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tv   ABC World News With Diane Sawyer  ABC  November 1, 2011 6:30pm-7:00pm EDT

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this is "world news." tonight, drinking and breast cancer. a major new study of 100,000 women finds a link between alcohol and breast cancer. why less than one drink a day could increase risk. the big bank backs down. a big victory in the david and goliath battle over those $5 bank fees. glow lie yath caves tonight. and our own made in america. this man wants to create american jobs. so, why on earth would the u.s. government make him go home? the defense rests in the michael jackson manslaughter case. what the pop stars brothers say they did to try to save his life. and it is possible this is the happiest woman in america? what is they doing to power up her life?
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good evening. we have a giant headline to tell you about tonight about health. the topic? breast cancer and alcohol, including wine. the results are in from the biggest study of its kind in history, by the american medical association. 100,000 women followed over 28 years, and the conclusion? less than a drink a da even a glass of wine with dinner, could change the risk of breast cancer. in whom and why? so, we asked abc's andrea canning to break it all down for us tonight. >> reporter: the new study out today found compelling evidence that having even a single glass of wine each day raises your risk of breast cancer. >> in the past we've known women who consume a lot of alcohol increase the risk of breast cancer. we actually thought that a small amount of alcohol was relatively safe for breast cancer. >> reporter: the study of more then 100,000 women over a 28-year period shows just 3 to 6
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glasses of alcohol a week can increase a woman's chances of breast cancer by 15%. less than a glass of wine per day. and if you bump that number up to two a day, the risk goes to 51%. does it make you think twice about having that extra drink? >> it might. but honestly, probably not. >> if wine is going to give a person breast cancer, i would definitely change my habits. >> reporter: doctors believe as many as 11% of breast cancers are linked to alcohol consumption. the increased risk is caused by the way the body reacts to alcohol. drinking increases levels of estrogen in the body, fueling tumor creation and growth. so what do you do? especially given the fact that we've heard in the past that moderate alcohol use has been found to help prevent heart attack and stroke. >> the increased risk of breast cancer is really dwarfed by the evidence of the decreased risk of cardiovascular disease. >> reporter: still, today's study is the most significant bit of evidence that every time you raise your glass, you might
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be raising your breast cancer risk. andrea canning, abc news, new york. >> which brings us to abc's dr. richard besser. so, rich, are you confident of this? is this going to be another study we're going to see reversed? >> reporter: this is not the first study, but the best study. if you have family members, women in your family, who died from breast cancer, there's not a lot you can do. but this says there's something you can do that can possibly reduce your risk. and that's stop drinking. >> you think they are onto something here? >> reporter: i think they are. >> okay, let me ask you about the other thing we keep hearing, which is a little bit of alcohol, moderate alcohol, prevents heart disease and stroke. so, how do you choose between the two? >> reporter: well, that's the catch. if you don't have that breast cancer risk, you have to remember that a small amount of alcohol, one drink a day or less has been shown to reduce your risk of heart disease. and you have to remember, 1 in 3
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women are going to die from heart disease. only 1 in 36 are going to die from breast cancer. so, it may be worth continuing to have that drink, if you don't have the increased cancer risk. >> start by taking a look at your risk factors and then decide which yours you're going to take. >> reporter: if you don't drink now, no one is saying to start there are too many things that can go wrong. but look at your our risk factors and that should help you decide. >> okay, rich, thank you. as we said this is a really big new study and big conclusions. and now, we turn to that david versus goliath story, the victory of people power against a huge bank. bank of america announced today it is reversing its on those new $5 customer fees. and we have been covering this since the beginning. you'll remember the young woman who started the petition against the bank, raising fees after the taxpayer bailout. customers moved in, it spread like wild fire. we tracked down the held of the company to try to get answers and abc's matt gutman, who did that, has been on the story from
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the beginning and takes us inside the grass roots revolution and what happened tonight. >> reporter: look. 33 days. 300,000 petitioners and one molly katchpole. >> i won! i know! so exciting. >> reporter: when katchpole, just 22, but featured on abc news last month, she just launched an online petition demanding bank of america repeal its, quote, outrageous $5 debit fee. >> it's crazy. it's at 125,000. >> reporter: today, 306,000. >> i just happened to be the person that started the petition. if it wasn't for the 306,000 people who signed it, it wouldn't be anywhere. >> reporter: per public outcry of the fee echoed from the senate floor -- >> bank of america customers, vote with your feet. >> reporter: all the way to the white house. >> you're going to see a bunch of the banks who say to themselves, you know what, this is actually not good business practice. >> reporter: at first, the bank wasn't listening. other big banks saying they, too, were thinking about adding the fees.
