tv CBS Overnight News CBS August 3, 2018 3:12am-4:00am PDT
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at german breweries. the howell family from texas told us they were trying to drink as much as possible and noted it's hot in dallas too. >> we'd rather be in italy drinking the water here than in texas. >> reporter: hundreds of fountains here in rome offer a little board of directors will soon be looking at accusations of sexual harassment and assault by cbs chairman and ceo leslie moonves. anna werner has more on this story. >> reporter: leslie moonves was seen arriving at his los angeles office today, a day after the cbs board announced it had hired two law firms to investigate allegations of sexual misconduct against him. >> good afternoon, everyone, and thanks for joining us today. >> reporter: during an hour-long teleconference call with wall street analysts, it was business as usual. moonves sounded confident and did not address the allegations at the advice of legal counsel.
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>> we're as confident as ever that the strategy we have in place is setting us up for continued long-term success. >> reporter: the board hired lawyers from two different firms, former u.s. attorney and sec chair mary jo white along with former federal prosecutor nancy kestenbaum they will lead a full investigation of the allegations in recent press reports about moonves, cbs news, and cultural issues at all levels of cbs. moonves was accused by six women of harassment in an article published by the new yorker. moonves told the magazine that he did not remember many of the claims and he denied sexually assaulting anyone. earlier this week, the los angeles d.a.'s office disclosed that another woman had gone to police last year to allege that moonves assaulted her in the late 1980s. the statutes of limitations have run out, and no charges were filed. but tonight some of moonves' former personal assistants are speaking out in his defense, including suzanne fickinger, who worked for him for 24 years up until 2013.
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the time span of the "new yorker" allegations. >> i sat outside his door within ten feet of him for the span of 24 years. and in all of that time, i never saw or heard anything that i would consider inappropriate in the workplace. >> reporter: a separate law firm is conducting an independent review that started after "cbs this morning" co-host charlie rose was fired over sexual misconduct allegations. that investigation is expected to wrap up this month. jeff, we asked fickinger, by the way, if she has been asked to defend moonves. she said no. she wanted to speak out. >> thanks again for your reporting on this. coming up next on the "cbs overnight news," record-breaking toxic read tide. why it is so bad this year. ♪
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naples to tampa. we sent manuel bojorquez to find out what is going on. >> reporter: they're dying by the tens of thousands -- fish, eels, turtles, sometimes as far as the eye can see in parts of southwest florida. >> there's one right there. >> reporter: just this week, one of several lifeless manatees was pulled from the water. the suspected culprit, a toxic algae bloom known as red tide. have you ever seen it this bad? >> no. i've seen some bad ones. this is the worst i've ever seen. >> reporter: ozzie fisher has been a fishing guide here for more than 20 years and is already seeing cancellations. it's hard to breathe around it. it stinks. >> oh, it really stinks. imagine if you paid $5,000 to come here on vacation, and you tell your wife and 3-year-old to go on the beach and breathe this in. you can't do that. i mean it's bad. >> reporter: the toxins can be harmful to humans too, causing respiratory illnesses for some beachgoers. the algae and bacteria are
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usually found in pockets, but this year they've mushroomed over 150 miles. warmer waters and runoff from lakes and streams can feed the problem. the red tide, which typically goes away in spring, has persisted for nine months. conservationists like heather barron say the overall effect on fragile species can be long lasting. >> i've cried three tyimes already today imagining that one day my three small children may grow up, and these animals may not be here anymore. but bottom line is we got to clean up our waters. >> reporter: here on sanibel island, cleanup crews have not been able to keep up with this putrid wave of dead sea life, and it extends for miles in either direction. and there's no telling how long this could go on. the worst bloom on record back in 2006 lasted 17 months. jeff? >> manuel bojorquez, thank you. still ahead here
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car. the car's owner showed up and r. they recovered the gun and ammunition and took the man into custody. police say they have found no link to terrorism. outhouston a s.w.a.t. team rescued eight children from a daycare center. they were trapped when a gunman running from the police barricaded himself inside. all the kids are safe. the gunman eventually gave himself up and was taken into custody. pope francis today declared the death penalty unacceptable in any case, calling executions an attack on human dignity. that is a change from previous catholic teaching, which accepted capital punishment if it was the only practical way to defend lives. up next, her letter to a cartoonist led to a serious change on the funny pages.
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when you humble yourself under the mighty hand of god, in due time he will exalt you. hi, i'm joel osteen. i'm excited about being with you every week. i hope you'll tune in. you'll be inspired, you'll be encouraged. i'm looking forward to seeing you right here. you are fully loaded and completely equipped for the race that's been designed for you.
