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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  September 11, 2018 3:12am-4:00am PDT

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weren't highlighting their nuclear arsenal. we consider that a sign of good faith. >> reporter: san snth wo depngriefing slamming b
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dysfunctional administration. earlier on twitter president trump called woodward a liar who was like an operative prior to the mid terms. on cbs sunday morning bob woodward stood by his reporting. >> you look at the operation of this white house and you have to say, let's hope to god we don't have a crisis. >> reporter: sanders also doubled down on the president's suggestion that the justice department should look into the identity of the writer of that anonymous "the new york times" op-ed that supports wood wards' reporting, but, jeff, she couldn't specify what federal crime the person may have broken. mi nex accusations of sexism on the court. are you taking the tissue test?
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company for 15 years was ousted last night after the number sex misconduct grew to 13. today we learn the financial terms of his departure. here is jericka duncan. >> reporter: just hours after the new yorker posted an article yesterday about leslie moonves, cbs announced the media mogul was stepping down as chairman and ceo. according to financial filings, as part of an agreement with cbs, moonves will not receive any immediate compensation or benefits pending the results of the independent investigation he could receive up to $120 million. he will become an unpaid advisor to cbs with an office and home security protection, and cbs has agreed to donate $20 million to organizations that support the me too movement. in the most recent new yorker article, six additional women accused moonves of sexual harassment over assault between the 1980s and early 2000s. the allegations range from
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forcing a woman to perform oral sex on him to exposing himself without consent, and physical violence and intimidation. moonves said in a statement, untrue allegations from decades ago are now being made against me that are not consistent with who i am. >> you hear about these things, but you don't think it's going to happen to you. >> reporter: former television executive phyllis golden gottleib worked with moonves at laura mar telepictures in the 80s. she said moonves forced her to perform oral sex on him. >> he grabbed my head and grabbed it and pushed it down -- i mean, i knew what was happening, but it was horrendous. >> reporter: her attorney gloria allred says tomorrow gottleib will be interviewed by investigators from cbs. moonves, who says he never misused his power to harm or hinder anyone, joined cbs in 1995. julie chen is married to moonves and has stood by him.
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today she did not appear on the cbs show "the talk" where she is the co-host. her co-hosts didn't hold back. >> but today we say, enough is enough. >> reporter: in a statement today, the interim chairman and ceo joe ianello said it is the people of this corporation that makes cbs what it is. in addition to moonves, the cbs board continues to investigate sexual harassment allegations against 60 minutes executive producer jeff fager and the culture at cbs news. jeff, no word on how long those investigations will take. >> jericka, thanks to you and the team for the reporting you've done on this story in the past and in the future. we appreciate it. we are back in just a moment. geico has over 75 years of great savings and service. with such a long history, it's easy to trust geico!
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she pretty much lives in her favorite princess dress. but once a week i let her play sheriff so i can wash it. i use tide to get out those week old stains and downy to get it fresh and soft. you are free to go. tide and downy together. more reaction came in today following a dramatic and controversial series of events at the u.s. open. the subject of discussion, serena williams and the umpire. here's dana jacobsen. >> i don't cheat. i'm just letting you know. >> reporter: after being cited for an illegal coaching violation and losing a point for smashing her racket, serena williams was then given the rare punishment of being penalized an entire game py criticair umpire
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ramos. >> there are men out here that do -- >> reporter: williams lost the championship match to 20-year-old naomi osaka. she called ramos's treatment of her sexist. >> i thought he took a game from me. but i've seen other men call other umpires several things and i'm here fighting for women's rights and for women's equality and for all kiepds nds of stuff. and for me to say thief and him to take a game, it made me feel like it was a sexist remark. >> reporter: ramos is well known as a stickler for the rules. but the controversy has put a spotlight on a perceived harsher treatment of women on the court. at the australian open in 2012, alexander used profanity to question a ramos call. >> what do you mean you didn't think? you couldn't see -- >> that's a [ bleep ] decision. >> reporter: and was not penalized. exa examples like that says james blake make williams' claim
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valid. >> ine i've seen others do worse. >> reporter: williams rights activist says the issues go beyond the tennis court. why did this resonate with women the way it has? >> everything that happened during the match and everything that's happening since the match is resonating with women because we can relate. we've had to resist and stand up for other women in our lives who have been treated in a wrong way. >> reporter: in the tv interview this morning osaka said the win was bitter/sweet because she's been a serena fan heron tire life and knew how badly the crowd wanted her to win. both the wta issued statements in support of williams expressing desire for equal treatment for men and women. >> interesting and eye opening discussion. dana jacobson, thank you for being here. >> sure. >> still ahead here, entertainment's most elite group gets some new members.
