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This Morning from CBS News, Sept. 28, 2016

Miss Universe

Hillary Clinton heads to New Hampshire today to campaign with former rival Bernie Sanders, and to try and capitalize both on momentum after her first debate with Republican nominee Donald Trump, and on a 20-year-old riff between Trump and a former Miss Universe beauty pageant winner.

Party lines

Dakota Schwab spends her days serving Sunshine State retirees in The Villages, the largest retirement community in the U.S. Unlike most of her clientele, however, she can’t fathom voting for Donald Trump, but she keeps those views largely to herself in what is solid Trump territory. Her story epitomizes the division, largely by age, of the voting populace in Florida.

Founding father

Even to his own people, Shimon Peres was a puzzle. The former Israeli president and prime minister who died yesterday at the age of 93 spoke eloquent Hebrew, but with a foreign accent, lacked formal education yet brimmed with culture, and was a mediocre politician, but became a statesman of spectacular vision.

Wells Fargo

Wells Fargo CEO John Stumpf is giving up tens of millions of dollars worth of stock benefits and losing his salary after revelations that employees opened about millions of unauthorized accounts in customers’ names to meet lofty sales targets. Was the fraud a symptom of a larger problem in the banking industry?

Hallowed ground

One of the most anticipated exhibits at the new National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington is a casket that carried the body 14-year-old Emmett Till, who was lynched for flirting with a white girl. We hear the story, which could have been lost to history if it wasn’t for his mother’s determination to reveal the evil behind her son’s murder.

Millennials’ money

Although many people in the U.S. are struggling to squirrel money away for retirement, one group of Americans seems to be getting the message that saving is paramount: millennials. We examine why young adults may be better prepared financially for their later years than earlier generations.

Slow bounce

Most Americans understand that the recovery from the Great Recession has been painfully slow -- but less apparent, is why. While various factors have contributed to the sluggish rebound, one reason stands out. Could the political discord in Washington be keeping the brakes on the economic engine?

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