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Transcripts For WTSP CBS Evening News With Scott Pelley 2016

Transcripts For WTSP CBS Evening News With Scott Pelley 20161101



on a roll. >> go, indians! >> wooo! this is the "cbs evening news" with scott pelley. reporting tonight from cleveland, ohio. >> pelley: this is the state where past and future of the american presidency meet, birth place of seven presidents, graveyard of more than a few presidential dreams. no ohio since lincoln, and the polls show tonight republican donald trump tied here with with democrat hillary clinton. both have visited ohio more than any other battleground, and they've poured $32 million into advertising here. that's four bucks for every registered buckeye. here's mark strassmann. >> we'll make america great again. >> reporter: in the courtship of ohio. >> helping children has been a >> reporter: ...many voters want a restraining order. on average, throughout the state, an ad for trump or clinton runs on local television every three minutes. >> overwhelmingly with ads, overwhelming with calls, overwhelming with nonstop political stuff. >> reporter: linda merriam is a registered independent. betty drake is a conservative democrat. if you get up at 7:00 a.m., by what time you have heard your first ad? >> probably, like, appropriate 7:03. that soon. >> yeah, that soon. >> i'm donald trump. >> i'm hillary clinton. >> reporter: since june, both presidential campaigns have spent more than $32 million on television ads in ohio. and many ohioans have stopped answering the door and the phone. you get calls all day long from numbers you don't recognize. >> right, yup. >> reporter: these are robocallers? >> robocallers, yes. cue-- ( phone ringing ) what do you think that phone call was? >> i think it was a robocaller. >> reporter: does this kind of blitz work? >> no. >> reporter: professor justin buchler: >> when you have as many ads as voters in ohio see, the marginal benefit of every additional ad is basically nothing. >> reporter: drake will vote for trump. merriam is undecided. nothing anybody has changed your mind one bit? >> no. >> reporter: that's a lot of noise for nothing. >> . it's a lot of noise for nothing. >> in hillary clinton's america. >> reporter: noise that one one here can muffle until next tuesday. mark strassmann, cbs news, cleveland. >> pelley: there is some evidence that ads do drive voters to polls. four years ago, the turnout in battleground states was seven points higher than the rest of the real clear politics average of major national polls shows clinton's lead is shrinking tonight from seven points two weeks ago, to two points now. so with one week to go, let's bring in our campaign corresponds nancy cordes and major garrett. first, let's go to nancy. how is clinton responding to these polls? >> reporter: scott, she herself has not said anything about them, but her aides insisted to us that this is what they've always predicted, that the race would end. in fact, they've even begun airing ads in a couple of states that should be pretty safe for democrats like new mexico and michigan. they say it's not a sign that they're getting nervous. it's simply a sign that they've amassed a pretty big war chest and this is their last chance to spend it. >> pelley: and, nancy, what do we know today about the f.b.i. e-mail investigation? >> reporter: well, we know that f.b.i. agents at quantico in virginia have begun electronically sifting through the hundreds of thousands of anthony weiner's laptop. they believe that the number of e-mails belonging to huma abedin numbers in the thousandses, and they've actually built a pretty sophisticate software program to weed through them using keywords like "classified" to try to condense the e-mails to those that they believe could be relevant to the clinton investigation, weed out duplicates that they've already read before, a process they say could take days before they even begin actually reading the e-mails, >> pelley: they're trying to figure out whether there's any classified information that passed on hillary clinton's private e-mail server. major garrett, trump is making hay out of clinton's problems, but the f.b.i. is looking into his world as well. >> reporter: that's right, scott. the big topic is russia. the f.b.i. spent many months this summer looking into possible connections between donald trump, those in his political inner circle, or his businesses with the russian government or russian oligarchs. some noak smokebut not much fire. there are also reports that former trump campaign chairman paul manny fort is under f.b.i. investigation. but he asures me, scott, there is no f.b.i. investigation. one thingt f.b.i. did conclude is the russian government is more disrupted in disrupting the democratic process here in america than aigd trump. >> pelley: and how's the campaign seeing this final week of the race? >> reporter: