Transcripts For KCCI CBS Overnight News 20151222

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the clinton campaign's data. clinton is still the favorite to win the nomination, but a loss in iowa or new hampshire could draw out the process, especially because sanders is sitting on a campaign war chest fueled by grassroots donors, and, maurice, that means less time for clinton to position herself for the general election. with three simple words. my name is chris noth and i will listen. from maine to maui, thousands of high school students across the country are getting in on the action by volunteering in their communities. chris young: action teams of high school students are joining volunteers of america and major league baseball players to help train and inspire the next generation of volunteers. carlos pea: it's easy to start an action team at your school so you, too, can get in on the action. if you were a hippie in the '60s, you need to know. yeah, and something else that's cool. what? osteoporosis is preventable. all: osteo's preventable? right on! if you dig your bones, protect them. all: cbs cares! on the republican side, another candidate quit the race today. and new jersey governor chris christie is making a move in new hampshire. major garrett has been spending time with christie in the granite state. >> i ask for your vote, for your trust and for your confidence. >> reporter: this town hall in pelham was chris christie's 41st in new hampshire. since the terrorist attacks in paris and san bernardino, christie has noticed a tidal shift in anxiety. 75% of his questions now are about terrorism, triple what they once were. responding to that fear. >> reporter: we rode on the christie bus and asked if fear can get the best of people? >> i don't think that we should be afraid of people because of what religion they practice. >> reporter: or how they look? >> of course. that goes hand in hand. what you need to be fearful of is not having enough intelligence to know the difference between a jihadist and a peaceful muslim. >> reporter: how do you do that? >> you first of all ramp back up the nsa program, which never should have been taken down. you give real support to the fbi. >> reporter: and what would christie do to recruit more arab and nato allies in the fight against isis? >> we have to say to them, this take on together. what skin are you going to have in this game? >> reporter: what if they say, not nearly as much as you want or you demand? >> well, you know what, that's when i become my charming and persuasive self, major, and that's what we do. >> reporter: christie is still running fourth but he's doubled his support in a month. after new hampshire. he couldn't even submit a full slate for the delegates for the ohio primary. >> i'm not worried about that. if we win in ohio, we'll get all the delegates anyway. >> reporter: christie has had to learn patience as for months his campaign teetered on the edge of irrelevancy while distancing himself from a scandal back home. >> listen, the stuff that happened in new jersey, the bridge stuff matures you. when you take that level of abuse and then you come out the other side of it fine, you're a much better office holder. >> reporter: the ranks of christie's republican rivals shrank by one today when lindsey graham dropped out. maurice, graham took credit for persuading republicans in this race to be more willing than they were before to send ground troops to syria to fight isis. >> major garrett in new hampshire tonight. thank you. we are getting a chilling look tonight at life for some victims of boko haram, the isis-linked terrorists in africa who kidnapped hundreds of killed 1,000 people in just the past two months. debora patta reports from cameroon tonight where a woman freed from captivity but whose ordeal is far from over. >> reporter: aisha musa has been living in a crowded refugee camp for seven months. she survives by selling corn meal at the local market. musa was kidnapped by boko haram militants. they killed her family and forced her at gunpoint to become a jihadi bride. "they show you a gun," she said, "and then whatever they say, you have to follow their commands." she told us her captor would lock her in during the day. at night he would rape her. "he would go on operations and kill people," she said, "and then come home and force me to be with him." musa was rescued by the cameroon ordeal was finding out she was pregnant by her rapist. she told us, "i am not enjoying that i have a baby from a boko haram man." but she is resigned and there are moments of tenderness. her story is not unusual. boko haram has captured hundreds of girls, the most infamous the over 200 chibok schoolgirls kidnapped more than 18 months ago. musa never saw the chibok girls but often heard the fighters speak of them. like many of the other girls here, they too were forced to marry the militants. and in a double injustice, many are now stigmatized by their community. girls like musa are regarded as spoiled goods, the baby a very public reminder of a cruel and unfair shame. debora patta, cbs news, minawao, aaa said today that for the first time since 2009 the average price of gas nationwide is below $2 a gallon, about 42 cents cheaper than a year ago. a report out today points to a growing danger on the roads, drowsy drivers. those leaving the night shift could be an accident waiting to happen. here's anna werner. >> reporter: this man just came off a night shift. watch the video on the left as he veers all over the road. nearly half the night shift workers tested nearly crashed. dr. charles czeisler worked on the study. >> they were crossing over the middle line. they were having trouble staying in their lane. more than 40% of the drives had to be terminated because it was judged to be unsafe. >> reporter: more than half the workers tested said they nodded off behind the wheel at least once a week on their way home, and they did no better in the test. >> they knew they were being watched, yet even in that while they were driving in a simulation of their commute home from work. >> reporter: dallas-area convenience store manager shariq khan starts work at 11:00 p.m. and works through the night. >> sometimes when i get off of my job, when i drive back home, i feel like i'm falling asleep. >> reporter: he believes the lack of sleep led to him having a couple minor accidents. researchers suggest night shift workers like khan skip driving and find another way home, but his area lacks public transportation. >> there's no alternative. there's no bus or no train service there. and i can't afford to have a taxi every day. >> reporter: researchers say night shift workers are fighting their own natural sleep patterns and they can't sleep as well during the day no matter how much they try. they lose about two hours of sleep a day, and maurice, after a few days, they've lost the equivalent of a whole night's sleep. >> okay. anna werner, thank you. from victory to defeat in about two minutes. universe mix-up. "star wars" did even better than expected at the box office. and meet a star in sheep's the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. silent night holy night sleep in heavenly peace sleep in heavenly peace enough pressure in here for ya? i'm gonna take mucinex sinus-max. too late, we're about to take off. these dissolve fast. they're new liquid gels. and you're coming with me... you realize i have gold status? mucinex sinus-max liquid gels. dissolves fast to unleash max strength medicine. we've been changing things up with k-y love. oh yeah. it's a pleasure gel that magnifies both our sensations. it gives us chills in places we've never gotten chills before. yeah, it makes us feel like... dare to feel more with new k-y love. (cell phone rings) where are you? well the squirrels are back in the attic. mom? your dad won't call an exterminator... can i call you back, mom? he says it's personal this time... you call at the worst time. it's what you do. if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance, you switch to geico. it's what you do. where are you? it's very loud there. in the end, the right contestant ended up with the crown, but many felt the host earned himself a dunce cap. mireya villarreal fills us in on the confusion at the miss universe pageant. >> colombia! >> reporter: it's the moment every pageant contestant dreams of. >> i have to apologize. the first runner-up is colombia. miss universe 2015 is philippines! >> reporter: but for miss colombia, a moment that should have been filled with joy and confusion and awkwardness when host steve harvey realized he crowned the wrong winner. >> it was my mistake. >> reporter: but steve harvey said the reason for his confusion was how the names were listed on the card. after the show he apologized again. >> reporter: to add insult to injury, when he posted an apology on social media, he misspelled philippines and colombia. critics went online