tv CBS News Roundup CBS July 30, 2024 2:42am-3:30am PDT
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certainly you've seen that reaction in the country. >> reporter: stuart stevens is a longtime republican political strategist and author. >> there is something about being vice president that diminishes you, and there's something about being the nominee of a party that enhances you. so i think what we've seen since the president withdrew from the nomination, this process of vice president harris becoming something larger than being a vice president. >> reporter: someone large enough in the eyes of voters to be president. traditionally candidates have months, the entire primary season, to do that. harris has exactly 100 days between now and november 5th. she's in a big hurry. in a week, she's locked the nomination, hauled in a mountain of cash, and racked up an impressive list of endorsements.
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young people, volunteers, constituencies who had tuned out of the presidential race are tuning back in by the thousands to support harris, nudging her to a statistical tie with former president donald trump in a new poll. >> we choose freedom. ♪ freedom ♪ >> reporter: harris has moved fast to define the narrative of her own campaign before trump does it for her. >> if you don't mind, i'm not going to be nice. is that okay? >> reporter: the fact she's a black south asian woman is the ever-present undercurrent in the turbulence of the now redefined election cycle. >> do you think that the fact that kamala harris is a woman will be a big factor in this election? >> i think when it's said and done, we're going to look back and say it was the determinative factor. >> harris will be bumping up against that expectation that
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strong leaders, that presidents look like men. and so she's going to have to look strong, look like a compelling leader while acknowledging that she is different. and so trying to find that fine line between being assertive and being a strong leader while not being unlikable is going to be a challenge. >> reporter: lindsay chervinsky is the executive director of the george washington presidential library and a presidential historian. >> anytime there has been a female candidate, whether it's all the way back to the early 1900s up through hillary clinton, many of the attacks can be gender-based. >> kamala harris, oh. >> reporter: as trump has already proven. >> did you see her last night on television with the laugh? ha, ha, ha. >> we have double standards for women in public life and the same for non-white candidates. look, i think that they're going to use every kind of racial, gender dog whistle that they can come up with. >> how will she have to respond to that?
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>> the easy answer to that is "i've never been in a courtroom with someone i was prosecuting who had a lot of nice things to say about me." >> hear me when i say i know donald trump's type. >> reporter: prosecutor versus felon has become a meme. >> lock him up! >> reporter: haven't we heard that line from donald trump? >> lock her up! >> incidentally -- >> reporter: looking back from the vantage point of history, sometimes a catch phrase or a moment can alter the perception of a candidate or a race. >> i, of course, disagree with senator kennedy. >> reporter: example, a sweaty, scowling richard nixon. >> only you can decide. >> reporter: versus a telegenic jfk in the 1960 debate. >> another one that i would maybe point to is bill clinton's arsenio hall saxophone playing
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because it spoke to the moment, and it confirmed what people liked about him. >> yes, we can! >> i don't think that there was a lot of polls out there in 2007 and early 2008 saying the american people, their number one issue was hope and change. but barack obama was able to make that the number one issue, and that's how you win campaigns. >> reporter: stuart stevens is an anti-trumper, but he's been a top adviser to republican presidential candidates since the mid-1990s. listen to his prediction. >> you think harris will win? >> i think she'll win comfortably. >> reporter: the odds are not necessarily in harris' favor, though. >> typically vice presidents have abysmal success running for presidents on their own. we've seen very few that are successful, and typically they only serve one additional term. >> reporter: of the 24 former vps who have run before harris, only 10 won, most recently joe biden.