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♪ finally tonight, 50 years ago this week, a little boy named franklin broke the color line in a black and white comic strip. here's jim axelrod. >> reporter: april 1968. martin luther king had been shot and killed. american cities burned in rage. in california, a 42-year-old teacher and mother of three felt helpless. >> and i remember sitting in suburbia saying, is there anything i can do? >> reporter: harriet glickman wanted to reach someone with influence. she wrote to charles schulz. his "peanuts" comic strip was read by nearly 100 million people each week. charlie brown, lucy, linus --
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they were all white. glickman told schulz he should integrate. >> it occurred to me today that the introduction of negro children into the group of schulz characters could happen with a minimum of impact. he said he felt he couldn't do it. it might be condescending. >> reporter: then schulz thought better of it and wrote back. >> i have drawn an episode which i think will please you. >> reporter: on a beach, an african-american child named franklin returned a ball charlie brown had lost. civil rights had come to the comics. >> i thought, that's like me. >> reporter: robb armstrong was just 6 at the time. >> my mom is like, look. >> what are you readying, franklin? >> it's a book on psychology. >> this little black character in "peanuts." it's like, wow. just changed everything. >> reporter: armstrong would become a highly s drawing
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"jump start" for three decades. as for harriet glickman -- >> if there's ever one thing i would like to say came out of this for me is that everybody can make a difference. franklin is this big, and franklin made a difference. >> reporter: because not all pictures are worth a thousand words. some speak volumes more. >> the progress of mankind. >> reporter: jim axelrod, cbs news, new york. that is the "overnight news" for this friday, august 3rd. for some of you 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 jeff glor.
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>> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." it's friday, august 3rd. welcome to the "overnight news." i'm meg oliver. amid bipartisan criticism that it's not doing enough to protect the upcoming midterm election from foreign meddling, the trump administration is moving to reassure americans about the integrity of the system. major garrett is at the white house. >> we continue to see a pervasive messaging campaign by russia to try to weaken and divide the united states. >> reporter: dan coats, the director of national intelligence and other top intelligence officials said emphatically what president trump has reluctantly acknowledged.
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russia used and continues to use cyber weaponso attack american politics. >> we acknowledge the threat. it is real. it is continuing, and we're doing everything we can to have a legitimate election that the american people can have trust in. >> reporter: fbi director chris wray summarized the kremlin-backed methods. >> cyberattacks against voting infrastructure along with computer intrusions targeting elected officials and others, and whole slew of other kinds of influence like both overtly and covertly manipulating news stories, spreading disinformation, leveraging economic resources, and escalating divisive issues. >> reporter: last month at the helsinki summit, the president gave as much weight to russian president vladimir putin's denials as he did to u.s. intelligence assessments about election meddling. >> i have great confidence in my intelligence people, but i will tell you that president putin was extremely strong and
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powerful in his denial today. >> reporter: today's white house show of force on cyber defenses was the first of its kind for the trump administration. it came amid intensifying anticipation of a report from special counsel robert mueller on russian interference in the 2016 election. the administration argues on this matter it has taken action, expelling russian diplomats, maintaining obama era sanctions and conducting table top exercises involving all relevant agencies to prepare for and possibly deflect future russian attacks. >> 19 states led by california say they will go to court to stop a trump administration plan to weaken obama era fuel economy standards. critics say the plan will speed up climate change, increase fuel costs, and harm americans' health. there is news about cbs and the sexual misconduct allegations against ceo les moonves. >> reporter: leslie moonves was
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seen arriving at his los angeles office day a day after the cbs board announced it had hired two law firms to investigate allegations of sexual misconduct against him. >> good afternoon, everyone, and thanks for joining us today. >> reporter: during an hour-long teleconference call with wall street analysts, it was business as usual. moonves sounded confident and did not address the allegations at the advice of legal counsel. >> we're as confident as ever that the strategy we have in place is setting us up for continued long-term success. >> reporter: the board hired lawyers from two different firms, former u.s. attorney and sec chair mary jo white along with former federal prosecutor nancy kestenbaum. they will lead a full investigation of the allegations in recent press reports about moonves, cbs news, and cultural issues at all levels of cbs. moonves was accused by six women of harassment in an article published by the new yorker. moonves told the magazine he did not remember many of the claims and he denied sexually assaulting anyone. but some of moonves' former
