tv CBS Overnight News CBS October 30, 2023 3:30am-4:31am PDT
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halloween release. this is the "cbs overnight news." >> several big stories this sunday, including the sad news that "friends" star matthew perry died this weekend. he was 54. tonight perry is being remembered for his role in one of tv's biggest hits, as well as his public struggle with addiction. but first, we begin with the latest in the israel-hamas war. tonight egypt sent nearly three dozen trucks of food and medical
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aid into southern gaza. rockets fired by hezbollah, militants hit a neighborhood in northern israel. no word yet on casualties. this as fighting in the gaza strip expands. charlie d'agata is in tel aviv with more. good evening. >> reporter: good evening, jericka. tonight, israeli forces are on the attack and on the move inside gaza, saying more troops have entered the territory while the humanitarian crisis inside gaza is worsening by the minute. the israeli defense forces said they struck more than 450 hamas targets in a 24-hour period. releasing new night time video, claiming to show israeli tanks advancing inside gaza. flanked by infantry soldiers on foot. taking up positions under the cover of darkness and smoke screens. hamas has reported firefights
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and released video purporting to show a missile attack on an israeli troop carrier. while aid agencies describe the toll on civilians as a catastrophic crisis. the u.n. has warned after break down of civil order, saying hundreds of people have stormed their warehouses in a desperate search for food and basic supplies. large parts of the territory even cut off from communications, but cbs news producer managed to report today scene of despair and utter desolation. >> while i was driving in gaza city north, i saw empty streets, but a lot of destructions everywhere. >> reporter: he found one survivor who said he was home with his family when an explosion hit. can you see our three children here, he said. on the israeli side of the frontline with gaza, we saw
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lines of artillery and troops opening fire. the israeli military's objective in this offensive is clear, to dismantle and destroy hamas. the search is not only on for more than 200 hostages but those behind their abduction. that means any hamas member, anywhere, says this former mossad intelligence chief. there have been those, including the prime minister who said that everybody responsible for this will be hunted down. >> yeah. >> reporter: is that possible? >> yes. but it mike takeght take a coup years. >> reporter: couple years. >> we're an able to get to everybody. everybody. >> reporter: he tried to describe intelligence leading to hostages in the middle of an active war zone as a mission impossible. now hostages' families are terrified this new phase of
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fighting might endanger their loved ones and risk any hope of negotiation. today president biden spoke with israeli prime minister netanyahu and egypt president el sisi about the latest in gaza as the uss eisenhower carrier strike group crossed into the mediterranean sea. schuyler henry is at the white house with more on the efforts to contain this conflict. >> reporter: as this war escalates, so does the criticism on israel's deadly siege on gaza. now the biden administration has repeatedly said that israel has every right to defend itself against hamas, but others are concerned about the siege's ripple effects, including the humanitarian toll. >> we do not stand for the killing of innocent people, whether it be palestinian, israeli or otherwise. >> reporter: national security advisor jake sullivan says challenges are growing for israeli defense forces as hamas
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militants have created an added burden of using civilians as human shields. >> but it does not lessen their responsibility to distinguish between terrorists and innocent civilians and protect to the lives of incinnocent civilians. >> reporter: critics are scrutinizing the military operation and add the u.s. has a responsibility to deescalate the situation. >> our credibility and our authority on the moral stage is, is greatly diminished if we do not also call out these, this siege that israel is launching on gaza as violations of international law. >> reporter: as those concerns grow, over on capitol hill, new house speaker mike johnson says he thinks a stand-alone israel aid package will pass in the lower chamber this week. >> we cannot allow the brutality
