tv CBS Overnight News CBS July 14, 2016 2:07am-3:59am EDT
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dealing with missioning, immigration and other tough issues. she will now have to manage the toughest of them all, the divorce from europe that she had actually campaigned against. >> we are living in an important moment in our country's history. following the referendum, we face a time of great national change. >> reporter: about the only thing that hasn't changed around here is larry, the downing street cat. he's saying. >> and the rumor that somehow i don't love larry. i do. and i have photographic evidence to prove it. >> reporter: and scott, there's already controversy about one of theresa may's first big appointments. she's named boris johnson, a divisive figure, who was criticized for using racist innuendo about president obama her new foreign minister. it will be his job to celebrit
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when the republican conventionpens next monday, clinton will be addressing the naacp convention in cincinnati. but donald trump has declined the invitation of the civil rights group. that's rare. both mitt romney and both presidents bush spoke to the naacp, but reagan declined in 1980. negative views of race relations are at their highest since the riot of 1992 since the acquittal of officers who beat rodney king. a new poll out tonight finds that 69% of americans say race relations are bad. about the same as 1992. the new poll was taken after the
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police shootings of black men in minnesota and louisiana and the five murders of police officers in dallas. there were funeral services for three of the officers, and we have that. ♪ amazing grace ♪ how sweet the sound >> reporter: at this service, dallas transit officer brent thompson was remembered as a family man. the father of six had recently married fellow transit officer emily. >> brent loves all of his brothers and sisters in blue. i encourage you to stand with me, continue to wear the badge with me. remembering the oath we took. we will not, we can not, we shall not let the act of a coward break us. fo reporter: his daughter sandy
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>> one thing i would always say to my dad when he walked out the door was, good-bye, daddy. i love you. be safe. and tonight we say our final good-bye, daddy. we love you. be safe. >> reporter: thousands of law enforcement officers from across the country gathered to pay their respects to their fallen comrades. this was the procession for dallas officer lorne ahrens. hundreds lined the streets. officers saluted. the youngest did too. inside, officer debbie taylor remembered the 6'4" ahrens as a gentle giant. >> his personality, his heart, his devotion to police work and his family who were all larger than life. >> reporter: at a mass for officer michael smith, an army veteran and father of two, he was called a warrior and guardian by his
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>> my brother's murder will not be in vain. his selfless legacy will live on. >> reporter: and in some ways, it already has. this week a family friend shared a photograph of officer smith's daughter giving a bracelet she made to the daughter of fallen police officer zamarripa. the funerals for officer zamarripa and officer michael krol are set to happen within the next few days. >> the murders of those dallas officers was motivated in part by the fatal police shooting of alton sterling in baton rouge. well, today the american civil liberties union sued the police there over their treatment of protesters. sterling's 15-year-old son cameron urged marchers to protest the right
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>> i'll never forget that image of you wailing on the side of your mom. >> when i put my arm around her it's like somebody else's hand touched me. like i had another hand laying on top of my hand. and when i looked over, wasn't nobody else touching me. nobody else was touching me. and it was like at that moment i knew. my daddy here. he right here beside us. we're standing here as a family once again. i really want everyone to know, alton sterling was a good man, no matter what anyone else has to say about him. truly in my heart, i know he was a good dad. >> reporter: what is your opinion of police in general these days? >> all police aren't bad. they all aren't bad. there are some that are bad. but all aren't bad. how i feel,
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shouldn't be punished for other police's crimes. the police in dallas, texas, they didn't deserve that. because you didn't, nobody knew if they had kids to go home to. those kids need their parents. >> reporter: people around the country have been protesting because of what happened to your dad, what would you say to them? >> continue protesting, but what i want, what i ask if you truly love my father. i want everyone to protest the right way. protesting in peace. not in violence. not beating the police, not police beating the people. that makes no sense. that make things worse. you have to make things better by making peace. >> reporter: today cameron got on a plane for washington. tomorrow it's expected he'll meet the president, and on friday, he will return to baton rouge to bury his
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>> david begno reporting for us. 47 american troops have been rushed into south sudan to protect americans and the u.s. embassy. it was five years ago that the u.s. brokered a deal that created the world's newest nation, splitting it from the rest of sudan. but civil war between rival ethnic groups flared again this week. the u.n. says more than 4 million south sudanese are threatened by famine. coming up, a manhunt for a gunman who has killed at least seven. 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]
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there's a serial killer in phoenix. at least nine people have been shot in the last four months, and seven have died. carter evans is following the manhunt. >> that's when they opened fire. >> reporter: the three latest victims were shot in his driveway. >> 12 bullets in my granddaughter, eight bullets in the other girl. that's 34 bullets. >> reporter: maleah was the youngest victim. his daughter stephanie and her daughter were also gunned down. this is not a sniper shooting someone at a distance. >> right. >> reporter: they look their victims in the eyes. >> not even a drive by. walked up, made sure seo
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>> reporter: phoenix police have now linked those murders to four others and the fbi and u.s. marshals have joined the investigation. the shootings began in march. since then, the serial killer or killers have murdered seven people within 50 square miles. all of the shootings occurred outside homes and at night. >> right now, we have not determined a motive in any of these incidents. we haven't found a relationship between the victims. >> reporter: investigators have a sketch of the suspect. and the community, while on edge, is being vigilant. mark upchurch is with the guardian angels. >> i know if he's not caught he'll kill again. >> reporter: but for he and his wife sylvia, it's already too late. >> they've taken my world. my life. my daughter was my life. >> reporter: now phoenix police were just investigating another apparent shooting that happened
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yesterday more than 30 people in new york suffered bizarre reactions to an illegal synthetic drug which is now available all across the country. michelle miller reports from new york city. >> can't stand up straight. >> reporter: it was a bizarre scene, dozens of people with blank stares, stumbling around a brooklyn neighborhood yesterday. brian arthur live streamed it on facebook. >> as i'm walking up the block, i see everybody laying on the floor, and everybody's stumbling all over the place. it looked like a scene out of a zombie movie. >> reporter: emergency workers sent 30 people to hospitals saying they were under the influence of k-2 or spice. designed to mimic marijuana, it has far more powerful effects. this man says he's used it before. >> k-2 does, puts you in a delusional world, have your mind
