tv CBS Overnight News CBS March 14, 2016 3:35am-4:30am EDT
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very well educated, i lead in all different categories. very proudly, i lead with evangelicals, with veterans. i lead in every category. i have everybody there. we really do have a young crowd. remember this, if they went to a hillary rally, although nobody cares too much about the hillary rallies because there is no fervor there. if they went to a bernie rally everybody would say what a terrible thing. they disrupt me from talking. and i do the best i can with it. and by the way, you have heard me say it. don't hurt them. i'm constantly saying to the police. don't hurt them. don't hurt them. i don't condone violence. but some of the people are violent. >> let me ask you a policy question, at the debate you talked hb 1 visas, you said something i frankly use, i shouldn't be allowed to use it. when you talked about bankruptcy laws, how you took advantage of them. you and i talk about your taxes, you pay as little as possible. if you are president why would anybody follow the laws you put in place if they know you were taking advantage of the laws in the private sector? >> because i know the game better than anybody. i built one of the greatest companies. did a filing, one of the great
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very little debt, tremendous cash flow. some of the greatest assets in the world. let me tell you, i use the bankruptcy laws just look other very successful people. i don't want to use their names. i could name ten people. the biggest peoplen all of business. it's the game we play. we use the laws of the land. we use it. and that's the way we play the game. as far as the visas are concerned. i'm not doing anything wrong. i think the, those visas shouldn't be allowed. but they are allowed. they're part of the fabric of, of what you do. so, i will use it. i'm a businessman. now, that i have turned politician, i hate to say that, almost about myself. but now that i am running for office. i know the game better than anybody. i'm the one that can fedex all -- can fix all of this stuff. i never went bankrupt. you understand i never went bankrupt. take a look at business leaders. i have 500 companies. i have so many different companies.
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the laws of the land. as every other major business person does. >> that's what i want to ask about the playing of the game. when you were with ben carson who endorsed you this week, you said he was pathologic and then that both of you've said that was just politics. so you are saying it is just the game. but if the most serious things you say about a person are just politics it any just the game. then why isn't everything you are saying just a game and just politics and open to revision? >> well that is politics. i mean say, bad things about people. and they say bad thing as but me. and actually, ben wrote it in his book. book. ur car overheated... what are the chances? can you send a tow truck please? uh, the location? you're not going to believe this but it's um... it's in a tree. i wish i was joking, mate, a tree. (car horn honking) no, no, all we really need is a tow truck. geico's emergency roadside
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john dickerson. >> good morning, senator. donald trump says he might start sending protesters to your rallies. >> well, you know -- donald trump has been an incredibly die -- divisive figure. day after day his rhetoric is in citing violence. some of his supporters responding to the rhetoric by kicking people. by sucker punching them. you know, we have seen recently charges leveled against his own campaign manager. for assaulting a female reporter. so there is a lot of this -- feelings about violence coming from -- trump's campaign. i very much hope that he understands that in the democracy, people should be allowed to go to anybody's rally, peacefully demonstrate without fear of being beaten up. i hope he tones it down. this is not good for the country. >> do you encourage some of your
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supporters i should say, are going to these rallies would you encourage them to keep doing that? >> no, not to disrupt rallies. trump, look, i don't, i won't that donald trump lies a whole lot. he calls me a communist. that's a lie. to suggest that our campaign is telling people to disrupt his campaign is a lie. we don't. we have millions of supporters and some of them will do what they do. but our campaign has never, not once, organized any effort to disrupt mr. trump's rallies or anybody else's rallies. not what we do. >> in the contest this week with hillary clinton she has said that she was way out in front on health care back in 1993. she wonders where you were on that issue back then? what's your response? >> well i think there is a video or photograph or something of me by here side. look, i have always said that hillary clinton did a very, very good job as, first lady.
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doing. but to criticize me on health care is not quite fair because i have been a leader in congress from day one. in the fight for -- universal health care. to make certain that in the united states we join the rest of the industrialized world, guarantee health care to all people, terms of the affordable care act. i work with congressmen jim cly burn on initiative to put $12 billion in community health centers so millions of people now have health care who previously would not have health care. i have led the effort to take on the greed and the unconscionable pricing of the drug companies who are ripping us off.