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and just the unspeakable evil that is happening against israel right now to continue, and we're going to stand with our friends. all . >> reporter: the saudi defense minister will be in washington tomorrow land meet with top biden officials. they'll talk about gaza and greater stability in the middle east. >> thank you. a new wave of gun violence across the country this weekend. among the worst incidents, two people killed and 18 wounded at a street fight in tampa, florida. there were also vigils in maine, following the nation's worst mass shooting so far this year. cbs is in lewiston with more. >> reporter: this crisis has demonstrated that people in this community have faith in each other and the future. what we've witnessed is people coming together and trying to heal after wednesday's shooting. before the gunman, robert card, attacked his victims in this bowling alley and bar and
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grille, he was on the radar of law enforcement. according to the "new york times," a sheriff in maine now acknowledges that he sent an alert to other law enforcement after card made threats about an army reserve center. it's unclear who received the notice and how it was handled. ♪ ♪ >> reporter: hundreds gathered at a nighttime vigil in lisbon falls, maine on saturday night. they hugged and lit candle to remember the victims of the massacre that left 18 people dead and at least 13 injured. >> i don't think it will ever heal. >> reporter: this 10-year-old,s to 10-year-old, was in the bowling alley when the gunman opened fire, eventually calling her grandpa to inform him that she had survived. what did you say to your grandpa when you called him? >> hmm, i'm not dead, pepe. >> reporter: her grandfather
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can't forget that call. >> and i just broke down. >> reporter: dozens of police officers responded to the shooting scenes. investigators right now looking at all that body camera video. and jericka, they're still digging into what the gunman was doing in the hours leading up to the shootings. the shootings. >> theo's nose was cause for alarm, so dad brought puffs plus lotion to save it from harm. puffs has 50% more lotion and brings soothing relief. don't get burned by winter nose. a nose in need deserves puffs indeed. america's #1 lotion tissue. [stomach growling] it's nothing... sounds like something. ♪when you have nausea, heartburn, indigestion♪ ♪upset stomach, diarrhea♪ pepto bismol coats and soothes for fast relief when you need it most.
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this is the "cbs overnight news." >> i'm jericka duncan in new york. thanks so much for staying with us. israel prime minister benjamin netanyahu has apologized to the nation's military and intelligence chiefs after appearing to blame them for not stopping the hamas attack of october 7th. 1400 people were killed that day, according to israeli officials, and hundreds more were taken hostage.
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israel's relentless bombing of gaza has left about 8,000 palestinians dead, nearly half of them children according to hamas. and hamas claimed last week that the airstrike also also killed 50 hostages. seth doane reports from israel. >> i will not rest, and i will not sit, and i will not cry until she comes back. >> reporter: you'll not cry? >> i don't want to be weak right now. i want to getter had back. >> reporter: a grandmother was one of the more than 220 people taken hostage during the hamas massacre on october 7. shashani learned when a friend sent her this video. >> probably they were also the people who murdered my grandfather just a few minutes before. you can feel like all these people cheering and watching, like it's some kind of, like,
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show, like here we got an old lady. >> reporter: hostage. >> hostage. old jewish lady, so everybody's cheering tae cheering. it's hard to watch, but i need to watch it. >> reporter: she lived in the now-destroyed kibbutz nir oz, about two miles from gaza. >> they were together for 53 years. they were in love like they just met. >> reporter: on their last day together, they'd barricaded themselves in their bomb shelter. >> my hero grandfather held the door handle for three hours, and terrorists couldn't open the door. they shot countless gunshots on the door. >> reporter: her grandfather was shot multiple times and died in the shelter, while her grandmother was kidnapped through the exploded shelter window.
