tv CBS Overnight News CBS May 13, 2016 2:07am-3:59am EDT
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superiors have lost confidence in commander eric rasch's ability to command. the sailors went off course in the persian gulf and entered iranian waters. the iranians held them for 16 hours and forced them to apologize. the invictus games for wounded warriors wrap up tonight in orlando, and there was a remarkable moment yesterday when u.s. army sergeant elizabeth marks returned her swimming medal to prince harry. she was asking him to give it to a british hospital that saved her life when she got ill during the first invictus games two years ago. marks suffered serious wounds to her hips while serving in iraq. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back.
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in campaign 2016 the top two republican leaders in america, donald trump and paul ryan, had their long-awaited peace summit today. a search for common ground in a deeply divided party. here's major garrett. >> reporter: donald trump's whirlwind unity tour through washington's republican establishment threw hordes of reporters, a raft of
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and a share of boisterous protesters. >> stop the hate! stop the hate! >> reporter: uncharacteristically, trump skipped the publicity bonanza and let twitter do the talking. "things working out really well," he wrote. >> i thought he was a very good personality. he's a very warm and genuine person. >> reporter: house speaker paul ryan called the 45-minute meeting with the presumptive nominee encouraging but admitted he and trump still have their differences on policy. those include trump's call to temporarily ban muslim immigration, deport all undocumented immigrants, oppose pending free trade deals, and leave medicare and social security intact. >> aren't you papering over these rather sizable differences in not only how conservatism is defined broadly but how you have tried to define it? >> so i represent a wing of the conservative party, you could say. he brings -- he's bringing a whole new wing to it. he's bringing new voters that we've never had for decades. that's a positive thing. >> reporter: ryan would not say if or when he would endorse trump. >> this is a
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i'm very encouraged at the first meeting of this process. >> reporter: rnc chairman reince priebus brokered the meeting. >> why is unity a process? why doesn't it just exist naturally? >> it's a big party. there's a lot of difference of opinion. the other thing i'd say is i don't think we all expected this thing to be over last week. people had to start talking and making decisions. and come to the realization that trump is it whether they're comfortable or not. >> suddenly being faced with okay, let's go, let's rally. you know, it going to take some people a little longer than others. but i think we're going to get there. >> trump also met with senate majority leader mitch mcconnell and his leadership team. most of these conversations were political, specifically what trump's campaign would mean to republicans seeking re-election, and we are told he impressed many lawmakers because he spent most of the time listening. >> major garrett for us tonight. major, thank you. well, the next president, whoever it is, will inherit the unending war in iraq. today isis suicide bombers killed at
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soldiers outside the city of ramadi. u.s. troops have been training the iraqi army for 13 years. it has cost american taxpayers nearly $30 billion, and there is no end in sight. charlie d'agata saw some of that firsthand. >> reporter: on the outskirts of baghdad iraqi army recruits took aim at an imaginary enemy. but for u.s. trainer sergeant first class josh mcspadden it's all too real. >> i fought in iraq the first time. >> reporter: he's been here before. during the worst of the fighting in 2004. and he remembers in vivid detail the day he thought he was going to die. >> it was the only day in my life that i ever thought that i wasn't going to make it home alive. you know, but it was so intense. >> reporter: but what's it like to have fought so fiercely and now you're back again? >> it's frustrating. you know, you
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brothers in arms, you know, the iraqi people, you want to see them have the same motivation. you want to see them fight the same way that you do. just to come back here and face the same problems, you know, and it's just when's enough going to be enough in. >> reporter: he doesn't have a lot to work with. a rusty russian tank and a handful of armored personnel carriers. there's not enough ammunition to practice with the big guns. well, they're not much, but they'll be vital in any ground offensive iraqi forces launch against isis. and it's no exaggeration to say that some of the recruits are far younger than the tanks they'll be firing. yesterday's strike on the iraqi capital was the worst bloodshed the city has seen this year. mcspadden says that only strengthens the resolve of his new recruits. >> they're very motivated. you know, especially with the attacks that happened in baghdad. it angers them. they want to take their cities
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back over. >> reporter: that training may have looked rather basic, scott, but those tanks and armored personnel carriers play a vital role in any ground offensive. and that equipment wasn't just for training. it's the same kind used by iraqi forces against isis on the battlefield. >> charlie d'agata in baghdad tonight. charlie, thanks. two state troopers from new hampshire and massachusetts were placed on leave today after apparently beating a man at the end of a high-speed chase. the suspect appears to surrender, getting out of the vehicle on his knees, and then the police officers pummel him. the man wanted on assault charges had a swollen eye in court today. the 9-millimeter pistol that george zimmerman used to kill trayvon martin is up for sale. the former neighborhood watchman claimed that he shot the unarmed teenager in self-defense. he was found not guilty of
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mark strassmann tells us what zimmerman wants to do with the money. >> reporter: at gun broker.com zimmerman opened the bidding at $5,000. he described the weapon as an american firearm icon and a piece of american history. he talked about the sale by phone with television station wofl. >> what i've decided to do is not cower. i'm a free american and i can do what i'd like with my possessions. >> reporter: but as the bidding opened, gun broker, a user-generated site, removed the posting saying "we want no part in the listing on our website." hours later, zimmerman relaunched the auction on another site, united gun group. trayvon martin's parents still view zimmerman's gun as the murder weapon. lawyer ben crump represents them. >> how could you possibly try to make money off of the killing of their child? >> put your hands up. get a f
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dogged zimmerman since his acquittal in july of 2013. he has had eight run-ins with police. among them in september of 2013 police questioned them for pointing a gun at his wife and father-in-law. two months later he was arrested for aggravated assault against his then girlfriend. the charges were dropped. in a 2015 road rage incident zimmerman's truck was hit by gunfire and the other man was charged with attempted second degree murder. last year zimmerman was arrested for throwing a wine bottle at his girlfriend. and now the gun auction, which critics on social media blasted as obscene and disgusting. >> they're not going to be bidding on it. so i couldn't care less about them. >> reporter: zimmerman has said he'll spend the money he makes from the gun auction on various causes that matter to him. scott, he specifically named preventing violence against police and the black lives matter movement. >> mark strassmann, thanks v
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much. store sales are slumping. is it time to reinvent the mall? and the pentagon recruits a few good nerds. the cbs overnight news will be right back. how can this have been washed 12 weeks ago and still smell like springtime? unstopables in-wash scent boosters. the more you pour, the more scent you'll savor. toss it in before your clothes for luxurious scent up to 12 weeks. unstopables by downy. the ultimate in long lasting scent. i use resolve pet foam. spray it on evenly.