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personal assistants are speaking out in his defense, including suzanne fickinger, who worked for him for 24 years up until 2013, the time span of the "new yorker" allegations. >> i sat outside his door within ten feet of him for the span of 24 years. and in all of that time, i never saw or heard anything that i would consider inappropriate in the workplace. europe is baking in intense, recor-breaking heat. adding to the misery, there's no relief in sight. seth doane is sweating it out in rome. ailo f rier: the culprit, hot leavi europeansnd triple-degres melng you're from vi>>yes.seo eat >> this is a different kind of heat. >> reporter: jessica pippett likened it to a never ending sauna at rome's spanish steps. it is hot here. it's like walking into a hair
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dryer with the heat just blowing at you. the iberian peninsula is getting some of the worth of this heat. portugal issued a nationwide health warning. in sweden, a mountaintop glacier melted so much it's no longer that country's highest peak. and satellite imagery from northern europe shows the transition from lush green in late june to burned out brown in less than a month. farmers in germany are demanding more than a billion dollars in aid to deal with the drought, and so many beers have been sold there, it's straining supplies at german breweries. the howell family from texas told us they were trying to drink as much as possible and noted it's hot in dallas too. >> we'd rather be in italy drink the water here than in texas. >> reporter: hundreds of fountains here in rome offer a little relief. and in finland a supermarket chain has said it will stay open late tonight so customers can use its a.c. florida has a toxic algae problem, and it's big. this year an overgrowth in the
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waters off the state's southwest coast is described as the worst in more than a decade. with the so-called red tide killing wildlife and making here's manuel bojorquez. >> reporter: they're dying by the tens of thousands. fish, eels, turtles, sometimes as far as the eye can see in parts of southwest florida. >> there's one right there. >> reporter: just this week, one of several lifeless manatees was pulled from the water. the suspected culprit, a toxic algae bloom known as red tide. have you ever seen it this bad? >> no. i've seen some bad ones. this is the worst i've ever seen. >> reporter: ozzie fisher has been a fishing guide here for more than 20 years and is already seeingtoroit >> oh,inks.imaged $5,000 to come here on vacation, and you tell your wife and your 3-year-old to go on the beach and breathe this in. you can't do that. i mean it's bad. >> reporter: the toxins can be harmful to humans too, causing
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respiratory illnesses for some beachgoers. the algae and bacteria are usually found in pockets, but this year they've mushroomed over 150 miles. warmer waters and runoff from lakes and streams can feed the problem. the red tide, which typically goes away in spring, has persisted for nine months. conservationists like heather barron say the overall effect on fragile species can be long-lasting. >> i've cried three times already today. imagining that one day my three small children may grow up, and these animals may not be here anymore. but bottom line is we got to clean up our waters. >> reporter: here on sanibel island, cleanup crews have not been able to keep up with this it extends for miles in either direction. and there's no telling how long this could go on. the worst black on record back in 2006 lasted 17 months.
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>> that was manuel bojorquez reporting. coming up next on the "overnight news," actress salma hayek on charity and activism. welcome to tide pods talk with gronk. i'm gronk! i'm big and awesome, but this guy is little, can it really clean? heck yeah it can! it's concentrated detergent plus stain fighters plus odor flighers that fight for clean. boom! even this entire bottle can't beat tide pods.
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>> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." salma hayek was nominated for an oscar for her performance as the artist frieda kay low in the movie frieda back in 2002. these days she's winning notice for her roles on behalf of charities as john blackstone shows us. >> reporter: last april in los angeles, unicef, the united nations children fund honored salma hayek with the danny kaye humanitarian award. >> and it takes so little to make big, big changes. >> reporter: it's recognition for all that she has done for more than a decade on behalf of women and children around the
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world. it's hard to decide who should get money. >> so many people need it. >> exactly. >> how it should be spent is the best -- is the best question. it is finding who can you help the most, how can you help the best, and through who can you be the most effective. >> how did you become an activist? >> it's a very strange question. my head thinks, why don't you? >> reporter: she helped raise more than $700,000 for relief efforts after the earthquake in mexico last september. in 2015, she visited syrian refugees in lebanon. and in 2008, here she is in sierra leone where tetanus was a leading cause of death among mothers and babies. during the trip, a 15-year-old mother approached her with a hungry baby just a few days old. >> i have no milk. i have no money. i have no food to give him.
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i have nothing, and she was sobbing. and i said, i've got milk because i was -- i had left my child for the first time, and i was weaning her from breastfeeding. i had milk. and there was a lot of people that were upset i did that. >> but there were many, as well, who said you may have saved a life, right? >> yeah. >> reporter: salma hayek was born in mexico in 1966. her father of lebanese descent was an oil company executive. her mother, mexican and spanish, was an opera singer. at the age of 5, salma would sit in front of the pink window in her home. >> sometimes i would just look out this window and come up with stories and come up with scenarios of what my life would be. i'd make myself cry on my own. it was my place where i would play with my imagination.
