.
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you can't hit a yearly cap. so you won't go bankrupt in if you get sick. all of these -- and as far as health care costs, they have gone down. we bent the cost curve as we talked about. and we extended the life of medicaid by 11 years. >> a lot of people say they can't afford it because the prices have gone up from 20% to on 80% in many places. >> but tho a 4% to 5% of the people. the people who have been hit that way have a right to be mad. but what i'm saying is, and when i say we bent the cost curve, you talk about getting it through your employer. those -- that -- the price of that -- and this is significant. because this is how most people get their insurance, has gone up at a much slower rate than it has any time in 50 years. >> let's talk about the merger. >> the merger?
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>> well, at&t has the pipes, so to speak. it delivers content. it has directv, largest pay cable -- pay tv there is. 25 million, i believe. it has second largest mobile broadband with increasingly people getting their tvs through that. buying for $85 billion warner, which has the most -- some of the most desirable content that exists. >> why is it bad for the consumer? >> why is that bad? it's a vertical integration and also has hbo and cnn and tbs. >> has the nbc/comcast merger which you led a fight against, has that hurt consumers? >> i think it did, yeah.
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on that and what at&t is saying, put conditions on us. the reason that comcast and time warner cable, which is a separate company, didn't get approved, one of the big reasons it didn't get approved is that comcast did not go through with some of those conditions, and this raises prices for consumers. it always does. this concentration, the consolidation of media is not good for consumers. prices and decreases choices? >> exactly. and usually leads to worse service, even worst service. in other words, now at&t buys this content, it can favor its own content on directv or through its mobile broadband and, also, other delivers of content will be managed.
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executive on friday said it doesn't jibe with the company's for the best price and have its own channels widely distributed as possible. >> you know, he said, like, this doesn't make sense. it would be like we have a toothpaste and we don't want to get into dwayne reid. like having hbo and shaking down comcast. those are very different. and he said it, it would be -- it would be like having a toothpaste company cbs. >> that is called vertical integration? >> and cbs is not toothpaste. people can live without arm and hammer toothpaste. people -- >> oh, no, i want my arm and hammer toothpaste. >> senator, we are out of time. >> if cbs can get it, if you really, really care about your
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warner brothers movies -- >> we have to put the toothpaste back in the tube and get on time here or our producers are going to kill us. >> they are trained in that. >> that is why i'm sitting at this table. >> something tells me, you'll speak up about it again. thank you very much for coming to the table. >> you bet. >> could your contact lenses send you to the emergency room? the biggest mistakes you can make in handling your contacts,
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johnson: social security is a legal ponzi scheme. senior 1: ron johnson is attacking social security. senior 2: he wants to let wall street risk it in the stock market. johnson: free money... young people don't really necessarily understand finance. college student 1: ron johnson voted to raise the cost of student loans - college student 2: he just doesn't get it. worker: he says he's for jobs, but ron johnson supports trade deals that hurt wisconsin. raising the cost of college. jobs lost overseas. senator ron johnson - he's hurting wisconsin families. russ feingold: i'm russ feingold
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doctor. what kind of mistakes do you make and what damage does it do to your eyes? i wear hard contact lenses which i've been wearing since i was 20. >> i wear soft. gayle wears soft. norah used to wear contacts but no longer, thanks to lasik surgery which is an option for most people as well. we make a lot of mistakes with contact lenses and some are obvious and some are not on obvious and good to mention what these are. >> the number one mistake vi >> sleeping in contact lenses. some are approved to extended wear. you can sleep in them but most of the ones we all wear and i would bet that certainly not rpg but my soft lenses are not designed for sleeping in. if you sleep in your contact lenses you may increase your risk of nasty infections that can cause vision loss. >> what about solutions? >> solution as well. people like to top off their solutions. you sort of take out your
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it there and top it off with solution at the end of the day. >> i always do that. >> i never did that. always had to rinse it out! >> yes. you sort of throw it out after you let out your lenses and let it air dry. don't top off your solutions, gayle. also not wear your contact lenses too long. two week lenses should be worn for two weeks. don't try to get a month out of them. daily lenses, throw them out at the end of the day a to get several days out of them. the other thing i should mention is water. not swimming in contact lenses. water and contact lenses do not mix? >> shower? >> shower, hot tub. severe infections can occur. and so if you have to swim with your contact, you have to see while you're swimming, wear
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contact lenses and throw them out when you're done. >> what age appropriate is contact lenses? >> good bet. some kid, depending on maturity level can start earlier but 10 to 12 is a good time to start. >> probably wash your hands. >> wash your hands, absolutely! >> you do that, gayle? >> i have >> and dry out your container. >> i do have has hygiene despite what you may think of me. ahead, find out why bono is designated to a list reserved for women. i like this! you're watching "cbs this morning." we will be right back. announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by visionworks. find more than a pair of
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it's holiday time, and no fruit is as versatile as our ocean spray cranberries, which is why we're declaring it "the unofficial official fruit of the holidays." the fig's gonna be so bummed. [ chuckles ] for holiday tips and recipes, go to oceanspray.com. i had frequent heartburn, but...my doctor recommended prilosec otc 7 years ago, 5 years ago, last week. just 1 pill each morning. 24 hours and zero heartburn, it's been the number 1 doctor recommended brand for 10 straight years, and it's still recommended today. use as directed remember 2007? smartphones?