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>> reporter: it's made by spraying various lael chemicals onto plants, ground up and smoked. many users experience confusion, hallucinations, rapid heart rate and even seizures. police say it's sold at small, neighborhood grocery stores. a cbs uncoverdercover investiga found it at this store. k2 is growing nationwide. more than 3500 calls of synthetic marijuana use to poison centers over a five-month period last year. drug dealers have managed to stay one step ahead of federal law enforcement. no sooner do they ban one recipe for k2 manufacturers come up with another, making it virtual lay impossible for the ingredients to be
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privilege." >> reporter: it was an entry in a school poetry contest. >> i'm scared what it would be like if i wasn't on the top rung. if i didn't have my white boy safety blanket to protect me. >> reporter: it was a plea from a 14 year old white male going to private school in atlanta. let everyone share his privileges. >> i love it, because when i see a police officer, i see someone who's on my side. >> i'm just trying to be truthful about like how i wofbts trade places with somebody. and i think a lot of people sometimes aren't so truthful about that. >> reporter: racial division seared america last week, after minnesota, baton rouge and dallas, the poem vukstruck a ne. more than 8 million have seen it
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written so all they have to do is get it read! i get the change can be scary, but equality shouldn't be. >> i'm not asking anybody to give up their lives for equality. i have other dreams, too. i'm just asking you to try to be an outlet. do your share. when you see something that you think is wrong, that's discrimination, speak up. >> it's time to let go of that fear. it's time to take that ladder and turn it into a bridge. >> reporter: he also won that poetry contest. mark straussman, cbs news, atlanta. and that's the overnight news for this thursday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back a little later for the morning news and of course, cbs this morning. i'm scott pelley.
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this is the "cbs overnight news." welcome to the overnight news. i'm jericka duncan. donald trump spent another day interviewing prospective running mates and will release his vp pick tomorrow. he and his son-in-law were at the indiana governor's mansion having lunch with governor pence. he is on the short list that also reportedly includes chris christie and former house speaker newt gingrich. a new poll shows nearly two-thirds of americans think the choice of a running mate is either very or somewhat important to the presidential race. major garrett has more. >> reporter: donald trump summoned his family to meet a
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second face-to-face encounter in two days. he then left for indianapolis to huddle with other potential running mates. first newt gingrich. he often tells trump he's leading a movement of historical significance. trump also met with four-term alabama senator jeff sessions, the first senator to back the candidate. and trump spoke by phone today with new jersey governor chris christie, whom he's known the longest and been the most outwardly loyal since ending his own campaign. christie chairs the trump transition. meanwhile, the devout evangelical christian has a deadline. he must notify the state by noon friday if he'll remain on the ballot as a candidate for governor. as for the meetingh
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nothing was accepted. but we had a great conversation with the country. >> reporter: do you think you could help him more as vice president or governor of indiana. >> that would be for others to say. i could just honestly tell you, these are good people. these are people who have the best interests of america at heart. >> donald trump gets it. >> reporter: the two campaigned together tuesday night, arriving more than an hour late after a fund raiser. trump appeared pleased. >> you'll be calling up mike pence. i don't know whether he's going to be your governor or your vice president. who the hell knows. >> reporter: throughout this campaign, trump has thrived on risk and gut instinct. pence is the more conventional choice, backed by trump's inner circle and some family advisers, but christie's personality is closer to trumps
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vi advisers have more clout than gingrich. the convention gets under way next week. ohio is an open carry state. and those attending protests will likely be armed. >> reporter: for one thing, there will be of course a large, hefty law enforcement presence in these barricades, across the street from the quicken loans arena. these barricades will soon be part of the security infrastructure here for crowd control once the convention begins. >> we're not going to restrict anybody's constitutional rights. >> reporter: calvin williams says his officers are prepared to deal with the possibility that many of the people on the streets during the gop convention could be armed. >> people in this state have a right to open carry. there's a second amendment and
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we understand that. our officers are prepared. they're used to seeing that in downtown cleveland for different events. >> reporter: the targeting of the police in dallas has put extra focus on open carry concerns and the confusion it might create if chaos erupts. it was something david brown addressed on monday. >> it's increasingly challenging when people have ar-15s slung over and the crowd begins running. we don't know who the good guy is versus who the bad guy is if everybody starts shooting. >> reporter: in june, a man in las vegas was arrested and accused of trying to kill the republican presumptive mom me aft -- nominee after trying to grab an officer's gun. another man was grabbed in dayton, ohio. >> there's no specific credibl
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>> reporter: joseph clancy insists his agency is prepared for the convention. >> we've been planning for close to a year. but the plan's never finished. you have to constantly be ready to adapt, be flexible to whatever may occur. >> reporter: they are expecting about 50,000 people to attend the convention. it is harder to put a number on how many people will be coming here armed. closer to the quicken loans arena, there is a zone where weapons are banned. but anywhere else, you can legally carry. for the democrats, they go into their convention united after bernie sanders threw his support behind hillary clinton. sanders sat down with charlie gale and nora to discuss the race ahead. >> you have made attacking wall street a pillar of your presidential campaign. are you capitulating some of your values by endorsing hillary clinton? >> no, i'm standing
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working families and the middle class saying donald trump would be a disaster for the future of this country. what this campaign is about is taking a hard look at which candidate is going to do more for ordinary americans. i think that choice is very, very clear. we have worked with secretary clinton's campaign. she is talking about making public universities and colleges tuition free-for-all families under $125,000. she's talking about expanding health care while donald trump wants to throw 20 million people off the health care they now have. donald trump does not accept science, thinks that climate change is a hoax. hillary clinton wants to rebuild our sustainable energy system and move away from fossil fuels. the differences between the two candidates are very, very clear. clinton is by far the superior candidate for the middle class to my mind. >> do you believe you have
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>> i think, when you get 13 million votes, which is what we got, when you win 22 states. when young people all over this country are demanding real change, secretary clinton and her team are smart enough to understand that they have got to go where the action is, and they have to move to where the people want to go. and what the people in this country want is a standing up to the big-money interests. >> okay, so -- >> what didn't you get? >> well, what we didn't get is me becoming president of the united states of america. [ laughter ] >> are you having running for president withdrawal already? >> i'm feeling fine, thanks. >> are you going to miss the secret service? >> that's an interesting question. yes and no. when i'm going to the bathroom.y that's the advantage. ant those guys did a great job, d appreciate what they did.