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>> reporter: this is what's left of the sears in san mateo, california, one of nearly 300 stores its parent company has closed over the last two years. sears chairman says it's a victim of disruptive changes from online competition, and it's not the only one. sports authority plans to close 140 stores this year. macy's will shutter 36 locations. and jcpenney closed 47 over the last year. ira kalb is a marketing professor at the university of southern california. he says many big box retailers no longer give shoppers a reason to leave their commuters. >> retailers have lost their added value. >> reporter: since more online sales means fewer purchases at local malls, many retail developers are now trying to upgrade to more luxurious shopping centers that can sell twice as much per square foot and offer much more than shopping. >> in order to compete with online convenience and the one-stop shopping, you've got to create a store experience. th
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ones that are doing well. >> reporter: like the grove in los angeles, which is experiencing double-digit growth. it's a shopping center that looks more like a village main street, complete with a green space, restaurants, and valet parking, because the goal is no longer just shopping. >> we are also in the entertainment business. >> reporter: marketing director judy johnson says shoppers spend twice as much time and more money at the grove than other malls. >> whether they shop with us isn't really relevant because at some point everyone has shopping or dining needs and they will come back because we have built a great relationship. >> reporter: when they finish tearing down this sears store in san mateo, they plan to replace it with a landscaped plaza and luxury bowling alley. now, some retail analysts say all these store closings we're seeing are actually a good thing and may be long overdue because, scott, many retailers simply have too many brick and mortar locations and they need to lean down to compete for those online shoppers. >> sign of the times. carter ev
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the only thing better than playing a hero in the movies, is being a hero in real life. like the 50,000 veterans who returned from iraq and afghanistan with devastating injuries. they are true heroes. and they're why i'm proud to support paralyzed veterans of america. for more than 60 years, paralyzed veterans of america has made a promise to never leave a fallen comrade behind. they make sure veterans with spinal cord injuries get the quality medical care, rehabilitation and housing they need when they come home. they stay with our fallen heroes for the long term, offering counseling, job training and support to help them regain the freedom and independence they fought so hard for. all at no cost to them. our veterans fought for us. let's fight for them. to learn more about how you can help, visit pva.org. that's p-v-a dot org. we will never leave
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the best defense is a good offense. so the pentagon challenged hackers to assault its cyber security system. the experiment ended today. here's david martin with the revenge of the nerds. >> reporter: walking the halls of the pentagon in his hoodie, chris lynch has been mistaken for a repairman, as in "how long will it take you to fix my phone?" >> this is the weirdest moment of my life. i never thought i'd show up in government. i never thought that i'd be working at the pentagon. >> reporter: a software entrepreneur from seattle, lynch was brought in by defense secretary carter to head a new office called the defense digital service. >> the title on the door says "rebel alliance." >> i like to say that the rebel alliance is anybody who wants to be part of working around and changing the bureaucracy. and i believe that is our mission. if we don't i don't know who else will.
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wars," this rebel alliance, actually a staff of 12, is out to do battle with a mighty empire -- the old and slow pentagon bureaucracy. >> we're kind of a s.w.a.t. team for nerds. >> bureaucracy busters. >> yeah, we have actually a type of person, one of our skill sets that we hire is actually a bureaucracy hacker. >> reporter: lynch's first project was called "hack the pentagon." pay a bountdy to anyone who can find a way to hack into five of the defense department's public websites. so "hack the pentagon" doesn't even sound legal. >> there were a lot of people who didn't like that name. >> reporter: most hackers i think are seen as malicious. >> not every hacker is bad. that's the big change here, is we're now allowing people who actually want to that are not malicious to do it. >> reporter: in six weeks 1,400 hackers uncovered 90 vulnerabilities in the software, flaws which could be exploitsed to tamper with the sites. >> we had our first vulnerability that came in 13
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program. >> we'll just kind of match things out. >> reporter: lynch has covered an entire wall with plans for overhauling pentagon software that go far beyond public websites. which is why army lieutenant colonel joe roman came looking for a software solution to the paperwork of recruiting. >> this will be fun since we don't speak your language, you don't speak ours. this will be -- i'll try to speak slowly and loudly so that you understand. >> reporter: lynch finds out the army is creating digital files the old-fashioned way. >> so they're printing all this stuff and they're scanning it? is that what they're doing? >> reporter: another potential project for lynch's great white wall. which ends with this admonition -- governments hate two things, change and the way things are. david martin, cbs news, the pentagon. that's the overnight news for this friday. for some of you the news continues. fo others check back with us a little bit later for the morning news and "cbs this morning." from the broadcast center in new york city i'm scott pelley.
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♪ >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." welcome to the "overnight news." i'm don dahler. donald trump made the rounds in washington meeting with republican leaders who've been reluctant to support his presidential bid. chief among them, house speaker paul ryan. ryan shocked the political establishment last week when he said he was not ready to endorse trump. ryan didn't change his tune after their 45-minute meeting, but he did call it very encouraging. >> i was very encouraged with what i heard from donald trump today. i do believe that we are now planting the seeds to get ourselves unified, to bridge the gaps and differences, and so from here we're going to go deeper into the policy areas to see where that common ground is and how we can make sure tha w
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are operating off the same core principles. and so yes, this is our first meeting. i was very encouraged with this meeting but this is a process. it takes a little time. >> donald trump also met with the republican national committee, whose help he'll need to raise the estimated $1 billion it'll take to fund his presidential campaign. julianna goldman reports. >> reporter: for donald trump to raise $1 billion it means he has to bring in about $45 million a week. it's a pretty tall order for someone who's won millions of votes from deriding big money in politics and now he's basically starting from scratch. >> i'm self-funding my campaign. i'm not taking all of this blood money. >> i'm not having lobbyists, and i'm not having citibank and i'm not having -- i fund it myself. >> reporter: it was a defining sales pitch for donald trump. >> and you know what i'm getting for this movement? i get nothing. i'm self-funding my campaign. okay? >> reporter: a line he repeated in ads -- >> i'm self-funding my campaign. >> reporter: -- in interviews. >> i'm putting up my
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>> reporter: and on the campaign trail. >> and i'm self-funding. i self-fund. so i'm self-funding. >> reporter: and it worked. 3 58% of voters in a recent cbs news poll said trump was not influenced by special interests. but with the nomination in reach he's reversing course. >> i'm raising money but i'm raising money really for the party. >> reporter: not only will he be asking for money, but trump already has super pacs. >> i think you're starting at a billion dollars right now. >> reporter: frank donnatelli is a long-time republican fund-raiser. he says trump is behind. >> you're going to need people with good contacts lists that can write checks themselves but also bring their friends and relatives to the table also. it takes a full court press on behalf of the candidate and the campaign. >> reporter: the billionaire businessman is scrambling to get that team. he hired top fund-raisers who worked for marco rubio and mitt romney. he also has the backing of a reported half dozen gop benefactors like billionaire t. boone pickens
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adelson. but others like the koch brothers are still standing on the sidelines. >> it's just bowing to reality that that's what you have to do to be competitive in november. >> reporter: competitive against hillary clinton, who has already raised almost $168 million from individual contributions compared to just over $12 million for trump. but even if he's trying to open the fund-raising floodgates, he still said this just last week. >> i'm self-funding my campaign. take a look at hillary, the money. take a look at where she's getting that money. >> reporter: later this month trump will be kicking off a string of 50 fund-raisers beginning with an event in california. in order to get to that billion-dollar mark he's probably going to need to start making calls to those special interests he said he'd never bow down to. three years after a texas fertilizer plant went up in a huge fireball killing 15 people and injuring hundreds, investigators say it was no accident. manuel bojorquez reports. >> reporter: when the
