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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  August 24, 2017 3:12am-4:00am PDT

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he weren't repeat lead invading your space?
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or do you turn, look him in the eye and say, loudly and clearly, back up you creep. get away from me. clinton has second thoughts about not choosing option b. maybe i have overlearned the lesson of staying calm. bite might tongue, dig might fingernails into a clenched fist. smiling all the while. >> clinton kept a relatively low profile since last november. in another excerpt she wrote about the disappointment of what she called her painful loss. >> i knew that millions of people were counting on me. and i couldn't bear the idea of letting them down. but i did. i couldn't get the job done. >> the excerpts allude to russia's interference in the election, clinton has also said she will address mistakes lick her private e-mail server in the book which she is calling the most personal book she has ever written. an knowny. >> julianna goldman. >> the commander of the navy seventh fleet was relieved of duty following two deadly
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collisions in four months. late sunday night the uss john s. mccain collided with an oil tanker off singapore. ten sailors are feared dead. here is david martin. >> reporter: divers went back below decks on the mccain for a second day of searching for remains of sailors trapped in flooded sleeping compartments they took the equipment needed to cut bodies ouft of the wreckage. after one identified body was pulled from the open water the navy expanded to look for sailors who may have been washed out of the gaming hole a tanker punched in the mccain's hull. having lost two ships, the mccain and the fitzgerald, to deadly collisions, the commander of the pacific fleet, admiral scott swift, said he no longer had confidence vice admiral joseph aucoin, commander of the seventh fleet and relieved him effective immediately. ships in the seventh fleet are in a safety stand down to review
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basic seamanship. one of several steps, senior navy officers felt aucoin should have ordered in june after the fitzgerald collision. a string of accidents in the seventh fleet dates back to january, when the guided missile cruiser ran aground in tokyo bay. the grounding was blamed on captain joseph kerrigan relieved of his command. but the investigation also found substandard performance from multiple crew members. the seventh fleet may not be over, lower ranking squadron commanders are response bum for monitoring conditions aboard individual ships like the mccain and fitzgerald. and may have failed to spot accidents waiting to happen. anthony. >> david martin at the poeg tonight. thank you, david. the texas gulf coast is bracing for harvey, a tropical depression that is expected to strengthen before making landfall late friday. a hurricane watch is up from port mansfield to galveston
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island. harvey could bring dangerous storm surge and as much as 20 inches of rain. police in the dutch city of rotterdam today canceled a concert by an american band, alla-las, after getting a terror threat. they arrested the driver of a van with spanish license plates and gas canisters. the group has received complaints from muslims, about its name. still ahead, a new study suggests there may be a health risk if you don't dream enough. >> and millions are dreaming a lot, of striking it rich. there's a special essence
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could save you 15% or more on car insurance. oh! ok. geico. because saving 15% or more on car insurance is always a great answer. whoa! gross! clearasil rapid action begins working fast for clearly visible results in as little as 12 hours. but can ot fix this teens skateboarding mishap? nope. so let's be clear: clearasil works fast on teen acne, not so much on other teen things. about a third of adults say
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they don't usually get enough sleep. tonight, there is news of a link between the quality of sleep, and the risk of dementia. dr. jon lapook here to explain. jon. >> anthony, the study looks at rapid eye movement sleep, rem, the time you dream. there are four stages in the sleep cycle. stage one, sleep is light. it progresses to deep sleep in stage three. after that, there is rem sleep which usually occurs, four to five times over eight hours as your sleep cycle repeats. in this study, as the the amount of rem sleep declined, the risk of dementia increased. >> what might sleep have to do with dementia, john? >> anthony, the study was done people over 60. increasing evidence that toxins accumulate in the brain during the day. as you are awake. what happens at night, or whenever you sleep is that those toxins get cleaned out. something of a, garbage collecting fun tgcollect ing function. and include amaloid linked to
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alzheimers. don't know when in the sleep cycle it occurs. very exciting research. >> does this mean sleep depravation can cause dementia? >> we don't know that yet. this is very exciting. because we know that the changes that occur in the brains of people with alzheimers occur decades before they get symptoms. so maybe, testing somebody for problems with sleep can be almost kind of a screening test in some people. and imagine if you could diagnose alzheimers or disk of dementia southeastern thoner ra later. >> indeed. i'm going to bed early tonight. and up next, a cover-up in charlottesville. not all fish oil supplements provide the same omega-3 power. megared advanced triple absorption is absorbed three times better. so one softgel has more omega-3 power than three standard fish oil pills.