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wonder if you can answer a couple of questions for us. so, we tracked down bank's ceo in washington, looking for answers. does bank of america need that money in order to stay alive? >> the fee is meant to can we provide a great service. >> reporter: so, the outrage continued, spurring other big banks like chase and wells fargo to kill plans to roll out their own debit fees, forcing b of a to buckle. "our customers' voices are most important to us. we are not charging the fee and will not be moving forward with any additional plans to do so." and all of it started with that quietest, quaintest of protests. a petition. >> i hope this inspires other people to try to change things when they're unhappy with them, you know? even if it is something like starting a petition. >> reporter: and analysts say it wasn't just those voices that forced that change but a silent army of people, diane, marching their money away from the big banks, traffic on the national
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federal credit union is up a whopping 700%. diane? >> and so many people thought they would never react, never respond and they did today. thank you, matt. and for all of your reporting on this issue. 24 hours ago, by the way, the stock market was surging, you may remember, and optimistic. but if you were watching your stocks today, you saw a nose dive. the dow down nearly 300 points, so, what changed? well, blame it on the country of greece, long criticized for being undisciplined and now threatening american retirement. here's abc's dan harris. >> reporter: to understand how the problems in tiny greece, 6,000 miles away, directly impact our savings right here in america, meet emma mcfarland and yannis latinakis. yannis is from athens, a former bank teller who retired two years ago at the age of 52. emma, who's 60 and lives in nakomis, florida, is still having to work around the clock
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and doesn't have enough savings to retire. >> it's just not going to happen. >> reporter: and check this out. while our maximum social security payment is around $28,000 a year, over in greece, where yannis lives, it's $48,000 a year. >> i kind of wish i was in greece right now. >> reporter: don't we all. this is a country of generous benefits, of pools and porches and massive tax evasion. so, here is how emma is now paying for yannis. in order to pay for all the retirement packages for people like yannis, the greek government borrowed big time for banks all over europe. now, greece says it can't pay. so, those banks are facing huge losses and that could push europe into a depression. since america does so much business with europe, we would be pulled down, too, and that, of course, would hurt emma's savings. the rest of europe has offered to bail greece out, if greece imposes some fiscal discipline.
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but today markets all over the world were rocked by greece saying they want to think about it. >> really don't appreciate it, you know? especially since it is impacting me. >> reporter: yannis told me today he feels guilty about his fat pension plan but many other greeks are unapologetic. even rioting over budget cuts, leaving emma shaking her head tonight. dan harris, abc news. and tonight, we'll tell you about a white-knuckle moment on board a flight from newark, new jersey, to poland. watch this, the boeing 767 crash lands, landing gear stuck the belly of the plane scraping the runway. small sparks erupting. the pie lot was called poland's captain sully and praised by the 231 people on board. >> the captain was just -- put the plane, the machine down. the passengers thought that we
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landed on wheels. >> the passengers have said they were so frightened they were sobbing and saying their farewells. everyone made it off safely. the republican presidential hopeful herman cain was in washington today, but he couldn't escape questions about those sexual harassment allegations. "the washington post" reports that a lawyer for one of ca's accusers wants the national restaurant association to lift a confidentiality agreement that bars her from talking about the case. the woman and cain worked for the trade group in the 1990s. cain has denied those allegations. and word today that secretary of state hillary rodham clinton's mother has died at the age of 92. mrs. clinton has said she was a kind of north star for her famous daughter who has talked about the strength of mother passed on. dorothy emma howell, abandoned at a child. >> i thought of what my own
