Transcripts For KPIX CBS Overnight News 20180129

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>> cordes: long pathway to citizenship. rachel, you wrote this week about the fact that speaker ryan is essentially a centrist on this issue, but he's also afraid to cross conservatives. >> the immigration debate is not about the future of dreamers but the future of a speaker. paul ryan has said many times that he is sim fa anesthetic to the dreamers, they came here at young minors, and the united states is home. however a very conservative house republican conference works by the way do not support a pathway for sit shin to this population, they made him promise when he became speaker that he would never put immigration on the floor that doesn't get the majority of the majority. however, what we're talking about on the senate probably would not get a majority of the majority. the one anecdote i would say to for this toxic concoction for the speaker president trump if he protects it. >> cordes: thank you so much, rachel, ed, dan, jennifer, appreciate you being with us today. and we'll be back with our conversation with illinois democrat tammy duckworth who is expecting to break a big barrier in the senate. legend has it, the first voyagers arrived on canoes, sailing the seas day and night. they knew where they were going, by watching the clouds move in the sky or the way their boats rocked. that's how the waves and stars would speak to them. guide them. sometimes, you can find your way in the world, by getting lost in it. let your legend begin at aulani, a one-of-a-kind disney resort in hawaii >> cordes: senator tammy duckworth is an iraq war veteran, a double amputee and soon she'll be the first senator to give birth while in office. the illinois democrat announced this week that she is expecting a second baby girl in april. a few weeks after her 50th birthday. she wants other women struggling with infertility to know what she went through. ten years of trying to conceive her first child and a miscarriage while campaigning for the senate. what did your doctor say about chances of getting pregnant at 49? >> he said it's the new 40. he said 50-year-old mom is the new 40. i have the most wonderful fertility doctor, he helped me with abigail. if you're willing to go through the process with me step by step it would seem like it takes a long time but we want to do this right. i just had -- like being a mom. >> cordes: i remember that feeling when i had one i felt like super mom then once you have second one, all those illusions are shattered. >> we'll see. i decided to run for the united states senate when i was on maternity leave which was leap of faith to do that. i was congresswoman trying to breast feed, travel, campaign, do my job as united states congresswoman. it was really, really tough. there were a lot of tears and a lot of, why am i doing this. i just want to be home with my daughter. but then i would come across situations like legislation that i could pass i realize, i have to do this. this makes me a better legislator. >> one of the things that you notice when you're doing all that traveling was that a lot of airports didn't have anywhere for you to nurse. >> no. i would go into airports, it's the handy capped stall in the public toilet. that's disgusting. you wouldn't eat a sandwich there, why should i nurse my baby there or pump breast milk, it's humiliating. i tried to pass legislation on it. it's out of committee, mandatory nursing rooms for moms at airports hopefully will get a bill. >> cordes: did you dream about going into politics before all of this happened? >> oh, my, lord, never. >> cordes: duckworth was helicopter pilot in the national guard. her call sign, mad dog. shortly staff material she deployed to iraq - 04 her black hawk was hit with a rocket-propelled grenade. as she was recovering she got a surprise invitation, 13 years ago this week. it. >> was senator durbin who found me in the hospital, he invited all illinois servicemen and women at walter reed, wounded warriors to go to the state of the union. i was one to have who was well enough to go. my first strip out of the hospital. >> cordes: was it emotional to go into that gallery and look down see this democracy, that you sacrificed for. it's overwhelming. still gets to me. that feeling. i was missionless. i was a helicopter pilot with no legs. i was trying to find way to serve my country. we were having issues at walter reed. i just became an advocate for my buddies, i happened to be highest ranking amputee patient. i met senator durbin that night he made the mistake of giving me his personal phone number. i just started calling him. i didn't know any better. after about ten months of this he called me up said, you need to run for congress, that's how i got into this. it's crazy. >> cordes: now you're standing on the floor of the senate and taking on the president on military issues. >> i have a message for cadet, if you cared about our military, you'd stop baiting king jong-un that could put 5,000 american troops and millions of innocent civilians in danger. >> cordes: you called five deferment, draft dodger. >> four for school one for medical reasons that he can't even remember what it was. i have a hang nail on my right foot, it's missing, we have guy who said he had a bone spur that kept him out of the