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over the past 17 years, photographer danny clinch has shot just about every heavyweight in the music industry, rappers, rockers, country stars and pop artists, and clinch has made a lot of friends along the way. anderson cooper has his story for 60 minutes. >> reporter: bruce springsteen, hitting the road on tour once more. his wife patty by his side, and danny clifrpgs is there to talk about old times. >> in '89 was the first team i photographed you guys. >> reporter: and shoot the band rehearsing. >> one, two, three, four! ♪
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>> reporter: over the years, clinch has taken thousands of pictures of springsteen. and many have become classics. >> it's a sweet little spot. >> reporter: they're portraits of the artist off stage that mirror the message and tone of his music. then there's the famous scene of springsteen falling from the stage into the crowd. did he know you got it? >> i felt like i did. yeah. >> reporter: clinch wears many hats. he covers the musical spectrum. tony bennett and lady gaga. >> i'm not a strong arm
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i want to collaborate. >> reporter: country star miranda lambert. >> you want to make people relax. >> reporter: singer/songwriter sam smith. >> you want to find a common ground as quickly as you can. >> reporter: he goes way back with many musicians. that's trey anstas yoe. trusting him to stay out of the way. it's new year's eve. fish is playing madison square garden. and to the crowd, clinch is the invisible man. what is it about shooting a concert? what are you trying to get? >> i'm trying to capture a moment. it's not about the singer at the microphone. i'm trying to look for like a moment in between.
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back of the stage, hiding behind the drums or the amplifiers, waiting for that in-between moment, popping up like a whack a mole to get his shot. and sometimes over the years it's paid off big as in this classic photograph. the view from the stage of info fighters. or this one. airborne. >> i popped up from behind the amplifiers. >> reporter: you were hiding behind an amplifier. >> yeah. >> reporter: do you wear earplugs? >> i should. >> reporter: but you don't? >> i often don't. >> reporter: i'm surprise issed y you can hear me. >> what? i get out there and i'm like, geez, i should have some earplugs, i forgot them. >> reporter:
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to annie leibovitz. if your pictures aren't good enough, you're not close enough. and even when he's not working, he's looking for that perfect shot. >> i'm such a visual person. i don't want to miss that moment. >> reporter: you're rarely without your camera. >> rarely. >> reporter: even sitting right here. >> see, i always want to be prepared, because you never know who's going to come to your studio. i really like this one a lot. >> reporter: his studio is a place where any music fan would love to be locked up for a few days. >> it's like a history of rock 'n roll. >> reporter: a couple years back he photographed one of the men who started it all. chuck barry who's now 89, and jerry lee lewis who's 80. and here are pictures from that
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>> we were trying to give him a little something to do and somebody came back with a bunch of different language newspapers. i started to shoot, keeping it real simple. >> reporter: more of his greatest hits. southern gothic. gregg allman. johnny cash waiting to go on stage, a shot capturing the loneliness of life on the road. country stars faith hill and tim mcgraw. tupac. >> he was really into it. he took his shirt off and i saw all the tattoos, and i said would you mind doing one like that? and he said yeah. >> reporter: when you took this, did you know how strong if was? >> i felt like this was a powerful image, that the simplicity of it was really powerful. >> reporter: clinch has branched
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out into videos and commercials. ♪ you give your hand to me >> willie doesn't mind my taking his photograph. i found ways to work with that. >> reporter: he also got some very candid stills. nelson braiding his hair. and indulging in his favorite recreational pastime, smoking a huge stick of weed. i don't know what we'd call this. >> i know. >> reporter: it's like a cigar. >> somehow i can't remember what happened after that. ♪ but you don't know me >> reporter: and then, there are the occasional shoots he wishes he could forget. >> i was at a madonna show, many, many years ago, and i was like in the sweet spot, and she came out, and she was like, it was the best part of the show. i was shooting, shooting, shooting, god, i must have shot 100 pictures. have i not run out of film? ani
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camera, and there was no film in there. >> oh, no. >> so that happened to me only once. >> reporter: ouch. ♪ >> reporter: no doubt one reason he gets along so well with musicians, he knows the language. wearing yet another hat to play with the tan jeers blues band, sometimes jamming with the likes of willie and bruce. his harmonica, like his camera, going everywhere he goes. ♪ >> reporter: he grew up on the jersey shore, living in tom's river, a few miles down the garden state parkway from springsteen country. >> these are some good ones. >> reporter: he got the photography bug from his mother. >> she always had a camera. always still has a camera. and at times i find myself taking pictures of her taking pictures of the family. >> reporter: and from his father he got a taste of classic rk
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classic cars. his prized possession, a 1948 pontiac silver streak, the sort of car his father always noticed when clinch was a kid. >> everywhere we'd go, he's like, there's a '55 chevy. and i started to like cars myself. >> reporter: and he's always found a way to work helm into the shot. with clinch's father at the wheel. an old cadillac and young inside tooling around nashville. >> you can see the full report on our website, cbs news.com. the overnight news will be right back.