well, scott, to understand the trump campaign models differently than anyone else. they see five or six points that other pollsters do not see. where do they find it? low-propensity voters, voters who haven't showed up before. they believe there are two or three points there, these people will surge to the polls unexpectedly. they also expect republicans to come home in the final days, one or two points there, and maybe one point of psycholog people associated with trump but finally convinced he's going to win. that's why they believe in >> pelley: we'll see a week from today. major garrett, nancy cordes thanks very much. african americans could tip the balance in battleground states, especially in florida and here in ohio if they turn out for clinton as strongly as they did for president obama. in a story for "60 minutes," we spoke with voters on the east side of cleveland, many of whom worship at the olivet institutional baptist church, which is led by colvin. >> i think what's going to happen is people are going to have to vote-- vote with passion and with purpose. because this election is not simply significant because every election is important. this election is existential when you look at what's happening around the country, the rhetoric, the kind of loss of civility. you won't vote, you're undecide or you will be voting? >> yeah, i'm going to vote. >> reporter: in the neighborhoods, reverend colvin is getting out the vote, and counted. >> we have to have a president, we have to have a president. these are the two choice we have. >> pelley: my wife says if you don't vote you can't complain. >> you can't, that's right, thoorpt, that's right. that's right. >> pelley: when african americans vote in large numbers in ohio, ohio votes democratic. >> yes. >> pelley: and when they don't come to the polls, ohio votes republican. >> yes. >> pelley: what's going to happen? >> i'm going to pray that they come to the polls. i'm gonna -- >> groundswell? >> i'm not hearing it. >> pelley: when you look into this congregation, the sunday before election day, what are you going to tell them? >> i'm going to say, "when you go to the polls, remember who you're taking with you. first, i want to think about the past. we're taking medgar evers with us. we're taking freedom summer with us. but not only are we taking the past, but we are also taking >> pelley: hillary clinton is also concerned that voters might change their minds in the last minute because of that f.b.i. e-mail investigation. here's michelle miller. >> reporter: at price hill chili restaurant in hamilton county this morning, they served up hot coffee, scrambled eggs and a side of politics. >> i'm standing by hillary. >> i'm really rooting trump this year. >> reporter: the f.b.i.'s decision to reopen hillary doesn't seem to be change many minds. are people pretty much just dug in? >> i think they are pretty much set at this point. >> reporter: the controversy isn't a big deal for 60-year-old kim chappelle, a lifelong republican who is voting for clinton. isn't this a new round of e-mails? >> it is. but from the previous, all the previous e-mail incidents nothing ever became of it, so i'm figuring nothing is becoming of this. stanger says the f.b.i. review confirms he's making the right choice with donald trump. >> the fact that they opened up the investigation tells me that there's more things that she's done that we don't know about. >> reporter: neighbors are displaying their support with political yard signs. james gillespie, a democrat who campaigned twice for obama, is switching parties this year. >> a lot of corruption they saw in hillary clinton is coming out in the news right now, and it's bi willing to support her. >> reporter: back at the restaurant, kim chappelle thinks trump is unelectable. >> i couldn't in good congress vote for donald trump. i just couldn't do it. >> reporter: early voting began here in ohio nearly three weeks ago, scott. so even before the controversy broke on friday, more than a million ballots had already been cast statewide. >> pelley: michelle, thanks very much. of course, both candidates would chip reid spoke to small business owners for our series "closing arguments." >> reporter: so what are you making here? >> i am making peanut butter buckeyes. >> reporter: buckeyes. >> yes. >> reporter: fall is candy season and it's when talk in donna's shop turns to politics. sandusky is a swing can county. president obama won it twice, but so did george w. bush. and who would you like to see win this election? >> i wou l trump win this election. >> reporter: mcneemer says she especially likes his plans for the can economy. >> when you want business to grow, would you not need somebody that knows business? >> reporter: she prefers trump's current plan on the minimum wage. he wants the states to decide. clinton supports a minimum mum as high as $15 an hour. >> if we're forced to pay $15 