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degree motionsense. ultimate freshness... with every move. the more you move, the more it works. degree, it won't let you down. because your carpet there's resolve carpet care. it lifts more dirt and pet hair versus vacuuming alone. resolve carpet care with five times benefits we have an update on the story of american and canadian diplomats in cuba, who it is believed were targets of a sonic attack. it now appears some suffered serious injuries. executive editor, steve dorsey of cbs news radio, broke the story. diplomats working in havana started complaining last year about hearing loss and headaches. now, an american doctor has diagnosed some with mild traumatic brain injury. and likely damage to the central nervous system. the cuban government denies any
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involvement. in charlottesville, virginia, today black covers were draped over the statues of confederate generals, robert e. lee and stonewall jacks on to symbolize the city's mourning for heather heyer rundown and killed august 12th during the clash between white supremacists and counterprotesters. a man tried to remove one of the covers, but, later gave up. meanwhile, what can be described as a head scratcher. espn says play-by-play man, robert lee won't work the university of virginia's football opener in charlottesville next month. quote, because of the coincidence of his name. lee who is asian-american will work another game. >> up next, the land o luck.
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people all over america are hoping tonight's $700 million powerball drawing will be their ticket to easy street. some bet they improve their odds
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by buying that ticket on main street. that's where we find adriana diaz. >> reporter: south of wisconsin's lake, the town of fond du lac is at the top of the list when it comes to luck. a city on a winning streak. >> help i win. >> the secret is out. just ask jerome simmons. >> whit did you choose this story? >> they told me they have a long history unfortunate like winners. off awe once again, a stretch of road in wisconsin deserves the title as the miracle mile. >> the luck of fond du lac's miracle mile struck. >> unusual lottery luck in fond du lac. >> stores on main street, miracle mile, sold 14 winning tickets in the past 20 years that claimed $300 million. >> five tickets. $10. >> ahead of tonight's giant drawing, optimists have been lining up at cornelli's ma and pa since 6:00 a.m. >> the owner says they sold more
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than 20,000 tickets since sunday. >> great. put fond du lac on the map. >> since 1993, they sold a dozen winning powerball tickets and jack pots. totaling more than $220 million. >> it's tremendous. >> in 2006 they sold one powerball winner worth $209 million. which was shared by 100 cheese factory workers. it is hard to avoid fond du lac fever. and though the odds of winning are one in nearly $300 million. >> help out a lot of handicap. >> hope is priceless. and you can take that to the bank. >> i got the winner right here. >> adrianna, diaz, fond du lac, wisconsin. >> the overnight news for this thursday. for some the news continues. for others check back later for the morning news and cbs this morning. from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm anthony mason. thank you for watching.
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welcome to the "overnight news." i'm tony dokoupil. president trump sijing a different tune as he addressed american legion conference in reno, nevada. one day after relentlessly blasting the media frying to torpedo members of his paertd, the president was calling for unity and love. chip reid now with a tale of two speeches. >> it is time to expose the crooked media deceptions. >> reporter: president trump returned to his fiery campaign trail rhetoric last night in phoenix. a sharp contrast to today in reno. where he read from a teleprompter. >> it is time to heal the wound that divide us and seek a new
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unity based on the common val use that unite us. >> in phoenix, he once again, defended remarks he made after a violent white supremacist rally earlier this month. one woman was killed when a man drove his car into a crowd of counterprotesters. here's what i said on saturday. we condemn in the strongest possible terms this egregious display of hatred, bigotry and violence. >> what he actually said was this. >> we condemn in the strongest possible terms, this egregious display of hatred, bigotry, and violence, on many sides. on many sides. on many sides. >> the words on many sides and apparent defense of white supremacists three days later. >> very fine people on beth sides. >> that led to widespread backlash. this from paul ryan. >> i do believe he messed up in his comments on tuesday when it,
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it's sounded like a moral equivocation or moral ambiguity. >> stronger words from bob corker of tennessee. >> the president has not yet -- has the not yet been able to demonstrate the stability, or some of the confidence that, that -- he needs to demonstrate. in order to be successful. >> the president last night, blamed the media. >> oh, that is so funny. look back there. the live red lights, that turning those suckers off fast. i will fell you. >> as you can see, cnn and cable networks did not stop their live coverage contrary to what the president said. athony it would appear the raucous rally last night in phoenix and respectful speech here in reno today would have nothing in common. in fact they do have this in common. in both cases, the president found a way to tell core audiences, core supporters, exactly what they wanted to
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hear. the naech has fired the commander of the u.s. seventh fleet after a string of collisions involving ships under his command. vice admiral joseph aucoine to to retire next month. navy brass beat him to is after the deadly end involving the uss mccain. david martin has the the story from the pentagon. >> reporter: divers went back below deck on the mccain for the second day searching for remains of sailors trapped in their sleeping compartments. this time they took the equipment needed to cut bodies out of the mangled wreckage. after one still unidentified body was pulled from the open water the navy expanded its search to look for more sailors who might have been washed out of the gaming hole a tanker punched in the mccain hum.