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a little touch is all it takes. k-y touch. an international team of rowers is maintaining a pace in the great pacific race. it started in monterey california and will land in honolulu in the next day or so. they're way ahead of the pack and on course to shatter the previous record time of 43 days and five hours at sea. rowing used to be a big sport m in the united states. and lately it has been making a come back. it's been called a symphony in motion. it's easy to see why when you watch a team like
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against the resistance of water and wind, all while balancing on a two-foot-wide boat. this is the captain. >> like to work as a unit and work as one piece together. >> reporter: rowing is the oldest contested college sport. the first race was the harvard/yale regatta in 1852. many schools still take it very seriously, which is one of the reasons why the sport is growing. u.s. rowing says its top tier membership rose 27% in 2015. partly because student athletes see it as a way to set themselves apart in the college admissions process. rowing's renaissance is also happening on land. at boutique fitness clubs like row house in new york. the crew may row to a different beat, but they're stillet
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those in the boat, as i learned personally. >> give me three more. >> that was intense. >> yeah, it's an intense work out. >> reporter: row house owners saw an opportunity with th the ergometer. >> a lot of people had the history rowing, and they loved it. >> reporter: what's common misconception about rowing? >> it's 60% legs, 30% more give or take core. and about 10% arms. so it's really just the opposite of what you would think it is. >> the rhythm is there. long and strong. >> rowing and crew is no joke. >> reporter: jordan is a sports medicine physician. >> if you're doing a hard run or a hard row, you're probably burning about the same number of calories. the difference is, if your joints become arthritic, running can sometimes be painful.
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rowing is much less low force on your joints. >> what is this? >> reporter: even the netflix hit, "house of cards" can't resist the urge. the rhythmic sounds of frank underwood's machine provide both a sound track and interesting analogy. >> translator: serie and every time underwood takes a stroke, water rower, the company that makes his erg getting a bump in sales. the factory has tripled production to more than 1,000 machines a week. while there are plenty of people who prefer to go at it solo. frolik says whether you're on the water or dry land, the real benefits can only be had when you're rowing with a crew. >> rowing at its best is a large group of people breathing together. it almostec b aomes
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and take charge today . visit your weight matters dot org. the fbi says there has only been one case of skyjacking in u.s. history that's never been solved. and now they're closing the case. you may not remember the story of d.b. cooper, but for decades, he was notorious. don dahler explains. >> reporter: he parachuted somewhere between seattle and reno, nevada in 1971 and disappeared with ransom money and was never seen again. did he get away with it? did he die trying? it's now safe to say we'll probably never know. >> it was just time. >> reporter: with those words, frank montoya jr. ended the 45-year hunt for the hijacker known as d.b. cooper.
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>> i i remember watching walter cronkite. it brought back a lot of memories to sight archival footage. >> when he got even the plane, he was just another passenger. >> reporter: an early report misidentify him as d.b. cooper. cooper bought a $20 ticket and boarded this boeing 727. he allegedly showed what he said was a suitcase bomb and forced the plane to land in seattle. 3 36 passengers were released. at cooper's orders, the plane took off for mexico city, apparently with the rear stairwell left open. somewhere between seattle and reno, cooper jumped out of the plane with the cash. >> how do you surmise tha
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landed in reno? >> well, a search was made of the plane immediately after landing. >> reporter: an exhaustive investigation began. in 1980, a boy digging near the columbia river found three bundles of weathered $20 bills, linked to the ransom money, but it only totaled about $6,000. the case has inspired films, books, and even a song by the birds called "bad full of money." >> be glad when it's over and ready to land ♪ ♪ with this bag full of money i've got in my hand ♪ >> reporter: over the years, the drmt b. cooper investigation has diverted resources from more pressing cases. >> this is the only unsolved skyjacking in american history. that's the oig
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for tyou. i'm jericka duncan. trump gets pensive. governor mike pence makes it to the final round in the gop veep stakes. >> i don't know whether he's going to be your governor or your vice president. who the hell knows. also tonight, a final salute to a police officer andfather. >> tonight we say our final good-bye, daddy, we love you. be safe. nightmare in brooklyn. >> everybody's laying out on the floor. and everybody's stumbling all over the place. it looked like a scene out of a zombie move eie. and the poem that went viral. >> i've started life at the top of the
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born on the first rung. this is the "cbs overnight news." who's your running mate. that's the question for donald trump, and it could be the answer as well. tonight, indiana governor mike pence is the leading candidate for the number two spot on the republican ticket. pence is 57, 13 years younger than trump, and he knows his way around washington. he spent 12 year as a congressman. here's major garrett. >> reporter: donald trump summoned his family from new york to meet with mike pence at the indiana governor's mansion, their second face-to-face encounter in to days. trump then left for indianapolis as the vice president vetting process grew to a close. first newt gingrich. a close adviser, gingrich often tetr
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movement of historical significance. trump also met with four-term alabama senator jeff sessions, the first senator to back the candidate. and trump spoke by phone with new jersey governor chris christie whom he's known the longest. christie chairs the trump transition team. >> this is a great festival. >> reporter: meanwhile, pence campaigned for reelection at a fair in ft. wayne. the fiscal conservative has a deadline. i mu he must notify the state by noon friday if he will remain on the ballot for governor. >> nothing was accepted, nothing was offered. we had a great conversation nk could help him more as vice president or as governor? >> i think that would be for others to say. i can tell you these are good people. these are people who have the best interests of america at heart. donald t g
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>> reporter: the two campaigned together tuesday night, arriving more than an hour late after a fund raiser pence organized that add more than $1 million to his campaign coffers. trump appeared pleased. >> you'll be calling up mike pence. i don't know if he will be your governor or your vice president, who the hell knows. >> reporter: throughout the campaign, trump has relied on gut instinct and risk. scott, christie's personality is much closer to trump's, and few have more clout than gingrich. a new poll out today finds that trump has taken the lead in the key state of florida. he's up three points. last month he was trailing there by eight. here's nancy cordis. >> trump's campaign adds up to an ugly, dangerous message to