vietnam but he doesn't remember where it was. >> cordes: do you think that disqualifies him from being commander in chief or making decisions about the military? >> no. i think he was elected rightfully to be president of the united states built i don't think that he has the right to question other people's support for our military especially those of us who have served. >> cordes: duckworth is the first disabled woman in the senate. and the first member of congress of thy descent. >> that's a lot of firsts. how does that feel? >> unintentional. the whole being the first sitting senator to give birth i think is ridiculous, it's 201. we need more female senators. we are only 22 of us, a little overwhelmed by how landmark it is when it shouldn't be. it's the 21st century. >> cordes: even someone used to breaking barriers runs into obstacles now and then. >> there was policy in the house but no policy in the senate i have to figure that out. >> cordes: she recently discovered that children are still prohibited on the senate floor which complicates her plans for maternity leave. >> i'm going to take the time i need with my daughter in the middle that have there might be days when i have to -- we have lot of close votes that i need to come in and not let the people of illinois down. but then what do i do with my baby? >> cordes: the senate to behind the times. >> the senate is behind the times. we're going to work on that. >> cordes: and we'll be back in a moment. [ click, keyboard clacking ] [ keyboard clacking ] [ click, keyboard clacking ] ♪ good questions lead to good answers. our advisors can help you find both. talk to one today and see why we're bullish on the future. yours. >> cordes: that's it for us today, thanks for watching. until next week for "face the nation," i'm nancy cordes. have a good one. if you're anything like me, your to-do list just keeps growing. (laughs desperately) it never stops. which is why the online financing application at carmax.com is so convenient. get some of that finance stuff out of the way from wherever you are, at the doctor's office, karate practice or my favorite... back at the doctor's office. knowing before you go means more quality time sewing a costume for the school play that is not going to look anything like a frog. just a little heads-up, mrs. davis... ha ha ha, yay kids! sailing the seas day and night. they knew where they were going, by watching the clouds move in the sky or the way their boats rocked. that's how the waves and stars would speak to them. guide them. sometimes, you can find your way in the world, by getting lost in it. let your legend begin at aulani, a one-of-a-kind disney resort in hawaii and so i, i realized that i loved being on stage. and i loved to act. i loved to sing. ♪ look out because here i come >> now you are confident. there you go. >> reporter: that love of performing and affection for this music educator award winner is why the students are up before dawn, every day. >> if there were no band, then i would only see ms. salgaro one day a week. but then i would rather see her for the whole week. >> they come to school for music. they do. >> they come to school for you. >> yeah. >> what does that mean to you? >> no one has ever put it that way. i would love for them to think back of their time here, not remember, i wake up early for band practice. i want them to remember i worked so hard. if they can there is one particular forest in italy that provides the raw material for some of the finest instruments in the world. seth doane took a walk through the woods. >> reporter: the stunning beauty of the dolamites is apparent to any one who visits italy's alps. but fabio unibene sees much more in this forest. >> this for me is for the piano. >> reporter: he selects wood that is just right for making musical instruments. when you look around a forest like this you can say that is a violin, that is a cello, this is a piano sound board? >> yes, for example this is perfect for the violin. >> reporter: its trunk is long and straight and has few branches or knots. >> this forest, where we are working now. >> reporter: his colleague and sisteren law, piera ciezze says they have been harvesting from this valley almost six centuries. >> the wood of the spruce is very, very light. and elastic. >> that makes it sound better. >> this makes it sound better. >> reporter: the alpine spruce grows evenly at this elevation. it's chopped down in the fall during a waning moon. when there its the least amount of sap in the tree. >> the trees must be not too big, not too small. you must have a piece of wood perfect. perfect without defects. >> the wood is cut into wedges, and aged for at least six years like a fine wine. there is enough aging in the workshop to make violin tops for 1,000 orchestras. that's where bernard newman comes in. >> the minerals that the trees have access to is very, very good for making a wood that is strong and at the same time light. >> reporter: newman and his business partner, american bruce carlson opened up shop together three decades ago in the northern italian town of crimona. where the violin was born, perfected, and where music seeps from its nearly 150 violin shops. the famed stradivarius worked here and is remembered in the city, a unesco world heritage site for violin making. newman carries on the tradition