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>> when did acting enter your mind? >> acting entered my mind, and then i was embarrassed to say i wanted to be an actress. >> reporter: but she says she somehow found the courage. and after appearing in popular mexican soap operas, tell lano velas, she came to los angeles at the age of 24 and studied acting. but after being a big star at home, she got work only as an extra. >> at the time, it seemed like there was no chance to succeed, especially because i was mexican. it didn't exist, this possibility. people would laugh at me. it's a different time. you have to understand, it really didn't exist before. >> reporter: but in more than 50
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movies, she became one of those actresses, as they say, the me e coleman, stop the train. miss escobar is getting off. >> who the hell is miss escobar? >> i'm a frightened, starving, half naked young woman who only wants to find her father. >> reporter: it may be that her portrayal of the mexican painter frida kahlo created the most attention. >> if you think i'm going to sleep with you just because you've taken me under your wing, you're wrong. >> reporter: she produced the movie and also earned an academy award nomination as best actress. >> just something inside of me just knew i had to do that one. it was an obsession. it was an obsession. >> and you had to work for eight years? >> eight year. >> to get it off the ground? >> yes. >> reporter: she made headlines in december with a "new york
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times" op-ed piece about the price she paid to work on frida with producer harvey weinstein, which she wrote involved many inappropriate sexual demands, charges weinstein has denied. but that essay helped to propel a movement. >> and the most exciting part for me is that when the world saw all these women that are so physical because it's hollywood coming together and saying, hey, guys, it's not okay. we take the power in hand to say, this stops now. >> reporter: in 2009, she married francois henri pinault, the french millionaire, whose company includes such luxury brands a gucci, and stella mccarthy. >> her name is diva. >> diva. >> reporter: and today salma
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hi hayek pinault is busier than ever. her company named for that rose window she sat in front of as a child. >> i like to wake up every day and work. i think i would die if i didn't have that in my life. coming up next, students are learning to save lives and changing their own lives at one new york city school. your acceptance is guaranteed. it's hard to believe, but i've been talking about the colonial penn life insurance company for almost 25 years. so call now... call now... make the call now. i must have said "call now" hundreds of times.
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any object. any surface. a e you gotta swiffer a women's natural lubrication varies throughout her cycle. this can effect how pleasurable sex can be. to supplement your lubrication for even better sex try ky natural feeling. the lubrication you want, nothing you don't. ky natural feeling get what you want lifeguards are on duty at pools and beaches during this hot summer, including here in new york city. it turns out many of the city's lifeguards got their training and learned how to swim at one particular high school. nikki battiste has the story. >> reporter: it took all the courage 17-year-old johanna apollo could muster to make her first dive ever into this pool three years ago. >> i was really scared. my first diving was really bad.
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>> reporter: her bravery is even more remarkable when you consider the fact her family had just moved here from ecuador. how many of you are from immigrant families? so all of you but one? >> yeah. >> reporter: it's only part of what makes this giddy grover cleveland high school swim team so inspiring. how many of you didn't know how to swim at all? you didn't know how to swim at all? >> reporter: not knowing how to swim almost seemed like a prerequisite to sign up here. 17-year-old dino antoine was petrified of water. >> the first time i looked down from the shallow end to the deep end, and i was like, no, i'm not going down there. >> reporter: but now he's making a splash right alongside 17-year-old fernando andrade. he transferred here as a freshman just to swim because pools in this new york city neighborhood are rare. >> it's scary. you think like you die if you go in.