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traffic is moving again along the stretch of i 35 for the first time in almost a week. the section of northern california had been shutdown by a wild fair forcing vehicles to take a 100-mile detour. the new miss america represents a new beginning for the pageant. nia franklin, miss new york, is the first to wear the crown without having to put on a swimsuit. on-stage interviews replaced that part of the competition. victory was extra sweet last night for three men as well. singer john legend, composer andrew lloyd webber and leer cyst t - lyrasist. each has an oscar and toney joining 12 others saying i got an egot. up next, she was queen for a day and a star of the night.
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we end here tonight with one of the rare est plays in sports. one with a football game won by the home coming queen. here's john blackstone. >> reporter: soon after 17-year-old caylee foster was crowned high school home coming queen in ocean springs, mississippi, she took off her tiara and put on helmet number 15. in the home coming game as place kicker, she scored two field goals. but the team needed more. with the game tie ed in overtime, it all depende
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>> it went in, it's like -- i see everyone is right there. nice group hug. >> reporter: the kick made her an instant star on social media and a whirlwind weekend she did a tv interview while getting made up for the home coming dance. >> i was just going out there to kick an extra point. >> reporter: caylee now a senior has been on the football team three years. but among home coming queens, she's not alone. nike's controversial new ad featuring colin kaepernick includes 18-year-old alicia which wi wilcot from michigan. >> don't settle for home coming queen and linebacker, do both. t chrazyam aftike calls the l. franstone,s, >> that is at overnight night for this tuesday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back later for morning." from the broadcast center in new
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york city, i'm jeff glor. >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." >> welcome to the overnight news. i'm tony dokoupil. the mid-atlantic coast has a giant bull's-eye on it as hurricane florence continues to grow into a monster storm headed our way. florence is expected to make landfall either late thursday or early friday and tens of millions from georgia to virginia are preparing for the worst. meteorologist megan glaros is tracking the storm. >> we are looking at a major storm here. it's not only intensified in the last 12 hours, but the expansive zone of hurricane force winds has also nearly doubled in size. it's strengthening. it's now a category 4. winds up to 140 miles per hour at this point. movement is west northwest at about 13 miles per hour, which
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puts it just shy of 1200 miles away from the south carolina, north carolina cst line you can watch as the storm comes into view here, but look at the nice pocket of darker color up to the north. that's what we call the bermuda high. it's steering the storm system south, but just as it starts to ride that ridge, we watch it turn into the u.s. coast line here. we're talking about a cat-4 moving into intensely warm waters. 85-plus mile an hour waters. that acts not just as fuel, but as premium fuel to intensify and charge that system up. we anticipate a possible landfall likely as a category 4 storm. again, we don't look at a fixed point on that line, but rather the entire cone of error. concern is for the carolinas all the way really up to virginia. but what happens once it makes landfall is of sda cce because, yes, we're worried about the winds. yes, we're worried, of course, about the intensity of storm surge. but look how it slows down once it makes landfall. then we're talking about a forward speed of 15 miles an
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hour slowing to nearly half that. and then nearly half that again as we roll into the weekend. the problem with that is then we talk about the intensity of rain coming into play. remember the rain with harvey was intense. jeff, it looks like the best bet is to look far north, west or out towards atlanta. >> south carolina's governor wants people off the beach. he's ordered an evacuation of the state's entire coast line by noon today. david begnaud is in the danger zone rights ville beach, north carolina. >> look for one of the blue signs that says evacuation route and this will lead you there. they will reverse traffic. you won't be able to get to places like myrtle beach and charleston. there will be one way and it will be out. south carolina's governor henry mcmaster made the announcement toisk one south carolina life. >> reporter: in north carolina there are evacuations in parts
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entire coast line. roy cooper is the governor. >> we are now assembling resources and equipment to help with debris clearing, road clearng. >> reporter: in virginia, the navy is scrambling to get 30 ships out to sea, well away from florence. it is a beast. this is the view from space. and that's what hurricane hunters saw when they flew into florence yesterday. on land today, it was the calm bustle, shall we say, before the storm. staying or evacuating? > i'm leaving for the virginia to be with my daughter. >> reporter: okay. we found lines for gas 60 cars deep consistently at this costco in wilmington, north carolina. nearby, scott prok ter was in line for propane, but he may need to run a generator once he returns. >> they canceled school for the rest of the week here, so we'll probably head out later today or