using many of the same tools, and tlhat all important spruce for the face of the instrument. the base is made from maple. >> the wood that i choose has to have the physical qualities. but it also has to have the kind of energy. and, and already it has a voice. >> reporter: you don't think of wood having energy or a voice? >> ye that's the whole thing. so the body of the instrument is an amplifier, natural amplifier. the violinist demonstrated what newman explained to a group of students visiting from maryland. >> if you dupe with this one. you will get a slight different note. it is special wood that, that, vibrates and resonates. >> reporter: and which for centuries led some of the world's greatest violin makers into these singing woods. these birds once affected by oil are heading back home. thanks to dawn, rescue workers only trust dawn, because it's tough on grease yet gentle. i am home, i am home, i am home pssst. what? i switched to geico and got more. more savings on car insurance? a-ha. and an award-winning mobile app. that is more. oh, there's more. mobile id cards, emergency roadside service... more technology. i can even add a new driver... ...right from her phone! geico. expect great savings and a whole lot more. make every day valentine's day with k-y yours and mine. blue for him. purple for her. two sensations. one great way to discover new feelings together. try degree ultraclear black + white ♪ saves your white clothes from yellow stains and black clothes from white marks still with 48 hour sweat protection. try degree ultraclear black + white it won't let you down amazon continues the search for a location for its second headquarters. that doesn't mean the first headquarters in seattle its getting the short end of the stick. jamie yuccas took a look. the spheres, three in all reaching 90 feet high. amazon isn't just reshaping the skyline. they're reinventing the idea of office space. >> a place where all employees in the company can come and hang out, get in touch with nature. an amazon rain forest in cold, rainy downtown seattle. the company asked horticulturist, ron gigliano to make it happen. amazon said have free reign, pick whatever you want. >> oh, hell yeah. >> one of the things i learned here. you can't be afraid to think big. >> reporter: this 62 foot wall its the centerpiece of amazon spheres, made up of 25,000 plants, 200 species from 30 countries. that includes a 55 foot fig free named ruby that could only be brought in by crane. a temporary hole in the roof. there are streams, fish, chocolate plants, vanilla orchids. all designed for employees with high stress jobs to disconnect. do you want people to feel like they're in a tree house? >> yeah, yeah, we want people to walk on this. >> reporter: this is bouncy. >> wait, it's moving. belter put my phone down. >> reporter: amazon pumped $4 billion into this campus, designed for visitors and its rapidly growing seattle base. now, 40,000 workers. one of the complaints you hear is that, amazon came in, and then the prices of everything went through the roof. >> a lot of jobs have been created well beyond the amazon jobs. all the construction jobs that have gone into building this area. >> reporter: and build steve hartman with the story of a man who whistles while he works to make a better nation. [ whistling ] >> reporter: for many people there is nothing like a good whistle to pass the time. but for 54-year-old chris olman, whistling is hardly a distraction. this four-time international whistling champion is partner in the carlisle group. an investment firm. he has been in washington 30 years. working at the highest levels in both the private and public sectors. and along the way he earned a reputation as perhaps d.c.'s only universally admired whistle blower. >> george w. bush, john kasich, george h.w. bush. >> he has performed for them all. >> supreme court justices. >> to rave reviews. >> people seek it out. to me that kind of, encapsulates the power of the pucker. unfortunately, his whistling hasn't always been use theed in harmony. back in '95, then house majority leader dick armey summoned chris to a tense budget negotiation. he wanted a song. it wasn't come to gather or we can work it out, it was, dixie. and the government shut down shortly after. >> so, you could are gu that these lips shut down the federal government. ha-ha. >> needless to say, chris won't do that again. but 20 years later he is not just not whistling dixie anymore. today, he is using his talents almost exclusively for the most apolitical purpose of all. >> prepare yourself. here we go. >> it just transcends the partisanship of washington. >> virtually every day. up to eight times a day. chris whistles happy birr daytona for frday for free tall over d.c. whether they work in cubicle, oval office, democrat or republican. >> happy birthday. >> the whistle helps me get beyond the politics. i am going to love you, honor you. because of you. that is the bottom line. that we have forgot tine love each other and forgot tine respect each other. that is the problem. >> reporter: to that end he wrote a book, encouraging others to find their special gift and use tuit to change lives. he said what america needs right now isn't a big fix. what it needs is a million small gestures. as we end this week with the government shutdown behind, and other battles