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having lost two ships, the mccain and the fitzgerald, to deadly collisions, the commander of the pacific fleet, admiral scott swift, said he no longer had confidence vice admiral joseph aucoin, commander of the seventh fleet and relieved him effective immediately. ships in the seventh fleet are in a safety stand down to review basic seamanship. one of several steps, senior navy officers felt aucoin should have ordered in june after the fitzgerald collision. a string of accidents in the seventh fleet dates back to january, when the guided missile cruiser ran aground in tokyo bay. the grounding was blamed on captain joseph kerrigan relieved of his command. but the investigation also found substandard performance from multiple crew members. the house cleaning in the seventh fleet may not be over, lower ranking squadron commanders are responsible for monitoring conditions aboard individual ships like the mccain and fitzgerald. and may have failed to spot accidents waiting to happen. anthony. part of president from's
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stratd g strategy in afghanistan is to build up the tiny air force. right now a dozen small planes and helicopters. charlie d'agata has the story from kabul. >> reporter: when the afghan president thanked president trump and american people for continued support here this week. the first thing he mentioned was importance of the development of the afghan air force. we got the rare opportunity to watch american pilots training pilots here, how to wage war over afghanistan's not so friendly skies. it may not look like a modern aircraft. and again, the afghan military's long fight against the taliban could hardly be described as a modern war. brigadier general phillip stewart says it might just break the stale mate here. >> a country screams out for air power. doesn't have a lot of roads. it's mountainous. >> reporter: that terrain suits the afghan fighter division, which consists of 12 american built a-29 planes. and about two dozen md-530
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attack helicopters. capable of delivering a full payload. heavy machine guns. >> the target. >> and guided missiles. >> u.s. combat pilot, lieutenant colonel, johnny green is in charge of handling afghanistan's top guns. >> all the communication is on them. >> the guy on the ground here is the target. speaking in the cockpit. >> all in their language. all on them. >> so is maintenance. because the a-29 uses the same kind of engine found in planes like cessnas they're easy to fix. it says something about the security situation here, the pilots don't want to be identified. but he said it is the taliban who have new reasons to be fearful. >> at the first they were laughing at this. like, this is the world, styled airplan airplanes. >> world war ii style. >> until they found themselves on the receiving end of one in
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combat. after that, they, they, said, we should hide. >> so now they hide when they hear you coming. >> they're hiding, yes. >> they're also capable of dropping laser guided 500-pound bombs which makes them both cheap and deadly. an air craft is not going to hold its own against an air force like the russians, or china. >> sure. not designed to. its there a need to have advanced aircraft, no. not in this theater. you know, this, suits the afghan air force fine. >> so it makes it an unfair fight. >> we hope so. in our fav, right. that's the desire. >> and it is a mission on fast forward. afghan pilots come right out of u.s. training, and straight into combat. with the taliban gaining ground, the only advantage they have got is above it. u.s. air force officials said they're not only examining new ways to expand the training of
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this the cbs "overnight news." the headline of president trump's visit to arizona was his fiery speech in phoenix and the protesters who met him there. but the president also visited the mexico border where he promised again to build a wall and he threat tuned shut down the federal government if congress stands in his way. there is no question, there is violent crime across the border, in fact, mexico is one of the most dangerous places in the world for journalists. manuel bojorquez has the story for our series, cbsn on assignment. >> reporter: journalists covering drug cartel violence worked with constant risic they may become the next target. they take precautions to avoid the dangers that come with their work.