for minimum wage, guess who's going to work more hours? me. because i'm going to have to lay off employees. handle that kind of increase. >> reporter: she also favors trump's tax plan with across-the-board cuts, the biggest for the wealthiest. clinton's plan would raise taxes on the rich. >> i understand that they're wealthy and they make a lot of money, but i also understand that they worked really hardinar money, and if they have to pay more taxes, it has to go somewhere. it's going to come down to me. >> reporter: across the county, in bellevue, ohio, richard stegman has a very different view. you're a big fan of hillary clinton. >> oh, gosh, yes. >> reporter: stegman owns the victorian tudor inn. >> all right, ladies, here we go. >> a b & b he bought right beforey recession. >> evidence this close, so close to losing everything. >> reporter: he credits the president's policy with turning the economy around and thinks clinton would state course. on the economic front what, do you like most about hillary clinton? >> well, i think it all goes under the exwrael o umbrella ofr wage, where do you stand on that? >> i have been paying my staff $14 to $15 an hour. >> reporter: that's well above the minimum wage. >> because i need good people. >> reporter: and he prefers clinton's tax policies to trump's? >> his tax proposal benefits a wide variety of people and that's what we need. we don't need a tax policy that really benefits just a small segment. i think hers is very broad. >> reporter: you think she'll help the middle class more than donald trump? >> oh, oh, oh, clearly. >> reporter: two sm sides in a county that could determine which way this battleground state swings. chip reid, cbs news, sandusky county, ohio. >> pelley: and it will be determined a week from tonight. cbs news election night coverage will begin next tuesday at 7:00 eastern time. today, the oklahoma highway patrol released video of the deadly end to a week-long wanted for a series of shootings, and he did not go down without a fight. here's manuel bojorquez. >> reporter: dash-cam video shows an oklahoma state trooper driving and firing his assault rifle as he chased murder suspect michael vance sunday night. a police helicopter captured the chase from above, showing him barreling through a checkpoint during the rolling gunbattle. at one point vance, who police say was armed with an ak-47, got out of his shield as he kept shooting. troopers fired back. eventually, he was struck and killed. vance had been on the run for more than a week after police say he killed two relatives, shot and injured two officers, and taunted authorities with a facebook video. >> what's up, y'all? letting you all know, look, this is real. see? that's a gun. that's the real deal. >> reporter: police got a break sunday when someone spotted vance camping out in he opened fire on a sheriff, who tried to pull him over, launching the chase. ( gunfire ) the sheriff was struck on the shoulder and elbow. he will survive. scott, police believe vance, who was recently charged with child sex abuse, out to seek revenge. >> pelley: manuel bojorquez for us tonight. manuel, thank you. coming up next on the cbs evening news, a pipeline blast could mean higher gasoline prices. and later, a city making a comeback whe news continues from cleveland. travel with my daughter. roller derby. ? now give up half of 'em. do i have to? this is a tough financial choice we could face when we retire. but, if we start saving even just 1% more of our annual income... we could keep doing all the things we love. if you have postmenopausal osteoporosis and a high risk for fracture... i can tell you prolia? is proven to help protect bones from fracture. but the real proof? my doctor said prolia? helped my bones get stronger. are your bones getting stronger do not take prolia? if you have low blood calcium, are pregnant, are allergic to it, or take xgeva?. serious allergic reactions, such as low blood pressure; trouble breathing; throat tightness; face, lip, or g or hives have happened in people taking prolia?. tell your doctor about dental problems, as severe jaw bone problems may happen, or new or unusual pain in your hip, groin or thigh, as unusual thigh bone fractures have occurred. prolia? can cause serious side effects, including low blood calcium, serious infections. which could require hospitalization; skin problems; and severe bone, joint or muscle pain. only prolia helps strengthen and protect bones with 2 shots a year. i have proof prolia? works for me. can it work for you? >> pelley: gasoline prices are likely going up after a major pipeline in alabama exploded yesterday. one person was killed, five were injured. pipeline supplies the east coast all the way up to new jersey. today, gasoline futures spiked more than 15%. here's david begnaud. >> reporter: the fire is still burning, but it's decreasing in fast. >> reporter: the explosion yesterday