looming, it might be wise for our leaders to think of the whistler while they work. [ whistling ] >> reporter: steve hartman on the road in washington. >> that's the "overnight news" for this monday. from the cbs broadcast center in new york city, i'm elaine quijano. welcome to the "overnight news." i'm elaine quijano. the flu epidemic sweeping the nation continues to prove deadly for people of all ages. in west palm beach, florida, an autopsy confirmed that 12-year-old dillon winnick its the latest victim of the virus. nationwide, influenza claimed the lives of at least 37 children. but they're not the only ones at risk. manuel bojorquez reports. >> reporter: concerns about the aggressive flu season are spreading after the deaths of seemingly healthy people, her father says she had just helped her two children and husband recover from the virus. >> she did obviously have the flu, was struggling taking deep breaths. i never got a chance to talk to her again. >> reporter: the cdc says the flu is more severe sending people to the hospital at a higher rate than any year since 2009. by the end of this season it is predicted 700,000 people will have been hospitalized. 34 million will have contracted the virus. surprisingly the second hardest hit group, babyboomers. doctors like bobby kupur of jackson memorial hospital are urging people not new let their guard down. even though flu season is halfway over. nasty strain of the flu, in a segment of the population that may have not gotten the shot into early what we are seeing. >> that's correct. >> reporter: one reason it is hitting schools and children bring it home. >> reporter: the reports of flu related deaths are enough for those who typically skip the shot to get it. like mitch philpot of texas. >> at home in the bed and bam they're gone like that. which is, that's scary. >> reporter: to be clear it is not the worst season on record. doctors say there is no reason to panic. the cdc says it is aware supplies of the medicine use theed to fight the virus could be running low in some of the hardest hit areas and is working to get more there. >> president trump goes before a joint session of congress tomorrow night to deliver his first official state of the union address. a center piece is expected to be his plan to overhaul the u.s. immigration system. cbs news chief congressional correspondent, nancy cordes joins me now from washington. so, nancy, the president release aid framework of what he wants on an immigration bill. what's been the congressional reaction to the proposal? >> well he has kind of gotten hit by all sides. which is, interesting given the fact that congress has been pushing him for weeks to lay out where he stands on this issue. but, his proposal includes a pathway to citizenship. it its not a quick one. it would take, ten years maybe more. for these so-called dreamers, young people who are brought to the country illegally, as children. and that has some conservatives of in arms, they say that amounts to amnesty. they're surprised the white house would formally put that on the table. and then you have democrats who say that pathway is cover for what is otherwise a proposal that would radically change the nation's immigration system. prohibiting, legal immigrants from being able to sponsor a sibling or, or an adult child or a parent, instead they would only be able to bring in a spouse, or -- or a child under the age of 18. so democrats say, a sweeping change like that, that would essentially cut legal immigration in half, doesn't belong in a narrow plan to give legalization and protection to this dreamer population. but it might be the only thing that would convince conservatives to get behind such a deal. so the politics are, incredibly complicated, and that's what you are going to see, both republicans and democrats, fighting over, both behind closed doors and out in the open. this week. >> and nancy, specifically, i know you have been reporting on a bipartisan group of senators working on a deal that would protect so-called dreamers. what exactly do their efforts stand right now? >> well, you know, it will be interesting to see how much influence they had. but what they can try to do is to influence the negotiations taking place between a group of four democratic and republican leaders from the house and senate. those are the four people who are going to be taking that white house proposal, taking the various bills that have been written in the house and senate, and trying to craft something that can pass. and that means, that they have got to be a lot more worried about house republicans frankly. than, than about senate moderates. >> cbs news chief congressional correspondent, nancy cordes, nancy, thank you very much. >> thank you for having me, elaine. watch the president's state of the union address here on cbs. our coverage begins at 9:00 p.m. eastern. now if congress and the president can reach an agreement on immigration and if it include money for a border wall, the project will still face obstacles. one of them its the strong opposition from many people who live along its proposed path. like the tohono o'dom tribe. mireya villarreal has the their story. >> reporter: in nogales, arizona the border wall is framed with metal pylons and ends ten miles west of the city. this is the fence? >> this is the fence. >> reporter: this is a bunch of sticks. >> this is a bunch of old sticks that have been here, for decades. and it continues on. >> reporter: a large portion of the border patrol's territory in southern arizona includes the pwall continued to grow closer n both sides of the nation, criminal smugglers have funneled on to sacred land. >> this is the tohono o'odom indian reservation. this is the size of connecticut. >> i read stuff on the amount of illegal smuggling through here, drugs, humans. this is a pretty intense area. >> it is very sparsely populated. so the criminal element tries to exploit the folks. >> reporter: the tohono o'odom nation covers the sonoran desert in arizona, part of the sacred land and people are in mexico. many members believe they've were born to protect this land and have vowed to fight the federal government on building president trump's big, bultful wall. >> at one time we were able to, drive through and walk through. when there was no border patrol agents. but, that was years ago. >> so you have to go through agents to get to and from your own land? >> right. >> in the interest of homeland security, tohono o'odom leaders say they are willing to work with the federal government. they suggested a virtual fence. many tribe members are skeptical of the federal government and worry they could lose their heritage if the president gets his way. >> we just want to follow our traditional ways. we have a unique culture. we still practice those. [ speaking foreign language ] i said i am o'odom, i follow my o'odom way all for this land. >> reporter: an hour-long look at the controversy, called, "the wall a nation divided." premieres tonight, 8:00 p.m. eastern on our streaming service, cbs. click on cbsnews.com. the "overnight news" will be the "overnight news" will be right back. make every day valentine's day with k-y yours and mine. blue for him. purple for her. two sensations. one great way to discover new feelings together. ♪ tired of wrestling with seemingly impossible cleaning tasks? using wipes in the kitchen, and sprays in the bathroom can be ineffective. try mr. clean magic eraser. simply add water, and use in your kitchen for burnt on food, in your bathroom to remove soap scum, and on walls to remove scuffs and marks. it erases 4x more permanent marker per swipe. for an effective, multi-surface clean, use mr. clean magic eraser. brand power. helping you buy better. the pennsylvania legislature has over a whack a week to redr bound drives the congressional districts. the state supreme court ruled that they were unconstitutionally gerrymandered to benefit republicans. mo rocca has a look. >> goofy is over there kicking donald. >> thought goofy was here doing the kicking. you think this is goofy kicking donald. >> reporter: this not a rorschach test and these are not patients. >> those are his ears flapping. >> reporter: the ears are flapping. i get it. they're suburban philadelphia voters who live next door to pennsylvania's seventh congressional district. nicknamed, goofy kicking donald. for its absurd, well, you can see why. >> wait a minute. would goofy ever kick donald? >> ha-ha. >> i don't think and stay in the disney world. >> reporter: this district is one of the most gerrymandered in america. >> what we are looking at its a disgrace, political disgrace. there is no reason for that kind of gerrymandering. here it is, folks. right in front of you. >> reporter: and welcome to gerrymandering 101. i promise you this won't hurt. much. gerrymandering is the manipulation of voting district lines usually to give one party an advantage over the other. the word comes from massachusetts governor, l. bridge gary who in 1812 signed off on this salamander shaped district, hence the term, gerrymander. which sound a lot better than garymander. there are 435 members in the house of representatives. pennsylvania has a lot of people. so it gets 18 house seats. like so. now some of these shapes, not just the seventh are pretty wacky. we can agree on that. now i know you are asking why not just lay a nice rectangular grid over pennsylvania. problem solved, right. well you can't do that. because people don't live evenly spread out. you got a lot of people in philly, bunch in pittsburgh. not a lot in place is with no dots. personally i would live in hershey. each district has the to have the same number of people for. that reason and others we will get to later the shapes of districts are almost never going to be perfect squares. but how these shapes got to be so wacky its the issue here. pennsylvania democrats say the republican controlled state house drew these lines or, gerrymandered them, to create as many safe republican seats as possible. last election, republicans won little more than half of the statewide vote. but the lion share of congressional seats. 