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also includes u2's bono. >> do you think naming a man changes the direction, the conversation at all? >> i think when a man is willing to say i care what happens to women and i'm willing to work for it, that is incredibly painful and bono has. he has put a lot of his own time and energy and real lives have been saved. >> the magazine recognized bono for the campaign he launched with one of his foundations. sure i don't deserve it. the battle for gender equality can't be won unless men lead it along with women. >> a new generation of drones is making waves for explorers. >> you've seen drones flying overhead. but now they are diving under water. >> the thing turns on a dime. >> reporter: we will show you
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remote-controlled technology coming up on "cbs this morning." russ feingold voiceover: as i travel to all 72 counties - knocking on doors, talking to folks - what i hear the most is how hard it is to get ahead. one big reason -- we have a political system let's protect social security, make college affordable for families and fix a tax system that rewards companies for exporting our jobs. i'm russ feingold and i approve this message because we need an economy that works for everyone. it's not uncommon for autistic kids to flap their hands. and so when i saw that, that was completely disqualifying.
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my son max can't live in trump world. so i'm crossing party lines and voting for hillary. i don't always agree with her, but she's reasonable. and she's smart. she can work with people to solve problems. i want to be able to tell my kids that i did the right thing when it really mattered. i'm hillary clinton and i approve this message. this is a cbs 58 morning news . 3 update.good morning i'm kate chappell... c-b-s 58 news time is 8:26. new this morning... one person is dead after a motorcycle crash in racine county.it happened in the town of raymond around 9-30 last night. according to the racine county sheriff... someone who drove by the crash called 9-1-1. police say the driver was dead when they got to the scene. they think the crash happened hours before they got the call. the cause of the crash is under investigation. police say it doesn't appear speed or alcohol were factors in the crash. the city of milwaukee's ?three? municipal court judges
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minor offenses today. anyone in the county with a municipal court warrant... driver's license suspension... or car registration suspension can have them lifted... no questions asked. people will still be responsible for any fines or "building and zoning code violations." anyone who qualifies... can show up in court starting today.. ?and? the next two wednesdays.we have more information on our website... cbs 58 dot com. search "warrants"... or look under "most popular stories" on the side of the homepage. campaign stops continue in the badger state today... with less than a week to go before will campaign for her mother in oshkosh, eau claire and milwaukee.russ feingold will join senator bernie sanders in milwaukee today at turner ballroom. ahead on cbs this morning--- drones can already fly overhead... now they're going underwater too.ben tracy shows you new sites to explore with the remote-controlled technology. first.. let's get a check of the forecast on this wet wednesday.here's meteorologist justin thompson gee. forecast...today: decreasing clouds, mild. high: 47tonight:
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? welcome back to "cbs this morning.? coming up in this half hour, it's been just over two years since we lostct robin williams. his wife susan schneider williams is with us today in our toyota green room and there in the purple. hello! ahead, why she believes a type of dementia is responsible for his death. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. britain's "guardian" says the pope thinks the catholic church will never have female priests. he commented yesterday on his plane. they explored lifting the ban
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duties of priest. "usa today" explores the best destinations of 2017 as chosen by lonely planet. nepal number five on the list. next is the mountainous caribbean eyelid of dominica. finland is third. second place close goes to colombia. first, drum roll. canada markets its 150th year. >> a great study. >> i love th canada. the celebration was on last night in chicago after the cubs, did you hear this? they beat the cleveland indians. the score was 9-3. so they are hoping their team will end a drought that has stretched back more than a century. >> wow. after being down 3-1 the cubs roared back to force a decisive
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wrigley field for what it means for the team and chicago. dean, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. well, to say the cubs have had difficulty in november and seasons past would be a serious understatement. but, hey, it's not october any more! and there's a decent chance, at least, that this team one day will be known as the victors of november. >> high flyball to left center. at the wall! grand slam! 7-0 chicago! >> reporter: in chicago, cub fans had a lot to cheer about last night. >> we are bringing home the trophy, baby! back to chicago, the trophy! ? >> reporter: the noise came from a very deep place. a centuries worth of disappointment is now a riot of
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>> into right field. this ball is out of here. >> reporter: for a team that last won it all during teddy roosevelt's administration, they will be looking to rewrite history in a winner take all final game. >> woo! let's go! >> addison russell. cubs have forced a game seven. >> reporter: and the cubs have the momentum for the first time in franchise history, they have won back-to-back elimination games in a postseason. >> go go go! >> reporter: former chicago cubs linda and jim valer drove from arizona to watch the game from