to skewer harvey. pageant coordinators put out a statement saying, "unfortunately a live telecast means human error can come into play." miss colombia took her loss graciously. >> everything happens for a reason, so i'm happy. >> reporter: for miss philippines, the real miss universe, the crowning moment will be best remembered as one blunders. >> it's a very non-traditional crowning moment, isn't it? it's very 2015. >> reporter: the ratings for this year's pageant broadcast had over a million fewer viewers than the last broadcast, and maurice, a cbs officer for the pageant actually told cbs radio that they would absolutely have harvey back for the 2016 pageant, saying the world would forgive and forget. >> okay, mireya, thank you very much tonight. well, in a moment the nfl filled with rough play. today the nfl suspended new york giants wide receiver odell beckham, jr., for one game. he was whistled for three personal fouls yesterday, including this vicious helmet-to-helmet hit on carolina panthers' cornerback josh norman. the league said beckham placed opponents at unnecessary rik of injury. "star wars" fans were out in force over the weekend. the sci-fi adventure took in more than half a billion dollars worldwide, $248 million of that was in the u.s. and canada where it broke the opening weekend record set this year by and we'll be right back. woman: what does it feel like when a woman is having a heart attack? chest pain, like there's a ton of weight on your chest. severe shortness of breath. unexplained nausea. cold sweats. there's an unusual tiredness and fatigue. there's unfamiliar dizziness or light-headedness. unusual pain in your back, neck, jaw, one or both arms, even your upper stomach, are signs you're having a heart attack. don't make excuses. make the call to 9-1-1 immediately. learn more at womenshealth.gov/heartattack. while i was on a combat patrol in baqubah, iraq, a rocket-propelled grenade took my arm off at the shoulder. i was discharged from the army, and i've been working with the wounded warrior project since 2007. warriors, you don't have to be severely wounded to be with the wounded warrior project. we do have a lot of guys that have post-traumatic stress disorder. kind of helps you wrap your mind around what did happen over there. my name is norbie, and yes, i do suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder, we have quite a yarn to end the broadcast, and it's spun by jim axelrod. [ rooster crowing ] >> reporter: on a bucolic farm just outside burlington, vermont, lives a sheep named sweet pea. she really is so sweet. sweet pea's adopted parents, john and jen churchman have a give- and-take relationship with the land. they saved her life. she changed theirs. >> we're very grateful for all it's very surreal. >> sweet pea, how you doing? >> reporter: when sweet pea developed an infection last winter, jen and john described the touch-and-go on facebook. so when you posted that sweet pea was in trouble, your followers must have been quite worked up about this. >> they were. they wanted updates all the time. >> this is prem. this is sunny. >> reporter: the churchmans brought sweet pea up to their house with barn-mates violet, sunny and prem to keep her company and to celebrate when she got better. >> we started about -- we would bring the others up for a party. >> someone said, if they do that it's going to be a sheepover. >> we were playing with this and people on facebook said, you have to write a book. >> reporter: they self-published 4,000 copies of "the sheepover." john went to a nearby bookstore, the "flying pig," to see if he could drum up any interest. >> i've been in this business a long time, and i had never seen anything quite like it. >> reporter: the store's owner photographs. >> there's nothing with this collage photographic style that i've seen in the children's book world. so i think it's groundbreaking. >> reporter: when she blogged a review, a big-time book agent, brenda bowen, didn't waste a second. >> it's granular level rare. >> never happens. >> rarely to never, yes. >> reporter: so now john and jen churchman are farmers and authors. >> we have three books right now, but we have ten more behind that that are ready to be in production. >> reporter: with every one of their 18 sheep a potential story, wool is no longer the most valuable product coming out of their pen. jim axelrod, cbs news, essex, vermont. >> and that is the "overnight news" for this tuesday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back with us a little bit later for the morning york city, i'm maurice dubois. this is the "cbs overnight news." >> welcome to the "overnight news." i'm jericka duncan. murder charges have been filed in las vegas against a woman who police say drove her car up the curb and plowed through crowds of people on a sidewalk. one person was killed, dozens of others injured. what's more, there was a child in the car. police don't have a motive, but the suspect is being held without bail. john blackstone reports. >> reporter: the usually busy las vegas strip was crowded instead with emergency vehicles after the 1996 model oldsmobile pedestrians on the sidewalk. antonio had just stepped out of the casino when the car sped past. >> people were bouncing off the front of the car. you could hear it. the windshield was smashed. she rode on the sidewalk and accelerated and just kept mowing everyone down. >> reporter: soon after police say 24-year-old lakeisha halloway pulled into a casino parking lot and told the valet to call 911. >> it looked like she wasn't even trying to stop the car. she had both of her hands on the wheel and was looking straight forward. there were men running after her trying to stop the vehicle, and they couldn't get to her. >> good morning, everybody. >> reporter: clark county sheriff joe lombardo doesn't think this was an act of terror but still can't rule it out. >> as far as terrorism, we don't know what the intent was behind it, and we don't know enough of her background to make that determination. we have not had the time or the luxury to get through all those investigative leads yet. >> reporter: lombardo says holloway came to las vegas from oregon about a week ago and had 3-year-old child, who was also in the vehicle as she ran people down. >> she did not demonstrate signs of being under the influence of alcohol, but we had a drug recognition expert respond to the scene and determine that he believed she to be under some sort of stimulant. >> reporter: investigators have not yet determined a motive for this unusual attack. as might be expected here on the las vegas strip, maurice, all 35 of the injured were visitors coming from several states as well as canada and mexico. also in las vegas, a different type of tragedy. this one at the miss universe pageant, on a live show being watched by millions around the world. host steve harvey announced the winner, and he got it wrong. it was an awkward moment for the winner, the runner-up and the entire pageant. nischelle turner was backstage after the mix-up. >> reporter: it's not the of the universe, but it's probably the biggest flub in the history of mitsdzss universe. imagine this, seconds ticking down on the end of the live broadcast and everyone is trying to figure out how to tell the announced winner that she's actually first runner-up. >> miss universe 2015 is -- colombia! [ applause ] >> reporter: for about 2 1/2 minutes, she was the reigning queen of miss universe, until host steve harvey returned and said this. >> i have to apologize. the first runner-up is colombia. miss universe 2015 is philippines. appeared stunned. for more than a minute, those on stage seemed at a loss for what to do next. host harvey quickly admitted his error. >> i will take responsibility for this. it was my mistake. it was on the card. >> reporter: unfortunately, it wasn't harvey's only mistake of the night. he tweeted -- he misspelled philippines and colombia. the tweet was quickly treated -- deleted and corrected. what could be seen as a final indignity, the crown was taken to miss colombia and barely made it to miss philippines' head before cutting to the final credits. the official miss universe posted an official twitter page. >> so very non-traditional crowning, isn't it? >> yes. very 2015. organization issued a statement. >> reporter: just wow. i was a preliminary judge for this year's pageant, so i did get to see the inner workings of everything. and got to see just how seriously these ladies take this contest. i tell you what, last night it was craziness inside the arena, as well. the crowd was booing. people wouldn't leave, despite repeated apologies from the p.a. system and asking everyone to leave. they just didn't want to see the end of it. a funeral will be held the day after christmas for the young hero who shielded three friends from gunfire when they sound themselves in the middle of a gang war. 15-year-old zaveon dobson died in the