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just down the street, shashani's uncle, wife and five little kids were in their shelter with invaders in the house >> they robbed everything on their way, and they had many time they sat down. there was like a birthday cake for one of the children. they like opened it up. ate part of the cake. it's like it's ridiculous. >> reporter: they survived and were able to communicate with the rest of the family. so, for a while, shashani was optimistic until that clip surfaced the afternoon of the attack. they heard nothing from the government for three days. >> from the army got if contact w in kwaukts acontact wth us and officially confirmed that she is kidnapped, but other than that, nothing. >> reporter: is there support for families? >> there is support for families that comes from a volunteer
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community. >> reporter: part of this is printing photographs, posters. >> yeah, yeah. i realize this is going to be my mission. so i started to pick up the phone and say who can help me. >> reporter: that urgent help came in the form of 4,000 volunteers. after davide dreamed up the hostages and missing families forum, in a country where more than 300,000 soldiers have been called to duty, here citizens are mobilizing as a headquarters for the families of hostages. why are you doing this instead of the government? >> the government does t but iit, but it's very slow. >> i said what can we do? and it came to me. >> reporter: this physician had been working on obesity and smoking issues but is now focussing on which medications
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hostages feed. >> the clock is ticking. every moment that they don't get their essential drug and there is no reestablishment of the connection with the families their lives are in danger. >> reporter: daniel shek plays a role in diplomatic efforts. >> i used to be ambassador in paris. but this guy just met the ambassador of portugal. >> reporter: one of the family members pictured on his shirt is an israeli hostage with portuguese citizenship. three are dead, he another, ell is missing. >> we cannot stop. que we cannot sleep. we cannot eat. i'm doing everything i can. >> reporter: psychological services are part of this, too. that's where shashani, mother and a grieving friend were until being interrupted by another
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incoming rocket alert, sending everyone to a shelter. >> a common feeling here. >> reporter: being together. >> being together and to embrace each other. and we understand each other more than anyone else can understand us. >> reporter: this group formed interest from one that had been protesting the government judicial reforms. after 23 days, four have op bee freed. >> i don't feel, personally, that this is the first priority of the government. >> reporter: that the hostages are? >> yeah, i file theel the first priority is to show fight to the hamas and how strong we are. >> reporter: israel has ramped up retaliation, pummeling the fenced-in gaza strip with airstrikes, killing more than 7,000 people according to hamas
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as the humanitarian crisis worsens. >> reporter: do you want tom some revenge? >> actually, no. what doi get, is that what brings my grandfather back to life? no. i don't think it can give me anything. i don't want to spend my life with hate in my heart. >> reporter: for now, she's overwhelmed by other emotions which poured out during a silent protest in tel aviv thursday. it's a plea to not forget those held captive, with many worrying about what a ground incursion might mean. >> this is so hard. to see everyone here. and to realize that this is real, and all those people are not here, and we are. sometimes it's like hits you. >> reporter: earlier when you were talking, were you telling me you try not to cry. >> yeah. but somehow every time i get here and see all these people,
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they can feel my pain. >> reporter: in a region torn >> reporter: in a region torn apart by decades of after cooking a delicious chicken cheddar broccoli recipe, you will want to delete all your delivery apps. because nothing beats a perfect combo of sweet tomatoes and smooth, silky zucchini. knorr taste combos. it's not fast food, but it's soooo good. ♪ ♪ herbal essences is packed with naturally derived plant ingredients you love, and none of the stuff you don't. our sulfate-free collections smell incredible and leave your hair touchably soft and smooth. herbal essences. do you struggle with occasional nerve aches in your hands or feet? try nervive nerve relief from the world's number one nerve care company. nervive contains ala to relieve nerve aches, and b-complex vitamins to fortify healthy nerves. try nervive. and, try nervive pain relieving roll-on. oh... stuffed up again? so congested! you need sinex saline from vicks. just sinex,
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nocturnal creatures and the people who absolutely love them. >> reporter: deep in the heart of texas. deep inside a cave, millions and millions of mexican free tailed bats roost together. one square foot of the ceiling can contain more than 500 of them. when it comes to bat colonies t turns out everything really is bigger in texas. >> so, this cave is the home to the largest colony of bats in the world. we have somewhere in the neighbo neighborhood of 20 million mexican free tail bats. >> reporter: it's located just outside th outside the city of san antonio. they can be found all throughout the lonestar state. the ones that roost under the bridge in austin have even become a tourist attraction. >> it's something unique to austin and just cool. >> reporter: but there's not quite like bracken. >> we call it a bat nado.