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now donald trump is the old guy running for the oval office. so will this be kamala harris' moment to make history? >> i'm ready. >> reporter: her honeymoon period won't last forever, but she's out of the gate swinging. >> that's right. bring it on. >> that was martha teichner, and >> that was martha teichner, and this is "cbs news roundup." “the darkness of bipolar depression made me feel like i was losing interest in the things i love. then i found a chance to let in the lyte.” discover caplyta. unlike some medicines that only treat bipolar i, caplyta is proven to deliver significant symptom relief from both bipolar i & ii depression. and in clinical trials, movement disorders and weight gain were not common. caplyta can cause serious side effects. call your doctor about sudden mood changes, behaviors, or suicidal thoughts right away. anti-depressants may increase these risks in young adults. elderly dementia patients have increased
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at the paris olympics, the u.s. women's rugby team dropped a hard-fought match to france. the u.s. sevens, as they're called, dominated in their first two games but just couldn't overcome the hometown favorites. women's rugby isn't that big here in the u.s., but one of the stars of that team is a tiktok sensation. jamie yuccas spent the day with ilona maher before she flew off to paris. >> reporter: at the team usa rugby training facility in chula vista, california, it's not hard to spot the 5'10", 200 pounds of muscle that is ilona maher. >> i love tackling. i love getting out there, just seeing exactly what i can do and how fast i can run, how hard i can hit. >> reporter: growing up in vermont, maher was always an athlete, but she didn't get into rugby until her senior year of high school. it was love at first tackle.
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>> it just kind of felt like it just fit, fit my body. the way that i was able to be physical and be praised for being physical and to be praised for my size out there, i kind of made the decision this is interesting. let me try to keep playing this. played in college and have kind of kept going. >> reporter: all the way to the women's world cup and eventually making it onto the tokyo 2020 olympic team, where she became just as famous off the field. >> i'm with team usa, and i'm here at the olympics. >> reporter: for her behind the scenes content on tiktok. >> now, ramen. deep fried camembert. i'm so excited. >> reporter: now with more than a million followers, she brings them along on her daily life and uses internet trolls as motivation. part of maher's tiktok success has been her bold embrace of her feminine side. >> i think there has always been a divide. people believing that, oh, when you play sports, if you're an athlete, you can't be feminine.
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i feel that i can be a beast and can play this very physical, aggressive sport while also keeping my femininity while i do that. >> did you always feel that way about yourself? >> people would always call me masculine. i'm like, oh, there's a purpose here for it. i can stiff arm and fend and get up and tackle as hard as i can. that's why i want other women to even just get in the gym and lift weights. see what your body can do. get to the point where you can do a pull-up. oh, man, i'm so powerful, i can do this. i just think it gave me a new perspective on my body. >> it's easy. >> reporter: before i knew it, it was time to see if i could do it. >> i'll just push you up, okay? so you have to start lifting. there you go. >> ahh! >> easy. easy. >> yeah, when i have you to actually lift me. >> that's how you start, though. you start by doing that. >> reporter: but for now, her sights are set on paris and winning a medal. she shows me how that's done while i remind her i'm an old lady. >> the art of the rugby tackle, what we say is -- our saying in
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rugby is cheek to cheek. >> okay. >> so when i'm going to tackle. >> are we talking butt cheeks or face cheeks? >> face cheeks and butt cheek actually, two of them. >> okay. >> shall we try one? >> i can do a little one on you. >> don't hurt me. i'm old. >> i won't hit you hard. >> whoa! that wasn't hard at all. >> what is it like for you to know that young women are watching you and you could be the reason it becomes more popular? >> i guess makes me nervous in some ways because people are always like, you're such a role model and we love you so much. i'm like, i don't want you to think of me as the perfect person because i make mistakes, and i might not always say the right things. but i know these girls' lives are being changed by it as well because they heard about rugby on a girl from tiktok, so they decided to try out this club program. then they met their best friends there, and now they're playing around, having the best memories. i'm honored and i hope to keep exposing america to rugby. >> reporter: i'm jamie yuccas in
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chula vista, california. marvel studios is still counting the receipts after this past weekend's blockbuster launch of "deadpool & wolverine." the action adventure set records, earning $210 million here in the u.s. and nearly $450 million worldwide. and as vladimir duthiers reports, it couldn't have come at a better time for the struggling studio. >> reporter: part three of this raunchy superhero saga did not disappoint. >> let's go. >> reporter: the newest "deadpool" movie blew past expectations, launching to the biggest movie opening of the year. it's a triumph for the marvel cinematic universe, whose most recent release, the marvels, bombed last november. disney and marvel changed strategy to focus on quality over quantity. " deadpool & wolverine" is the only mcu title releasing in theaters this year.