cross fire. his friends weren't hurt, but the whole city of knoxville is fighting back tears. david begnaud reports now from the football field where the young man was a star. >> reporter: on this football standout who had star potential. the week before he was killed, he went to a stop the violence rally with his mother. this morning, people around the country are hailing her son a hero. >> it's part of me that want to be angry, but i just can't. >> reporter: because you're so proud of what he did? >> yes. >> reporter: president obama tweeted -- >> reporter: zaveon's story has dominated social media. kimberly in california tweeted -- >> reporter: how does that make you feel? >> it made me feel like, wow, you're doing your job as a mother. >> reporter: knoxville police say zaveon was playing video games with friends when he stepped outside to talk to a the middle of gang gunfire. >> he jumped on top of three to shield them from the >> reporter: do you wonder "why my child?" >> yes. >> reporter: what do you say to those gang members that shot your son? >> stop the violence. stop it! he asked me one time, what am i going to do? what is it in it for me? i said, zaveon, your time coming. when his time came, the trumpets sounded. the angels came down and they took my baby to heaven. i know they did. and he's looking down smiling, because he made an impact on the whole world. >> reporter: there were five gang members who all fired at zaveon dobson, according to police. one was killed by another gang member. another is in jail this morning and police are looking for the three others. zaveon dobson's mother will bury be right back. when heartburn hits fight back fast tums smoothies starts dissolving the instant it touches your tongue and neutralizes stomach acid at the source tum, tum, tum, tum apple is the biggest and richest company in the world. and it finds itself at the heart of some of the biggest issues facing american companies today. there's a battle over the encryption used in apple products. the debate over companies hiding profits overseas and the challenges of doing business in china. apple is also notoriously secretive. but charlie rose was invited into apple headquarters for "60 minutes." >> go. >> thank you. thank you. it's been an incredible year for apple. >> reporter: tim cook has been running apple for the past four before that -- >> we had some real revolutionary products. >> reporter: the stage belonged to apple's late co-founder steve jobs. >> we're going to make history together today. >> reporter: jobs transformed the computer from a cumbersome machine into perhaps the most personal and sleek consumer product of all-time. the iphone is 12,000 times more powerful than the original mcintosh and next year it will have sold 1 billion units. following steve jobs was one of the most challenging successions imaginable. a daunting responsible for the man he hand picked, tim cook. >> i have never met anyone on the face of the earth like him before. >> reporter: never met anyone on the face of the earth like him >> no, not one person. >> reporter: not one? >> who had this incredible and canny ability to see around the driving force for perfection. >> reporter: the spirit of steve jobs hovers over apple. he was a founder like no other. a volatile visionary capable of creating products people wanted before they even knew it. cook is a passionate engineer from alabama. on the apple campus, employees still talk about steve jobs in the same way that tim coo does. >> it's a bar of excellence that merely good isn't good enough, it has to be great. steve used to say insanely great. >> reporter: you believe you can do things other companies can't do? >> you do, you do. we all do. and we have, fortunately. >> reporter: it begins on the apple campus at 9:00 a.m. every monday morning at the executive team meeting. name search of the brains of apple and someone said go in this room and you'll find it. is this the place? >> no, no, this is not the place. >> reporter: attendance is mandatory. one of the most important people at apple. they wouldn't let us attend the meeting, but they were eager to tell us what they liked so much about their company. that's jeff williams, officially named the new chief operating officer this week. and that's eddie cue, he is the guy who helped create i-tunes. >> it's amazing to work at a place where you're building products that everybody in the world uses, whether it's a 2-year-old or a 100-year-old. they get to experience the products that we're building, and that's amazing. >> reporter: is the dna of steve jobs baked deeply into everything just so? >> it is, it is. this is steve's company. this is still steve's company. it was born that way, it's still that way. so his spirit, i think, will always be the dna of this company. >> reporter: and if there was to sharing jobs' dna, it would be this man, jonathan ive, apple's chief design officer. he's considered by many at apple to be the most important person at the company. every apple device on the market today was either created or inspired by this reserved and polite son of a british silver smith. we met ive in his design studio. but apple's preoccupation with secrecy allowed us to only see so much. what's interesting in this room is that i see these covers over some of these desks. why is that? >> so you can't see what's underneath. >> reporter: meaning if i could see what's underneath it, i would know where the future is of apple. >> you would know what we're working on next. so that's one of the reasons that it's extraordinarily rare that people come into the design studio. >> reporter: that's why you don't like people in this room, period? we don't like people in this room, period. >> reporter: his team of 22 designers are a very close group. in 15 years, only two have left the company. we noticed that his studio is quiet and looks a lot like an apple store. no coincidence, he designed both around his signature wooden here ive and his team create prototypes of future products before the specifications are sent overseas to be manufactured with. the iphone 6 and 6 plus, the design team made 10 different sized models before deciding which worked best. >> we chose these two because partly they just felt -- they felt right. they somehow -- not from a tactile point of view, but just emotionally, it felt like a good size. >> reporter: do you do this of dedication to emotional context? >> this is the tip of the iceberg, because we found the different textures consider my impacts your perception of the product, what it's like to hold it, what it's like to feel it. so the only way that we know how to resolve and address and develop all of those issues is to make models, is to make prototypes. >> reporter: he showed us how he prototyped the apple watch. it begins with a sketch of the watch casing, then it's transformed into a three dimensional electronic blueprint. that is sent to this high precision milling device nobody as a cnc machine. there in this cnc machine is now machining incredibly accurately the form, the back of the watch. and all of the tiniest details, as well. >> reporter: once it's been carved, the prototype of the watch casing is sanded and polished by hand by veteran craftsman. his team overseas every design detail, including testing hundreds of different shades of red, blue, and yellow for the watch bands. >> all of these things, if we manage to get them right, you sort of sense that it's authentic, really thoughtfully conceived object. >> reporter: ive described the process that comes next, turning a prototype into a working product requires a high level of complex engineering. when he wanted to make the new head of hardware engineering to create a battery powerful enough to last all day but also small enough to fit into the slim cased design. >> every tenth of a millimeter in our product is sacred. >> reporter: every tenth of a millimeter is sacred. >> with this design, it involved mechanical designers, tool makers, chemists, and software engineers to design a pack to fit within the surfaces of the product but still work reliably. >> reporter: one of the most complex engineering challenges involves the iphone camera, the most used feature of any apple product. that's the entire camera you're looking at in my hand. how many parts are in here? >> there's over 200 separate individual parts in that one module there. >> reporter: graham is in charge of a team of 800 engineers and solely to the camera. he showed us a microsuspension system that steadies the camera when your hand shakes. >> this whole auto focus motor here is suspended on four wires, you'll see them coming in here. these are four wires that are less than half of a human hair's width and that moves it in x and y. so tha allows us to stabilize for the hand shake. >> reporter: in the camera lab, engineers calibrate the camera to perform in any type of lighting. >> you have bright, bright noon and this you