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explosion ripped through this texas fertilizer plant in 2013 -- >> you okay? >> i can't hear. i can't hear. >> reporter: -- it leveled part of the small town of west. >> there has been an explosion on the fire scene. there are firefighters down at this time. >> reporter: the blast destroyed hundreds of buildings, including schools, a nursing home, and an apartment complex. 15 people were killed. 12 of them first responders who had rushed to the scene. >> we have never stopped investigating this fire. >> reporter: wednesday, after more than three years and a more than $2 million investigation, federal authorities revealed the fire that sparked the explosion was deliberately set in a seed room at the facility. >> the fire has been ruled as incendiary. this means this fire was a criminal act. >> reporter: federal authorities are offering a $50,000 reward for any information leading to an arrest. they say they believe their investigation is headed in the right direction but they need the
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across the finish line." about 5 million syrians have been driven from their homes by the civil war, including about a million children. many have ended up in turkey, where a cbs news investigation found refugee children working long hours in sweat shops. holly williams has that. >> reporter: in a textile factor in istanbul workers toil over sewing machines. but look closely. because these workers are children. filming with a hidden camera, we found scores of factories using child labor in turkey. most, perhaps all of the children from syria. some told us they were as young as 11. refugees from a war now easily exploited. a turkish worker on the minimum wage earns around $450 a month. a syrian child working 12 hours a day earns as little as
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at a school for syrian children in istanbul these boys, age 10 to 12, are just beginning to learn to read and write because until recently most of them were full-time workers. >> how many of you guys have worked? wow. >> reporter: the school founder, shaf sha shafiq. suleiman told us he offers free tuition tone courage parents to send their children back to class. but sometimes that's not enough. parents aren't earning enough money to feed their families. >> no. so they have to -- they're being forced to send their kids to work. >> out of desperation. >> yes. yes. they've got no choice. they have to send their children. >> reporter: layla aqcha is a psychologist who treats syrian child refugees and their families and told us many factories prefer to hire children over their parents. >> you can overwork t
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and they're not going to be oppositional. they're not going to ask for their rights. they don't know their rights. so they're just going to work like slaves and it's easier to keep them as slaves than doing it to an adult. >> reporter: turkey has taken in around 3 million syrian refugees, spending billions of dollars to shelter and feed them. but while they're safe here, there's very little stable work and not much hope of building a future. that's why so many syrians have risked their lives in rickety boats to reach europe. but now the european union has promised turkey nearly $7 billion in return for its help stopping the refugees. and the crackdown has worked. for syrians the door to europe has slammed shut. but the factories that prey on them appear to be operating with impunity. and hundreds of thousands of syrian children in turkey are
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imagine traveling from one city to another at nearly the speed of sound. one company says it's getting closer to making that a reality. it's called hyperloop technology, and it could be coming to a city near you. carter evans explains. >> three, two, one. >> reporter: blink and you might miss it. [ cheers and applause ] but speed is sort of the point. on a test track in the nevada desert a 1,500-pound sled went from 0 to 60 in about a second. powered by an electromagnetic propulsion system, it reached 116 miles per hour before plowing into a sand barrier to slow it down. >> we demonstrated today a full-scaom
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to move this fast. it's just really amazing to see the team come together behind it and execute. >> reporter: hyperloop one hopes to build a carbon-free network of tubes with pods that would travel at near supersonic speeds on a cushion of air using electric motors. theoretically, someone could travel the roughly 400 miles from los angeles to san francisco in about 30 minutes. >> so this simulates the pod going through the tube? >> correct. >> reporter: we got an inside look at hyperloop's engineering last fall at the company's headquarters in los angeles. >> we literally build a full-scale tube between any two destinations. then inside of that tube we have a pod that we can send either people or cargo very quickly. >> reporter: some critics say wednesday's test shows there's still a long way to go. >> keep in mind that this was a very short distance and its maximum speed was 1/10 the speed of what a hyperloop system would be. >> reporter: t c
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gained traction in 2013 after tesla and spacex ceo elon musk released a design plan. but there's competition. >> the fact that there are several companies working on this means there are a lot of people who take this idea very seriously and are determined to try and make it happen. however, infrastructure is very hard. it just takes time to take an idea and turn it into reality. >> reporter: hyperloop one ceo rob lloyd told us that reality is not so far off. >> how long before we see the first functional hyperloop system? >> five years from now we'll be moving goods and people. >> reporter: carter evans, los angeles. a silicon valley startup has an invention that could revolutionize how many companies do business. it's a 3-d printer, and it's already being used to make parts for cars and sneakers and even movie props. john blackstone
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>> reporter: jody simone's machine the m-1 is a 3-d printer inspired by science fiction. when desimone, a chemist, saw the robot t-1000 rise from a molten pool in the movie "terminator 2," he imagined a machine that would do something similar. >> it has a symmetry such you that can't injection mold it. >> reporter: in a ted talk last year he demonstrated an early prototype, growing a complex sphere from a liquid pool in minutes. >> there it is. that's great. >> reporter: now his company, carbon, is unveiling its first commercial printer, a machine capable of making everything from cushioning for running shoes. >> this is going to be a new mid-sol design for sneakers. >> reporter: to complex car parts. >> this actually has multiple pieces that was printed all as one part. >> this moves but this was all printed together. >> that's right. >> reporter: through the years factory floors have had multiple machines, each designed for one specific job. from bolting to
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shaping parts. with his new invention desimone imagines nothing less than a manufacturing revolution. >> think about a place that has 100 of these machines, and what's really cool is as you change what products you want to make you don't have to change the factory floor. >> reporter: until now 3-d printers have operated by slowly building layer upon layer of material, a time-consuming process used mostly to create prototypes. what other 3-d printers do in hours the m-1 does in minutes. and not just prototypes but finished products ready to be used. >> this is very hard. this is very flexible. they come out of the same machine. >> same machine. it's all about chemistry. >> reporter: the speed and flexibility opens a wide range of possibilities. >> complex medical devices, whether it's inside of your heart or your kneecap or your feet or your teeth or your ears. >> reporter: legacy effects studio is one of the lucky few, along with bmw and ford, given the opportuni
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testing carbon's new printer. >> how is this technology being looked upon i guess in that 3-d printing community? >> they walked upo tthe industry and dropped a grenade and walked away. >> reporter: jason lope says 3-d printing has been part of their creations for years but when a commercial needed an easter bunny on short notice carbon's printer provided a faster solution. >> i came in at 7:00 in the morning. printed out the bunny. i handed it over by 8:00 in the morning. it was finished, painted and brought on set by 10:30 a.m. and shot. >> quick as a bunny. >> quick as a bunny. >> reporter: from creatures -- >> this is part of the "alien" franchise. >> reporter: to practical parts. >> you name it, we make it. >> reporter: and in a way bringing the machine back to its inspiration. >> one of the first projects we did on it was for the "terminator: genisys" collect iblds. how ironic can that snb. >> reporter: 3-d printing was developed 30 years ago amid high hopes and plenty of hype. the factory of the future may still be a long way
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a good example of life imitating art. john blackstone, redwood city, california. the cbs "overnight news" will be right back. from fading.. there's woolite darks. it's free of harsh ingredients, keeping dark clothes looking like new for 30 washes so your love for dark clothes will never fade. woolite darks. how are you doing?nne. hi, evelyn. i know it's been a difficult time since your mom passed away. yeah. i miss her a lot, but i'm okay. wow. that was fast. this is the check i've been waiting for. mom had a guaranteed acceptance life insurance policy through the colonial penn program, and this will really help with the cost of her final expenses. is it affordable? it costs less than 35 cents a day-- that's pretty affordable, huh? that's less than the cost of a postage stamp. so, you said it was guaranteed acceptance? yes. it's for people ages 50 to 85. there's no medical exam or health questions.