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>> reporter: when they emerge, the resulting bat-nado is so massive it shows up on doppler radar. they're headed out to local fields to feast on innocents tt insects that feast on corn and other products. >> a lot of people, what they know about bats is whatever horror movie they saw last. >> reporter: and pop culture, bats are depicted as terrifying bloodsuckers. even batman is afraid of bats. but one wealthy texas entrepreneur fell in love with the bracken bats, inspiring him to pull a bruce wayne and build his own bat cave. >> after seeing the one down at
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bracken cave, it just knocked me over. i said, that, that is something. >> reporter: david bam burger co-founded church's texas chicken. in the late 1990s, concerned about threats to the bats' natural habitat in texas he built a giant cave near johnson city, and then for a long time, no bats showed up. but cbs's jim axel rod did. >> so when bam burger built the largest man-made bat cave, his wallet keeps him from sweating what is so far a $107,000 batless bust. the millionaire who'd gone batty was bigness. the cave was a colossal flop until one night when bamburger heard the flapping of thousands of tiny winds. >> bats were pouring out of there by the thousands. tears were running down my face. oh, i'm so happy.
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>> reporter: today, bamburger's cave, which is dubbed the chiroptorium, is home to a couple hundred thousand bats. it's impressive. romantic, even. >> well, our first date was a beautiful sunday afternoon. would you care to come and see my bat cave? >> reporter: that was the first date? >> yes. >> reporter: so what's a gal say to that? >> she says, at my age, i've had every come-on in my life, but i've neff been sdod see a bat cave before. >> reporter: bamburger is a 95-year-old newly wid. he married joanna reese bamburger earlier this year. they come out to see the bats most evenings. >> you sit there absolutely agaug, because it's wonderful to look at. >> reporter: looking at the faces of these high schoolers on a field trip to bracken cave,
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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. actor matthew perry, best known for his role on the sitcom "friends" has passed away. perry was found unconscious in a hot tub at his home, and papers were unable to revive him. perry had battled addiction and had been open about his health problems over the years, but his death was a shock to many, including canadian prime minister justin trudeau. he says he remembers playing with perry in the schoolyard when they were kids. jane pauley takes a look back at matthew perry's life and career. >> reporter: word of the passing
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of matthew perry, famed for his role as chandler bing in the televi t television series "friends", his most famous role. >> i'm like the bing, bing, bing. you're look the boom, boom, boom. >> reporter: but he appeared in any number of tv series and quite a few movie, most often comedies. while on-screen, perry's characters were usually easygoing. >> ai >> i'd like to believe you, but your nose is actually growing. >> reporter: off screen he struggled with drugs and alcohol and had stints in rehab. he wrote about those struggle thstruggles in a memoir published just last year. matthew
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matthew perry was just 54 years old. >> follow us online any time, of course, at cbs news.com. reporting from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm jericka duncan. this is cbs news flash. i'm matt piper in new york. the judge overseeing the 2020 election case against donald trump has reinstated the gag order against him. the ruling prohibits him from targeting court personnel, witnesses or jack smith or his team of prosecutors. uaw members have approved a new contract with ford that still feedsneeds union approval.
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gm is the still the only one seeking a deal. the most ever halloween weekend rellease. fighting intensifies in gaza. so does the humanitarian crisis. palestinians trapped in the territory raid united nations warehouses for food, despair and deaths mounting. israeli tanks and troops pushing deeper into gaza. war planes striking hundreds of targets in the last 24 hours. cbs news is there. as israel enters a new phase of fighting, hostage families fear for the safety of their
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loved ones. i'm chandler. i make jokes when i'm uncomfortable. >> also, remembering matthew perry. the "friend s" star dead at 54. talented and troubled. the latest on the investigation into his death. plus vigils in maine. new details emerge about the gunman. i'm in lewiston, maine where the memorials to the 18 victims are growing. and later, space race. lunar rovers, how china is rocketing ahead. >> beware, because they are very aggressive. this is the "cbs overnight news." >> several big stories this
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sunday, including the sad news that "friends" star matthew perry died this weekend. he was 54. he is remembered for his role in one of tv's biggest hits as well as his public struggle with addiction. > but first we begin with the latest in the israel-hamas war. militants in lebanon hit a neighborhood in northern israel, though worno word /on casualtie. >> reporter: tonight israeli forces are on the attack and on the move inside gaza, saying more troops have entered the territory, while the humanitarian crisis inside gaza is worsening by the minute. the israeli defense forces said they struck more than 450 hamas targets in a 24-hour period.