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hitting $200 million was a shock. it's also a coup for a theater industry still struggling to put people in seats after the covid pandemic. >> where we fight -- >> we win! >> reporter: and still dealing with the fallout of last year's sag-aftra strikes. big summer hits like "twisters," "inside out 2," and "bad boys: ride or die" have also drawn big audiences. >> stop it. >> reporter: but the weekend excitement didn't just peak in the theater. in a shocking reveal, marvel's most notable hero will be donning a new mask with iron man's robert downey jr. set to play notorious villain dr. doom in two upcoming "avengers" movies. >> new mask. same task. >> hat was vladimir dut
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outside the olympic sports venues the streets of paris are filled with all sorts of vendors hawking olympic merch, or merchandise. and among the most sought after items, olympic pins. leah mishkin has the story. >> reporter: at the olympic village in paris, these pins are catching eyes. the curious will come a little closer, and this is what they'll learn. ross baxter has been collecting pins since 1988. it all started when he was a volunteer at the calgary winter olympics. he's been to 14 olympics at this point. the 86-year-old has a pin collection from each one. most of them are at home in canada, but he brought many duplicates to trade here for
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pins from paris 2024. >> this, to me, is a lot of fun because you go to another country. you meet a lot of nice people. >> reporter: pin collecting started getting popular at the 1984 los angeles olympics. that's where baxter's friend, dan presburger, got hooked. >> i was a coin collector, and when i was at the olympics in 1984, i was 20 years old in college, and i couldn't afford to buy coins anymore. >> reporter: the los angeles teacher brought about 165 pounds of pins in his suitcase to paris to trade. >> at every games, there's a pin that every collector really tries to get. >> reporter: about 100 to 150 traders will be on the prowl. >> some people collect media pins. some people collect the country pins. some people collect the paris pins only. >> it's just an addiction. luckily it doesn't ruin your lungs. >> reporter: and you can make some money out of it too. not all of them, but some pins can go for $15 to $50, and rare ones can go upwards of $1,000
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apiece. presburger says the money he makes on resales will help pay for this trip plus the tickets for the events he plans to watch with his girlfriend and son. leah mishkin, cbs news, london. and that's today's "cbs news roundup." for some of you, the news continues. for others, tune in later for "cbs mornings" and follow us 24/7 at cbsnews.com. reporting from the cbs news broadcast center in new york city, i'm shanelle kaul. ♪
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hello and thanks so much for staying up with us. i'm shanelle kaul in new york, and here are some of the top stories on "cbs news roundup." violence in venezuela. chaos breaks out amid accusations much of a rigged election. america's largest fire this year continues growing in california by the hour. and president biden proposes an ethics code and term limits for the supreme court. venezuela's opposition leaders say they have obtained vote-counting sheets proving their victory in presidential elections. violent protests broke out after the incumbent, nicolas maduro, was declared the winner on sunday night. the u.s. and other countries are now casting doubt on the results amid widespread accusations of fraud. cbs's lilia luciano reports from caracas. she is the only u.s. network
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correspondent inside venezuela. >> reporter: thousands of demonstrators are taking to the streets across venezuela to protest what they say is an attempt by nicolas maduro to steal the country's election. a lot of tear gas has been deployed by police, who are seeing a group of protesters. we can't figure out how many, but there is perhaps a few hundred there, a few dozen. the line is back there. there are some of being thrown at them, and police are assembling in large numbers over here. venezuela's strongman, nicolas maduro, has claimed victory for a third term despite exit polls showing challenger edmundo gonzalez ahead by more than 30 points. the international community has joined those calls for transparency as they did in maduro's last disputed election win in 2018.