go, sunset now. there we go. so there's different types of quality of lighting from morning, bright sunshine, the noon daylight, and then finally sunset. we can simulate all of those here. so believe it or not, to capture one image, there's 24 billion operations going on, just for one picture. >> we'll have part two of charlie's report on apple on our website cbsnews.com. the "overnight news" will be right back.nd go. but these liquid gels are new. mucinex fast max. it's the same difference. this one is max strength and fights mucus. mucinex fast max. the only cold and flu liquid gel that's max-strength and fights mucus. let's end this. i absolutely love my new york apartment, but the rent is outrageous. good thing geico offers affordable renters insurance. with great coverage it protects my personal belongings should they get damaged, stolen or destroyed. [doorbell] uh, excuse me. delivery. hey. lo mein, szechwan chicken, chopsticks, soy sauce and you got some fortune cookies. have a good one. ah, these small new york apartments... protect your belongings. let geico help you with renters insurance. i asked my dentist if an electric toothbrush was going to clean better than a manual? he said sure. but don't get just any one. get one inspired by dentists. with a round brush head. go pro with oral-b. to break up plaque and rotates to sweep it away. and oral-b delivers a clinically proven superior clean versus sonicare diamondclean. my mouth feels super clean. oral-b know you're getting a superior clean. i'm never going back to a manual brush. we've been changing things up with k-y love. oh yeah. it's a pleasure gel that magnifies both our sensations. it gives us chills in places we've never gotten chills before. yeah, it makes us feel like... dare to feel more with new k-y love. get fast-acting, long-lasting relief from heartburn with it neutralizes stomach acid and is the only product that forms a protective barrier that helps keep stomach acid in the stomach where it belongs. for fast-acting, long-lasting olympic champion matthias mayer will miss the rest of the ski season after his dramatic crash during a world cup downhill race in italy this weekend. he broke two vertebrae in his back, but it could have been much worse. he was wearing a new airbag system, and it was the first cup event. catessa brewer has the details. >> reporter: that fracture of the second, that technology kicked into gear when needed most, leaving mayer in much better shape than anyone who saw the fall expected. olympic gold medalist matthias mayer's world cup run came to an unexpected end after he flipped, flew, and crashed his way past the finish line saturday. what most people didn't realize is during the fall, an intricate safety system was at work, an airbag concealed in his vest activated only in falls. the technology has been in development for falls, but only recently have a handful of athletes started wearing them. >> it's not as big as an airbag in your car. >> reporter: he helped test the new wearable vests by the he says for athletes who measure success by the millisecond, safety gear isn't always a top priority. >> it's little bulkier but it's easy to maneuver in it. >> reporter: the airbags are not controlled by sensors that not only detect when a skier abruptly changes position, but can tell the difference between a jump and a fall. the international ski federation recorded 808 injuries over the last nine seasons of alpine competition. more than 16% of those involved the head, neck, and shoulders. downhill racing is one of the latest sports to embrace the technology, following in the footsteps of other high speed sports including motorcycle racing. it's a technology insiders say soon will be widespread. >> it's gone from almost science fiction level to reality in just and maybe in just another year or so it will be something you can walk into a store and buy. >> the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. want to do something special this holiday season? support i have a dream foundation. help a child achieve the dream of a higher education. cbs cares. organ donation can truly provide a second chance at life. find out how you can help someone in need be a real survivor. go to donatelife.net. cbs cares. want to do something special this christmas? support i have a dream foundation. help a child achieve the dream of a higher education. cbs cares. when the engines failed on the plane i was flying, i knew what to do to save my passengers. but when my father sank into depression, i didn't know how to help him. when he ultimately shot himself, he left our family devastated. don't let this happen to you. call the national suicide prevention lifeline. no matter how hopeless or helpless you feel, with the right help, you can get well. (franklin d. roosevelt) the inherent right to work is one of the elemental privileges of a free people. endowed, as our nation is, with abundant physical resources... ...and inspired as it should be to make those resources and opportunities available for the enjoyment of all... ...we approach reemployment with real hope of finding a better answer than we have now. narrator: donate to goodwill where your donations help fund they're still counting the box office receipts from this weekend's opening of "star wars: the force awakens." worldwide ticket sales of more than half a billion dollars, setting records. the film set an opening weekend in the u.s., canada, britain, austria and russia. and it's expected to get a huge bump when it opens next month in china. experts say this latest "star wars" could become the highest grossing film of all-time, beating out "avatar" which raked in $2.8 billion. and it's not just ticket sales. "the force awakens" is also selling a lot of "star wars" merchandise. >> the force, it's calling to you. >> reporter: "star wars" means big business for everyone in its galaxy, and beyond. box office analysts predict the movie could bring in between $1.5 to $2 billion in ticket sales. >> merchandise sales are unprecedented. s>> reporter: but earnings are expected to stretch far beyond the box office. >> i came across campbell's soup that was branded with a "star wars" character. i came across a pottery barn bed that was selling for $4,000 that looked like a millennium falcon. >> reporter: sure, millions of "star wars" themed toy also end up under christmas trees this year. but a host of other companies are looking to take advantage of the "star wars" blitz, including shoe designers and household brands like crest. richard barry, the global chief merchandising officer for toys r us says the store has had a 40-year relationship with the sci-fi franchise. the most important and best-selling franchises in our stores. not just in the u.s. but around the world. >> reporter: and it's not just well-known chains getting in on the action. apple hills creamy in new york is churning out "star wars" ice cream, after the co-founder brian smith struck up a friendship with disney ceo bob iger. >> this franchise, everything that is associated with it, does gangbusters. >> the first week of selling "star wars," we sold as many pints online as we had sold online in the year previous. >> reporter: the business decided on two flavors, the light side -- >> the lightest, most billowy ice cream we could do and that's marshmallow. >> reporter: and the dark side. >> es presso fudge brownies. i feel proud that we have done something that, you know, that feels like "star wars." >> reporter: has george lucas sampled it? for this tuesday. six americans killed in afghanistan in the deadliest attack of the year. also tonight, get set for a warm christmas. records may fall in 30 states. driving drowsy, a new study on the dangers of working the overnight shift. >> it is just as bad as if we are drunk. >> and -- >> i have to apologize. >> beauty and the blunder that led to the shortest reign in the history of pageants. >> this is the "cbs overnight news." >> and scott is off. i'm maurice dubois. we saw tragic evidence monday of the growing insurgency in six american service members were killed in the worst attack on u.s. forces there in 2015. they were ambushed by a suicide bomber not far from their base in the north. three americans and three afghans were wounded. margaret brennan reports tonight from the pentagon. >> reporter: the american service members were stopped at a local meeting point while on patrol with afghan forces when a suicide bomber drove a motorcycle packed with explosives into the group. the taliban took credit for the attack, which happened nearby bagram air field, the largest remaining u.s. military base in afghanistan. the pentagon has warned that the insurgents have been gaining strength since the end of the u.s. combat mission. the taliban has seized control of the strategic helmand province in the south as well as getting closer to important cities. national security analyst from afghanistan. >> the threat remains roughly