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i don't have to defend myself off to anybody about the role i have played in health care. i do believe that we should move to a medicare for all health care system which finally says that health care is a right in our, to all people in our country, something which differentiates me from secretary clinton. >> have to talk politics here. on these election day, you had a big surprise win in michigan. real, momentum booster. at the end of the day, hillary clinton got more delegates on almost every election day we had. if that keeps happening she will get the nomination? >> well, john, to everybody's surprise. when we began this campaign, we were 3% in the polls. we were 70 points behind hillary clinton. since then, we have won nine states. eight of them by large margins. one in michigan was very tight. last week all of the pollsters predicted that we would lose michigan, by, by 15, 20, 25 points. well, we ended up winning. i think -- we have a lot of momentum in illinois. in ohio, in missouri. i think we are going to do
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and in florida. so we are looking forward to a very good tuesday. we are look forward to wing the democratic nomination. >> ohio is make or break for john kasich's presidential campaign. the latest poll shows kasich tied with donald trump there. kasich discusses his chances with john dickerson. -- i want to start with something you said about donald trump. you said there its no place for a national leader to prey on the fears of people who live in our country. how exactly is he preying on fears? >> look, he has done a lot of name calling. and created a very toxic atmosphere where he is, look, you want to start with immigration? do you want to start with the things he has said, you know, about muslims? where does it end? it's putting one group against another. and it's created a toxic atmosphere. i am not going to till you in his rally, some of the people don't show up who want to create problems. that happens in all volatile situations. but you know, john.
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strength is its people. and our greatest -- strength in people is when we are unified. and there is no doubt that, that he has run this divisive campaign and it is concerning to me. at the end of the day. he is not going to be the nominee. we are going to learn from this. and i am going to win ohio tuesday. we'll be competing all across the country. and a new day. wait and see. >> one of the things he says and others say too. voters are angry. he is not preying on fears. this is natural anger that is out there. talk about that line a little bit. . difference between the voters who are angry and then the politicians who poke at that anger. >> look, i think first there are people upset. they're worried about their jobs. they're worried about their wages which haven't gone up. they put their money in the bank. they get no interest. their kids are still living in their home after they get a college degree. these are real concerns. he was tapping into something out there t the reason i understand it.
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a kid. the way you get the voters to tell them how you fix things. that's why i always talk about the strength of my record. in washington, helping the economy to take off or whether in ohio with creation of over 400,000 new jobs here. i also think you can walk into a room, john, of 100 people. you could put them in a really bad mood or you can walk into that same room and you can get them to be hopeful. i notice this everywhere i go. because when i show up, i talk abut the way we can fix things. how people need to work together. and don't wait for somebody else to show up. begin to change the world in which you live. the hopefulness of it works. since i have been so positive. must be contagious was sweet, right. >> everybody behaved themselves. >> at the last debate. talking about trade. seems in the republican party. trade is now a bad word. you voted for nafta.
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that against you. what happened to the, who its the promoter of free trade now in the republican party. >> sort of interesting, john. i have been a fair trader and free trader at the same time. in 2001. i've helped the steel companies to get a 201 trade restraint. so they could consolidate and be stronger. i have been saying for a long time. we need to have an expedited process. when people cheat we shut their products down. doesn't take from the fact we have to be involved in the global marker. one of every five workers are connected to it. 38 million americans have jobs connected to trade. we do want to have free trade. and fair trade. and expedited process to say that when when you are cheating we will take action against you and include. manipulation of currency. >> politics you said you will win ohio. marco rubio said his voters should vote for him in ohio.
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should vote for him in florida. >> really hard to tell your voters to go vote for somebody else. look, not campaigning in florida. my focus has been in this state. in illinois. look at the end this is not like stop somebody. this is my telling people the way the country ought to be run. and the experience that i have had. why i have had success. so i can give them the hope that we actually can pull the country together, remember we are americans before republicans and democrats. and solve our most vexing problems. frankly using conservative principles. >> mention americans before republicans. an argument people are using against donald trump. saying, some of your rivals seem to be wobbly in terms of whether they will stick with the pledge and support him. where are you on that? >> well i would look to support the nominee. he is not going to be the nominee. just not going to happen. i said at the last debate. he makes it difficult. we'll see how this go.