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going to say? >> he was going to say one hell of a game. >> thank you, dean. just over two years ago, america lost one of its most beloved actors. robin williams died in august of 2014. he left us with many laughs and many memorable characters. >> good morning, vietnam! the water is boiling. >> hello! >> you do a celebration of a dance. you do fossey fossey fossey, marriage graham, marriage graham or twila, twila! >> you saw what he did. >> who is the boss? >> i am. >> who is the boss? >> i am. >> don't mess with me, man, i'm a lawyer! 10,000 years will give you such
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ah-ha! nanu, nanu. ? hi. mind if i sit down? make your life spectacular. i know i did. you don't know about real love because it only occurs when you love something love yourself. and don't you ever love to anybody that much. thank you, boys. thank you. >> thank you. despite his larger than life spirit on screen, robin williams had several private struggles and his widow is sharing his story. susan schneider williams wrote
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brain and about her husband's final year. >> reporter: she describes his body with dah men that. she says it drove her husband to sued and she wrote it felt like he was drowning in his own symptoms and i was drowning along with him. lewy is hard to diagnose because symptoms sim t disease and alzheimer's disease. susan schneider williams joins us at the table for had he first tv interview since writing this. you write such he will defense about him. you were powerless in helping him see his own brilliance because so many people felt, at
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because he was sgrefdepressed. >> leyy body is so complex. depression came in only near the end. probably within a few months before he left. and it was not a predominant symptom. i think because he had had a prior history over seven or eight years prior where he did have depression but he hadn't had it that long but the tendency was to want to pick up that, you know, as the issue. but they didn't focus only on that. >> what did you see that made here? >> we were celebrating our second wedding anniversary and it was october of 2013. and robin started having gut discomfort. through that experience, you know, it turned out to be nothing. the test results on that were negative. we thought it might be div
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and his fear and anxiety spiked and sustained at a level that was very scary. so that was kind of the beginning really the way i see it. and the next ten months we just -- we were chasing symptom after symptom. and the thing about lewy body disease is the person is aware of that their abilities are declining. in alzheimer's, they are not aware. that is a marked difference and can really kind of add t terror of this particular disease. >> how much of it is physical pain? i get the sense there is something going on inside of me that is just driving me? >> that is a great question, charlie. i don't know if i have the answer to that, really. because all of the different reasons the brain are affecting different things within us. i can't answer -- i don't know. i can tell you that in his autopsy, the coroner's report
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throughout all of his brain and brain stem. >> wow. >> nearly every region. >> what would you talk about? >> what would he talk about? >> yes. >> so what started to happen more and more was this issue around fear and anxiety. and his concerns over -- it got difficult for him to even interacting with people became very difficult. he would question things afterwards or during. and really in the realms of, you know, did i do okay? things that focused around insecurity >> schizophrenia? >> when we found out -- we thought we had the answer a few months before he left, he was diagnosed with parkinson's which is actually an accurate diagnosis but that was the clinical side. the pathologist was he had diffused lewy body disease which is what took him. we were in that doctor appointment with the general neurologist asking what does
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the parkinson's, we finally have a name and what does this mean? robin asked in that appointment, do i have alzheimer's, dementia? am i schizophrenic? and it was painful later to realize why he was probably asking those questions, because he was likely keeping a lot of -- not necessarily the symptoms but the degree of symptoms to himself. >> you also wrote in this piece the caregiver is the ultimate key witness to the terrorism that tar 1 in 6 people affected by brain disease. what is your advice to other caregivers? you were there. >> just that they are not alone. remember they are not alone and also to remember -- and it's hard to hold on to this -- but to remember their loved one's symptoms are coming from the brain disease. it's not coming from their heart. >> right.
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to witness. yet, the caregiver is the witness because the person afflicted, they are losing their ability and they may not be able to verbalize. robin was losing verbal ability and finding words and weakness of voice. so it's difficult for them to say -- >> did you think he was in danger of taking his own life? >> not at all. nobody was. we had a whole medical team. no one saw that coming. >> i knew him as well, as you know. >> yes. >> in 25 laugh more than he did. i mean, it was rasemarkable. when es at a stage with you, he took you somewhere else and it was remarkable and we have all of that to remember. >> yes. >> thank you. here is a picture of you and him on your wedding day. >> so beautiful. beautiful. >> thank you. >> thank you, charlie. thank you. >> thank you, susan. you have helped a lot of people. >> i hope so. >> thank you.