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tomorrow. >> reporter: he told us the costco was out of water. suf five cases of water per member. there's none. >> as you probably heard, les moonves has been forced out add. the move came with more accusations of sexual misconduct. he could be in line for a $120 million severance pack only or nothing depending on the results of the investigation. that may sound like a big hit, but by one estimate, moonves has earned about $650 million in cash and stock during his tenure at cbs. jericka duncan reports. >> reporter: just hours after the new yorker posted an article yesterday about leslie moonves, cbs announced the media mogul ans stepping down as chairman according to financial filings, as part of an agreement with cbs, moonves will not receive any immediate compensation or benefits pending the results of the independent investigation he
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could receive up to $120 million. he will become an unpaid advisor to cbs with an office and home security protection, and cbs has agreed to donate $20 million to organizations that support the me too movement. in the most recent new yorker article, six additional women accused moonves of sexual harassment or assault between the 1980s and early 2000s. the allegations range from forcing a woman to perform oral sex on him to exposing himself without consent and physical violence and intimidation. moonves said in a statement, untrue allegations from decades ago are now being made against me that are not consistent with who i am. >> you hear about these things, but you don't think it's going to happen to you. >> reporter: former television phyllis golden gottleib worked with moonves at lara mar telepictures in the '80s. she said moonves forced her to perform oral sex on him. >> he grabbed my head and
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grabbed it and pushed it down -- i mean, i knew what was happening, but it was horrendous. >> reporter: her attorney gloria allred says tomorrow gottleib will be interviewed by investigators from cbs. moonves, who says he never misused his power to harm or hinder anyone, joined cbs in 1995. julie chen is married to moonves and has stood by him. today she did not appear on the cbs show "the talk" where she is the co-host. her co-hosts didn't hold back. >> but today we say, enough is enough. >> a white police officer in texas is freon bail charged with manslaughter after killing an unarmed black man in his own apartment. she claims she thought it was her apartment. omar villafranca has more. >> reporter: this video shows off-duty dallas officer amber geyger talking on the phone
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moments after police say she shot and killed 26-year-old botham jean inside his apartment. according to geyger a's arrest warrant relisaed late today, the officer told investigators she went to what she thought was her apartment around 10:00 p.m. on thursday and noticed the door was open. in the darkness, she saw a large silhouette across the room. thinking it was a burglar, she gave verbal commands. when she was ignored, fired her service pistol twice. it wasn't until she turned on the lights and called 911 that she realized she was on the wrong floor and in the wrong apartment. paramedics could be seen performing chest compressions on botham who later died at the hospital. on sunday, geyger was arrested and charged with manslaughter, almost three days after the shooting. dallas county district attorney faith johnson. >> how do you tell them it's not special treatment because she's an officer? >> based on our history, we are committed to making certain that everybody is treated the same.
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>> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." >> president trump had more kind words for north korean dictator kim jong-un. the north is celebrating the 70th anniversary of its founding with spectacles and parades. this year the big parade did not feature inter-continental ballistic missiles. president trump liked that and fired off a tweet. thank you to chairman kim. we will both prove everyone wrong. there is nothing like good dialogue from two people that like each other. kim sent back a letter saying he wants to meet mr. trump again. ben tracy is in pyongyang. >> reporter: despite the friendly words, negotiation s to get north korea to give up its nuclear weapons are not going quickly or well. but instead of using this anniversary to provoke the u.s. with a show of force, kim
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jong-un appears to be making some noticeable changes to the north korean script. this is the north korea the world rarely sees. tens of thousands of its people putting on a spectacular show. about unity and peace. this is the more familiar north korea show. but kim jong-un, who wantched te military parade from above, ordered a plot twist. he significantly shrunk the weaponry portion of the parade and did not show off north korea's most provocative possessions, its inter-continental ballistic missiles. perhaps mindful of the fragile detente between him and president trump. he used this 70th anniversary to shift inside north korea. the missiles and military are still important, but what he's increasingly talking about is building north korea's economy.