constant. the insurgency is resilient, and we have 100,000 fewer combined country. >> reporter: so far this year 20 american service members have been killed. there have also been two american civilian casualties, including 35-year-old aid worker lisa akbari. the former u.s. army researcher was shot in the back of the head while leaving her gym in kabul on sunday. her family told us she had moved there three years ago to help afghan women and children. maurice, this violence is why president obama recently decided to reverse course and keep 9,800 u.s. troops in afghanistan through next year. that's to keep the taliban at bay and to ward off this new threat posed by isis. >> margaret brennan at the pentagon, thank you. winter officially begins tonight, but you wouldn't know it in much of the east where temperatures soared into the 50s and 60s. adriana diaz is in chicago, which tonight is the balmy city. >> reporter: maurice, we have but it feels like early fall. today's high in chicago was 54 degrees. on this day last year it was 36. the warm winter has already kept this non-refridgerated ice rink closed and even tricked flowers at the chicago botanic garden into blooming early. cities like st. louis, new york and boston all topped 50 degrees today, about 20 degrees higher than this time last year. the warm weather is cooling demand for hats, scarves and coats. the apparel industry has already lost more than $400 million this season because of the weather. >> eric fisher is our chief meteorologist in boston. eric, many records may fall later this week, right? >> reporter: maurice, dozens and dozens if not hundreds of records are going to be set this week, so a holiday week that millions of americans are going to remember for a very long time. i want to break it down day by day. on wednesday some of the warmth here, the great lakes, the ohio valley, this is where we expect the highest concentration of we head into christmas eve, northeast down to the mid atlantic, boston near 70. new york city near 70 degrees. 70s down into washington, d.c. then on christmas day itself, the record heat into the southeast, well into the 70s. most of florida in the 80s, and many more record highs. almost every day this week they're setting new marks. also a very stormy week across the southeast. bouts of heavy rainfall, thunderstorms, even a chance of some severe thunderstorms tonight, tomorrow and into wednesday as well as christmas day. a lot of heavy rainfall along the coast. flooding could be another story for this week, as well. >> eric fisher, thank you very much. the lawyer for a homeless woman accused of a deadly crash on the las vegas strip last night is raising questions about her mental state. police say she repeatedly drove her car into a crowd on purpose. one person was killed, ten others are in the hospital. here's john blackstone. >> reporter: the usually busy instead with emergency vehicles after the 1996 model oldsmobile deliberately plowed into pedestrians on the sidewalk. >> everybody has to get back. >> reporter: antonio nassar had just stepped out of the casino when the car sped past. >> people were bouncing off the front of the car. you could hear it. the windshield was smashed. she rode on the sidewalk and accelerated and just kept mowing everyone down. >> reporter: soon after police say 24-year-old lakeisha halloway pulled into a casino parking lot and told the valet to call 911. >> it looked like she wasn't even trying to stop the car. she had both of her hands on the wheel and was looking straight forward. there were men running after her trying to stop the vehicle, and they couldn't get to her. >> good morning, everybody. >> reporter: clark county sheriff joe lombardo doesn't think this was an act of terror but still can't rule it out. >> as far as terrorism, we don't know what the intent was behind it, and we don't know enough of her background to make that determination. we have not had the time or the investigative leads yet. >> reporter: lombardo says holloway came to las vegas from oregon about a week ago and had been living in her car with her child, who was also in her vehicle as she ran people down. >> she did not demonstrate signs of being under the influence of alcohol, but we had a drug recognition expert respond to the scene and determine that he believed she to be under some sort of stimulant. >> reporter: all 35 of the injured were visitors, coming from several states, as well as canada and mexico. >> john blackstone in las vegas tonight. in the presidential campaign, the democratic front-runner has at times seemed to be looking ahead to the general election, taking on republicans like donald trump. hillary clinton has a big lead in the national polls, but the races are much tighter in early voting states. here's julianna goldman. >> i think that's especially appropriate here in iowa. >> reporter: with less than two months to go before the first voting contest, victories are clinton. according to the latest cbs battleground polls, vermont senator bernie sanders is just five points behind clinton in iowa, and in new hampshire, he's beating her by 14 points. >> if we can win in iowa. if we can win in new hampshire, i think we're on our way to a national victory and one of the great political upsets in the modern history of america. >> reporter: on "cbs this morning," sanders said he's not ceding any ground, but he continued to accuse the democratic national committee of playing favorites with the continued fallout of last week's breech of clinton campaign voter data. >> i believe the action of the dnc to basically shut us off from all of the information that we have put into that base, the lifeblood of our campaign, was totally inappropriate. >> oh, my goodness. >> reporter: one staffer was fired and two others have been suspended pending an investigation into whether the sanders' team has stolen any of clinton is still the favorite to win the nomination, but a loss in iowa or new hampshire could draw out the process, especially because sanders is sitting on a campaign war chest fueled by grassroots donors, and, maurice, that means less time for clinton [ vocalizing ] [ buzzing ] [ tree crashes ] [ wind howling ] on the republican side, another candidate quit the race today. and new jersey governor chris christie is making a move in new hampshire. major garrett has been spending time with christie in the granite state. >> i ask for your vote, for your trust and for your confidence. >> reporter: this town hall in pelham was chris christie's 41st in new hampshire. since the terrorist attacks in paris and san bernardino, christie has noticed a tidal shift in anxiety. 75% of his questions now are about terrorism, triple what they once were. responding to that fear. >> reporter: we rode on the christie bus and asked if fear can get the best of people? >> i don't think that we should be afraid of people because of what religion they practice. >> reporter: or how they look? >> of course. that goes hand in hand. what you need to be fearful of is not having enough intelligence to know the difference between a jihadist and a peaceful muslim. >> reporter: how do you do that? >> you first of all ramp back up the nsa program, which never should have been taken down. you give real support to the fbi. >> reporter: and what would christie do to recruit more arab and nato allies in the fight against isis? >> we have to say to them, this is a fight all of us need to take on together. what skin are you going to have in this game? >> reporter: what if they say, not nearly as much as you want or you demand? >> well, you know what, that's when i become my charming and persuasive self, major, and that's what we do. >> reporter: christie is still running fourth but he's doubled his support in a month. after new hampshire. he couldn't even submit a full slate for the delegates for the ohio primary. >> i'm not worried about that. if we win in ohio, we'll get all the delegates anyway. >> reporter: christie has had to learn patience as for months his campaign teetered on the edge of irrelevancy while distancing himself from a scandal back home. >> listen, the stuff that happened in new jersey, the bridge stuff matures you. hen you take that level of abuse and then you come out the other side of it fine, you're a much better office holder. >> reporter: the ranks of christie's republican rivals shrank by one today when lindsey graham dropped out. maurice, graham took credit for persuading republicans in this race to be more willing than they were before to send ground troops to syria to fight isis. >> major garrett in new hampshire tonight. thank you. we are getting a chilling look tonight at life for some victims of boko haram, the isis-linked terrorists in africa who kidnapped hundreds of nigerian school girls last year. killed 1,000 people in just the past two months. debora patta reports from cameroon tonight where a woman freed from captivity but whose ordeal is far