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russ feingold voiceover: as i travel to all 72 counties - knocking on doors, talking to folks - what i hear the most is how hard it is to get ahead. one big reason -- we have a political system working overtime -- for ceos. let's protect social security, make college affordable for families and fix a tax system that rewards companies for exporting our jobs. i'm russ feingold and i approve this message because we need an economy
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wrecks and explore underwater life. benef >> reporter: it cuts through the water like fish and this remote reason controlled underwater drone can turn on a dime. t trident is the newest model to come out. >> we find it to be excellent at going a long straight line. >> reporter: while the technology is complex, the idea is simple. let anyone become an so-called citizen scientist. what are you hoping to accomplish? >> my hope we can get 10,000 more eyes in the water looking at parts of the world no one has ever seen before. in the past, exploration has always been something you see someone else do. it's always been a famous explorers who do their expedition and come back and show you what they found. >> reporter: it started in the
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in 2013, oscar winning director james cameron developed a one-man sub to look at the highest deep part of the pacific defi seven miles down. >> technology has allowed us to give that to everyone. they have been used to find ancient mine the pottery mexico and antarctica under the ice and mt. everest. >> reporter: last year in lake tahoe they found the queen of the lake. >> we found this on a ship wreck not seen for 70 years. that was just awesome. >> reporter: we joined the team on a test run of the new model in monterey bay in central california's coast.
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>> we are over a case called metrini fields. >> reporter: hot weather caused an explosion. back at their lab in berkeley, they are hoping their start-up called open rov will also explode in popularity. rov means remotely operated vehicle. the software is open, so users can modify it to fit specific needs. they sold more than 3,000 of about $900. >> we are building the largest global operation network in the world and it's powered by people. >> reporter: in september david lane spoke at john kerry's ocean conference in washington, d.c. he talked about open rov citizen scientists are making waves. while using her drone in 2014, laura james noticed sick and dying sea stars near her home in
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the devastation and sharing what she found with scientists. they believe it's climate change. >> science becomes more a headline. it's something people are engaged? >> reporter: they have create an online global community where a boy scout troop exploring a reef in the bahamas to >> when i look at the water, i see not just the surface but the murky deep below and i want to know more about it. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning," ben tracy, monterey, california. >> beautifully done. love to be there. >> yeah. you're watching "cbs this
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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. we're learning ?new details? about a deadly crash. a woman.. ?hit and killed? near 9-th and oklahoma in milwaukee. that man says he was walking off of his front porch around 0 school bus turning from the ninth to oklahoma avenue and hit a woman crossing the street. he says you could hear the impact. he immediately ran to check on that woman, he says that she was unresponsive but was grabbing her chest. the bus driver also apparently got out to check on that woman. the milwaukee county medical examiner has arrived on scene, they have confirmed that that woman has died. and just to give you some perspective if you're not familiar with the
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across the street from clement j zablocki elementary school.... so you can imagine this is already a very busy area with many children going to school at that time of morning. meanwhile.. milwaukee police are still on scene 3 investigating, trying to piece together what all happened. ka cbs 58 news. kyle, thank you. let's get a final check of the forecast. now. here's meteorologist justin thompson gee. forecast...today: decreasing clouds, mild. high: 47tonight: increasing clouds, mild. low: 39thursday; partly 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 sunny. high: 52friday: partly
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johnson: social security is a legal ponzi scheme. senior 1: ron johnson is attacking social security. senior 2: he wants to let wall street risk it in the stock market. johnson: free money... young people don't really college student 1: ron johnson voted to raise the cost of student loans - college student 2: he just doesn't get it. worker: he says he's for jobs, but ron johnson supports trade deals that hurt wisconsin. v.o.: attacking social security. raising the cost of college. jobs lost overseas. senator ron johnson - he's hurting wisconsin families. russ feingold: i'm russ feingold
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wayne: (screams) jonathan: it's a trip to ireland. hello, wayne mcbrady. wayne: oops, i'm naughty. jonathan: it's a new motorcycle. omg. wayne: come on, brother, let's do it! what?! tiffany: wake up! wayne: if you're having a good time, say, ?yeah?! (cheering) jonathan: it's time for ?let's make a deal?! now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady! wayne: what's up, america? welcome to ?let's make a deal.? you guys ready to have fun? i need one person to make a deal. let's go. who wants to make a deal? who wants to make a deal? i see people over here. you, you, yeah, you in the snorkel suit. hey. hello, ashley. - yeah, ashley. wayne: nice to meet you, ashley, what do you do? - i'm a chemical engineer.
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