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the majority of the parade was about highlighting economic advancements. despite crippling international sanctions. our government-guided tours have been pushing the same message. trips to a soap factory and a north korean cosmetics operation that exports its products to china and russia. yet the one thing that hasn't changed here is the cultive personality around north korea's leaders past and present. kim jong-un visited this teaching college in january. there is a room devote today his visit. they even put this chair in a glass case here because that's the chair he sat in. at the events this weekend, kim waved to the adoring crowds, people he's not just promising better weapons, but also a better way of life. this is still a regime that is under sanctions for brutal human rights abuses so it is unclear if kim jong-un really intends to transform his country or if all of this is just an elaborate
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distraction. >> it's now 17 years since the september 11th terror attacks. in the wake of that tragic day, the nation vowedo nevere 9/11 ms of the new world trade center is a reminder of that commitment. one exhibit chronicles the role that sports played in helping the country heal. danny jacobson spoke with two new york sports legends who are part of that history. >> i heard a phone ring at 8:00. my father goes, where are you? i'm at home. you better turn the tv on. i turned the tv on and obviously saw what the events unfold after that. >> reporter: mark and tiki barber weren't just new york sports stars for the rangers and giants on september 11th, 2001. >> i sat there in horror watching this unfold, being like mark, only, you know, 350 only r 60 blocks away thinking is this an attack on our city. >> reporter: they were new yorkers reeling in the aftermath
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giants and jets standpoint, these were our fans, literally our parking lot is a commuter lot to go into new york city. some cars never left our parking lot. >> if we had to go play football, it wouldn't have made any sense to me with so much else going on just across the river. >> reporter: with the country in mourning, the sports world paused to grieve. an unprecedented stoppage in pro sports as stadiums and ballparks sat empty. at that point, where was sport for you? >> i think for me personally, and i think for most of the people i was around, it was the furthest thing from our mind. i think it was irrelevant at that point. >> reporter: so how do you then know that you need to get back to playing? >> you don't. you don't. and even when we did, we still didn't know until we actually played and got through it. >> we realized not that they need us, they need an escape from this horrible tragedy.
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and when he started to realize, we get back to what we do because it will help them. >> reporter: it is that spirit on display at a temporary exhibition at the 9/11 memorial museum entitled, comeback season, 9/11 in sports. in the immediate aftermath of 9/11, sports became a way for the country to heal. >> reporter: alice greenwald is the 9/11 memorial and museum president and ceo. >> this exhibit is a microcosm of the whole museum actually. you are confronted with the real tragic, horrific history of what happened on 9/11. but you're also reminded of the way we responded. ultimately, we tell the 9/11 story, but the message is 9:21. >> this one has a chance. mike piz aerks a. >> reporter: when they returned to the stadium to take on the braves. >> the mets fans, braves fans,
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everybody is cheering. this was a sense it was not about the game, it was about new york. to this day people remember that moment when they exhaled. they had been holding their breath for ten days. they didn't know if they'd recover, but then they knew they could. >> reporter: from president bush's world series pitch to the first nascar race after 9/11. >> the american checker flag out at dover earnhardt, jr. >> reporter: the theme is constant throughout the exhibit. sports helping the nation to heal, unifying and uplifting as the days and soon months passed. but for mark messier and tiki barber, it's more than messages, it's a history they lived. ♪ ore the ramparts we watched -- >> reporter: like the giants first game after 9/11, the chiefs. >> kansas city is a rough place to play. it's a sea of red and they are not friendly to anyone that comes in there. but the first thing we saw was a
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sign saying k.c. loves n.y.c.. the fans wanted to reach down and shake our hands. the national anthem played and i've stood for the national anthem for years, going back to when i was a kid. but i've heard it, i truly heard it for the first time. >> reporter: messier's moment would come at the rangers home opener during a pregame ceremony, he was asked to wear the helmet of fdny chief ray downy who was killed on september 11. >> to be honored with that was incredible, but also felt a huge responsibility to do the right things and say the right things in honor of all the people that lost their lives that day. >> reporter: you met his family also right after, right? >> met his family after and stayed in touch. in fact we were just here at the museum for another function not long ago. everybody is growing up and kids are growing up. they all have kids now. it was a great reunion. >> reporter: to know you had an impact on a family that was going through so much tragedy, what does that mean to you in
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>> i was the one that wore the hat, but i think it was everybody. all the sports men and sports women in the city who did so much. >> we had a shared responsibility. it will exist forever. as mark has said repeatedly, you cannot forget what happened
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paul's cathedral or a side trip out to stone henge. you'll find any of those on a tour map. let's say you want someone to point you to the best restaurant in the world. mark phillips did just that. >> reporter: to beat a path to the door of the best restaurant in the world, you first have to find the door. somewhere down the winding country lanes of the english county of north yorkshire is a place the police can't find. the owners of the black swan like it that way. >> i love the fact that people have to travel to the village i i grew up in to eat my food. >> reporter: and, boy, have they been traveling lately. >> table 3. >> reporter: ever since tommy bank's little family-run country pub was surprisingly named, yes, the best restaurant in the world by trip advisor, an award not based on food, critic reviews,
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but on a secret algorithm of internet posts by normal customers. just ask bethany. >> it's great to be here the past few weeks to say to friends, what are you doing over the holidays? we're going to the best restaurant in the world. >> reporter: great for a little place that used to have trouble filling its tables. not any more. >> in terms of business, it's a game changer. we're fully booked. we're booked three months in advance. people sit online at midnight and snap bookings up. you don't have to answer the phone. by the time you wake up in the morning all the bookings are gone. >> reporter: what's the attraction? innovative cooking using local products, really innovative. what are you going to show me? >> so, first i've got sbeef. >> reporter: not just beef, but beer-fed beef from just down the road covered in a home grown peppery sauce topped with a little grated sweet chestnut and frozen smoked bone marrow.