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people. stop dividing people. and the toxic environment must end. this is not making us proud. think of the videos shown all over the world of people slugging it out at a campaign rally. i mean there are people around the world shaking their heads. who are saying, what the heck happened to america? we'll be fine. the people are smart. they're going to make the right decision. in my opinion. >> the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. nothing will keep you from magnum double caramel. silky vanilla bean ice cream & rich caramel sauce all covered in thick chocolate. discover magnum, double dipped for double chocolate pleasure. (sounds of birds whistling)
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largest veterans charity fired after a cbs news investigation found widespread waste at wounded warrior project. the charities collected hundreds of millions in donations but 40% to 50% is spent on overhead. including lavish parties and conventions. other veterans charities have overhead costs as low as 10%. chip reid broke this story and has the latest. >> i'll be damned if you are going to take hard working americans' money and drink it and waste it. >> reporter: when we spoke with former wounded warrior project employee eric milette in january. he was furious about what he called the charity's lavish spending at the expense of veterans programs. but his anger has subsided now that the charity's top two officials, nardizzi and giordano have been fired. >> i didn't do it for me. i did it for veterans wounded
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>> he is guardedly optimist ache >> for the first time in years he is guardedly optimistic about the organization's future. he agrees with fred and diane cane who raised $325,000 for the charity with golf tournaments that the ouster is only the first step. >> they snead to change the culture which in my opinion will require significant changes to the team. the executive team. i think they can right the ship. but it's going to take a lot of effort and it's going to -- take a lot of effort to build up that goodwill again. >> reporter: also weighing in the melia family which founded wounded warrior project in 2003. in a statement they accused nardizzi going so far as to remove any mention of the melia family from the wwp website and said donors have every right to be angry about the lack of stewardship shown by the immediate past leadership. the charity's board of directors
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some policies procedures and controls at wwp have not kept pace with the organization's rapid growth in recent years. and are in need of strengthening. but the board also insisted that a substantial portion of the donations given to wwp go to programs and services for wounded warriors. >> the board announced that while it searches for a permanent ceo. the board chairman will
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into being a really good nurse. and did it really make a difference? >> reporter: she got her answer when she became the patient. >> lynn. >> lynn has rheumatoid arthritis. last summer during one of her doctor's visits she was treated by a new nurse named nicole cran who seemed strangely familiar. >> just something on her face and her eyes, i thought, i knew who she was. >> reporter: do you get goose bumps? >> i do i have goose bumps right now. >> reporter: lynn first met nicole 28 years earlier. back when they both shared the cover of "children's nurse magazine." it was an article about lynn and the special relationship she had with nicole. her patient at the time. >> she was a very lovable little girl. >> reporter: nicole with the whale spout of a ponytail had a life threatening intestinal problem. lynn, sweet lynny as nicole
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her back to health. but, that was then. >> nicole was this little girl that i took care of. now she is taking such good care of me. >> reporter: nicole says she doesn't remember much from those days. but here is what is interesting. she also doesn't remember a time when she didn't want to be a nurse. >> oh, yeah, i always wanted to help people. and i don't remember if i really just liked nurses. i always knew i wanted to be one. >> reporter: for as long as she can remember, she always wanted to be one. some might say that is a coincidence. but to lynn -- it is a godsend. >> this is just what i needed. it is definitely a gift. because now i know for 44 years i made a difference in people's lives. >> reporter: 44 years and maybe
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historic flood in the south. floodwaters top a levee in louisiana. >> new trend in eating, big meals give way to smaller snacks. >> and why these kids from the class of 2032 have a million reasons to be thankful. >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." welcome to theover night news, i'm jeff glor. 1,000 delegates are at stake. holding presidential primaries in five states -- ohio, illinois, missouri, north carolina and florida. after several caucuses this weekend, here is where the races stand. hillary clinton about halfway to the democratic nomination with more than 1,200 delegates. on the republican side. donald trump is a third of the way to nomination. ted cruz within striking distance. this weekend chaos around the trump campaign. and dean reynolds has it covered. >> we all want peace.