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releasing new nighttime video, claiming to show israeli tanks advancing inside gaza, flanked by infantry soldiers on foot. taking up positions under the cover of darkness and smoke screens. hamas has reported firefights and released video purporting to show a missile attack on an israeli troop carrier. while aid agencies describe the toll on civilians as a catastrophic crisis. the u.n. has warned of a breakdown of civil order, saying hundreds of people have stormed their warehouses in a desperate search for food and basic supplies. large parts of the territory even cut off from communications. but our cbs news producer managed to report today scenes of despair and utter desolation. >> while i was driving in gaza
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city north, i saw empty streets, but a lot of destructions everywhere. >> reporter: he found one survivor who said he was home with his family when the explosion hit. you can see our three children here, he said. on the israeli side of the frontline with gaza, we saw lines of artillery and troops opening fire. the israeli military's objective in this offensive is clear. to dismantle and destroy hamas. the search is not only on for more than 200 hostages but those behind their abduction. that means any hamas member, anywhere, says a former mossad intelligence chief. >> there have been those, including the prime minister who said that everybody responsible for this would be hunted down. >> yeah. >> reporter: is that possible? >> yes. but it might take a couple
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years. >> reporter: couple years. >> yeah, we're an able to get to everybody. to everybody. >> reporter: he described trying to find intelligence leading to the hostages in the middle of an active war zone like a mission impossible, jericka. now hostage families are terrified this new phase of fighting will endanger their loved once and might risk any hope of negotiations. >> charlie d'agata in tel aviv, thank you. today president biden spoke with israeli prime minister netanyahu and egyptian president el sisi, as the uss eisenhower strike group crossed into the mediterranean sea, joining other u.s. navy assets in that region. schuyler henry is at the white house with more on the efforts to contain this conflict. >> reporter: good to be with you. as the war escalates, so does the criticism on israel's deadly siege on gaza. now the biden administration has repeatedly said that israel has
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every right to defend itself against hamas, but others are concerned about the siege's ripple effects, including the humanitarian toll. >> we do not stand for the killing of innocent people, whether it be palestinian, israeli or otherwise. >> reporter: national security advisor jake sullivan says challenges are growing as hamas militants have created an added burden of using civilians as human shields. >> but it doesn't lessen their responsibility to protect the lives of innocent civilians. >> reporter: the biden administration says it will hold israel accountable if the country violates the law of armed conflict, though critics are scrutinizing the military operation and add the u.s. has a responsibility to deescalate the situation. >> our credibility and our authority on the moral stage is greatly diminished if we do not
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also call out these, this siege that israel is launching on gaza as violations of international law. >> reporter: as those concerns grow, over on capitol hill, new house speaker mike johnson says he thinks a stand-alone israel aid package will pass in the lower chamber this week. >> we cannot allow the brutality and just the unspeakable evil that is happening against israel right now to continue. we're going to stand with our friends. >> reporter: the saudi defense minister will be in washington tomorrow. he'll meet with top biden administration officials. they'll talk about gaza as well as greater stability in the middle east. jericka? >> schuyler henry at the white house tonight, thank you. there is a lot more news ahead on the "cbs overnight news."