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>> just eat it like you would eat it? >> just go for it. i don't think it's as challenging as it sounds. >> reporter: not challenging, more melt in your mouth interesting. i like that. next? next is the black swan signature dish. >> it's been cooking four hours now, and we smoke it. >> reporter: based on the previously humble beat root, treated more like a steak with exotic toppings. >> kind of a brazed meat. you have beef and horse radish. >> reporter: where did that idea come from? how did you decide? >> when you have about 10,000 beat root in the field, you have to come up with original ideas who >> rorter: it's pantry. the pantry is the family farm right next door where the beats are grown, and where tom senior digs them up. >> we call it beet root because
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it looks like meat. >> reporter: yorkshire has a bounty of ingredients if you're willing to take the risk to find them. really slippery. >> oh, dear. >> reporter: hope you were rolling. the slow berries used in jam and slow gin are worth the embarrassment. that's delicious. you can't speak, but it's delicious. the best restaurant award has done more for business than the michellin star earned years ago. the secret is to stay local. how you cook and apparently how you behave. >> the thing about yorkshire is everyone is understated. you're never going to find anyone that blows their own trumpet. that's what people say to me. how do you stay down to earth? it's quite easy. try to get praise out of my mom and dad. it's impossible. in yorkshire, yes, it's all
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right. it's pretty good. >> reporter: the recommendation to say, the black swan in ole
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on this september 11, solemn ceremonies will take place in lower manhattan, the pentagon and shanksville, pennsylvania. that's where 40 heroes gave up their lives to end a terrorist high jacking. a new memorial at the site was dedicated over the weekend and chip reid was there. >> reporter: that is the tower of voices directedly behind me. it is 93 feet tall in honor of flight 93, and it is essentially a very large musical instrument intended to recall the voices of the 40 people who died here. ♪ this is the sound of one voice ♪ ♪ >> reporter: in shanksville, pennsylvania sunday, this crowd refused to allow the elements to interfere with a ceremony honoring the heroes of flight 93. >> i hope the words that we
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express today are as powerful a tribute to the heroes and heroines as your presence in this weather. >> reporter: on september 11, 2001, tom ridge, then the governor of pennsylvania, rushed to the crash site. >> the sound at the moment took my breath away. it was louder than the army chinook helicopter that brought me here. it was the brutal, and i think sometimes unbearable sound of silence. >> reporter: the silence of this pastoral and somber place will forever have a new sound. the music of wind chimes. soon there will be 40 installed here to symbolize the voices of the 40 who died. those voices were immortalized in phone calls and voice mails left by the passengers and crew before the plane went down. >> i'm on a plane that's been high-jacked.
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please tell my children that i love them very much. i hope to be able to see your face again, baby. passenge and crews as victims. we look at them as heroes. >> r reporter: before the rain fell, we talked to gordon felt, president of the families of flight 93. his brother ed felt was a passenger on the plane. >> obviously they wanted to live, but they also knew that in order to, to try to survive they had to fight. and in doing so they lost their lives. but they averted a far greater tragedy. >> reporter: that tragedy was the destruction of the u.s. capital, which is believed to have been the target of the high jackers. what does the tower of voices add to this memorial? >> well, for me the tower of voices is a symbol of defiance, 93 feet tall standing at the entrance to this memorial defiantly, speaking for our loved ones. >> reporter: paul murdoch is the architect of the flight 93 memorial. >> it's a monumental piece.
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it's meant to be heroic. this is a battle ground on thee one hand, but it'ss also a fina captioning funded by cbs captioning funded by cbs it's tuesday, september 11th, 2018. this is the "cbs morning news." southeast is bracing for hurricane florence, now a monster storm headed full steam toward the u.s. coast where it could do the most damage. president trump is open to a second summit with north korean leader kim jong-un even though denuclearization has stalled. what prompted the new meeting. and never forget. today the nation marks the anniversary of the september

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