This Morning from CBS News, Jan. 19, 2016
Trump's ground game
Hundreds braved a New Hampshire blizzard to see Donald Trump speak just three weeks before the state's critical primary. They were just the kind of passionate supporters he's counting on to win key early caucus and primary states -- but most of them weren't from New Hampshire. Is Trump's Granite State ground-game for real, or is it struggling to keep up with the front-runner's momentum? Does it matter?
Seeds of terror
CBSN goes into the French capital's impoverished banlieues, the neighborhoods with up to 30 percent unemployment where ISIS and other terror groups have found fertile ground to sow the seeds of extremism. One young resident told CBSN that, in his opinion, "exclusion makes the terrorist."
IRS scam
Last year we broke the story of the biggest phone fraud in IRS history. Since then, the number of people contacted by the scammers has almost tripled. We take a look at the government's new campaign to fight back against the fraudsters.
Adjusting to freedom
Three Americans freed from a notorious Iranian prison are readjusting to life outside concrete walls, but that process will take time. We find out how the recently-released U.S. citizens are getting on as they reunite with loved ones, and taste foods they've been missing for years.
Cancer test
Bill Gates and Jeff Bezos are just two of the high-profile investors in start-up Ilumina, which claims to have developed a ground-breaking way to detect cancer. But some cancer specialists have their doubts about the company's approach -- is the technology too good to be true?
When dogs fly
People traveling with big dogs used to be able to go to the ticket counter, put Fido in a crate and check him onto the same flight you were flying on. Now, most major carriers are moving toward transporting pets as cargo, which has pet owners checking-in far from the terminal.
Dish telemarketing
The DISH Network will defend itself today against allegations it violated the National Do Not Call Registry 150 million times. The Justice Department is seeking penalties in the hundreds of millions of dollars -- but it must prove DISH had knowledge of the violations.
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