13 out of 18. thank you for listening and let's return to our angry voters. >> we are not getting the representation that weep were intended to get. and, the politicians just jiggled it around to meet their need. not our needs. >> they're angry, because the they say their democratic leaning communities, were deliberately kept out of the seventh. and lumped into the heavily republican 16th district. ensuring both went red. >> it causes people i think to wonder -- why should they go out to feet. is my vote going off to count? >> it was done to us personally. and there was no rational justification for that other than blind, naked power. >> i think it is very difficult for us to try to draw the lines. >> both parties are guilty of jerry manned ergsering. >> examples of gerrymandering. >> reporter: both parties have long decried it. >> the fact is that jerry manneders has become a national scandal. >> it is absolutely essential that we, block the gerrymandering ways of the democratic party. >> reporter: increasingly the discussion around gerrymandering has been about the threat it poses to american democracy itself. few current representatives want to talk about it. as rod blum does. >> we shouldn't have to rig the system in our favor, or the democrats shouldn't have to rig the system in their favor. >> reporter: a tea party republican who represents iowa's first. a democratic leaning district. blum says he can't afford to ignore any constituents. >> with gerrymandering, the politician knows that they can be extreme right or extreme left and get re-elected. if the district was like mine, split evenly you are looking at every bill. what does a republican think of this. democrat thing of this. in penned enlt think of it. rancheros his is not a typical district. nationwide, gerrymandering is one reason that the number of competitive congressional seats, those where both parties have a good shot at winning, has plunged over the past 20 years, from 164 to just 72. now keep an eye on pennsylvania seventh. those district lines we hatch been talking about are redrawn every ten years right after the census. usually by the state legislature. in a process, redistricting. get a load of how the 7th changed over the years. few know this process better than kim brace. for more than 40 years he has been hired, mostly by democrats to help draw congressional districts. he was the only map maker we i've de identified that was willing to talk to us on camera. >> you have a lot of power in your pen? >> that's true. it's not your pen. it is now a mouse. >> okay. mouse. >> it's a mouse. >> reporter: and armed with mountains of voter data. it's become more science than art. th theoretically you could say, 5300 block of river road is a lot more democratic now. let's cut that out when weep draw the map. >> sure, possible. that's possible. >> but brace says there are a lot of factors that have to be kidded. for instance, districts have to be contiguous. communities of interest should be kept together. and, how about this one -- >> incumbent reap quequest and protection something the court recognized is a fact of redistricting life. >> incumbent protection. like their spotted owls. >> or somethiline. >> yes. >> but this was precisely the rationale back in 2001 when to protect the seat of illinois democrat, bobby rush, kim brace cut out this residential block, home to a young primary challenger named barack obama. >> you gerrymandered the future president of the united states out of a congressional district. >> right. >> so, he then went for u.s. senate. and used that elevation to then become president. >> not even a president could do what you did? >> probably not. i guess. >> the general perception it seems not just from democrats from a lot of republican whose want limits on gerrymandering, its that gerrymandering is bad for democracy. >> it's not always the case. but, one person's gerrymander is another one's beautiful art creation. >> there may be no better example of this than brace's most famous or infamous creation. illinois' fourth. be better known as the ear muches. it was drawn to comply with the voting rights act which mandates that racial minorities be able to elect one of their own. and so he connected two latino neighborhood on chicago's west side, by this narrow highway corridor. so, we're in the 4th right now. >> correct. >> but you say over here i am in the illinois 7th. and now, i'm in the ill now 4th. now, i'm in the illinois 5th. so, three different districts right there. >> right there. >> amazing. >> that is amazing. >> reporter: back in the 1990s racial gerrymandering dominated the discussion. then in 2010, the gop launch an am besh us campaign to within control of state governments. and redraw the lines in their favor. they succeeded in a big way. >> it was a sea change. we have now seen, congress, being in control by the republicans for this entire decade. >> while republican house candidates won about half of the nationwide vote in 2016. they took 55% of the seats. 241 to the democart's 194. but, and this is important. even if lines were not being drawn to favor republicans, democacara democrats would be at something of disadvantage says stanford political scientist, jonathan rodin. that's because of where they live. >> democrats have been clustered in cities in the industrialized states ever since newt deal. ever since fdr. cities have become more democratic. rural areas more republican. >> rodin studies how increasingly republicans are spread across rural areas and democrats packed into urban areas. kid the influence on a state like missouri. >> democrats are highly concentrated in st. louis and kansas sitcity. the elections are close. a place that democrats can win statewide. the best they can hope for in an eight seat delegation is three seats. the current outcome is two. >> is the issue gerrymandering or geography. >> geography