ignited a spectacular fireball that could be seen for more than 70 miles. the flames sparked wildfires. bill ber sea spokesman for colonial pipeline. >> this is a tragic accident. we had a contractor out there that we've used for many years excavating over the top of a pipeline thp this contractor has done this many, many times before. >> reporter: that contractor struck the pipeline with a trackhoe, igniting the gasoline. contractor was completing a permanent repair on a leak that had happened two months ago. that leak sparked gas shortages and long lines in five southern states as prices spiked. following yesterday's explosion. >> markets were just through the roofs and you could tell that there was a sense of panic. >> reporter: adriana diaz is a senior petroleum analyst at gasbuddy.com. >> prices may go up slightly in the days ahead. more importantly, for the time being there, should not be widespread impact to gas supply, keep monitoring. >> reporter: we have not seen a jump in prices or even long lines here at the pumps. scott, colonial says that pipeline where the explosion happened is going to remain off for the rest of the week, but if it goes longer than that, many analysts believe that could be what fuels a spike in prices. >> pelley: david begnaud. thanks. still ahead, a rare look inside the white house living quarters. i thought my bladder leakage meant my social life was over. wearing depend underwear has allowed me and i'm meeting people. unlike the bargain brand, depend fit-flex underwear is more flexible to move with you. reconnect with the life you've been missing. get a free sample at depend.com. i love that my shop is part of the morning ritual around here. reconnect with the life you've been missing. people rely on that first cup and i wouldn't want to mess with that. but when (my) back pain got bad, i couldn't sleep. i had trouble getting there on time. then i found aleve pm. aleve pm is the only one to combine a safe sleep aid plus the 12 hour strength of aleve. ? 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at unitedhealthcare, we offer three plans- -including one that's brand new for 2017: the aarp medicarerx walgreens plan insured through unitedhealthcare. it features $0 co-pays, low monthly premiums, and the convenience of walgreens. december 7th. so if you're on medicare call or visit us online now to learn more or to enroll. ? ? >> pelley: politics will be on hold here in cleveland tonight cubs in game six of the world series. the tribe could win it all tonight, or maybe tomorrow night. but even if they lose, don dahler tells us this city is on a winning streak. >> go, indians! >> woo! >> reporter: cleared sphrans adopted a new nickname for their afh-maligned hometown, believeland. but it wasn't always so. tom hamilton is the home of the indians. sum up the sports fans here? >> a lot of frustration, don, a lot of broken hearts and a lot of championships that seemed to be lost in almost historical fashion. >> reporter: with the indians possibly on the verge of the city's second championship in a year, cleveland seems to have put its painful past behind it. but it this resurrection hasn't just happened in the realm of sports. not so long ago, this city was down for the count. in the mid-1970s cleveland became the first major city to obligations since great depression and became the poster child for the declining rustbelt. richie teaches population dynamics at cleveland state university. >> we rose with industry and we died with industry, psychically. we lost our identity. >> reporter: to save itself, the city was reborn as a world-class center of medicine. downtown now beckons with clean streets, stores, and restaurants. >there's still a tough struggle basketball team was down 3-1 in the finals or its baseball taesms dismissed as unlikely to even reach the world series yet again, the city of cleveland looked into the abyss and staged the ultimate comeback. don dahler, cbs news, cleveland. >> pelley: and that's the cbs evening news for tonight. for our team here in cleveland world, good night. carson and i have seen some terrible ads attacking our mom dana young. for things she never did. it hurts because mom is cool. she is caring, she works hard. whenever something is not right mom is on it. trust us we know from experience. mom put her career on hold for us. to raise our family. she is a role model for everyone in our community. from sony pictures studios, it's america's game! wheel... of... fortune! ladies and gentlemen, here are the stars of our show -- pat sajak and vanna white! hey. thank you, jim. you, everybody. you feeling collegiate? -yes! -okay. me, too. we appreciate that. thank you very much. you must go. hi, guys. nice of you to show up here. all right, get ready. we'll give away some money right now. grab those devices. $1,000 for our first "toss up." and the category is "thing." ? [ chimes lindsy. full scholarship.