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>> we have serious concerns that the results announced does not reflect the will of the venezuela people. >> reporter: we're seeing them throwing canisters of tear gas back at police. there's a lot of police motorcycles here confronting them. the group of protesters back there, some of them told us that they assembled peacefully, and that's when all of this confrontation started taking place. lilia luciano, cbs news. wildfires continue raging across the american west. the park fire in northern california, america's largest this year, is growing by 5,000 acres every hour. the man suspected of starting it has now appeared in court, and cbs's jonathan vigliotti reports the fire could take weeks to extinguish. >> reporter: as fast-moving flames ravage parts of northern california, firefighters are urged to stay aggressive. more than 4,800 of them are now battling the state's sixth
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largest wildfire ever recorded. crews are scrambling to put out hot spots. but an abundance of grass, timber, and dry brush is fueling the fire at a feverish pace. >> it's been prime to go over the last number of years. obviously with the temperatures and the winds, everything's just kind of aligned perfectly for this fire to be burning 4,000 to 5,000 acres an hour. >> reporter: the man accused of starting the blaze, 42-year-old ronnie stout, appeared in court for his arraignment. prosecutors say he pushed a burning car into an embankment. one witness told us what she saw. >> some flames kind of liblged at the passenger side. in that moment, we're like, oh, my god. it spread fast. >> reporter: in kern county, about 130 miles north of los angeles, another wildfire exploded, destroying most of a historic mining town over the weekend. meanwhile in canada, we're getting an up-close look at the devastation caused by a wildfire that struck the popular tourist destination of jasper and its
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national park. 358 buildings were burned. a third of the entire town. and smoke from the wildfires both in canada and here in the western united states has now drifted as far as the east coast. jonathan vigliotti, cbs news. president biden is revealing his plans for major reform to the u.s. supreme court. but as cbs's skyler henry reports, the president is facing a steep battle on capitol hill. >> reporter: president biden spoke at the lyndon b. johnson library in austin, texas, on monday about major changes he's proposing for the u.s. supreme court. >> i'm calling for a constitutional amendment called "no one is above the law" amendment. we're a nation of laws, not kings and dictators. >> reporter: biden cited recent supreme court rulings he called extreme, including overtime turning of roe v. wade, and a decision granting partial community to ex-presidents. >> the court is being used to weaponize an unchecked agenda. >> reporter: among the core
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components of president's ideas are an enforceable code of ethics. the nine justices would be required to disclose all major gifts and travel. >> we need a mandatory code of ethics for the supreme court, and we need it now. >> reporter: and biden's supreme court plan includes 18-year term limits for justices. if adopted, the sitting president would nominate a new justice every two years as older justices time out. >> for him to get to the point where he thinks that the constitution has to be amended to constrain the supreme court is a big deal. >> reporter: the ideas would need congressional approval, a very tall order with a narrowly divided senate and a republican-controlled house. >> president biden and his leftist allies who don't like the current composition of the court, so they want to shred the constitution to change it. >> reporter: speaker mike johnson called the proposal dead on arrival. skyler henry, cbs news, washington. the u.s. is leading diplomatic efforts to deter israel from striking lebanon's capital, beirut. israel is threatening to exact a
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heavy price from iranian-backed hezbollah militants in lebanon for the rocket attack over the weekend that killed 12 israeli children in the israeli-occupied golan heights. cbs's debora patta is in the middle east with the latest. >> reporter: blown apart by a hezbollah rocket, 12 children laid to rest in a long row of white shrouded coffins. the kids were playing just behind me when the sirens went off. then the rockets slammed into the pitch, leaving no time for them to make it to the shelter. these paramedics arrived ten minutes later. >> we found only dead kids. it was really hard to watch. >> it was truly hell on earth. the smell of the burning and the burning flesh and the blood. >> reporter: israel and the iranian-backed hezbollah have been trading fire since october 7th. this has reignited fears of an all-out war. a response will come, and it
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will be harsh, said prime minister benjamin netanyahu at the site of the attack. some in this village want revenge, but many more just want the bloodshed to stop. the u.s. is urging restraint on all sides, worried this attack is the nightmare scenario it's been warning could trigger full-blown war. debora patta, cbs news, east jerusalem. when "cbs news roundup" continues, we'll tell you about the latest developments in the investigation of the attempted assassination of former president donald trump. man: awww man, i can't believe i'm missing this! ♪ ♪ okay grandma, i see you!