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>> we met a freelance journalist in juarez. >> mucho gusta. >> he told us many reporters in mexico work with fear their next story may be their last. >> with journalists in mexico, it is not look if you [ bleep ] up, it is nothing like you [ bleep ] in the u.s. newsroom. you know, you [ bleep ] up you get fired or something. in mexico, you [ bleep ] up, you are a dead man. >> he says after one of his drug cartel stories revealed too much information, he was stopped by two men he thought were police
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officers. >> one night, two police cars, they just stop me, put up big gun to my head. and they kidnap me. tied my hand and my feet. they put me in the back of a truck. >> reporter: you must have thought they were going to kill you? >> one of them wanted to take money from me. the other wanted to follow the orders to [ bleep ] shoot me. they let me go. give me two hours for, $600. >> he fled across the border to el paso for a year. when he returned to mexico little had changed. >> you still do it though? >> what you sign up for. when you are a journalist in mexico. i won't shut up. i don't want to sound corny, that's what you are trying to do, a better [ bleep ] place for your kids. >> so you feel like you are a target right now? >> every journalist is a target in mexico. they killed my colleague recently. she was my boss for -- for a ear. at norte newspaper. she was brave, man, she was brave. i felt like that [ bleep ]
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bullet was too close for me. you snow like? >> she was one of mexico's leading investigative reporters. her murder this spring, sparked protest as cross mexico. she was shot eight times in her car outside of her home in chihuahua. the alleged killer seen in the footage, left a sign on her body. it said for having a loose tongue. one of the reasons you came here to juarez was to speak to the publisher of "el nort techlt" the newspaper that pub leshed some of the journalists articles. bullet holes outside the newsroom wall remind those inside of the cartel's purr to silence journalis. after losing the biggest advertiser, followed by the murder, el norte's owner stopped daily publication. >> she was a very, very, accurate, very courageous, and very visionary. >> which was her last article?
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>> this one here. >> she must have known this was dangerous and there would be threats for this kind of reporting. >> yeah, she, she -- she must have known. >> did she tell you? >> never. >> this is the, the last article that, she wrote on the subject of crime and corruption. and, it's, it is impressive. she writes about, by either threat or just being scum police it, the heads of the narcos in all the regions have essentially infiltrated local governments. you can see why this type of reporting in an area like that would rub some body on the wrong way. likely this its what led to her death. eight journalists have been killed for their work across mexico so far this year.
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cecelio was executed shot ten times in the neck and chest lying in a hammock. ricardo was shot and killed in vera cruz walking out of a restaurant with wife and son. gunmen killed a journalist in a la paz garage, slooting with assault rifles at close range. javier valdez was dragged from his car and shot. >> gunmen killed jonathan rodriguez. in vera cruz, the journalist was shot dead after he fled honduras to escape violence there. luciano shot in the head in baja california. in chihuahua, a memorial, and mexico's long trail of violence. bears the journalist's name. >> the sign says, you don't kill the truth, by killing journalists. from juarez we traveled 200 miles south to chihuahua city to
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state headquarters, where the attorney general is leading the investigation into the journalist's murder. we have made our way into this, pretty secure police substation. where we are suppose to interview the attorney general of the state of chi w wachlt we wand to find out what is being done to bring about justice. to remove the sense of impunity that people can get away with murder. and see what he has to say. >> attorney general told us the killing of journalists in mexico has become a social problem. and a priority for prosecutors across the country. >> you talk about the work that's being done, but i think there is still a sense out there you can kill a journalist and get away with it. >> citizens are worried about this kind of event. of course the public opinion severely criticizes the fact that in the face of journalists' crimes, few cases have been resolved. >> there is evidence, and there may be people to point to, why haven't the people, necessarily
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been arrested? >> man of the cases have been left unresolved, because many prosecutors and in the country don't have resources to adequately address homicide cases. we are speaking ineffectiveness of 90%. well that hurts all of us. >> the journalist's case may become one of the statistics. despite surveillance video showing potential suspect. five months after her murder. no arrests have been made. to address the violence and unsolved killings of journalists, mexico created a prosecutor's office and program to provide@risk journalist with police protection and panic but fons to alert police when they journalist is in danger. police are currently protecting 196 journalists in mexico. to meet sanchez we traveled to mexico's gulf coast, south of vera cruz, the western hem ills fear's most dangerous place to
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be a reporter. sanchez publishes small investigative newspaper, la union from his home in medelline. this its what protection under federal law looks like. >> they've installed lighting. an alarm, cameras, fencing, bar,ed wire on top. >> what is it like to give with all of this. >> like having your own jail cell. curiously the ones who end up behind bars are victims not criminals. awe all jorge's father started the paper, two years ago his reporting on cartels and corruption within the local government. tlied his death. >> six people andered. armed. they've asked for him. my mother was too shocked to say anything. >> he was found weeks later, dismembered and decapitated. his killer still have not been found. >> do you fear for your life?