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illinois, the home of lincoln, clinton called trump a threat to the republic. a man determined to stoke fear and set many scotle scores. >> imagine if he had not just twitter and cable news to go after his critics but also the irs and for that matter the entire military. >> reporter: voters in three key battle ground say thing now consider trump significantly more trustworthy. it's one of several polls that show clinton slipping after she skirted an indictment last week but not a tongue-lashing for her use of a private e-mail server. >> i think she was negligent. >> reporter: the clinton camp chose to look on the bright side, highlighting another poll that has her leading in iowa by three and pennsylvania by nine. and clinton argued it's trump to really flaunts the riule of law. >> he says as
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he would order our troops to commit war crimes. >> reporter: she was referring to his vow to bring back the use of torture. >> we should go for water boarding and tougher than water boarding. >> as long as i'm director of cia, we're not going to go down that road again. >> reporter: clinton's vp selection process has been markedly less public than trump's, but everyone will be looking for clues tomorrow when she comes to washington to meet with senate democrats a room that's full of nominees. britain got a new prime minister. theresa may, a career politician is the first woman to hold the office since margaret thatcher in 1990. markz(u[ phillips reports cha came quickly. >> reporter: the moment of becoming prime minister frozen in time. everything else was in motion, especially david cameron leaving office four years
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he'd planned. >> it's not been an easy journey, and of course we've not got every decision right. >> reporter: he got one big thing wrong, the referendum on leaving the eu on which he gambled and lost. so one last grilling in parliament that was less a grilling than a political standup routine. >> other than one meeting this afternoon with her majesty the queen, the diary for the rest of my day is remarkably light. >> reporter: or the one about the time he was stopped by someone on the sidewalk in new york. >> eventually, someone said cameron, prime minister's questions, we love your show! >> reporter: the david cameron act is over. it's such a neat show of political theatrics. one prime minister leaves through the famous front door. another arrives. the characters may change, but the plot stays the same. it's theresa may's show now. the 59-year-old's run britain's home office for
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dealing with policing, immigration and other tough issues. she will now have to manage the toughest of them all, the divorce from europe that she had actually campaigned against. >> we are living through an important moment in our country's history. following the referendum, we face a time of great national change. >> reporter: about the only thing that hasn't changed around here is larry, the downing street cat. he's staying. >> and the rumor that somehow i don't love larry, i do. and i have photographic evidence to prove it. >> reporter: and scott, there's already controversy about one of theresa may's first big appointments. she's named boris johnson, a divisive figure who was criticized during the brexit campaign for using racist innuendo about prime minister her new foreign minister. it will be his job to sell brexit to the world.
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when the republican convention opens next monday, clinton will be addressing the naacp convention in cincinnati. but donald trump has declined the invitation of the civil rights group. that's rare. both mitt romney and both presidents bush spoke to the naacp, but reagan declined in 1980. negative views of race relations are at their highest since the 1992 riots that occurred after the acquittal of police officers who beat taxi driver rodney king in los angeles. a cbs news "new york times" poll out tonight finds that 69% of americans say race relations are bad, about the same as 1992. the new poll was taken after the police shoot
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louisiana and minnesota, and the murders of five police officers in dallas. there were funerals today for three of those officers, and we have that. ♪ amazing grace ♪ how sweet the sound >> reporter: at this service, dallas transit officer brent thompson was remembered as a family man. the father of six had recently married fellow transit officer emily. >> brent loves all of his brothers and sisters in blue. i encourage you to stand with me, continue to wear the badge with me, remembering the oath we took. we will not, we cannot, we shall not let the act of a coward break us. >> reporter: his daughter
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>> one thing i would always say to my dad when he walked out the door was, good-bye, daddy, i love you, be safe. and tonight we say our final good-bye, daddy, we love you. be safe. >> reporter: thousands of law enforcement officers from across the country gathered to pay their respects to their fallen comrades. this was the procession for lorne ahrens. hundreds lined the streets. officers sa lulted. the youngest did too. >> not only was he big in physical stature, but his personality, his heart, his enthusiasm for police work and his devotion to his family were all larger than life. ♪ how precious did >> reporter: at a mass for officer michael smith, an army veteran and father of two, he was called a warrior and guardian by his
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>> my brother's murder will not be in vain. his selfless legacy will live on. >> reporter: and in some ways, it already has. this week a family friend shared a photograph of officer smith's daughter giving a bracelet she made to the daughter of fallen officer zamarripa. the funerals for officer zamarripa and officer michael krol are set to happen over the next few days. >> manuel, thank you. the murders of those dallas officers was motivated in part by the fatal police shooting of alton sterling in baton rouge. well, today, the american civil liberties union sued the police there over their treatment of protesters. sterling's 15-year-old son cameron urged marchers to protest, as he put it, the right way.
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>> reporter: i'll never forget that image of you wailing on the side of your mom. >> when i put my arm around her. it's like somebody else hand touch me. like i had another hand laying on top of my hand. and when i looked over wasn't nobody else touching me. nobody else was touching me. and it was at that moment i knew, my daddy here, he's standing right beside here, we're standing here as a family once again. want everyone to know, alton sterling was a good man, no matter what anybody else has to say about him. truly in my heart, i know he was a good dad. >> reporter: what is your opinion of police in general these days? >> all police aren't bad. they all aren't bad. there are some that are bad. but all aren't bad. how i feel?