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this is the "cbs overnight news." >> now to the death saturday of actor matthew perry. tonight he's being mourned by family and friends and generations of fans. in melbourne, australia, singer charlie puth had an arena full of self-declared "friends" fans as they sang the theme song during a concert. the host of entertainment
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tonight joins us with the latest on that. >> reporter: good evening. the police investigation is under way, but it could be several weeks before the l.a. coroner determines the cause of death. his family says they are heartbroken, as are so many of his fans. >> rachel and i hired a male nanny. >> you got a man who's a nanny? you got a manny? >> reporter: matthew perry played the wisecracking chandler bing on "friends", a role that shot him to fame at 24 years old. >> could i be more sorry? >> reporter: 30 years later, his sudden death came as a shock. 54-year-old perry was found unresponsive saturday at a jacuzzi at his los angeles home. the investigation is ongoing, but authorities do not suspect foul play. in his final instagram post a week ago, perry shared a photo of himself in his ja acccuzzi.
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the hollywood funny man wrote about his struggle with substance abuse in his memoir released last year. >>ly >> i had people around me tell neeg st telling me to stop. >> reporter: perry said he was living a healthy lifestyle since overcoming his addiction to alcohol and drugs in 2021. he shared that he had gone to rehab 15 times and 6,000 aa meetings. >> i want a drink all the time. because it's the only time i feel good and normal. but then it turns on you. the drink turns on you and says, well, now, i'm going to kill you. >> reporter: the actor starred in "the odd couple" and received an emmy nomination for "friends the reunion." thanks to streaming, "friends"
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gained a new generation of fans during the pandemic. the show's creators called him the sweetest with a giving and selfless heart. >> honesty made him so relatable. a new wave of gun violence across the country this weekend. among the worst incidents, two people killed and 18 wounded at a street fight in tampa, florida. there were also vigils in maine, following the nation's worst mass shooting so far this year. cbs is in lewiston with more. >> reporter: people in this community have faith in each other and the future. what we've witnessed is people coming together and trying to heal after wednesday's shooting. before the gunman, robert card, attacked his victims, he was on the radar of law enforcement. according to the "new york
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times," the sheriff in maine now acknowledges that he sent an alert to other law enforcement after card made threats about an army reserve center. it's unclear who received the notice and how it was handled. ♪ ♪ hundreds gathered at a nighttime vigil in lisbon falls, maine on saturday night. they hugged and lit candles to remember the victims of the massacre that left 18 people dead and at least 13 injured. >> i don't think they'll ever heal. >> reporter: this 10-year-old was in the bowling alley when the gunman opened fire. >> i saw someone get shot on the third shot. >> reporter: eventually calling her grandpa to inform him that she had survived. what did you say to your grandpa when you called him? >> hmm, i'm not dad, pepe. >> reporter: her grandfather can't forget that call. >> and i just broke down.
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>> reporter: dozens of police officers responded to the shooting scenes. investigators are right now looking at all of that body camera video, and jericka, they're also still digging into what the gunman was doing in the hours leading up to the shootings. >> thank you. as the war between israel and hamas enters its fourth week, its impact is being felt far beyond the middle east. for two americans i spoke to, the unimaginable is now reality. at a restaurant in brooklyn, the owner, a 37-year-old palestinian american. >> reporter: >> ray for peace, brother. >> reporter: says his life hasn't been the same since hamas attacked 1400 people in israel. october 7 , hamas invades israe. you're thinking what? >> i'm thinking this problem, this is a war. >> reporter: his mother is
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trapped in the west bank. he worries for her safety. he says the conflict has been taking lives for 75 years. >> people in gaza, every house has death, has a kid lost, died or a father died or a cousin died. it's not even one house in gaza that they don't have death. >> reporter: are you just as frustrated and saddened by the loss of life in israel? >> listen, i am mad for both sides. i don't want no killing for both sides. and i really don't want to cry in this meeting, but the babies are losing. the babies are dying. no israeli soldier that i personally mow wants to seat innocent civilian die. >> reporter: this 23-year-old a israeli-american, has been organizing rallies in new york city since the attack. in 2020, he served in the idf. >> and our hearts go out for any casualties of war that cannot be
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equated with the gruesome attacks on innocent civilian lives. >> reporter: do you empathize with people who say they stand with palestine? >> i empathize with them because i hope what they're saying is that they empathize with the palestinian people and not hamas. >> reporter: his uncle was murdered by hamas in 1996. prime minister benjamin netanyahu was at the funeral. >> my uncle was kidnapped for seven months. we ended up finding his body cut in two. >> reporter: and in this war both sides are left struggling with the loss of innocent lives. >> we have to wipe out this terrorist force and find a way to live together. find a way to bring pace. >> at war, who dies? us as human beings. i'm jonathan lawson here to tell you about life insurance through the colonial penn program. if you're age 50 to 85, and looking to buy life insurance on a fixed budget, remember the three ps. what are the three ps? the three ps of life insurance on a fixed budget are price, price, and price.