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>> i believe this work carries risk. many people don't talk, don't write. don't take photos or document certain things. out of fear. if we stay quiet. things are not going to change. >> the committee to protect journalists sent a delegation to meet with the mexican president. and, cpj's american program director. he told her, the unsolved killings of journalists threaten a foundation of democracy. in mexico. >> we are calling on him to make -- impunity, the resolution of the crimes and the defense of protection of journalists a pry or tee in the government agenda. >> some people might think you only care about journalists. you're a journalist too. >> goats way beyond that. >> why. affecting fundamental rights. it is impeding possibility of mexicans to engage in a public debate of the issues that are
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affecting the daily life of mexicans. and affecting the civil tee of mexican democracy. >> why should any one in the u.s. care about that? >> mexico has a long border with the u.s. hiss is a bilateral issue no wegs. >> people in the u.s. need to be more aware whurt is going on in mexico. >> we get called faks news, enemy of the american people. we can brush that aside. keep during our work. but here it its a totally different
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production of the latest mission impossible movie shut down for two months after actor tom cruise broke his ankle doing one of his own stunts. the accident came days after a stunt woman was killed in a motorcycle crash on another movie set. demarco morgan has the story. >> hollywood stunts are dangerous business. people behind the stunts some times risk their lives to capture perfect moment for the cameras. much of hollywood relies on special effects for biggest action scenes. tom cruise likes to do it himself. whether that is swinging from the world's tallest building in dubai or dangling from the back of a cargo plane. the 55-year-old actor says all part of the business. >> underwater on the plane. you spend time training. it is a stunt.
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the latest mission impossible installment, the hollywood star apares to injure himself after failing to jump a gap. british tabloid, the sun says cruise broke two bones in his ankle. vancouver filming was brought to a stand still on the set of comic book movie deadpool two after a stunt woman was killed riding motorcycle. motorcycle fleeing across street off a ramp in the air. standing on the bike. slams into the building. in jup lly a stuntman was kille falling to his death during the filming of amc's hit, the walking dead. a lot has to do with the fact that there are not formal regulations. >> performing stunts on film and tv for a decade. >> there isn't as much emphasis on making sure that one, how can i do this stunt safely. and two, can i do this stunt at all. in his experience, on set safety
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isn't clearly ,$8drw
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one of the mysteries of world war ii has been solved what happened to uss indianapolis. the navy cruiser heading south through the pacific after delivering one of the atomic bombs that ended world war ii. this ship was sung and never seen again. many crew members were eaten by sharks as they bobbed in the water, waiting to be rescued. 72 years later the indianapolis has been found. more than three miles underwater. vladamir dutier reports. >> the sinking of the indianapolis, resulted in the biggest loss of life. of 1200 crew members on board, one in four survived. >> that's it, paul. we have go out. >> with the hull identification number 35 visible, researchers found the uss indianapolis. new video shows the ship's
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distinct world war ii era weapons. >> yeah, definitely. this photo shows the indy defending against scrap knees fighters. water, remote location. difficult to mount a search. >> new technology enabled the crew of to launch a vehicle to travel down more than 18,000 feet to the ocean floor. >> she was, the most iconic and historically significant ship at that time. >> she just complete aid secret mission, delivering components for one of two atomic bombs to be dropped on japan. while en route to the philippines, two japanese torpedoes hit and sunk the ship. one of the estimated 800 men that escaped. an sos was never received. and no one knew they were missing. >> we are their tsy. we are hungry. we are just completely exhausted.
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but we dare not give up. >> for 4 1/2 days they waited in shark infested waters. >> shark would be coming through the group. and he would take some one, fairly close, to you. >> only 316 men were rescued. >> now, 92, he says he was afraid he would never see the discovery of the uss indianapolis. >> yet, it still leaves open, the trauma of that experience. but, the fact that we found the ship now. >> that brings closure to the story of the indianapolis. >> the ship's classified mission helped bring the war to a close. the exact location of the ship is classified. it is a war grade and property of the u.s. government. >> that's the overnight news for this thursday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back later for the morning news and do not miss cbs this morning from the broadcast center here in new york city.
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i'm tony dokoupil. it's thursday august 24th, 2017 and this is the cbs morning news. someone is waking up $758 million richer. a single jackpot winning powerball ticket is sold in massachusetts. president trump calls for patriotism and national healing a day after a rally and preparing for harvey, communities up and down the gulf t

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