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oh my god, what if i don't come up? >> reporter: overcoming fear. >> what's your first protocol when you see a victim? >> reporter: is just one of the life lessons the coaches teach. >> when they struggle and you tell them, you can do it. in the beginning, they don't have the confidence and no one ever told them to believe in themselves. >> reporter: about ten years ago, they had an idea. why not train their swimmers to be lifeguards. >> today we're going to go over all the basic lifeguard skills. >> reporter: but their mission really serves a dual purpose, filling a local lifeguard shortage and helping these teenager build confidence and a bank account. >> they can make, i would say, roughly anywhere from $5,000 to $8,000 a year. >> reporter: grover cleveland has certified more than 300 working lifeguards in the past decade. >> some kids travel on buses for like two hours to get to this school. >> reporter: the training is
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tough. it's rigorous. >> it's hard. it's very hard. but i think that's what you have to do in order to like save a life. you have to kind of push yourself to that limit. >> so when we look at this edge, this is considered a higher edge. >> one of the trickiest things was like getting a brick from the deep end and having to like carry it and swim to the other end. that was pretty hard. >> reporter: students must learn cpr and how to perform a variety of rescues to become a red cross certified lifeguard. >> i think a lot of them are just moderate swimmers at first. and for them to get to the level of becoming a lifeguard can be intense, and they work hard, and they get there. >> reporter: making the cut is a milestone. how much of it was, oh, i want to make some money. oh, i want to become more confident? >> for me, i guess it was more both. i wanted to be responsible and everything and more because i want to help my mom because it's
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only me and my mom now. >> reporter: fernando's father passed away a few months ago, not long after he told him he wanted to be a lifeguard. >> now you are. what do you think he would say to new. >> i think he would be proud of me. he would say you're helping around the house doing something good. >> reporter: the newly certified lifeguards are employed at beaches and pools this summer. dino has made about $500 so far and says he wants to stick with it to pay for college. johanna and her grover cleveland teammate, elsie cordero, say they feel a great responsibility sitting in their lifeguard chairs. >> i feel like with this i can actually like make the world a little bit safer. when i'm in the chair, i feel like a grown-up. people treat me differently in a way. >> reporter: this newfound respect isn't the only thing these new lifeguards got the joy of taking home. >> it felt amazing. it was my first paycheck. i was like, wow, this is a lot of money for me. >> reporter: so far she's made
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almost $1,000. >> i wto give some to my parent >> reporter: but the greatest payoff may be for the coaches. >> to get to this point, it's really amazing to me. >> reporter: they say this isn't just a swim team. it's a family devoted to saving lives. so three years ago when you were still in ecuador, could you ever imagine that you'd be in america lifeguarding, making $14 an hour at 17? >> no. i couldn't even imagine because i didn't even know how to swim. >> what's the life lesson that everyone walks away with here? >> well, to never give up, never settle. don't short yourself in anything in life. >> that was nikki battiste reporting. coming up next on the "overnight news," a national park that's in the stars.
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yellowstone, bryce, and yosemite, even acadia. these well known and much visited national parks seem to get all the attention. but a national park in nevada arguably has something better. anonymity. here's conor knighton. >> great basin national park isn't really on the way to anywhere. head to this remote stretch of the nevada desert, and you could easily spend an entire day wandering the pine by yourself. but if you go home when the sun goes down, you'll have missed one of great basin's greatest attractions. as they're fond of saying, half of this park is after dark. this is what great basin looks like at night. the stars shine so brightly here
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because this place is so unbelievably dark. >> we're pretty rare. this is one of if not the darkest place in the lower 48. >> reporter: annie gilliland is part of a special team of star gazers at great basin. >> we're the dark rangers, which i do love telling people i'm a dark ranger here. >> reporter: the dark rangers lead nighttime programs setting up telescopes and showing off distant galaxies to people who may be seeing them for the very first time. what's it like seeing something like this? >> it makes me think our world is so small and the galaxy out there is so big, our minds can't even imagine it. >> reporter: great basin is less than 300 miles away from the las vegas strip. the brightest spot on earth when viewed from space. protecting the skies out here has become a priority for the park. >> having a dark night very different from the daylight matters to all the wildlife here, the plants and trees as ll andumanhealth. theeporter: this year after
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park was certified as one of just a handful of international dark sky parks and has been promoting itself as one of the last places to see what's becoming an endangered natural resource. >> all aboard! >> reporter: during the summer, visitors can join a ranger on star trains, hopping into historic railcars and heading out into the desert to see what the night sky would have looked like across most of america a hundred years ago. today, over two-thirds of americans can't see the milky way from their backyards. alexis wood came all the way out from st. louis to take a look l. >> light could, you know, just reach us from millions and millions of years away that's been traveling forever, and it's just suddenly getting to me, this one individual person on this, you know, planet, yeah, it's just kind of amazing. >> reporter: it's hard not to have that reaction when you look up to the heavens. as a wise man or two or three once said, there's stars of
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wonder, stars of might. >> that's the "overnight for this friday, august 3rd. >> that's the "overnight for this friday, august 3rd. from the cbs broadcast c captioning funded by cbs it's friday, august 3rd, 2018. this is the "cbs morning news." the threat is real. our upcoming elections are at risk of russian interference. now the trump administration is sounding the alarm. breaking overnight, torrential rains, a tornado, and a flooding dam at risk of failing. wild weather strikes the eeftd. and the search for mollie tibbetts. her loved ones are ramping up
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