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we don't want trouble. >> reporter: donald trump's style himself as a unifying peacemaker in bloomington, illinois. when confronted with hecklers as he regularly is he took a familiar hard line. >> get them out of here, please. get them out. >> reporter: in kansas city last night he could barely got a word in without interruption. >> we're in no rush. a get them out. get them out. >> reporter: outside police used pepper spray on protesters. as the the number of these incidents rise, trump has come close to condoning a violence response from supporters. this is what he said in interview. >> beaver i you have two people with tomatoes. if you see them do. what you have to do to them, i don't care. i think within my rights to say that. >> in another answer he appeared to double down on a notorious incident at one of his rallies last wednesday. when one of his supporters sucker punched a demonstrator. the 78-year-old puncher was
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>> it is possible you could help will hit legal fees if this man needs it? >> i have instructed my people to look into it, yes. >> reporter: with rising drama, trump's legal defense fund could expand. friday night in chicago, trump canceled a rally when protesters and supporters clashed. trump has taken late low to blaming interruptions on bernie sanders as he did in dayton on saturday. >> these other people. by the way, some represented bernie, our communist friend. sanders, on "face the nation" was not amused. >> he calls me a communist. that is a lie to suggest that our campaign is telling people to disrupt his campaign, is a lie. we don't. >> reporter: trump also exaggerates the size of his crowds and reviews of his debate performances. but his loose association with the truth has not slowed him down yet. jeff if the polls are right he is in for another big win here in florida on tuesday.
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thank you very much. >> trump's lead in florida is confirmed by a cbs news battleground tracker poll showing home state senator marco rubio fallen into third place. in the other winner take all state of ohio the poll says trump is tide with the state's governor, john kasich. in illinois, ted cruz is four points behind trump. on the democratic side, bernie sanders has a narrow lead in illinois. hillary clinton come portably ahead in florida and smaller lead in ohio. more from julianna goldman. >> if we can win ohio we'll run the table. >> reporter: ahead of five critical contests, donald trump hopscotched illinois, ohio and florida. tied with kasich in ohio, trump took aim. >> your governor as you know voted as congressman, volt voted for nafta which is absolutely, you know, ohio has never, ever, come back from that. >> kasich has the the fewest delegates of any republican
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but his strategy rest on winning ohio next week betting he will be able to stay in until a phandful of northeastern states vote in april. >> i believe after tuesday, we are going to continue to roll. >> reporter: kasich is banking outlasting marco rubio singularly focused on win flag fla, polls show him trailing. >> witness day morning, pollsters are going to have to ex-palestinian why explain why they're wrong about florida and other places. >> ted cruz emerging as most appealing of nontrump candidates. >> our campaign the only campaign now that has beaten him once, not twice, not three times but eight different times. all over the country. >> thank you. >> reporter: the stakes for tuesday are also high on the democratic side. clinton's lead is shrinking in ohio where she campaigned today. after his surprise win last week in michigan, bernie sanders has a narrow lead in illinois. >> i think we have a lot of momentum in illinois, in ohio, in missouri.
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good tuesday. >> the poll shows the that in illinois, sanders leads clinton when it comes to being honest and trust worthy. jeff, establishment efforts to stop trump don't seem to have had an impact in all three states more voters say the party should rally around him if he continues to win. >> julianna goldman. >> a car bomb killed 34 people injured 100 others in turkey today. it is the second devastating attack in ankara in last three weeks. jonathan vigliott has more. >> reporter: working by the remains of fiery vehicles. ankara's main boulevard became a make shift triage center for first responders. security video captured the very moment a car packed with explosives detonated near a busy bus stop in turkey's capital. embers and debris rain down on the street, as survivors ran for cover.
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[ speaking foreign language ] he said, "the bus slowed down a bit. then boom it exploded. something red appeared in the bus. fire. it killed two or three people." [ sirens sounding ] the car bomb targeted the heavily trafficked kizilay square, home to a park and several government ministries. the third bombing in the city since last fall. turkey has struggled with kurdish rebels, threats from the islamic state and the growing migrant crisis. the motive for today's explosion is unclear, but comes just two days after the united states embassy warned its citizens of a potential terrorist plot. following the attack, a ban on access to facebook, twitter and other sites in the country after images were shared on social media. jonathan vigliotti, cbs news, london. >> the "cbs overnight news" will
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at least 16 people were killed. deborah patta has our report and some of the images are graphic. >> reporter: the attack happened sunday afternoon on a stretch of beach lined by hotels popular with westerners. ivory coast officials say six gunmen targeted beach-goers. i heard shots coming from over there, said one witness. that's when i saw the criminals. we found this guy here, they had killed him. another witness described how one of the gunmen approached two children, the one child knelt and parade. the the gunmen were armed with ak 47, ammunition clips and grenades. military trucks helped evacuate the injured. the attack the latest to target west african luxury hotels.