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i use resolve pet foam. spray it on evenly. rub it in. and then i vacuum. it's like i have a brand new carpet. and, rigby is enjoying it as well. unless you have allergies. flonase is the first and only nasal spray approved to relieve both itchy, watery eyes and congestion. no other nasal allergy spray can say that. go ahead, embrace those beautiful moments. flonase changes everything. a giant panda born last year at washington's national zoo continues to be the star attraction. and when you see rita braver's report you'll k
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>> reporter: okay, moms, let's face it, this baby may be cuter than yours. and a lot more famous. he's bei-bei. born at the smithsonian institution's national zoo in washington, d.c. last august. his arrival made headlines. even though he wasn't much to look at then. >> they're about 1/9 h00 the si of the mother. they're really tiny. >> we say like a stick of butter. >> stick of butter, yeah. but holding them in your hand you'd be surprised how sturdy they feel. >> they're born hairless and blind. >> yes, they are blind and deaf. >> reporter: marty geary is a panda keeper. one of about two dozen employees aided by 60 volunteers who keep the giant pandas happy and healthy. bei-bei will stay with mother mei-xiang until he's 2. father -t
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bao-bao have their own specially designed habitats as pandas are usually solitary creatures. almost every move they make is captured by the zoo's famous panda cams. remember when this video went viral last winter? does the zoo have any idea how popular the panda cams would be? >> i don't think anybody could predict the incredible popularity. but what i love is that this is science in real life in real time. >> reporter: brandy smith, who oversees the zoo's panda operation, says the cameras help volunteers keep detailed logs of each animal's daily activity. >> must be getting warm outside because she's indicating that she's warm. >> right now we're looking at mei xiang and beibei to learn about mother-cup interactions hoping we can learn from that and help more pandas in the
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species. found only in china there are only about 1,800 in the wild as humans have encroached on their territory. >> no. good boy. get all the way in. >> reporter: so the pandas at the national zoo get frequent checkups. and in a rare behind-the-scenes visit we got to see how they're trained to cooperate. >> i don't think you're in the middle of the scale. >> reporter: biologist lori thompson coaches bei-bichlt to wei weigh in. >> 43 pounds. 43 1/2 pounds. >> reward, a sweet potato. >> he's curious about anything new in his enclosure. >> aim allowed to pet him? >> no. >> reporter: yes, these cuddly creatures can bite. and almost three years and 180 pounds, bao-bao, bei-bei's sister, does her training through a cage. >> all the way. open. good. >> reporter:
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delicious stream of honey water. >> good girl. >> reporter: it's how she grows accustomed to everything from dental exams -- >> open. good. >> reporter: -- to blood tests. according to panda keeper tally wiles. if you do a blood stick for her, does it hurt her? >> they might feel it initially like a little pinch like a person does as well but she's getting that honey reward, which is much more fantastic than anything she's going through. >> reporter: it was panda diplomacy that brought the first two pandas to the national zoo. >> i think they're adorable endearing creatures. >> reporter: sing sing and ling ling were a gift from the chinese government in 1972. after president nixon's historic visit to the country. but that panda parent never produced a cub that survived. in contrast bey bey's parents who are here on loan from the chinese government have produced three healthy clubs, includi
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tai-xian, now almost 11 and living in china. but it hasn't been easy. >> the giant pandas are a species that is very difficult to reproduce and care for in captivity primarily because our knowledge of their biology has been very rudimentary until the last decade or so. >> reporter: steven monfort is director of the smithsonian conservation biology institute in frontroyal, virginia. a key mission here is studying panda reproduction. >> the female only matures and ovulates one time per year. so you have about a 36-hour window of fertility once a year with a giant panda. >> mei xian. >> reporter: by collecting urine samples researchers have been able to pinpoint exactly when she is fertile and ready for a visit from tien tien. >> but so far they haven't been able to connect the parts? >> that's a nice way of
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it. there's an anatomical mismatch, let's say. >> reporter: to tell you the truth, ladies, it's apparently a performance issue on the male panda's part. >> one, two, three. >> reporter: so bei bei was conceived by artificial insemination. sadly, his twin did not survive. but every panda that makes it is considered a minor miracle. >> they're still under threat. so we are in a race against time. we have much, much more work to do. >> reporter: bao bao and bei bei will be sent to china within a few years. so we should enjoy them while we can. and the zoo's brandy smith says there's a primal reason we are so delighted by the antics of these creatures. >> when you see something that touches your heart, there's a biochemical reaction. you produce the same chemicals associated with childbirth. they make you happier.
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♪music runners on your mark! ♪you're rolled out at the dawning of the day♪ ♪heart racin' as you made your little get away♪ get set! ♪it feels like you've been runnin' all your life♪ ♪but why? oh why? (sfx: starter pistol shot) ♪so you've pulled away from the love that would've been there♪ ♪you start believin' that your situation's unfair ♪but there's always scars, when you fall back far♪ ♪we lose our way, we get back up again♪ ♪it's never too late to get back up again♪ ♪one day, you're gonna shine again,♪ ♪you may be knocked down but not out forever♪ ♪we lose our way, we get back up again♪ ♪it's never too late to get back up again♪ ♪one day, you're gonna shine again,♪ ♪you may be knocked down but not out forever♪ ♪we lose our way, we get back up again♪ ♪so get up, get up ♪you're gonna shine again ♪it's never too late to get back up again♪ ♪you may be knocked down, but not out forever♪
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the latest technology in golf has nothing to do with clubs or balls. it's the golf board. and it could soon take the place of the old-fashioned golf cart. carter evans went for a ride. >> you don't want to have too big of a smile on your face because you're going to piss off the other members. >> reporter: cruising down the fairway at up to ten miles an hour, this battery-powered machine can last 36 holes. don wildman and his golf board are adding a new twist to a sport with time-honored traditions. >> golf is partly masochistic. i think it's a masochistic sport. i hate to say that. and standing up like this, it gives you a whole different feeling. >> it's fun. i mean, i feel like a kid again. i'm aiming for the hills. >> can you imagine a guy my age and able to do this? you go this is -- i'm like
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>> reporter: at 83 wildman is redefining what it means to be a great grandfather. he's a world-class athlete in several sports. a few years ago as an enticement to get his friend big wave surfer laird hamilton on the links, wildman suggested traversing the course on electric skateboards. the idea for the golf board was born. >> when you first brought the golfboard to a course did you get a lot of strange looks? >> people wondered what the heck is that? but the first reaction is it looks cool. >> reporter: surprisingly, the industry is embracing the board. a review on pga.com suggests "this is the future of getting around a course." and it may be a way to attract a new generation to the game because golf's popularity is in decline from a high of more than 30 million players in 2005 to about 24 million in 2015. and only 5% of golfers are under the age of 30.
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said to me, hey, let's go play golf and he told me there was going to be a skateboard that i could go on the golf course, you know, i would be the first one to want to be out there. >> very nice. >> you are all set. >> reporter: this golf course in palm springs, california now has a fleet of golf boards renting for 25d $25 apiece. golf pro steve bossert has said the boards boosted numbers. >> people say i came here to play because i want to take a golf board out on the course. >> reporter: wildman sees a future design with golf boards in mind and he plans to be there swinging. >> the key is to keep going. exercise. >> reporter: carter evans, los angeles. that's the overnight news for this friday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back with us a little later for the "morning news" and "cbs this morning." from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm don dahler.