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i feel all police shouldn't be punished for other police's crimes. the police in dallas, texas, they didn't deserve that. because you didn't, nobody knew if they had kids to go home to. those kids need their parents. >> reporter: people around the country have been protesting because of what happened to your dad. what would you say to them? >> continue protesting, but what i want, what i ask, if you truly love my father. i truly just want everyone to protest the right way. protesting in peace. not in violence. not beating the police. not police beating the people. that makes no sense. that make things worse. you have to make things better by making peace. >> reporter: today cameron got on a plane for washington. tomorrow it's expected he'll meet the president, and scott, on friday, he will return to baton rouge to burr y
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>> david begnaud reporting for us. 47 american troops have been rushed into south sudan to protect americans and the u.s. embassy. it was five years ago that the u.s. brokered a deal that created the world's newest nation, splitting it from the rest of sudan. but civil war between rival ethnic groups flared again this week. the u.n. says more than 4 million south sudanese are threatened by famine. coming up, aanhunt for a gunman who has killed at least seven. introducing new k-y touch gel crème. for massage and intimacy. every touch, gently intensified. a little touch is all it takes.
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there's a serial killer in phoenix. at least nine people have been shot in the last four months, and seven have died. carter evans is following the manhunt. >> that's when they opened fire. >> reporter: the three latest victims were murdered in dosy ellis's driveway. >> 12 bullets in my granddaughter, eight bullets in the other girl. >> reporter: his grand dpauter was the youngest victim. her friend and daughter were also gunned down. this is not a sniper shooting someone at a distance. >> right. not even a drive by. walked up. made sure someone were in
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and just opened fire. >> reporter: phoenix police have now linked those murders to four others, and the fbi and u.s. marshals have joined the investigation. the shootings began in march. since then, the serial killer or killers have murdered within 50 square miles. >> we have not determined a motive. we haven't found a relationship between the victims. >> reporter: they knew have a sketch of the suspect. and the community, while on international is being vigilant. the mike upchurch is patrolling with the guardian angels. >> it's very frustrating. i know if he's not caught, he's going to kill again. >> reporter: but for dosy ellis and his wife sylvia, it's already too late. >> they've taken my world. my life. my daughter was my life. >> reporter: now phoenix police were just developing another apparent shooting that happene
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yesterday more than 30 people in new york suffered bizarre reactions to an illegal synthetic drug which is now available all across the country. michelle miller reports from new york city. >> can't stand up straight. >> reporter: it was a bizarre scene. dozens of people with blank stares, stumbling around a brooklyn neighborhood yesterday. brian arthur live streamed it on facebook. >> i see everybody laying out on the floor, and everybody's stumbling all over the place. it looked like a scene out of a zombie movie. >> reporter: emergency workers sent 33 people to area hospitals saying they appeared to be under the influence of the sin thetsic drug known as k2 or spice. designed to mimic marijuana, it has far more powerful effects. this man says he's used it before. >> k2 does put you in a delusional world. have your mind spinning, md
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alterment. >> reporter: k2 is made by spraying various legal chemicals onto plants, ground up and smoked. many users experience confusion, hallucinations, rapid heart rate and even seizures. police say it's sold at small neighborhood grocery stores. a cbs undercover producer found it at this brooklyn corner store last year. >> $10? >> reporter: k2 usage is growing nationwide. the cdc reports more than 3500 calls of synthetic marijuana use to poison centers over a five-month period last year. that's a 229% jump from the year before. drug dealers have managed to stay one step ahead of federal law enforcement. no sooner do they ban one recipe for k2, manufacturers come up with another, making it virtually impossible, scott, for the ingredients to be banned. >> michelle
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you'd do anything to take care of that spot on your lawn. so why not take care of that spot on your skin? if you're a man over 50 you're in the oup most likely to develop skin cancer, including melanoma, the cancer that kills 1 person every hour. check your skin for suspicious or changing spots. go to spotskincancer.org to find out what to look for. a message from the american academy of dermatology
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privilege." >> reporter: white boy privilege was an entry in a school poetry contest. >> to be honest, i'm scared about what it would be like if i wasn't on the top rung. if the tables were turned. >> reporter: his message was a plea from a 14 year old white male going to a private school in atlanta, let everyone share his privileges. >> i love it, because when i see a police officer, i see someone who's on my side. >> i'm just trying to be truthful and, about, like how i wouldn't trade places with somebody and i think a lot of people, sometimes aren't so truthful about that. >> reporter: racial divisions seared america last week after baton rouge, minnesota and dallas, the poem struck a nerve. many loved it, others attacked him. more than 8 million people have seen it. >> everyone should have the privileges i
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everyone's story should be written so all they have to do is get it read. i get that change can be scary, but equality shouldn't be. >> i'm not asking anybody to give up their lives to fight for equality. just be an ally, do your share, when you see something that you think is wrong that's discrimination, speak up. >> it's time to let go of that fear. it's time to take that ladder and turn it into a bridge. [ applause ] >> reporter: he also won that poetry contest. mark straussman, cbs news, atlanta. and that's overnight news for this thursday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back with us a little bit later for the morning news and of course cbs this morning. from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm scott pelley.