from over. >> reporter: aisha musa has been living in a crowded refugee camp for seven months. she survives by selling corn meal at the local market. musa was kidnapped by boko haram militants. they killed her family and forced her at gunpoint to become a jihadi bride. "they show you a gun," she said, "and then whatever they say, you have to follow their commands." she told us her captor would lock her in during the day. at night he would rape her. "he would go on operations and kill people," she said, "and then come home and force me to be with him." musa was rescued by the cameroon military, but the worst of her pregnant by her rapist. she told us, "i am not enjoying that i have a baby from a boko haram man." but she is resigned and there are moments of tenderness. her story is not unusual. boko haram has captured hundreds of girls, the most infamous the over 200 chibok schoolgirls kidnapped more than 18 months ago. musa never saw the chibok girls but often heard the fighters speak of them. like many of the other girls here, they too were forced to marry the militants. and in a double injustice, many are now stigmatized by their community. girls like musa are regarded as spoiled goods, the baby a very public reminder of a cruel and unfair shame. debora patta, cbs news, minawao, cameroon. first time since 2009 the average price of gas nationwide is below $2 a gallon, ababt 42 cents cheaper than a year ago. a report out today points to a growing danger on the roads, drowsy drivers. those leaving the night shift could be an accident waiting to happen. here's anna werner. >> reporter: this man just came off a night shift. watch the video on the left as he veers all over the road. nearly half the night shift workers tested nearly crashed. dr. charles czeisler worked on the study. >> they were crossing over the middle line. they were having trouble staying in their lane. more than 40% of the drives had to be terminated because it was judged to be unsafe. >> reporter: more than half the workers tested said they nodded off behind the wheel at least once a week on their way home, test. >> they knew they were being watched, yet even in that context they couldn't stay awake while they were driving in a from work. >> reporter: dallas-area convenience store manager shariq khan starts work at 11:00 p.m. and works through the night. >> sometimes when i get off of my job, when i drive back home, i feel like i'm falling asleep. >> reporter: he believes the lack of sleep led to him having a couple minor accidents. researchers suggest night shift workers like khan skip driving and find another way home, but his area lacks public transportation. >> there's no alternative. there's no bus or no train service there. and i can't afford to have a taxi every day. >> reporter: researchers say night shift workers are fighting their own natural sleep patterns and they can't sleep as well during the day no matter how much they try. they lose about two hours of sleep a day, and maurice, after a few days, they've lost the equivalent of a whole night's sleep. >> okay. anna werner, thank you. from victory to defeat in about two minutes. universe mix-up. "star wars" did even better than expected at the box office. and meet a star in sheep's clothing. phil! oh no... (under his breath) hey man! hey peter. (unenthusiastic) oh... ha ha ha! joanne? is that you? it's me... you don't look a day over 70. am i right? jingle jingle. if you're peter pan, you stay young forever. it's what you do. if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance, you switch to geico. you make me feel so young... it's what you do. you make me feel we've been changing things up with k-y love. oh yeah. it gives us chills in places we've never gotten chills before. yeah, it makes us feel like... in the end, the right contestant ended up with the crown, but many felt the host earned himself a dunce cap. mireya villarreal fills us in on the confusion at the miss universe pageant. >> colombia! >> reporter: it's the moment every pageant contestant dreams of. >> i have to apologize. the first runner-up is colombia. miss universe 2015 is philippines! >> reporter: but for miss colombia, a moment that should celebration turned into confusion and awkwardness when host steve harvey realized he crowned the wrong winner. >> it was my mistake. >> reporter: but steve harvey said the reason for his confusion was how the names were listed on the card. after the show he apologized again. >> i made a mistake. i read the name on the card. >> reporter: to add insult to injury, when he posted an apology on social media, he misspelled philippines. and colombia. critics went online to skewer harvey. pageant coordinators put out a statement saying, "unfortunately a live telecast means human error can come into play." miss colombia took her loss >> everything happens for a reason, so i'm happy. >> reporter: for miss philippines, the real miss universe, the crowning moment will be best remembered as one of steve harvey's biggest >> it's a very non-traditional crowning moment, isn't it? it's very 2015. >> reporter: the ratings for this year's pageant broadcast had over a million fewer viewers than the last broadcast, and maurice, a cbs officer for the pageant actually told cbs radio that they would absolutely have harvey back for the 2016 pageant, saying the world would forgive and forget. >> okay, mireya, thank you very much tonight. well, in a moment the nfl filled with rough play. today the nfl suspended new york giants wide receiver odell beckham, jr., for one game. he was whistled for three personal fouls yesterday, including this vicious helmet-to-helmet hit on carolina panthers' cornerback josh norman. the league said beckham placed opponents at unnecessary risk of injury. "star wars" fans were out in force over the weekend. the sci-fi adventure took in more than half a billion dollars worldwide, $248 million of that was in the u.s. and canada where it broke the opening weekend and we'll be right back. want to do something special this holiday season? support i have a dream foundation. help a child achieve the dream of a higher education. cbs cares. organ donation can truly provide a second chance at life. find out how you can help someone in need be a real survivor. go to donatelife.net. cbs cares. want to do something special this christmas? support i have a dream foundation. help a child achieve the dream of a higher education. cbs cares. every day it's getting closer going faster than a roller coaster a love like yours will surely come my way babies aren't fully developed until at least 39 weeks. if your pregnancy is healthy, wait for labor to begin on its own. a healthy baby is worth the wait. o0 c1 travel is part of the american way of life. when we're on vacation, we keep an eye out for anything that looks out of place. [ indistinct conversations ] miss, your bag. when we travel from city to city, we pay attention to our surroundings. [ cheering ] everyone plays a role in keeping our community safe. whether you're traveling for business or pleasure, be aware of your surroundings. if you see something suspicious, we have quite a yarn to end the broadcast, and it's spun by jim axelrod. [ rooster crowing ] >> reporter: on a bucolic farm just outside burlington, vermont, lives a sheep named sweet pea. she really is so sweet. sweet pea's adopted parents, john and jen churchman have a give- and-take relationship with the land. they saved her life. she changed theirs. >> we're very grateful for all of this. it's very surreal. >> reporter: when sweet pea developed an infection last winter, jen and john described the touch-and-go on facebook. so when you posted that sweet pea was in trouble, your followers must have been quite worked up about this. >> they were. they wanted updates all the time. >> this is prem. this is sunny. >> reporter: the churchmans brought sweet pea up to their house with barn-mates violet, sunny and prem to keep her company and to celebrate when she got better. >> we started about -- we would bring the others up for a party. >> someone said, if they do that it's going to be a sheepover. >> we were playing with this and people on facebook said, you have to write a book. >> reporter: they self-published 4,000 copies of "the sheepover." john went to a nearby bookstore, the "flying pig," to see if he could drum up any interest. >> i've been in this business a long time, and i had never seen anything quite like it. photographs. >> there's nothing with this collage photographic style that i've seen in the children's book world. so i think it's groundbreaking. >> reporter: when she blogged a review, a big-time book agent, brenda bowen, didn't waste a second. >> it's granular level rare. >> never happens. >> rarely to never, yes. >> reporter: so now john and jen churchman are farmers and authors. >> we have three books right now, but we have ten more behind that that are ready to be in production. >> reporter: with