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a breakthrough in the battle against a deadly cancer that attacks 13,000 americans every year. >> and there's no cancer in this picture at all. >> we don't see any cancer -- active cancer cells. also tonight -- trump and ryan talk unity but there's no endorsement. >> this is a process. it takes a little time. a notorious weapon goes up for auction. >> i'm a free american, and i can do what i'd like with my possessions. and a friendly invasion of the pentagon. >> they were kind of a s.w.a.t. team for nerds. >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." we hope one day to lead the broadcast with a cure for cancer, but now we may have the next best thing. we can report that a bol
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breakthrough status by the food and drug administration. results in early tests at duke university have been so remarkable that the fda wants to fast-track the therapy to more patients. the treatment is audacious, using the polio virus to kill glioblastoma, a vicious brain cancer that can kill in a matter of months. for two years, "60 minutes" has been following the patients in the clinical trial. it's a hell of a thing to be told that you have months to live when you're 20 years old. in 2011 stephanie lipscomb was a nursing student with headaches. a doctor told her she had this glioblastoma tumor the size of a tennis ball. you had 98% of the tumor removed. >> exactly. >> and then in 2012 what did the doctors tell you? >> your cancer's back. >> reporter: with recurrent glioblastoma there were no options except the one that had never been tried. ep
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volunteer for duke's experiment with the polio virus. the virus is the creation of molecular biologist mathias gromeier. gromeier reengineered the virus, removing a key genetic sequence. the virus can't survive this way, so he repaired the damage with a harmless bit of cold virus. this new modified polio virus can't cause paralysis or death because it can't reproduce in normal cells. but in cancer cells it does. and in the process of replicating it releases toxins that poison the cell. this process also awakens the immune system to the cancer that it had never noticed before. why didn't the immune system react to the cancer to begin with? >> so cancers, all human cancers, they develop a shield or a shroud of protective measures that make them invisible to the immune system.
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tried to reverse with our virus. so by infecting the tumor we are actually removing this protective shield and telling -- enabling the immune system to come in and attack. >> reporter: it appears the polio starts the killing but the immune system does most of the damage. stephanie lipscomb's tumor shrank for 21 months until it was gone. three years after the infusion something unimaginable had happened. this is from an mri in august 2014. and there's no cancer in this picture at all? >> we don't see any cancer, active cancer cells. >> all you could see in that picture was an old surgical scar. as is typical, duke started a company to attract research dollars to the therapy, and gromeier is an investor. the fda granted breakthrough status this week after data
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showed that patients who had been living 10 months were now living 15 months, and three patients are cancer-free after three years. see our full story this sunday on "60 minutes." also on "60 minutes," a news-making investigation of doping by russian athletes. including some who won gold at the winter olympics. tonight, armen keteyian has learned more about this russian operation. >> reporter: the international olympic committee said today it's considering retesting blood and urine samples from this now tainted russian lab at the 2014 winter games in sochi. but based upon what we've learned from the lab's former director, any positive drug tests disappeared a long time ago. dr. grigory rodchenkov shared details of a systematic cover-up in sochi during skype conversations with vitaly ep
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anti-doping official turned key whistleblower. stepanov allowed us to listen to 15 hours of conversations he secretly recorded with rodchenkov. >> he had the ability to help to get the necessary results. >> and those necessary results were gold medals? >> yes. >> reporter: in the recordings rodchenkov named russian gold medalists in three sports -- bobsled, skeleton and cross-country skiing, whose dirty drug tests he helped cover up, all part, he said, of an elaborate scheme to protect russia's olympic medal winners with the help of his country's intelligence service, known as the fsb. what did he tell you about the fsb? >> that fsb tried to control every single step of the anti-doping process in sochi. >> reporter: the fsb figured out a way to open bottles considered to be tamperproof containing urine from drug-tainted athletes.
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they then filled the bottles with clean urine collected from the athletes before they started doping. rodchenkov said he then had two weeks after the sochi games to make sure, in his words, people turned out to be clean, before test samples were sent to the international olympic committee in switzerland for storage. but we've also learned today a recent review of blood tests in at least one olympic event at sochi has revealed evidence of test tampering, scott, involving russian athletes. >> could have an impact on russia in the summer olympics coming up as well. >> absolutely. >> thank you very much, armen. >> you're welcome. southern california's being invaded. red tuna crabs are washing ashore on imperial beach. scientists are blaming warmer ocean water, which is drawing crabs north from mexico. so far it's not as bad as last year, when they covered beaches in a red carpet. we're just getting word that the navy has relieved the commander of the ten u.s. sailors who were detained by
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iran back in january. superiors have lost confidence in commander eric rasch's ability to command. the sailors went off course in the persian gulf and entered iranian waters. the iranians held them for 16 hours and forced them to apologize. the invictus games for wounded warriors wrap up tonight in orlando, and there was a remarkable moment yesterday when u.s. army sergeant elizabeth marks returned her swimming medal to prince harry. she was asking him to give it to a british hospital that saved her life when she got ill during the first invictus games two years ago. marks suffered serious wounds to her hips while serving in iraq. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back.
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uh just gonna hang out. with gary and todd? yea. i've been meaning to ask you, is there any drinking going on in this crowd? no. so if any of your buddies ever pressure you to take a drink, just tell them you promised your dad you wouldn't. i'd do anything to keep you safe. ok. i will. i hope this is working. i promise. i love you too dad. they really do hear you. for tips on what to say visit underagedrinking.samhsa.gov
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in campaign 2016 the top two republican leaders in america, donald trump and paul ryan, had their long-awaited peace summit today. a search for common ground in a deeply divided party. here's major garrett. >> reporter: donald trump's whirlwind unity tour through washington's republican establishment drew hordes of reporters, a raft of onlookers,
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and a share of boisterous protesters. >> stop the hate! stop the hate! >> reporter: uncharacteristically, trump skipped the publicity bonanza and let twitter do the talking. "things working out really well," he wrote. >> i thought he was a very good personality. he's a very warm and genuine person. >> reporter: house speaker paul ryan called the 45-minute meeting with the presumptive nominee encouraging but admitted he and trump still have their differences on policy. those include trump's call to temporarily ban muslim immigration, deport all undocumented immigrants, oppose pending free trade deals, and leave medicare and social security intact. >> aren't you papering over these rather sizable differences in not only how conservatism is defined broadly but how you have tried to define it? >> so i represent a wing of the conservative party, you could say. he brings -- he's bringing a whole new wing to it. he's bringing new voters that we've never had for decades. that's a positive thing. >> reporter: ryan would not say if or when he would endorse trump. >> this is a process. we just began the process.
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i'm very encouraged at the first meeting of this process. >> reporter: rnc chairman reince priebus brokered the meeting. >> why is unity a process? why doesn't it just exist naturally? >> it's a big party. there's a lot of difference of opinion. the other thing i'd say is i don't think we all expected this thing to be over last week. people had to start talking and making decisions. >> and come to the realization that trump is it whether they're comfortable or not. >> suddenly being faced with okay, let's go, let's rally. you know, it going to take some people a little longer than others. but i think we're going to get there. >> trump also met with senate majority leader mitch mcconnell and his leadership team. most of these conversations were political, specifically what trump's campaign would mean to republicans seeking re-election, and we are told he impressed many lawmakers because he spent most of the time listening. >> major garrett for us tonight. major, thank you. well, the next president, whoever it is, will inherit the unending war in iraq. today isis suicide bombers killed at least 17 iraqi soldiers outside the city of ramadi.
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u.s. troops have been training the iraqi army for 13 years. it has cost american taxpayers nearly $30 billion, and there is no end in sight. charlie d'agata saw some of that firsthand. >> reporter: on the outskirts of baghdad iraqi army recruits took aim at an imaginary enemy. but for u.s. trainer sergeant first class josh mcspadden it's all too real. >> i fought in iraq the first time. >> reporter: he's been here before. during the worst of the fighting in 2004. and he remembers in vivid detail the day he thought he was going to die. >> it was the only day in my life that i ever thought that i wasn't going to make it home alive. you know, but it was so intense. >> reporter: but what's it like to have fought so fiercely and
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>> it's frustrating. you know, you want to see your brothers in arms, you know, the iraqi people, you want to see them have the same motivation. you want to see them fight the same way that you do. just to come back here and face the same problems, you know, and it's just like when's enough going to be enough? >> reporter: he doesn't have a lot to work with. a rusty russian tank and a handful of armored personnel carriers. there's not enough ammunition to practice with the big guns. well, they're not much, but they'll be vital in any ground offensive iraqi forces launch against isis. and it's no exaggeration to say that some of the recruits are far younger than the tanks they'll be firing. yesterday's strike on the iraqi capital was the worst bloodshed the city has seen this year. mcspadden says that only strengthens the resolve of his new recruits. >> they're very motivated. you know, especially with the attacks that happened in baghdad. it angers them. they want to take their cities back over.