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this is the "cbs overnight news." welcome to the overnight news. i'm jericka duncan. donald trump spent another day interviewing prospective running mates and says he'll unveil his vp choice tomorrow. trump, three of his children and son-in-law were all at the indiana governor's mansion having lunch with mike pence. governor pence is on the short list that also reportedly includes new jersey governor chris christie and former house speaker newt gingrich. a new poll shows nearly two-thirds of americans think the choice of a running mate is either very or somewhat important to the presidential raise. major garrett has more. >> reporter: trump summoned his family from new york to meet with mike pence at the indiana
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face-to-face encounter in two days. trump then left for indianapolis. first, gingrich who ran for president himself four years ago. a close adviser, gingrich often tells trump he's leading a movement of historical significance. trump also melt with four-term alabama senator jeff sessions, the first senator to back the candidate. and trump spoke by phone today with new jersey governor chris christie, whom he's known the longest and been the most outwardly loyal since ending his own campaign. christie chairs the trump transition team. meanwhile, pence campaigned for reelection at a fair in ft. wayne. the evangelical christian and fiscal conservative has a deadline. he must notefy the state by noon friday if he will remain on the ballot for governor. as for
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>> nothing was offered, nothing was accepted, but we had a great conversation about the country. >> reporter: do you think you could help him more as vice president or governor of indiana? >> i think that would be for others to say. these are good people. these are people who have the best interests of america at heart. >> donald trump gets it! >> reporter: the two campaigned together tuesday night, arriving more than an hour late after a fundraiser pence organized for trump that added more than $1 million to his campaign coffers. trump appeared pleased. >> you'll be calling up mike pence. >> i don't know whether he'll be your goerp or vice president, who the hell knows. >> reporter: throughout this campaign, trump has thrived on risk and gut instinct. pence is the more conventional choice, backed by trump's inner circle and some family advisers, but christie's personality is much closer to trump's. and few outside advisers have more clout than
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major garrett, cbs news, ft. wayne, indiana. >> the republican national convention gets under way in cleveland monday, and law enforcement agencies have a big job in front of them. ohio is an open carry state. likely be armed. >> reporter: for one thing, there will be of course a large, hefty law enforcement presence in these barricades, across the street from the quicken loans arena. these barricades will soon be part of the security infrastructure here for crowd control once the convention begins. >> we're not going to restriblgts anybody's constitutional rights. >> reporter: they are prepared to deal with the possibility that many could be armed. >> people in this state have a right to open carry. there's a second amendment to the constitution. we understand .
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they're used to seeing that in downtown cleveland for different events. >> reporter: the targeting of police in dallas last week has put extra focus on open carry concerns and the confusion it might create if chaos erupts. it was an issue dallas police chief david brown addressed on monday. >> it's increasingly challenging when people have ar-15s slung over and they begin running. we don't know who the bad guy is versus who the good guy is if everybody starts shooltsing. >> reporter: trump rallies have already been the site of clashes. in june, a man in lavgs was arrested and accused of trying to kill the republican nominee after trying to grab an officer's gun. in march, secret service agents intercepted another man who tried to reach the candidate at a rally in dayton, ohio. >> there's no specific crebl
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>> reporter: secret service director joseph clancy suggests they are prepared. >> we've been planning for close to a year, but the plan's never finished. you have to constant lly be rea to adapt, be flexible to whatever may occur. >> reporter: they are expecting about 50,000 people to attend the convention. it is harder to put a number on how many people will be coming here armed. closer to the quicken loans arena, there is a security zone where weapons are banned. but anywhere else, you can legally care e fort democr -- carry. for the democrats, they go into the convention united. >> you have made attacking wall street a pillar of your presidential campaign. are you now capitulating some of your values by endorsing hillary clinton? >> no, i'm stapding up for rk
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class by saying donald trump would be a disaster for the country. what this campaign is about is taking a hard look at which dpt is going to do more for americans. that choice is very, very clear. we have worked with secretary clinton's campaign. she is talking about making colleges and universities tuition free-for-all families under $125,000. donald trump wants to throw people off of the health care they have. donald trump does not accept science, thinks that climate change is a hoax. hillary clinton wants to rebuild our sustainable energy system and move away from fossil fuels. the differences between the two candidates are very, very clear. clinton is by far the superior candidate for the middle class to my mind. >> do you believe you have pulled her
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>> i think, when you get 13 million votes, which is what we got. when you win 22 states, when young people all over the country are demanding real change, secretary clinton and her team are smart enough to understand that they have got to go where the action is. and they have to move to where the people want to go. and what the people in this country want is a standing up to the big-money interests. >> what didn't you get? >> well, what we didn't get is me becoming president of the united states of america. [ laughter ] le >> are you having running for president withdrawal already? >> i'm feeling fine. >> are you going to miss the secret service? >> yes and no. now i don't have to tell anybody when i'm going to the bathroom. that's the advantage. but thoseuy gs did a great b.
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over the past 17 years, photographer danny clinch has shot just about every heavyweight in the music industry, rappers, rockers, country stars, jazz and pop artists, and clinch has made a lot of friends along the way. anderson cooper has his story for 60 minutes. >> hey! >> reporter: bruce springsteen, hitting the road on tour once more. his wife patty by his side. and danny clinch is there to talk a bit about old times. >> in '99 was the first time i photographed you guying and it was there. >> reporter: and shoot the band rehearsing. >> wichone, two, thre
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♪ >> reporter: over the years, clifrnls has taken thousands of pictures of springsteen. and many have become classics. >> this is at a house that's on bruce's property. it's just a sweet little spot. >> reporter: there are portraits of the artist off stage that mirror the message of his music. and there is a picture of him falling from the stage into the crowd. >> he fell back and i got my shot. >> did he know you got it? >> i felt like i did. yeah. >> reporter: clinch wears many hats, pun intended. as the official portrait photographer of the grammys. he covers the spectrum.
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tony bennett and lady gaga. country star miranda lambert. singer-songwriter sam smith. >> you want to find a common ground as quickly as you can. >> reporter: paul mccartney and foo fighters. >> want to go up on stage? >> yeah. >> reporter: he goes way back with many musicians. that's trey anastasio. trusting him to stay out of the way. ♪ it's new year's eve. fish is playing madison square garden, and to the crowd, clinch is the invisible man. what is it about shooting a concert? what are you trying to get? >> i'm trying to capture a moment. it's not about the singer at the microphone. i'm trying to look for like a moment in between.