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this is "cbs news roundup." i'm shanelle kaul in new york. on capitol hill, leaders of the house of representatives have now chosen 13 lawmakers to lead a bipartisan inquiry into the attempted assassination of former president donald trump. all have backgrounds in national security and law enforcement. trump, himself, has agreed to be interviewed by the fbi in its investigation. meanwhile, cbs news is getting some new information about the timeline of that day and potential missed opportunities to stop the gunman before he pulled the trigger. cbs's scott macfarlane has more. >> reporter: newly released police text messages now show officers were aware of thomas crooks at least 105 minutes before he shot at former president donald trump. [ sound of gunfire ] >> get down, get down! >> reporter: over 30 minutes more than previously known. at 4:27 p.m., one countersniper texted his colleagues, the shooter knows you guys are in
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there, referring to the building he just left. at 5:38 p.m., in a different group chat, an officer sent a picture of crooks and says, i did see him with a range finder looking toward the stage. still, 40 minutes later, crooks had a clear line of sight at the stage when he shot trump. >> seemed to have a comprehension of the security arrangements, if you will, and seemed to have really done a deep dive into possibly how to get around those. >> reporter: there were other failures of communication. beaver county, pennsylvania, held a morning security briefing that day. secret service was absent. in fact, that s.w.a.t. team says they never spoke to secret service on the day of the rally until after the assassination attempt. this new timeline comes as an fbi investigation reveals thomas crooks carefully planned his moves. the fbi says crooks' sbt history reveals he researched power plants, explosive devices, how far lee harvey oswald was when he asasz nated jfk, and even the
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assassination attempt against the slovak prime minister earlier this year. they say he made two dozen firearm purchases and bought chemicals in the year before the shooting using aliases. fbi athss have completed approximately 450 interviews and searched data on the shooter provided by 86 companies. >> seems this has played out is sort of the lone wolf scenario where an individual doesn't have a lot of friends. he's not sharing information with friends or family, and he's just keeping everything to himself, maybe internalizing it because he's got this ultimate goal. >> reporter: meanwhile, secret service acting director ronald rowe is in the hot seat tomorrow at a u.s. senate hearing to explain the agency's internal probe into its failures july 13th. yet another investigation is just launched. u.s. house has a 13-member panel with subpoena power to investigate the failures of july 13th and whether any risks or vulnerabilities remain. >> that was scott macfarlane at the capitol. vice president kamala harris will be in georgia today, trying to shore up support among black
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voters, middle class women, and college graduates. those groups helped president biden carry the state in 2020. harris has already raised more than $200 million and erased donald trump's lead in the polls. weijia jiang has more from the white house. >> reporter: just 99 days before the election -- >> she will be worse than crooked joe biden. >> reporter: -- the race is tightening and vice president harris is trying to sustain her strong start. >> people have been flooding our offices around the country to volunteer. [ applause ] we've got momentum. it's on our side. >> reporter: harris raised more than $200 million in her first full week on the trail. two-thirds of it from first-time donors. the campaign signed up 170,000 new volunteers. and a new poll shows her favorability rating jumping to 43% from a week ago while on the republican side, j.d. vance's
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unfavorable rating increased to 39%, due in part to these comments that went viral. >> we're effectively run in this country by a bunch of childless cat ladies who are miserable at their own lives. >> reporter: democrats pounced with a new line of attack. >> that stuff is weird. they come across weird. >> on the other side, they're just weird. >> reporter: today two potential picks for vice president stumped for harris in the key battleground state of pennsylvania, including its governor, josh shapiro. >> she's not only ready, she's damn ready. you know who else knows she's ready? donald trump knows she's ready. so i got a message to donald trump. stop [ bleep ] talking america. this is -- this is the greatest country on the face of the earth. let's start acting like it. >> reporter: michigan governor gretchen whitmer. >> trump and vance want to take us backwards, but we're not going back. our response to them is simple.
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hell no. kamala harris has more experience than the trump/vance ticket combined. between the two of those dudes, they only have 5 1/2 years, and it's not public service. it's self-service. >> reporter: on monday, governor whitmer told cbs news that harris will choose a running mate in the next six or seven days. that's right before the deadline for when the dnc wants to for when the dnc wants to formally nominate the everybody wants super straight, super white teeth. they want that hollywood white smile. new sensodyne clinical white provides 2 shades whiter teeth and 24/7 sensitivity protection. i think it's a great product. it's going to help a lot of patients. inez, let me ask you, you're using head & shoulders, right? only when i see flakes. then i switch back to my regular shampoo. you should use it every wash, otherwise the flakes will come back. he's right, you know. is that tiny troy? the ingredients in head & shoulders keep the microbes that cause flakes at bay. microbes, really? they're always on your scalp...