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>> reporter: that training may have looked rather basic, scott, but those tanks and armored personnel carriers play a vital role in any ground offensive. and that equipment wasn't just for training. it's the same kind used by iraqi forces against isis on the battlefield. >> charlie d'agata in baghdad tonight. charlie, thanks. two state troopers from new hampshire and massachusetts were placed on leave today after apparently beating a man at the end of a high-speed chase. the suspect appears to surrender, getting out of the vehicle on his knees, and then the police officers pummel him. the man wanted on assault charges had a swollen eye in court today. the 9-millimeter pistol that george zimmean used to kill trayvon martin is up for sale. the former neighborhood watchman claimed that he shot the unarmed teenager in self-defense. he was found not guilty of murder. mark strassmann tells us what zimmerman wants to do with the
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>> reporter: on gunbroker.com, an auction website, zimmerman opened the bidding at $5,000. he described the weapon as "an american firearm icon" and "a piece of american history." he talked about the sale by phone with television station wofl. >> what i've decided to do is not cower. i'm a free american and i can do what i'd like with my possessions. >> reporter: but as the bidding opened, gun broker, a user-generated site, removed the posting saying "we want no part in the listing on our website." hours later, zimmerman relaunched the auction on another site, united gun group. trayvon martin's parents still view zimmerman's gun as the murder weapon. lawyer ben crump represents them. >> how could you possibly try to make money off of the killing of their child? >> put your hands up.
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dogged zimmerman since his acquittal in july of 2013. he has had eight run-ins with police. among them, in september of 2013 police questioned him for pointing a gun at his wife and father-in-law. two months later he was arrested for aggravated assault against his then girlfriend. the charges were dropped. in a 2015 road rage incident zimmerman's truck was hit by gunfire and the other man was charged with attempted second degree murder. last year zimmerman was arrested for throwing a wine bottle at his girlfriend. and now the gun auction, which critics on social media blasted as obscene and disgusting. >> they're not going to be bidding on it. so i couldn't care less about them. >> reporter: zimmerman has said he'll spend the money he makes from the gun auction on various causes that matter to him. scott, he specifically named preventing violence against police and the black lives matter men
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>> mark strassmann, thanks very much. store sales are slumping. is it time to reinvent the mall? and the pentagon recruits a few good nerds. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. olay regenerist renews from within... plumping surface cells for a dramatic transformation without the need for fillers. your concert tee might show your age..r .youskin never will. olay regenerist.
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income was down 40%. carter evans with more on this. >> reporter: this is what's left of the sears in san mateo, california, one of nearly 300 stores its parent company has closed over the last two years. sears' chairman says it's a victim of disruptive changes from online competition, and it's not the only one. sports authority plans to close 140 stores this year. macy's will shutter 36 locations. and jcpenney closed 47 over the last year. ira kalb is a marketing professor at the university of southern california. he says many big box retailers no longer give shoppers a reason to leave their commuters. >> retailers have lost their added value. >> reporter: since more online sales means fewer purchases at local malls, many retail developers are now trying to upgrade to more luxurious shopping centers that can sell twice as much per square foot and offer much more than shopping
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online convenience and the one-stop shopping, you've got to create a store experience. and the ones that have are the ones that are doing well. >> reporter: like the grove in los angeles, which is experiencing double-digit growth. it's a shopping center that looks more like a village main street, complete with a green space, restaurants, and valet parking, because the goal is no longer just shopping. >> we are also in the entertainment business. >> reporter: marketing director judy johnson says shoppers spend twice as much time and more money at the grove than other malls. >> whether they shop with us isn't really relevant because at some point everyone has shopping or dining needs and they will come back because we have built a great relationship. >> reporter: when they finish tearing down this sears store in san mateo, they plan to replace it with a landscaped plaza and luxury bowling alley. now, some retail analysts say all these store closings we're seeing are actually a good thing and may be long overdue because, scott, many retailers simply have too many brick and mortar locations and they need to lean down to compete for those online shoppers. >>n
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the best defense is a good offense. so the pentagon challenged hackers to assault its cyber security system. the experiment ended today. here's david martin with the revenge of the nerds. >> reporter: walking the halls of the pentagon in his hoodie, chris lynch has been mistaken for a repairman, as in "how long will it take you to fix my phone?" >> this is the weirdest moment of my life. i never thought i'd show up in government. i never thought that i'd be working at the pentagon. >> reporter: a software entrepreneur from seattle, lynch was brought in by defense secretary carter to head a new office called the defense digital service. >> the title on the door says "rebel alliance." >> i like to say that the rebel alliance is anybody who wants to be part of working around and changing the bureaucracy. and i believe that is our mission. if we don'
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else will. >> reporter: just as in "star wars," this rebel alliance, actually a staff of 12, is out to do battle with a mighty empire -- the old and slow pentagon bureaucracy. >> we're kind of a s.w.a.t. team for nerds. >> bureaucracy busters. >> yeah, we have actually a type of person, one of our skill sets that we hire is actually a bureaucracy hacker. >> reporter: lynch's first project was called "hack the pentagon." pay a bounty to anyone who can find a way to hack into five of the defense department's public websites. so "hack the pentagon" doesn't even sound legal. >> there were a lot of people who didn't like that name. >> reporter: most hackers i think are seen as malicious. >> not every hacker is bad. that's the big change here, is that we're now allowing people who actually want to that are not malicious to do it. >> reporter: in six weeks 1,400 hackers uncovered 90 vulnerabilities in the software, flaws which could be exploited to tamper with the sites. >> we had our first vulnerability that came in 13 minutes from the launch of the program.
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>> we'll just kind of map things out. >> reporter: lynch has covered an entire wall with plans for overhauling pentagon software that go far beyond public websites. which is why army lieutenant colonel joe roman came looking for a software solution to the paperwork of recruiting. >> this will be fun since we don't speak your language, you don't speak ours. this will be -- i'll try to speak slowly and loudly so that you understand. >> reporter: lynch finds out the army is creating digital files the old-fashioned way. >> so they're printing all this stuff and they're scanning it? is that what they're doing? >> it's a lot of printing and scanning -- >> reporter: another potential project for lynch's great white wall. which ends with this admonition -- governments hate two things, change and the way things are. david martin, cbs news, the pentagon. that's the "overnight news" for this friday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back with us a little bit later for the morning news and "cbs this morning." from the broadcast center in new york city i'm scott pelley.
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♪ >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." welcome to the "overnight news." i'm don dahler. donald trump made the rounds in washington, meeting with republican leaders who've been reluctant to support his presidential bid. chief among them, house speaker paul ryan. ryan shocked the political establishment last week when he said he was not ready to endorse trump. ryan didn't change his tune after their 45-minute meeting, but he did call it very encouraging. >> i was very encouraged with what i heard from donald trump today. i do believe that we are now planting the seeds to get ourselves unified, to bridge the gaps and differences, and so from here we're going to go deeper into the policy areas to see where that common ground is and how we can make sure that we are operating off the same core
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principles. and so yes, this is our first meeting. i was very encouraged with this meeting but this is a process. it takes a little time. >> donald trump also met with the republican national committee, whose help he'll need to raise the estimated $1 presidential campaign. julianna goldman reports. >> reporter: for donald trump to raise $1 billion it means he has to bring in about $45 million a week. it's a pretty tall order for someone who's won millions of votes from deriding big money in politics and now he's basically starting from scratch. >> i'm self-funding my campaign. i'm not taking all of this blood money. >> i'm not having lobbyists, and i'm not having citibank and i'm not having -- i fund it myself. >> reporter: it was a defining sales pitch for donald trump. >> and you know what i'm getting for this movement? i get nothing. i'm self-funding my campaign. okay? >> reporter: a line he repeated in ads -- >> i'm self-funding my campaign.