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back of the stage, hiding behind the drums or the amplifiers, waiting for that in-between moment, popping up like a whack-a-mole to get his shot. and sometimes over the years it's paid off big as in this classic photograph. the view from the stage of into fight others and a cast of thousands. or this one at a pearl jam concert. >> i popped up from behind jeff's amplifiers. the whole stadium was lit. there in' there up in the air. >> reporter: do you wear earplugs? >> i should. >> reporter: but you don't. >> i often don't. >> reporter: i'm surprised you can hear me. >> what? i get out there and i'm like, geez, i should have brought some earplugs. >> reporter: he was an assistant to photographer annie
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light and agrees with "if your pictures aren't good enough, you're not close enough." and even if he's not working he's still looking for that perfect shot >> i'm photographing all the time. i'm a visual person. i don't want to miss that moment. >> reporter: you're never without your camera. >> rarely. >> reporter: even right here. >> i always want to be prepared. because you never know who's going to come to your studio. i really like this one a lot. >> reporter: his studio is a place where any music fan would love to be locked up for a few days. it's like a history of rock 'n roll. >> a couple things i want to show you. >> reporter: a couple years back he photographed one of the men who started it all. chuck barry who's now 89. and another founding father, jerry lee lewis who's 80. and here are some pictures from that first session with bob
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give him a little something to do. and somebody k5i8 back wicame b bunch of different language newspapers. keeping it real simple. >> reporter: more of his greatest hits. southern gothic. johnny cash, waiting to go on stage, a shot capturing the loneliness of life on the road. country stars faith hill and tim mcgraw. tom waits, nora jones, tupac shakur. >> he took his shirt off and i saw the tattoos, i said would you mind my doing one like that? he said yeah. >> reporter: when you took that, did you know how strong it was? >> i thought in was a really powerful image. i thought the simplicity was really powerful. >> reporter: clinch has branched out into making commercials and music videos. this one shot in willie nelson's
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bedroom on his tour bus. ♪ you give your hand to me ♪ and then you say hello >> willie doesn't mind me taking his photograph, but he's not crazy about sitting and being directed and that sort of stuff. so i found ways to work with that. >> reporter: he also got some very candid stills. nelson braiding his hair and indulging in his favorite recreational pastime, smoking a huge stick of weed. i don't know what it would be called it's so big. it's like a cigar. >> somehow i can't remember what happened after that. ♪ but you don't know me >> reporter: and then there are the occasional shoots he wishes he could forget. >> i was at a madonna show, many, many years ago, and i was like in the sweet spot. she came out, and she was like, it was the best part of the show. and i was shooting, shooting, shooting, and i was like, god, i must have shot 100 pictures, have i not run out of lm
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camera, and there was no film in there. so that happened to me only once. >> reporter: ouch. ♪ >> reporter: no doubt one reason he gets along so well with musicians, he knows the language. ♪ >> reporter: wearing yelts another hat to play with the tan jeers blues band, sometimes jamming with the likes of willie and bruce. his harmonica, like his camera, goes everywhere he goes. he grew up on the jersey shore, living in toms river, a few miles down the garden sfats parkway from springsteen country. >> these are some good ones. >> reporter: he got the photography bug from his mother. >> she always had a camera, always still has a camera. and at times i find myself taking pictures of her taking pictures of the family. >> reporter: and from his father he got a taste of classic roc
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classic cars. his prized possession, a 1949 silver streak, the sort of car his father always noticed when he was a kid. >> everywhere we went, he'd be like, that's a '55 chevy or a cadillac. >> reporter: and he's always found a way to work them into the shot. springsteen with a pontiac and in his wife's hudson with clinch's father at the wheel. an old cadillac with neil young's has and neil young inside tooling around nashville. >> you can see the full report on our website, cbs news.com. the overnight news will be right back. we're on a whale. i can't believe my role isn't bigger. real ingredients. unbelievable taste. enjoy i can't believe it's not butter!
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an international team of rowers is maintaining a record pace in the 2400 mile great pacific race. the four-man team started in monterey, california and will land in honolulu in the next day or so. they're way ahead of the pack and on course to shatter the previous record time of 43 days and five hours at sea. rowing used to be a big sport in the united states, and lately it has been making a come back. the sport of rowing has been called a symphony in motion. it's easy to see why, when you watch a team like yale's. eight
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in unity. hubert is the bulldog's captain. >> to work as a unit and to work as one piece together. >> reporter: rowing is the oldest contest the college sport. the first race was the harvard/yale regatta in 1852. many schools still take it very seriously which is one of the reasons the sport is growing. u.s. rowing says its top tier membership rose 27% in 2015. partly because student athletes see it as a way to set themselves apart in the college admissions process. rowing renaissance is also happening on land. at boutique fitness clubs like row house. the crew may row to a different beat, but they're still
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those in the boat as i learned personally. >> give me three more. >>na w na wathat was intense. >> reporter: row house owners saw an opportunity with the ergometer also known at erg. >> it didn't make sense that there wasn't rows of them like treadmills. >> we started to find that a lot of people had history rowing, and they loved it. >> reporter: what's the common misconception about rowing? >> it's 60% legs, 40% more give or take core and 10% arms. so it's really just the opposite of what you would think it is. >> the rhythm is there. long and strong. >> rowing and crew is no joke. >> reporter: jordan is a sports medicine physician. >> if you're doing a hard run or hard row, you're probably burning about the same number of calories. the difference is if your joints become arthritic, running can
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rowing is much less loading force on your joints. >> reporter: even the netflix hit "house of cards" can't resist the erg. the rhythmic sounds of frank underwood's machine provide a sound track and interesting analogy in the series. a politician constantly moving but going nowhere. and every time underwood takes a stroke water rower, the company that makes his erg, gets a bump in sales. the factory here in warren, rhode island has tripled production in the last five years to more than 1,000 machines a week. while there are plenty of people who prefer to go at it solo, frolik says whether you're on the water or dry land, the real benefits can only be had when you're rowing with a crew. >> it's a large group of people breathin tg tohe,
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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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s is captioning funded by cbs it's thursday, july 14th, 2014. this is the "cbs morning news." after weeks of speculation donald trump is set to reveal his running mate. when he's announcing and who he spent last night with. ♪ amazing grace a final farewell in dallas. family members of the fallen officers remember the heroes and their final moments together. >> one thing i would always say to my dad as he walked out the door was good-bye, da
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