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killed at a hotel in . debora patta, johannesburg, south africa. >> in the u.s. parts of the south remain under flood watches and warnings tonight. nearly a week of rain has left six people dead. most in louisiana. and david begnaud is there. >> reporter: 78-year-old harold worsham recovered items from the flooded mobile home when the boat he was in capsized. worsham drowned, deacon at the nearby church. kenneth is his son. >> they shouldn't have been out here. they were coming in when the water was too rough to handle. >> reporter: here in the pace community, crews are scrambling to stop floodwater from the black lake. north of here in bosher parish, they're wink the fight against
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ayou. bosher sheriff, julian wittington. >> the sandbags are holding the water back. >> reporter: 26% of louisiana's river gauges are at some level of flooding. initial reports show as many as 5,000 homes have received flood damage. in southeast louisiana, covington authorities are calling for a voluntary evacuation of communities near two major rivers that are cresting tonight. mayor mike cooper. >> the rivers are rising. they're rising at historical proportions. >> for jerri and her family river water came close to the home. they spent the day cleaning out. >> we have a sump pump. moved low stuff up. moved the cars. all you can do. >> absolutely frightening. one thing for it to be certainly high, but just to see the flow and the motion there. it's definitely scary. back here in central, louisiana, they're using this equipment and
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the water from celine bayou from pouring across. there is a culvert they tried to plug. it is not working. water towards clarence. a mile from here our cameraman shot video of the water that appears to be right at the top of the levee. >> dif it begnaud. thank you very much. the men's basketball team at yale qualified for ncaa tournament for the first time in 54 years. they'll play baylor first round. should be a time of celebration for yale, but there is also scandal. here is jericka duncan. >> your ivy league champions for 2015-16. >> reporter: when the yale bulldogs advanced to the tournament this year for the first time since 1962, the team danced into the national spotlight. but that light is now shining hard on the team's ex-captain, jack monague who apparently was expelled a few weeks ago amid rumors of sixable misconduct accusations.
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>> we just circled the wagons. in situations you got to come in closer together. believe in each other and fight harder. >> reporter: what are you telling your team as you all prepare for the ncaa tournament? >> justing saying go out and have some fun here. >> getting this far should have been especially rewarding. because the bulldogs just missed the tournament last year. losing to harvard by two points. back then they were missing 6'6" forward brandon sherrard who took last season off to travel with yale's acapella group, the whiffen poofs. >> this year he is back. >> all that he learned from interaction all over the world has come back to help with his leadership. >> now they have lost their captain. and because the team supports him, they have also lost support from some of their classmates. after the team wore t-shirts to
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game, with montague's nickname, posters appeared warning the bulldogs to stop supporting a rapist. helen price the director of uf night against sexual assault yale. >> to show support in the most public, nationally televised game, i think that is very, very irresponsible. >> the team later apologized. >> is it frustrating at all as a coach when you have worked this hard and the headline isn't necessarily focused on the team and what you have accomplished? >> i can't tell you how happy i am in terms of what we accomplished with the group of young men knowing we completed what we set out to do. >> players say they help to use their positions on and off the court in a way that can make everyone proud. and jeff, the new haven police said today, that there are currently no cases involving monta. ue. >> up next, the big business of
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economics of eating is changing. with so many schedules influx, americans are eating on the run and in new ways. snacks are a 374 billion business globally. cbs business analyst is here, what is driving the boom. >> millenials are asking for healthier options, boomers partake. biggest snackers, 55-64. broad based. amazingly, 45% of americans are replacing one or two meals a day with a snack. one third are taking more snacks in than they did two years ago. >> amazing how much the food industry is changing because of it? >> absolutely. look at kellogg's, big food brand. look back to 2000. 20% of the business of kellogg's and year 2000, 15 years later, 50%. the biggest growth segment. health and energy bars.