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>> i'm putting up my own money. >> reporter: and on the campaign trail. >> and i'm self-funding. i self-fund. so i'm self-funding. >> reporter: and it worked. 58% of voters in a recent cbs news poll said trump was not influenced by special interests. but with the nomination in reach he's reversing course. >> i'm raising money but i'm raising money really for the party. >> reporter: not only will he be asking for money, but trump already has super pacs. >> i think you're starting at a billion dollars right now. >> reporter: frank donatelli is a long-time republican fund-raiser. he says trump is behind. >> you're going to need people with good contacts lists that can write checks themselves but also bring their friends and relatives to the table also. it takes a full court press on behalf of the candidate and the campaign. >> reporter: the billionaire businessman is scrambling to get that team. he hired top fund-raisers who worked for marco rubio and mitt romney. he also has the backing of a reported half dozen gop benefactors like billionaire t. boone pickens and sheldon adelson. but others like e
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brothers are still standing on the sidelines. >> it's just bowing to reality that that's what you have to do to be competitive in november. >> reporter: competitive against hillary clinton, who has already raised almost $168 million from individual contributions compared to just over $12 million for trump. but even if he's trying to open the fund-raising floodgates, he still said this just last week. >> i'm self-funding my campaign. take a look at hillary, the money. take a look at where she's etting that money. >> reporter: later this month trump will be kicking off a string of 50 fund-raisers beginning with an event in california. in order to get to that billion-dollar mark he's probably going to need to start making calls to those special interests he said he'd never bow down to. three years after a texas fertilizer plant went up in a huge fireball killing 15 people and injuring hundreds, investigatsaors y it was no accident. manuel bojorquez reports. >> reporter: when the massive explosion ripped through this texas fertilizer plant in
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>> you okay? >> i can't hear. i can't hear. >> reporter: -- it leveled part of the small town of west. >> there has been an explosion on the fire scene. there are firefighters down at this time. >> reporter: the blast destroyed hundreds of buildings, including schools, a nursing home, and an apartment complex. 15 people were killed. 12 of them first responders who had rushed to the scene. >> we have never stopped investigating this fire. >> reporter: wednesday, after more than three years and a more than $2 million inveatstigion, federal authorities revealed the fire that sparked the explosion was deliberately set in a seed room at the facility. >> the fire has been ruled as incendiary. this means this fire was a criminal act. >> reporter: federal authorities are offering a $50,000 reward for any informion leading to an arrest. they say they believe their investigation is headed in the
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the public's help to "get them across the finish line." about 5 million syrians have been driven from their homes by the civil war, including about a million children. many have ended up in turkey, where a cbs news investigation found refugee children working long hours in sweat shops. holly williams has that. >> reporter: in a textile factor in istanbul workers toil over sewing machines. but look closely. because these workers are children. filming with a hidden camera, we found scores of factories using child labor in turkey. most, perhaps all of the children from syria. some told us they were as young as 11. refugees from a war now easily exploited. a turkish worker on the minimum wage earns around $450 a month. a syrian child working 12 hours a day earns as little as $160.
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at a school for syrian children in istanbul these boys, age 10 to 12, are just beginning to learn to read and write because until recently most of them were full-time workers. >> how many of you guys have worked? wow. >> reporter: the school founder, shafiq suleiman, told us he offers free tuition to encourage parents to send their children back to class. but sometimes that's not enough. parents aren't earning enough money to feed their families. >> no. so they have to -- they're being forced to send their kids to work. >> out of desperation. >> yes. yes. they've got no choice. they have to send their children. >> reporter: layla aqcha is a psychologist who treats syrian child refugees and their families and told us many factories prefer to hire children over their parents. >> you can overwork the children and they're not going to be
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they're not going to ask for their rights. they don't know their rights. so they're just going to work like slaves and it's easier to keep them as slaves than doing it to an adult. >> reporter: turkey has taken in around 3 million syrian refugees, spending billions of dollars to shelter and feed them. but while they're safe here, there's very little stable work and not much hope of building a future. that's why so many syrians have risked their lives in rickety boats to reach europe. but now the european union has promised turkey nearly $7 billion in return for its help stopping the refugees. and the crackdown has worked. for syrians the door to europe has slammed shut. but the factories that prey on them appear to be operating with impunity. and hundreds of thousands of syrian children in turkey are growing up illiterate and
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powerless to change their fate. holly williams, cbs news, istanbul. i asked my dentist if an electric toothbrush was going to clean better than a manual. he said sure...but don't get just any one. get one inspired by dentists, with a round brush head. go pro with oral-b. oral-b's rounded brush head cups your teeth to break up plaque and rotates to sweep it away. and oral-b delivers a clinically proven superior clean versus sonicare diamondclean. my mouth feels super clean! oral-b. know you're getting a superior clean. i'm never going back to a manual brush. hey spray 'n wash is back...ws? and even better. it's powerful formula removes everyday stains the first time. which is bad news for stains, and good news for you.
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imagine traveling from one city to another at nearly the speed of sound. one company says it's getting closer to making that a reality. it's called hyperloop technology, and it could be coming to a city near you. carter evans explains. >> three, two, one. >> reporter: blink and you might miss it. [ cheers and applause ] but speed is sort of the point. on a test track in the nevada desert a 1,500-pound sled went from 0 to 60 in about a second. powered by an electromagnetic propulsion system, it reached 116 miles per hour before plowing into a sand barrier to slow it down.
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hyperloop. >> we always said we were going to move this fast. it's just really amazing to see the team come together behind it and execute. >> reporter: hyperloop one hopes to build a carbon-free network of tubes with pods that would travel at near supersonic speeds on a cushion of aiusing electric motors. theoretically, someone could travel the roughly 400 miles from los angeles to san francisco in about 30 minutes. >> so this simulates the pod going through the tube? >> correct. >> reporter: we got an inside look at hyperloop's engineering last fall at the company's headquarters in los angeles. >> we literally build a full-scale tube between any two destinations. then inside of that tube we have a pod that we can send either people or cargo very quickly. >> reporter: some critics say wednesday's test shows there's still a long way to go. >> keep in mind that this was a very short distance and its maximum speed was 1/10 the speed of what a hyperloop system would be. >> reporter: the concept hyperloop one is working on
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gained traction in 2013 after tesla and spacex ceo elon musk released a design plan. but there's competition. >> the fact that there are several companies working on this means there are a lot of people who take this idea very seriously and are determined to try and make it happen. however, infrastructure is very hard. it just takes time to take an idea and turn it into reality. >> reporter: hyperloop one ceo rob lloyd told us that reality is not so far off. >> how long before we see the first functional hyperloop system? >> five years from now we'll be moving goods and people. >> reporter: carter evans, los angeles. a silicon valley startup has an invention that could revolutionize how many companies do business. it's a 3-d printer, and it's already being used to make parts for cars and sneakers and even movie props. john blackstone reports.