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on a roll. >> go, indians! >> wooo! this is the "cbs evening news" with scott pelley. reporting tonight from cleveland, ohio. >> pelley: this is the state where past and future of the american presidency meet, birth place of seven presidents, graveyard of more than a few presidential dreams. no ohio since lincoln, and the polls show tonight republican donald trump tied here with with democrat hillary clinton. both have visited ohio more than any other battleground, and they've poured $32 million into advertising here. that's four bucks for every registered buckeye. here's mark strassmann. >> we'll make america great again. >> reporter: in the courtship of ohio. >> helping children has been a >> reporter: ...many voters want a restraining order. on average, throughout the state, an ad for trump or clinton runs on local television every three minutes. >> overwhelmingly with ads, overwhelming with calls, overwhelming with nonstop political stuff. >> reporter: linda merriam is a registered independent. betty drake is a conservative democrat. if you get up at 7:00 a.m., by what time you have heard your first ad? >> probably, like, appropriate 7:03. that soon. >> yeah, that soon. >> i'm donald trump. >> i'm hillary clinton. >> reporter: since june, both presidential campaigns have spent more than $32 million on television ads in ohio. and many ohioans have stopped answering the door and the phone. you get calls all day long from numbers you don't recognize. >> right, yup. >> reporter: these are robocallers? >> robocallers, yes. cue-- ( phone ringing ) what do you think that phone call was? >> i think it was a robocaller. >> reporter: does this kind of blitz work? >> no. >> reporter: professor justin buchler: >> when you have as many ads as voters in ohio see, the marginal benefit of every additional ad is basically nothing. >> reporter: drake will vote for trump. merriam is undecided. nothing anybody has changed your mind one bit? >> no. >> reporter: that's a lot of noise for nothing. >> . it's a lot of noise for nothing. >> in hillary clinton's america. >> reporter: noise that one one here can muffle until next tuesday. mark strassmann, cbs news, cleveland. >> pelley: there is some evidence that ads do drive voters to polls. four years ago, the turnout in battleground states was seven points higher than the rest of the real clear politics average of major national polls shows clinton's lead is shrinking tonight from seven points two weeks ago, to two points now. so with one week to go, let's bring in our campaign corresponds nancy cordes and major garrett. first, let's go to nancy. how is clinton responding to these polls? >> reporter: scott, she herself has not said anything about them, but her aides insisted to us that this is what they've always predicted, that the race would end. in fact, they've even begun airing ads in a couple of states that should be pretty safe for democrats like new mexico and michigan. they say it's not a sign that they're getting nervous. it's simply a sign that they've amassed a pretty big war chest and this is their last chance to spend it. >> pelley: and, nancy, what do we know today about the f.b.i. e-mail investigation? >> reporter: well, we know that f.b.i. agents at quantico in virginia have begun electronically sifting through the hundreds of thousands of anthony weiner's laptop. they believe that the number of e-mails belonging to huma abedin numbers in the thousandses, and they've actually built a pretty sophisticate software program to weed through them using keywords like "classified" to try to condense the e-mails to those that they believe could be relevant to the clinton investigation, weed out duplicates that they've already read before, a process they say could take days before they even begin actually reading the e-mails, >> pelley: they're trying to figure out whether there's any classified information that passed on hillary clinton's private e-mail server. major garrett, trump is making hay out of clinton's problems, but the f.b.i. is looking into his world as well. >> reporter: that's right, scott. the big topic is russia. the f.b.i. spent many months this summer looking into possible connections between donald trump, those in his political inner circle, or his businesses with the russian government or russian oligarchs. some noak smokebut not much fire. there are also reports that former trump campaign chairman paul manny fort is under f.b.i. investigation. but he asures me, scott, there is no f.b.i. investigation. one thingt f.b.i. did conclude is the russian government is more disrupted in disrupting the democratic process here in america than aigd