every one of their 18 sheep a potential story, wool is no longer the most valuable product coming out of their pen. jim axelrod, cbs news, essex, vermont. >> and that is the "overnight news" for this tuesday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back with us a nows and "cbs morning news." from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm maurice dubois. -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com this is the "cbs overnight news." >> welcome to the "overnight news." murder charges have been filed in las vegas against a woman who drove her car on a curb. one person was killed, dozens of others injured. police don't have a motive, but the suspect is being held without bail. john blackstone reports. >> reporter: the usually busy las vegas strip was crowded instead with emergency vehicles after the 1996 model oldsmobile pedestrians on the sidewalk. antonio had just stepped out of the casino when the car sped past. >> people were bouncing off the front of the car. you could hear it. the windshield was smashed. she rode on the sidewalk and accelerated and just kept mowing everyone down. >> reporter: soon after police say 24-year-old lakeisha halloway pulled into a casino parking lot and told the valet to call 911. >> it looked like she wasn't even trying to stop the car. she had both of her hands on the wheel and was looking straight forward. there were men running after her trying to stop the vehicle, and they couldn't get to her. >> good morning, everybody. >> reporter: clark county sheriff joe lombardo doesn't think this was an act of terror but still can't rule it out. >> as far as terrorism, we don't know what the intent was behind it, and we don't know enough of her background to make that determination. we have not had the time or the luxury to get through all those investigative leads yet. >> reporter: lombardo says holloway came to las vegas from been living in her car with her 3-year-old child, who was also in the vehicle as she ran people down. >> she did not demonstrate signs of being under the influence of alcohol, but we had a drug recognition expert respond to the scene and determine that he believed she to be under some sort of stimulant. >> reporter: investigators have not yet determined a motive for this unusual attack. as might be expected here on the las vegas strip, maurice, all 35 of the injured were visitors coming from several states as well as canada and mexico. also in las vegas, a different type of tragedy. this one at the miss universe pageant, on a live show being watched by millions around the world. host steve harvey announced the winner, and he got it wrong. it was an awkward moment for the winner, the runner-up and the entire pageant. nischelle turner was backstage >> it's not the biggest mistake in the universe but probably the biggest flub in the history of miss universe. imagine this, seconds ticking down on the end of the live broadcast and everyone is trying to figure out how to tell the announced winner that she's actually first runner-up. >> miss universe 2015 is -- colombia! [ applause ] >> reporter: for about 2 1/2 minutes, she was the reigning queen of miss universe, until host steve harvey returned and said this. >> i have to apologize. the first runner-up is colombia. miss universe 2015 is >> reporter: the actual winner appeared stunned. for more than a minute, those on stage seemed at a loss for what to do next. error. >> i will take responsibility for this. it was my mistake. it was on the card. >> reporter: unfortunately, it wasn't harvey's only mistake of the night. he tweeted, i want -- he misspelled philippines and colombia. what could be seen as a final indignity, the crown was taken to miss colombia and barely made before cutting to the final credits. >> so very non-traditional crowning, isn't it? >> yes. very 2015. organization issued a statement. >> just wow. i was a preliminary judge for this year's pageant, so i did get to see the inner workings and got to see just how seriously these ladies take this contest. i tell you what, last night it was craziness inside the arena, as well. the crowd was booing. people wouldn't leave, despite repeated apologies from the p.a. system and asking everyone to leave. they just didn't want to see the end of it. a funeral will be held the day after christmas for the young hero who shielded three friends from gunfire when they sound themselves in the middle of a gang war. he died in the cross fire, his friends weren't hurt, but the whole city of knoxville is fighting back tears. david begnaud reports now from the football field where the young man was a star. field in knoxville, tennessee, he was a sophomore standout. the week before he was killed, he went to a stop the violence rally with his mother. this morning, people around the country are hailing her son a hero. >> it's part of me that want to be angry, but i just can't. >> reporter: because you're so proud of what he did? >> yes. >> reporter: president obama tweeted -- >> reporter: his story has dominated social media. kimberly in california tweeted -- >> reporter: how does that make you feel? >> it made me feel like, wow, you're doing your job as a mother. >> reporter: knoxville police say he was playing video games with friends when he stepped outside to talk to a group of middle of gang gunfire. >> he jumped on top of three girls to shield them -- sorry. to shield them from the shooters. >> reporter: do you wonder "why my child?" >> yes. >> reporter: what do you say to those gang members that shot your son? >> stop the violence. he asked me one time, what am i going to do? what is it in it for me? i said your time is coming. when his seem came, the angels came down and took my baby to heaven. i know they did. and he's looking down smiling, because he made an impact on the whole world. >> reporter: there were five gang members who all fired at him, according to police. one was killed by another gang member. and police are looking for the sooe roar three others. >> the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. olay regenerist renews from within, plumping surface cells for a dramatic transformation without the need for fillers your concert tee might show your age... your skin never will. olay regenerist. olay. ageless. enough pressure in here for ya? i'm gonna take mucinex sinus-max. too late, we're about to take off. these dissolve fast. they're new liquid gels. and you're coming with me... you realize i have gold status? mucinex sinus-max liquid gels. dissolves fast to unleash max strength medicine. let's end this. we've been changing things up with k-y love. oh yeah. it gives us chills in places we've never gotten chills before. yeah, it makes us feel like... an lt is apple is the biggest and richest company in the world. there's a battle over the encryption used in apple products. the debate over companies hiding profits overseas and the challenges of doing business in china. apple is also notoriously secretive. but charlie rose was invited into apple headquarters for "60 minutes." >> go. >> thank you. thank you. it's been an incredible year for apple. for the past four years. but for most of the 15 years before that -- >> we had some real revolutionary products. >> reporter: the stage belonged to apple's late co-founder steve jobs. >> we're going to make history together today. >> reporter: he transformed the computer from a cumbersome machine into the most sleek consumer product of all-time. the iphone is 12,000 times more powerful than the original mcintosh and next year it will have sold 1 billion units. following steve jobs was one of the most challenging successions imaginable. a daunting responsible for the man he hand picked, tim cook. >> i have never met anyone on before. >> reporter: never met anyone on the face of the earth like him if >> no, not one person. >> reporter: not one? >> who had this incredible and corner, who had this relentless, driving force for perfection. >> reporter: the spirit of steve jobs hovers over apple. he was a founder like no other. a volatile visionary capable of creates products for people before they even knew it. cook is a passionate engineer from alabama. on the apple campus, employees still talk about steve jobs in the same way that tim cook does. >> it's a bar of excellence that good isn't good enough, it has to be great. steve used to say insanely great. >> reporter: you believe you can do things other companies can't do? >> we do, and we have, fortunately. >> reporter: it begins on the apple campus at 9:00 a.m. every monday morning at the executive team meeting. someone said go in this room and you'll find the brains of apple. is this the place? >> reporter: attendance is mandatory. if you are in the room, you are one of the most important people at apple. they wouldn't let us attend the meeting, but they were eager to tell us what they liked so much about their company. that's jeff williams, officially named the new chief