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♪ millions of kids are spending at least part of the summer at camp. for most, it's a carefree time for fun and games. but for others, it's healing. for the decade ending in 2021, more than 320,000 children lost a parent to a drug overdose, and it's no surprise these youngsters are more at risk of becoming addicted themselves. nancy chen visited a summer camp designed to break that cycle. >> you're looking for the emotion embarrassed. >> reporter: with the sights and sounds of summer, this may feel like a storybook camp. ♪ green and purple ♪ >> reporter: but these children say their stories are far from it. >> i never knew anybody else who had the same kind of experience as me before i came here. >> reporter: it's madison timmens' third year at camp
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mariposa, a national year-long program that teaches kids the tools they need to manage addiction in their families. >> what are some of the things that you remember about your dad? >> i remember one time he showed up at my school, and i thought he was just like having fun, but i later learned that he was just like -- he was intoxicated. i was in preschool at the time. >> think about if it was a play. >> reporter: traditional camp activities are combined with support sessions led by trained professionals. the focus, preventing drug and alcohol use. >> confident. >> reporter: 3,500 campers have come through the free program since it started in 2007. >> come on, evelyn. >> reporter: this woman is the director of this camp in the pennsylvania woods. >> we're teaching kids not only what addiction is and that it's a disease and how substances really hijack the brain, but then we follow that with coping strategies. >> reporter: and it works. a six-year study found at least
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94% of participants 12 years old and up had not gotten high. kids attend camp here between the ages of 9 and 12, what experts call a key window in understanding and breaking the cycle of substance use disorder. children of a parent with a history of addiction are between four to eight times more likely to develop a problem with addiction themselves. >> my addiction has nothing to do with the way i feel about madison. >> reporter: jason stricker is madison's father. he says he's sober today from the hard drugs he started using at age 12. his addiction strong enough at times to come before his daughter, the one whose name is tattooed on his neck. >> when we talked to maddie, she says she feels like she's lost a parent, that she became an adult too soon. >> absolutely. it sucks because i didn't want it to be like that. we were really a strong family unit, and i thought i was going
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to be able to get it this time, and i really, really did. then i just -- i started using again. >> what is not working? >> immediate access to treatment. >> reporter: dr. barbara schindler is the medical director of a program at philadelphia's drexel university for families struggling with addiction. >> it's a very treatable illness. this is a pediatric disease for almost everybody. >> reporter: this summer marks madison's last here as a camper, but she plans on returning next year as a junior counselor. >> what would your message be to other children who are going through what you've gone through? >> you'll make it. >> reporter: a new chapter in this story for the next hey, i just got a text from my sister. you remember rick, her neighbor? sure, he's the 76-year-old guy who still runs marathons, right? sadly, not anymore. wow. so sudden. um, we're not about to have the "we need life insurance" conversation again, are we?
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hello, colonial penn? nearly 500 of ukraine's top athletes have been killed since the russian invasion. one former olympian is keeping their memories alive. cbs's leah mishkin has more. >> reporter: ukrainian wrestler objection sanaa rack raf fulfilled her childhood dream. she competed in the 2008 beijing olympics. the mother of two credits her success to her training. a lot of it took place at this facility in ukraine. it was destroyed in the war. that war is what brings us here to parliament square in london. >> i'm here just to help raise the voice of all athletes who have been killed. >> reporter: the ukrainian ministry of youth and sports says at least 487 ukrainian
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athletes have died since russia's invasion. many of them will never have the chance to go for their olympic dreams. this is 11-year-old katarina vee event choe. we're told a russian aerial bomb, killing the gymnast and her entire family. >> that's our future, so that's very sad. >> reporter: ukraine will have its smallest representation in its history at the summer olympic games. the association of ukrainians in great britain says this display honoring athlete who's have died, is another level of support. >> when people are watching the olympics, just remember there's still a war in ukraine, and we all need to unite together. >> reporter: some of the athletes on their way to paris parted from their families with a heavy heart, knowing anything could happen in an ongoing war. each one pledging to do everything to ake
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