trump. >> pelley: and how's the campaign seeing this final week of the race? >> reporter: well, scott, to understand the trump campaign models differently than anyone else. they see five or six points that other pollsters do not see. where do they find it? low-propensity voters, voters who haven't showed up before. they believe there are two or three points there, these people will surge to the polls unexpectedly. they also expect republicans to come home in the final days, one or two points there, and maybe one point of psycholog people associated with trump but finally convinced he's going to win. that's why they believe in >> pelley: we'll see a week from today. major garrett, nancy cordes thanks very much. african americans could tip the balance in battleground states, especially in florida and here in ohio if they turn out for clinton as strongly as they did for president obama. in a story for "60 minutes," we spoke with voters on the east side of cleveland, many of whom worship at the olivet institutional baptist church, which is led by colvin. >> i think what's going to happen is people are going to have to vote-- vote with passion and with purpose. because this election is not simply significant because every election is important. this election is existential when you look at what's happening around the country, the rhetoric, the kind of loss of civility. you won't vote, you're undecide or you will be voting? >> yeah, i'm going to vote. >> reporter: in the neighborhoods, reverend colvin is getting out the vote, and counted. >> we have to have a president, we have to have a president. these are the two choice we have. >> pelley: my wife says if you don't vote you can't complain. >> you can't, that's right, thoorpt, that's right. that's right. >> pelley: when african americans vote in large numbers in ohio, ohio votes democratic. >> yes. >> pelley: and when they don't come to the polls, ohio votes republican. >> yes. >> pelley: what's going to happen? >> i'm going to pray that they come to the polls. i'm gonna -- >> groundswell? >> i'm not hearing it. >> pelley: when you look into this congregation, the sunday before election day, what are you going to tell them? >> i'm going to say, "when you go to the polls, remember who you're taking with you. first, i want to think about the past. we're taking medgar evers with us. we're taking freedom summer with us. but not only are we taking the past, but we are also taking >> pelley: hillary clinton is also concerned that voters might change their minds in the last minute because of that f.b.i. e-mail investigation. here's michelle miller. >> reporter: at price hill chili restaurant in hamilton county this morning, they served up hot coffee, scrambled eggs and a side of politics. >> i'm standing by hillary. >> i'm really rooting trump this year. >> reporter: the f.b.i.'s decision to reopen hillary doesn't seem to be change many minds. are people pretty much just dug in? >> i think they are pretty much set at this point. >> reporter: the controversy isn't a big deal for 60-year-old kim chappelle, a lifelong republican who is voting for clinton. isn't this a new round of e-mails? >> it is. but from the previous, all the previous e-mail incidents nothing ever became of it, so i'm figuring nothing is becoming of this. stanger says the f.b.i. review confirms he's making the right choice with donald trump. >> the fact that they opened up the investigation tells me that there's more things that she's done that we don't know about. >> reporter: neighbors are displaying their support with political yard signs. james gillespie, a democrat who campaigned twice for obama, is switching parties this year. >> a lot of corruption they saw in hillary clinton is coming out in the news right now, and it's bi willing to support her. >> reporter: back at the restaurant, kim chappelle thinks trump is unelectable. >> i couldn't in good congress vote for donald trump. i just couldn't do it. >> reporter: early voting began here in ohio nearly three weeks ago, scott. so even before the controversy broke on friday, more than a million ballots had already been cast statewide. >> pelley: michelle, thanks very much. of course, both candidates would chip reid spoke to small business owners for our series "closing arguments." >> reporter: so what are you making here? >> i am making peanut butter buckeyes. >> reporter: buckeyes. >> yes. >> reporter: fall is candy season and it's when talk in donna's shop turns to politics. sandusky is a swing can county. president obama won it twice, but so did george w. bush. and who would you like to see win this election? >> i wou l trump win this election. >> reporter: mcneemer says she especially likes