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mother went through in her life as a child, born to teenage parents who couldn't take care of her. at 14, she went to work, caring for a family's children. >> reporter: later, she would marry a traveling salesman, becoming a full-time homemaker, raising three children in park ridge, illinois, one of them a little girl who was being bullied and had to learn about true grit. this is a rare interview with oprah in 2004. >> we moved into this new house, new neighborhood, and she would come in crying and screaming about the fact that she had been sat upon by a group of children she came in one day and i said this is just about enough, hillary. >> so cute! >> just go out there and show them they're not afraid and if she does hit you again, which she kept doing, hit her back. >> reporter: she was always
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there, though mostly in the background. always watching. and in the 2008 presidential campaign, she taped a campaign ad for her hillary. >> what i would like people to know about hillary is what a good person she is. >> reporter: for the last five years, she lived in her daughter's home in washington. a mother who had no real nurturing herself, cheering her daughter's victories, consoling her defeat. in her book, hillary clinton wrote that her mother's life made her appreciate her own life so much more, adding, "it was her mother who said she could never be a quitter." and still ahead right here on "world news," an entrepreneur, blocked by the u.s. government from creating american jobs? what's going on? a made in america investigation. and a woman designated the happiest woman in america. what are the secrets of her life for everyone else? i've got nothing against these do-it-yourself steam cleaners.
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now, a made in america investigation. last night, we told you about road blocks keeping hundreds of thousands of tourists from coming to america, who are ready to spend $600 billion on u.s. goods. well, tonight, abc's david muir looks more closely at a road block aimed at entrepreneurs, eager to set up shop on u.s. soil, hire right here in the u.s. but instead, why are they being turned away? >> reporter: take a walk through so many american high tech companies and you'll find the same thing at the top. ceos, foreign entrepreneurs, who chose america to start their businesses. and employed millions of americans in doing so. among the companies, google, yahoo! pfizer, even ebay. selling just about everything and sold on doing it in america. in fact, in just ten years time, foreign entrepreneurs who fought to visas to america and got them, created 450,000 american
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jobs in just ten years. and that's just the high-tech sector. so why is it so difficult for foreign entrepreneurs today -- to get a visa to stay here? even when they're sitting on the the next big thing and want to employ americans to get it done. take amit aharoni. a stanford business school grad from israel who invented cruisewise.com, an online booking engine, just like orbitz or exbee yad, only for cruises. he already hired nine american employees and his company rated one of the hot 20 silicon valley start ups to watch. investors so confident, they poured in more than a million dollars already. after all, he'd come to america for an education. stanford was so impressed when he applied, a hand-written note from the dean. "congratulations, "congratulations," he wrote. "your commitment to innovation -- to proving that anything is possible -- will ensure that you succeed." but the question now, where? because amit just learned from the u.s. government his
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visa has been denied. and now he's running his company from a friend's living room in canada. they >> how's everyone doing? good. thumbs up. >> reporter: they give him a thumbs up. skyping form 900 miles away. now forced to skype with his employees. how frustrated are you? >> i'm extremely frustrated this entire situation, i find is outrageous. >> reporter: on hold, his long-term hoches to eventually hire hundreds of americans. the reason? the government says his job as ceo of that hot new startup doesn't require someone with his high-level degree. essentially that don't need him here. but it's his idea, his company. and he already hired americans. >> reporter: so as i sit here with the letter that told you had to leave, does this mean you might take those jobs you created here in america elsewhere? >> i would hate to see that happen but i might be forced to yes. >> reporter: even new york city mayor michael bloomberg says time is money. money that would be spent here in the u.s. jobs that would be created here. so you have other countries looking at people who've been educated in america and they say come start your business here. >> absolutely. and we say go. we don't even give them the option of staying here. >> reporter: and bloomberg says if america doesn't roll out the red carpet, other countries will. china, he says, already offering not only visas, but startup cash. and chile? beyond the music and the animated hand shake, the offer of cold hard cash, incentives. the kind of help amit didn't even ask for here in the u.s.