and gerrymandering. and, inned or r order to under outcomes we have to understand how they react. >> but it is gerrymandering that is before the u.s. supreme court right now. a ruling is expected this spring. iowa's rod blum is welling to risk any advantage gerrymandering currently gives his party. >> if putting curbs on partisan gerrymandering meant ceding control to the house to the democrats how would you feel? >> i'm okay. need to recruit. get out there. do a good job of governing. and sell our message to the voters. >> losing an election. and i think the opposite. if you lose an election. it is okay. it's the way our government is set up. not to have the people be here, 30, 40, 50 years. >> as for our voters in pennsylvania, for them, a decision can't come soon enough. >> everyone wants to be treated try degree ultraclear black + white ♪ saves your white clothes from yellow stains and black clothes from white marks still with 48 hour sweat protection. try degree ultraclear black + white it won't let you down 60% of women are wearing the wrong size pad and can experience leaks discover always my fit. find the number that's right for your flow and panty size on the top of any always pack. the better the fit, the better it protects. always. 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(mellow music) ♪ the recent california wildfires were the worst in state's recorded history. when the smoke cleared, dedicated humans took it upon themselves to help injured animals get back on their feet. here is jamie yuccas. >> reporter: the largest wildfire in california's history threatened not only humans but also wildlife. desperate to escape the flames. the thomas fire proved too much for two female bears. one of them pregnant. and a five-month-old mountain lion. all suffered severe burns to their paws. uc davis veterinarian, jamie peyton. >> getting them back to the wild vi vital. we don't want them to get used to being around people. vets turned to all tornado tich method. attached fish skins with high levels of collagen to their paws. and then wrapped them in rice paper and corn husks. it is the first time the procedure had been performed in the u.s. but it now gives hope to future burn victims. the bears also received acupuncture. chiropractic care, and laser therapy. while the lion kept eating the fish skin off its paws, the treatments were enough to get the bears back on their feet. in just a matter of weeks. and into the wild. california fish and wildlife build them new dens to replace the ones lost in the fire. a happy ending to a bear's tale. jamie yuccas, cbs news, los angeles. >> the "overnight news" will we end the half-hour with the return of a hollywood legend. not seen in half a century. mark strassmann cuts right to the chase. >> reporter: the hollywood car chase was born during this thrill ride. on the streets of san francisco. in the 1968 classic "bullet." steve mcqueen chased the bad guys almost ten minutes on screen. man and mustang. steve mcqueen and his classic pony car. the epitome of cool. even faster than mcqueen's car, its disappearance after the movie. until now. it was never meant to bea secret. it was just our car. >> robbie and her son sean shared the family secret. in 1974, robbie's late husband robert saw this ad. the bullet mustang list ford sale in "road & track" magazine. he bought it for $6,000. >> it was unbelievable. i mean we had seen the movie. then to see the car. >> reporter: it still has the the movie camera mounts, a huge hole, cult in tt in the trunk f smoke machine and the horsepower engine. at one point, steve mcqueen tracked them down and asked to buy back what he called "my car." >> it was part of our family at that point. it had too many memories. >> you weren't giving it up? >> no. >> reporter: the family retired their car in 1980. they garaged it out of sight. >> this is the most personal thing that we have. >> reporter: sean restored it, top to bottom. a tribute to more than steve mcqueen. >> i see the car, i see my father. >> reporter: they were ready to let everyone see the car too. and turned to ford's chief mustang designer, daryl beamer, for help. >> the best part in my mind. >> beamer still admires the movie star he fell in love with as a teenager, "the bullet mustang." at the car maker's auto show earlier this month it unveiled the original bullet car restored to its faded glory. >> i was emotional it go. like a family member leaving the house. >> to see it in real life and site in its unrestored authentic condition was just phenomenal. >> reporter: star power has staying power. just like old school cool. mark strassmann, cbs news, dearborn, michigan. that's the "overnight news" for monday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back later for the morning news and krs this morning. from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm it's monday, january 29th, 2018. this is the "cbs morning news." >> and the grammy goes to. "that's what i like." >> 24 carat magic. bruno mars. >> 24 carat magic, bruno mars. >> bruno mars sweeps the grammys and women at the awards show make a social statement. president trump prepares for his first state of the union address and he opens up in a wide ranging interview. a shooting rampage at a car wash in a small pennsylvania

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