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and you know this low carb diet has propelled sales of, get this, jerky. okay. not just slim jims. i have special flavors for you tonight. siracha honey, ginger orange. jerky sales grew by 12.5% to $2.8 billion. >> bison bacon cranberry, one that is interesting. >> people are leaving restaurants not going to restaurants? >> well are going to restaurants. we want small plates and options. really interesting. one big trend among all restaurants now is the small plates, snack mentions on restaurant menus. up 97% over the last two years. the problem is, they're fighting the big benefit of snacks. portability. 60% say the reason why i take a snack is because i can get it on the go. we are going to have to see whether restaurants keep adapting. maybe more to go, reality is, i'm worried about sunday dinners, jeff. >> jill, thank you very much.
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scientists china engaged in controversial research, genetically modifying beagles to be more muscular. for med ral reasons. they've been accused of animal cruelty. here is seth doan. >> reporter: of the 2,000 beagles at this laboratory in southern china, two are making headlines. these are the ones you are caring about most? >> yeah, yeah. >> reporter: scientists led by this doctor at the institutes of biomedicine and health claim they're the first to successfully alter the genetic
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>> this muscle is much stronger. >> yeah, yeah. of beagles through the process of gene editing. we knocked out a again which would ordinarily stop muscles from growing. so these dogs became much more muscular. scientists here tell us the idea is not to create designer pets, but rather to mimic diseases like, parkinson's in the dogs and treat them in an effort to find a cure. ultimately the idea is to create a safe, effective drug. beagles are often used in research against the wishes of animal rights advocates. scientists at a lab used similar technology to create micropigs. selling them as pets for $1,600 each. another lab has drawn worldwide condemnation for carrying out genetic editing tests on human embryos. some major scientific journals
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critics have called china the wild west of gene editing. its that fair? >> i don't think it is fair. what we do in our lab is for the betterment of human kind, he added. i dent think anyone should experiment on humans before ethical questions are answered. dr. lai, a dog lover, insists they need to improve accuracy. of the more than 60 embryos they gene edited two were successful. selt d
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rio vista elementary school puts an emphasis on college even in tessa ashton's kindergarten class. >> not too young to start now. >> no. >> the of tuition makes it elusive. each would be first to attend college. where these volunteers have donated school supplies and sweat shirts. recent leap marty y ly marty had an announcement. >> i was thinking pizza party, pencils, and he offers a game changer for their life. >> it was a game changer for marty as well. a lifelong sailor who even got married at sea, he was planning to buy a 40-foot dream boat to reap tire on. retire on. until a sermon on charity made him think twice. >> prior to the sermon you had every intention of saelg off iling off into the sunset. >> right. >> then something bigger came along? >> yes.
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going to pay for your college tuition and everything you need to get through. >> we have come up with $1,182,000. >> wow. >> will you have to postpone your retirement then? >> hopefully not. i am prepared to. >> the money goes into ape trust. the only condition that these students have to send them a picture or essay every year. >> i want them to visualize their goal. visualizing what life is going to be like as a college graduate. >> you are going to be a teacher? >> for him to remove the road block -- it infuses them with a realistic hope. like this isn't some pipe dream anymore. >> reporter: for parents like maria alvarez. >> from the bottom of my heart. thank you so much. >> he just changed their family's future and their child's future. literally. >> reporter: circle the date for the class of 2032. >> we'll have a big party. >> yeah. throw a graduation party for all of them.
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>> reporter: their future is secure even before first grade. terry okita, cbs news, anaheim. that's the "cbs overnight news" for this monday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back with us later for the morning news and cbs this morning. from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm jeff glor. captioning funded by cbs captioning funded by cbs it's monday, march 14th, 2016. this is the "cbs morning news." rally cries. the race for the white house
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protesters clash with donald trump supporters. now the front-runner could be fronting the legal expenses for his violent supporters. lights and sirens. a wild chase unfolding overnight in l.a. an armed suspect leading the police through the city streets in a stolen cop car. and get your pencils ready. the march madness matchups are set. a look at the brackets and the surprises and snubs. good morning from the studio 57 newsroom at cbs news headquarters here in new york. good to be with you. i'm anne-marie green. we begin with breaking news. multiple injuries are reported after an amtrak train derailed in kansas. amtrak train 4, the southwest chief was en route from los angeles to chicago when it jumped the tracks about 25 miles
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