operating officer this week. and that's eddie cue, he is the guy who helped create i tunes. >> it's amazing to work at a place where you're building products that everybody in the world uses, whether it's a 2-year-old or a 100-year-old. they get to experience the products that we're building, and that's amazing. >> reporter: is the dna of steve jobs baked deeply into everything? >> it is,'9" is. this is steve's company. this is still steve's company. it was born that way, it's still that way. always be the dna of this company. >> reporter: and if there was to sharing jobs' dna, it would be this man, apple's chief design officer. he's considered by many at apple to be the most important person at the company. every apple device on the market today was either created or inspired by this reserved and polite son of a british silver smith. we met him in his design studio, but we were only allowed to seal so much. what's interesting in this room is that i see these covers over some of these desks. why is that? >> so you can't see what's underneath. >> reporter: meaning if i could see what's underneath it, i would know where the future is of apple. >> you would know what we're working on next. so that's one of the reasons that it's extraordinarily rare that people come into the design studio. >> reporter: that's why you >> that's right. we don't like people in this room, period. >> reporter: his team of 22 designers are a very close group. in 15 years, only two have left the company. we noticed that his studio is quiet and looks a lot like an apple store. no coincidence, he designed both around his signature wooden tables. here he and his team create prototypes of future products before the specifications are sent overseas to be manufactured with. the iphone 6 and 6 plus, the design team made 10 different sized models before deciding which worked best. >> we chose these two because partly they just felt -- they felt right. they somehow -- not from a tactile point of view, but just >> reporter: do you do this about every product, this amount of dedication to emotional context? >> this is the tip of the iceberg, because we found the different textures considerably -- what it's like to hold it, what it's like to feel it. so the only way that we know how to resolve an address and develop all of those issues is to make models, is to make prototypes. >> reporter: he showed us how he prototyped the apple watch. it begins with a sketch of the watch casing, then it's transformed into a three dimension alal electronic blueprint, then sent to a cnc machine. there in this cnc machine is now machining incredibly accurately the form, the back of the watch. and all of the tiniest details, as well. >> reporter: once it's been carved, the prototype of the watch casing is sanded and polished by hand by veteran craftsman. his team overseas every design detail, including testing hundreds of different shades of blues and yellows. >> all of these things, if we manage to get them right, you sort of sense that it's authentic, really thoughtfully conceived object. >> reporter: he described a process that comes next, turning a prototype into a working product requires a high level of complex engineering. mac book, he worked with apple's head of hardware engineering to create a battery powerful enough to last all day but also small enough to fit into the slim cased design. >> every tenth of a millimeter in our product is sacred. with this design, it involved mechanical designers, tool makers, chemists, and software engineers to design a pack to fit within the surfaces of the product but still work reliably. >> reporter: one of the most complex engineering challenges involves the iphone camera, the most used feature of any apple product. that's the entire camera you're looking at in my hand. how many parts are in here? >> there's over 200 separate individual parts in that one module there. >> reporter: graham is in charge other specialists dedicated solely to the camera. he showed us a microsuspension system that steadies the camera when your hand shakes. >> this whole auto focus motor here is suspended on four wires, less than half oh a human hair's width and that moves it in x and y. so that allows us to stabilize for the hand shake. >> reporter: in the camera lab, engineers calibrate the camera to perform in any type of lighting. >> you have bright, bright noon and this you go, sunset now. there we go. so there's different types of quality of lighting from morning, bright sunshine, the noon daylight, and then finally sunset. we can simulate all of those here. so believe it or not, to capture one image, there's 24 billion operations going on, just for charlie's report on apple let's get these dayquil liquid gels and go. but these liquid gels are new. mucinex fast max. it's the same difference. this one is max strength and fights mucus. mucinex fast max. the only cold and flu liquid gel that's max-strength and fights mucus. let's end this. olympic champion mateas the myer crashed this week in italy, breaking two vertebrae in his back but could have been much worse. he was wearing a new airbag time one inflated during a world cup event. ka tessa brewer has the details. >> reporter: that fracture of the second, that technology kicked into gear when needed most, leaving him in much better shape than anyone who saw the fall expected. his world cup run came to an unexpected end after he flipped, flew, and crashed his way past the finish line saturday. what most people didn't realize is during the fall, an intricate safety system was at work, an airbag system activated only during falls. the technology has been in development for falls, but only recently have a handful of athletes started wearing them. >> it's not as big as an airbag in your car. new wearable vests by the italian maker. he says for athletes who measure success by the millisecond, safe safety gear isn't always a top priority. >> it's little bulkier but it's easy to maneuver in it. >> reporter: the airbags are controlled by sensors that detect when a skier abruptly changes position but can distinguish between a jump and a fall. 808 injuries were recorded over the last nine seasons of alpine competition. more than 16% of those involved the head, neck, and shoulders. downhill racing is one of the latest sports to embrace the technology, following in the footsteps of other high speed racing. it's a technology insiders say soon will be widespread. fiction level to reality in just a few years. and maybe in just another year or so it will be something you can walk into a store and buy. >> the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. embarrassed by a prostate exam? imagine how your doctor feels. as a urologist, i have performed 9,421 and a half prostate exams. so why do i do it? because i get paid. und... on this side of the glove i know prostate exams can save lives. so, if you are a man over 50, talk to you doctor to see if a prostate exam is right for you. if we can do it, so can you. they're still counting the box office receipts from this opening of "star wars, the force awakens." worldwide ticket sales of more than half a billion dollars, setting records. and it's expected to get a huge bump when it opens next month in china. experts say this latest "star wars" could become the highest grossing film of all-time, deeting out "avatar" which raked in $2.8 billion. and it's not just tick elet sales. selling a lot of merchandise. vlad duthiers reports. >> reporter: "star wars" means big business for everyone in its galaxy, and beyond. box office analysts the movie could bring in between $1.5 to $2 billion in ticket sales. >> merchandise sales are unprecedented. >> i came across campbell's soup that was branded with a "star wars" character. >> reporter: sure, millions of "star wars" themed toy also end up under christmas trees this year. but a host of other companies are looking to take advantage of the "star wars" blitz, including shoe designers and household brands like crest. richard barry, the global chief merchandising officer says the store has had a 40-year relationship with the sci-fi franchise. >> "star wars" has been one of best-selling franchises in our stores. not just in the u.s. but around the world. >> reporter: and it's not just well-known chains getting in on the action. here they are churning out "star wars" ice cream. >> this franchise, everything that is associated with it, does gang busters. >> the first week of selling "star wars," we sold as many pints online as we had sold online in the year previous. >> reporter: the business decided on two flavors, the light side -- >> the lightest, most billowy ice cream we could do and that's marshmallow. >> reporter: and the dark side. >> espresso brownies. i feel broad that we have done something that, you know, that feels like "star wars." reporter: h george lucas sampled snit >> not yet. for this tuesday.

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