his plans for the can economy. >> when you want business to grow, would you not need somebody that knows business? >> reporter: she prefers trump's current plan on the minimum wage. he wants the states to decide. clinton supports a minimum mum as high as $15 an hour. >> if we're forced to pay $15 for minimum wage, guess who's going to work more hours? me. because i'm going to have to lay off employees. handle that kind of increase. >> reporter: she also favors trump's tax plan with across-the-board cuts, the biggest for the wealthiest. clinton's plan would raise taxes on the rich. >> i understand that they're wealthy and they make a lot of money, but i also understand that they worked really hardinar money, and if they have to pay more taxes, it has to go somewhere. it's going to come down to me. >> reporter: across the county, in bellevue, ohio, richard stegman has a very different view. you're a big fan of hillary clinton. >> oh, gosh, yes. >> reporter: stegman owns the victorian tudor inn. >> all right, ladies, here we go. >> a b & b he bought right beforey recession. >> evidence this close, so close to losing everything. >> reporter: he credits the president's policy with turning the economy around and thinks clinton would state course. on the economic front what, do you like most about hillary clinton? >> well, i think it all goes under the exwrael o umbrella ofr wage, where do you stand on that? >> i have been paying my staff $14 to $15 an hour. >> reporter: that's well above the minimum wage. >> because i need good people. >> reporter: and he prefers clinton's tax policies to trump's? >> his tax proposal benefits a wide variety of people and that's what we need. we don't need a tax policy that really benefits just a small segment. i think hers is very broad. >> reporter: you think she'll help the middle class more than donald trump? >> oh, oh, oh, clearly. >> reporter: two sm sides in a county that could determine which way this battleground state swings. chip reid, cbs news, sandusky county, ohio. >> pelley: and it will be determined a week from tonight. cbs news election night coverage will begin next tuesday at 7:00 eastern time. today, the oklahoma highway patrol released video of the deadly end to a week-long wanted for a series of shootings, and he did not go down without a fight. here's manuel bojorquez. >> reporter: dash-cam video shows an oklahoma state trooper driving and firing his assault rifle as he chased murder suspect michael vance sunday night. a police helicopter captured the chase from above, showing him barreling through a checkpoint during the rolling gunbattle. at one point vance, who police say was armed with an ak-47, got out of his shield as he kept shooting. troopers fired back. eventually, he was struck and killed. vance had been on the run for more than a week after police say he killed two relatives, shot and injured two officers, and taunted authorities with a facebook video. >> what's up, y'all? letting you all know, look, this is real. see? that's a gun. that's the real deal. >> reporter: police got a break sunday when someone spotted vance camping out in he opened fire on a sheriff, who tried to pull him over, launching the chase. ( gunfire ) the sheriff was struck on the shoulder and elbow. he will survive. scott, police believe vance, who was recently charged with child sex abuse, out to seek revenge. >> pelley: manuel bojorquez for us tonight. manuel, thank you. coming up next on the cbs evening news, a pipeline blast could mean higher gasoline prices. and later, a city making a comeback whe news continues from cleveland. travel with my daughter. roller derby. ? now give up half of 'em. do i have to? this is a tough financial choice we could face when we retire. but, if we start saving even just 1% more of our annual income... we could keep doing all the things we love. if you have postmenopausal osteoporosis and a high risk for fracture... i can tell you prolia? is proven to help protect bones from fracture. but the real proof? my doctor said prolia? helped my bones get stronger. are your bones getting stronger do not take prolia? if you have low blood calcium, are pregnant, are allergic to it, or take xgeva?. serious allergic reactions, such as low blood pressure; trouble breathing; throat tightness; face, lip, or g or hives have happened in people taking prolia?. tell your doctor about dental problems, as severe jaw bone problems may happen, or new or unusual pain in your hip, groin or thigh, as unusual thigh bone fractures have occurred. prolia? 