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to go back to the moon. for them to get to the moon. >> reporter: this space race's prize, the moon's south pole where there's ice. that means water, air and rocket fuel, critical to use the moon as a springboard to mars. the u.s. plans to build a base there as part of its artemis program. but china does too. what to you is worrisome about all of this? >> they are not transparent. and you better watch your stuff. they get there, and they say, this is our territory. you stay out. >> reporter: kevin pullpeter has studied china's space moves for more than two decades. >> and then we would get into a situation that would turn from competition perhaps into conflict. >> we've got a situation over here. >> reporter: that's what happens in apple tv's original series "for all mankind", a competition to mine scarce lunar resources
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turns deadly. >> we are at risk of losing our economic and national security. >> reporter: for nasa, the race back to the moon is a marathon. after a test flight last year, the agency plans to send a crew around the moon late next year. then in 2026 a moon landing mission. but supply chain problems, technical challenges and other delays threaten nasa's schedule. are you concerned that those delays could be significant enough that the chinese would get there first? >> we should be landing before they would have a chance. but beware, because they are very aggressive. >> reporter: this year, china announced its lunar timetable is accelerating. astronauts on the moon by 2030. five years earlier than previously planned. mark strassmann, cbs news, washington. washington. next one small step for this strong enamel is your best defense
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finally tonight, we say good-bye to the friend we lost. >> i'm chandler, i make jokes when i'm uncomfortable. >> chandler bing was often sharp. sometimes self-deprecating. >> interesting, because in my james, i'm surprise lig inadequate. >> and always sarcastic. >> i'm not great at the advice, can i interest you in a sarcastic comment? >> more than 52 million people would tune in when perry delivered the show's final line. >> okay, should we get some coffee? >> sure. >> where? >> today family and friends are remembering perry as someone who was always there for them. >> i would like to be remembered as somebody who lived well, loved well. and his paramount thing is that he wants to help people. >> and that is the overnight
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news for this monday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, make sure you check back later for cbs mornings, and follow us any time at cbs news.com. i'm jericka duncan. this is cbs news flash. i'm matt pieper in new york. the judge overseeing the 2020 case against former president donald trump has reinstated the gag order against him. the ruling prohibits him from pub publicly targeting court personnel, witness or jack smith or his team of prosecutors. a tentative agreement with
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stellantis and ford were reached over the weekend. and it's spooky season at the box office as "five nights at freddy's" opens to $78 million domestically, the most ever for a halloween weekend release. for more, download the cbs it's monday, october 30th, 2023. this is the "cbs morning news." death and despair. as israeli tanks and troops push deeper into gaza. the humanitarian crisis grows with palestinians looting u.n. warehouses for food and other supplies. remembering matthew perry. the "friends" star died suddenly at 54. the investigation and the tributes. and honoring the victims of maine's mass shooting. hundreds come together to mourn the 18 lives lost as we learn
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