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>> reporter: joe de simone's machine the m-1 is a 3-d printer inspired by science fiction. when de simone, a chemist, saw the robot t-1000 rise from a molten pool in the movie "terminator 2," he imagined a machine that would do something similar. >> it has a symmetry such you that can't injection mold it. >> reporter: in a ted talk last year he demonstrated an early prototype, growing a complex sphere from a liquid pool in minutes. >> there it is. that's great. >> reporter: now his company, carbon, is unveiling its first commercial printer, a machine capable of making everything from cushioning for running shoes -- >> this is going to be a new mid-sole design for sneakers. >> reporter: -- to complex car parts. >> this actually has multiple pieces that was printed all as one part. >> this moves but this was all printed together. >> that's right. >> reporter: through the years factory floors have had multiple maes
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specific job. from bolting to soldering to shaping parts. with his new invention desimone imagines nothing less than a manufacturing revolution. >> think about a place that has 100 of these machines, and what's really cool is as you change what products you want to make you don't have to change the factory floor. >> reporter: until now 3-d printers have operated by slowly building layer upon layer of material, a time-consuming process used mostly to create prototypes. what other 3-d printers do in hours the m-1 does in minutes. and not just prototypes but finished products ready to be used. >> this is very hard. this is very flexible. they come out of the same machine. >> same machine. it's all about chemistry. >> reporter: the speed and flexibility opens a wide range of possibilities. >> complex medical devices, whether it's inside of your heart or your kneecap or your feet or your teeth or your ears. >> reporter: legacy effects studio is one of the lucky few
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along with bmw and ford, given the opportunity to spend months testing carbon's new printer. >> how is this technology being looked upon i guess in that 3-d printing community? >> they walked up to the industry and dropped a grenade and walked away. >> reporter: jason lope says 3-d printing has been part of their creations for years but when a commercial needed an easter bunny on short notice carbon's printer provided a faster solution. >> i came in at 7:00 in the morning. printed out the bunny. i handed it over by 8:00 in the morning. it was finished, painted and brought on set by 10:30 a.m. and shot. >> quick as a bunny. >> quick as a bunny. >> reporter: from creatures -- >> this is part of the "alien" franchise. >> reporter: -- to practical parts. >> you name it, we make it. >> reporter: and in a way bringing the machine back to its inspiration. >> one of the first projects we did on it was for the "terminator: genisys" collectibles. how ironic can that be? >> reporter: 3-d printing was created 30 years ago amid high hopes and plenty of hype. the factory of the future may still be a long way off.
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a good example of life imitating art. john blackstone, redwood city, california. the cbs "overnight news" will be right back. you can finally break up with bleach. lysol with hydrogen peroxide. for a tough clean with zero percent bleach. lysol that. what are you doing? sara, i love you, and... [phone rings] ah, it's my brother. keep going... sara, will you marry... [phone rings again] what do you want, todd???? [crowd cheering] keep it going!!!! if you sit on your phone, you butt-dial people. it's what you do. todd! if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance, you switch to geico. it's what you do. i know we just met like, two months ago... yes! [crowd cheering] [crowd cheering over phone] i use resolve pet foam. spray it on evenly.
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>> reporter: okay, moms, let's face it, this baby may be cuter than yours. and a lot more famous. he's bei bei. born at the smithsonian institution's national zoo in washington, d.c. last august. his arrival made headlines. even though he wasn't much to look at then. >> they're about 1/900 the size of the mother. they're really tiny. >> we say like a stick of butter. >> stick of butter, yeah. but they're really tough. holding them in your hand you'd be surprised how sturdy they feel. >> they're born hairless and blind? >> yes, they are blind and deaf. >> reporter: marty geary is a panda keeper. one of about two dozen employees aided by 60 volunteers who keep the giant pandas happy and healthy. bei-bei will stay with mother mei xiang until he's 2.
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father tian tian and big sister bao bao have their own specially designed habitats as pandas are usually solitary creatures. almost every move they make is captured by the zoo's famous panda cams. remember when this video went viral last winter? did the zoo have any idea how popular the panda cams would be? >> i don't think anybody could predict the incredible popularity. but what i love is that this is science in real life in real time. >> reporter: brandy smith, who oversees the zoo's panda operation, says the cameras help volunteers keep detailed logs of each animal's daily activity. >> must be getting warm outside because she's indicating that she's warm. >> right now we're looking at mei xiang and bei bei to look at mother-cub interactions hoping we can learn froat
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they are a highly endangered species. found only in china, there are only about 1,800 in the wild as humans have encroached on their territory. >> no? good boy. get all the way in. >> reporter: so the pandas at the national zoo get frequent checkups. and in a rare behind-the-scenes visit we got to see how they're trained to cooperate. >> i don't think you're in the middle of the scale. >> reporter: biologist lori thompson coaches bei bei to weigh in. >> 43 pounds. 43 1/2 pounds. >> reporter: the reward -- a sweet potato. >> he's curious about anything new that is in his enclosure. >> am i allowed to pet him? >> no. >> reporter: yes, these cuddly creatures can bite. and almost three years and 180 pounds, bao bao, bei bei's sister, does her training through a cage. >> all the way. open. good.
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>> reporter: in exchange for a delicious stream of honey water. >> good girl. >> reporter: it's how she grows accustomed to everything from dental exams -- >> open. good. >> reporter: -- to blood tests. according to panda keeper tally wiles. if you do a blood stick for her, does it hurt her? >> they might feel it initially like a little pinch like a person does as well, but she's getting that honey reward, which is much more fantastic than anything she's going through. >> reporter: it was panda diplomacy that brought the first two pandas to the national zoo. >> i think they're adorable endearing creatures. >> reporter: sing sing and ling ling were a gift from the chinese government in 1972 after president nixon's historic visit to the country. but that panda pair never produced a cub that survived. in contrast, bei bei's parents who are here on loan from the chinese government have produced th
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tai xian, now almost 11 and living in china. but it hasn't been easy. >> the giant pandas are a species that is very difficult to reproduce and care for in captivity primarily because our knowledge of their biology has been very rudimentary until the last decade or so. >> reporter: steven monfort is director of the smithsonian conservation biology institute in frontroyal, virginia. a key mission here is studying panda reproduction. >> the female only matures and ovulates one time per year. so you have about a 36-hour window of fertility once a year with a giant panda. >> mei xiang. >> reporter: by collecting urine samples researchers have been able to pinpoint exactly when she is fertile and ready for a visit from tian tian. >> but so far they haven't been able to connect the parts?
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>> that's a nice way of putting it. there's an anatomical mismatch, let's say. >> reporter: to tell you the truth, ladies, it's apparently a performance issue on the male panda's part. >> one, two, three. >> reporter: so bei bei was conceived by artificial insemination. sadly, his twin did not survive. but every panda that makes it is considered a minor miracle. >> they're still under threat. so we are in a race against time. we have much, much more work to do. >> reporter: bao bao and bei bei will be sent to china within a few years. so we should enjoy them while we can. and the zoo's brandy smith says there's a primal reason we are so delighted by the antics of these creatures. >> when you see something that touches your heart, there's a biochemical reaction. you produce the same chemicals associated with childbirth. they make you happier. >> eat your sweet potato. you got it? >> you become a better person by watching these p
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p?p?o?gv captioning funded by cbs it's friday, may 13th, 2016. this is "cbs morning news." breaking over, the white house is set to make a sweeping announcement directing all u.s. schools to give transgender students the right to use the restroom they're most comfortable in. a meeting of the minds for donald trump and republican party leaders. paul ryan said discussions went well but stopped short of supporting the presumptive nominee. manipulation allegations. is facebook faking its trending stories? ceo mark zuckerberg responds to claims his social network is rigged against the right. and the invictus games
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