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like a human fingerprint, no two whale flukes are the same. because your needs are unique, for more than 145 years. ask a financial advisor how you can tailor solutions from pacific life to help you reach your financial goals. many people clean their dentures with toothpaste or plain water. and even though their dentures look clean, in reality they're not. if a denture were to be put under a microscope, we can see all the bacteria that still exists on the denture, and that bacteria multiplies very rapidly. that's why dentists recommend cleaning with polident everyday. polident's unique micro clean formula works in just 3 minutes, killing 99.99% of odor causing bacteria. for a cleaner, fresher, brighter denture every day. look, the wolf was huffing and puffing. like you do sometimes, grandpa? well, when you have copd, it can be hard to breathe. it can be hard to get air out, which can make it hard to get air in. so i talked to my doctor. she said... symbicort could help you breathe better, a rescue inhaler for sudden symptoms. symbicort helps provide significant improvement of your lung function. symbicort is for copd, including chronic bronchitis and emphysema. it should not be taken more than twice a day. symbicort contains formoterol. medicines like formoterol increase the risk of death from asthma problems. symbicort may increase your risk of lung infections, osteoporosis, and some eye problems. you should tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. symbicort could mean a day with better breathing. ren giggle) symbicort. breathe better starting within 5 minutes. call or go online to learn more about a free trial offer. if you can't afford your medication, astrazeneca may be able to help. oh yeah one bottle has the grease cleaning power of two bottles of this bargain brand. a drop of dawn and grease is gone. looking to save with a medicare prescription drug plan? at unitedhealthcare, we offer three plans- -including one that's brand new for 2017: the aarp medicarerx walgreens plan insured through unitedhealthcare. it features $0 co-pays, low monthly premiums, and the convenience of walgreens. december 7th. so if you're on medicare call or visit us online now to learn more or to enroll. ? ? >> pelley: politics will be on hold here in cleveland tonight cubs in game six of the world series. the tribe could win it all tonight, or maybe tomorrow night. but even if they lose, don dahler tells us this city is on a winning streak. >> go, indians! >> woo! >> reporter: cleared sphrans adopted a new nickname for their afh-maligned hometown, believeland. but it wasn't always so. tom hamilton is the home of the indians. sum up the sports fans here? >> a lot of frustration, don, a lot of broken hearts and a lot of championships that seemed to be lost in almost historical fashion. >> reporter: with the indians possibly on the verge of the city's second championship in a year, cleveland seems to have put its painful past behind it. but it this resurrection hasn't just happened in the realm of sports. not so long ago, this city was down for the count. in the mid-1970s cleveland became the first major city to obligations since great depression and became the poster child for the declining rustbelt. richie teaches population dynamics at cleveland state university. >> we rose with industry and we died with industry, psychically. we lost our identity. >> reporter: to save itself, the city was reborn as a world-class center of medicine. downtown now beckons with clean streets, stores, and restaurants. >there's still a tough struggle basketball team was down 3-1 in the finals or its baseball taesms dismissed as unlikely to even reach the world series yet again, the city of cleveland looked into the abyss and staged the ultimate comeback. don dahler, cbs news, cleveland. >> pelley: and that's the cbs evening news for tonight. for our team here in cleveland world, good night. carson and i have seen some terrible ads attacking our mom dana young. for things she never did. it hurts because mom is cool. she is caring, she works hard. whenever something is not right mom is on it. trust us we know from experience. mom put her career on hold for us. to raise our family. she is a role model for everyone in our community. from sony pictures studios, it's america's game! wheel... of... fortune! ladies and gentlemen, here are the stars of our show -- pat sajak and vanna white! hey. thank you, jim. you, everybody. you feeling collegiate? -yes! -okay. me, too. we appreciate that. thank you very much. you must go. hi, guys. nice of you to show up here. all right, get ready. we'll give away some money right now. grab those devices. $1,000 for our first "toss up." and the category is "thing." ? [ chimes lindsy. full scholarship.

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