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for a company industry leaders already said is one to watch. now, the government agency that issues the visas said in their letter to amit for his job, running that hot new startup, his advanced degree wasn't necessary. essentially saying to give him a visa, he would need to find a job where he uses that degree. he argues he is using it and he's hiring americans to help him. the government says they cannot comment on his case specifically, diane. we'll stay on it. >> please do and please let us know. thank you, david muir and the whole made in america team. and still ahead, the trial of michael jackson's doctor. a crucial decision by the defendant, against the advice of a defense lawyer. [ sniffs ] i have a cold. [ sniffs ] i took dayquil
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foot-care scientists are behind it. you'll get all-day relief. for your tired achy feet. for locations, see drscholls.com. thank you... after 22 days of often intense testimony, the prosecution and the defense have now rested in the trial of the doctor charged in michael jackson's death. all of this after a crucial decision by dr. conrad murray. what was it? here's abc's jim avila to tell us about it. >> reporter: a standoff on the defense team. sources tell abc news conrad murray was getting conflicting advice from his defense team right up until the end. lead defense attorney ed chernoff adamantly against his client taking the witness stand, while michael flanagan, in the second chair, told murray to win the case, he had to explain directly to the jury. and with cameras off, judge michael pastor to murray -- if you want to testify, you will testify.
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do you understand this is an individual decision? yes. what is your decision? my decision is that i will not testify in this matter. >> there's no way you can handle the cross examination. you're going to be defeated before you even start. >> reporter: part of the jackson family in court again today, and now that the evidence is all in, tito and remember bea, michael's siblings in london to promote a tribute concert, talked about how helpless they feel about their brother's drug habit. >> he was in denial. we tried very hard. there were several interventions. >> reporter: closing arguments are now scheduled for thursday. the jury should get the case friday. diane? >> all right, jim, thanks to you. and still ahead, secrets to living a happy life. from someone who may know, do you think she is the happiest woman in america? x. knowing that i could smoke during the first week was really important to me. [ male announcer ] along with support, chantix is proven to help people quit smoking. chantix reduced my urge to smoke -- and personally that's what i knew i needed. [ male announcer ] some people had changes in behavior,
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million dollars less over their careers than men their age. the result? >> this generation of women in mid-life has lower well being than any other generation. >> reporter: than any other generation? >> and this generation is more distressed and stressed. >> reporter: so, why is mary clairoe ostill smiling? well, she's figured it out. researchers working with "usa today" surveyed hundreds of thousands of women and came one a list of specific things they say boost their happiness. mary claire 'em boembodies most them. today, we'll pull back the layers of her work life to learn how to improve ours. first off, at age 50, she's a senior manager at her company and she's not slowing down. >> i need that fulfillment. i've always worked. in fact, i've never worked 40 hours. i think i'll do that when irm e retire. >> reporter: pollsters found the happiest women are still working full time.
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on this day, mary claire leaves at 3:00 to take her son for a college visit. she told her bosses she works best with a flexible schedule and they allowed it. flexibility contributes to happiness in the workplace more than any other benefit. another secret to happiness? a good friend. people who have a best friend at work are seven times more likely to be engaged during the day. and don't underestimate the power of your commute, either. researchers found for every ten minutes you're in the car, your happiness goes down a notch. mary claire works from home twice a week. >> i lose two hours of productivity. >> reporter: and lost family time. a priority for so many women trying to make work work. sharyn alfonsi, abc news, new york. >> and if you want to check up on your life, how it measures up on the happiness scale, go to
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abcnews.com/worldne abcnews.com/worldnews. and we are happy you spent this half hour with us and we're always on at abcnews.com. don't forget, "nightline" later. and we'll see you for "world news" back here again tomorrow night. until then, you have a wonderful evening. good night. look, every day we're using more and more energy.
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the world needs more energy. where's it going to come from? ♪ that's why right here, in australia, chevron is building one of the biggest natural gas projects in the world. enough power for a city the size of singapore for 50 years. what's it going to do to the planet? natural gas is the cleanest conventional fuel there is. we've got to be smart about this. it's a smart way to go. ♪

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