tv CBS Overnight News CBS August 9, 2016 2:02am-4:01am EDT
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i'm no marketing guru... but this guy is. he's from madison avenue. he likes to say things like... raised without antibiotics. that's a phrase he invented to make chicken sound safer. and it doesn't mean much because, by federal law, all chickens must be clear of antibiotics before they leave the farm. i've got more. "mom approved?" "caffeine free?" we think mr. marketing guru would fit in better
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the number of nontreated zika infections in florida rose to 16. this time the person is in palm beach county. 75 miles north of the miami zika zone but had traveled to miami-dade county. david begnaud has the latest on the battle of to birth defect. >> reporter: there has been aerial spraying over the zika zone at least three times now. with 17 locally transmitted zika cases. the one mile area of wynwood was a ghost dotown. she feared sunny had he had zik. today she received good news. >> we did your test last week. it was negative.
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>> whew. one last thing to worry about. >> reporter: she says she has been taking precautions including using bug spray any time she is outside. >> reporter: you understand how randomly it could have been you? >> absolutely. and, and in any situation, when you become pregnant, you just accept you are not in control. one thing that you are in control of, with zika is you can prevent. >> reporter: her obstetrician, dr. e patients are forgetting abut prevention. >> people want to beep tested. but do you have bug spray in your purse. you are getting tested. do you have bug spray in your purse. you have to focus on. images have to be of the mosquito, bites, that's what you need to avoid. >> reporter: tonight in palm beach county, inspectors are in the area where the new case was detected going dpoor to door asking people for voluntary
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charlie the kids are about to go back to school in florida. today the governor asked education leaders to start teaching students about zika protection. >> thank you, david. folks in florida bracing for severe flooding in port richard, roads have been closed because of heavy rains. and forecast is only getting worse. some places could get 9 inches of rain in the next few days. that's because a storm system has stalled over the florida panhandle. the bad weather extends all the way to new orleans. javier is bearing down on baja california. heavy air expected to pass by cabo san lucas tonight. half a foot of rain is in the forecast. an earlier storm, erm, dumped a month worth of rain on central mexico in 24 hours. that triggered an avalanche of mud, that killed at least 45 people. today, soldiers and rescue teams
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survivors were transported in military vehicles to safety. by contrast the western u.s. is bone dry. tonight, dozens of wildfires are burning out of control. evacuations have been ordered in the san bernardino mountains, east of los angeles. hundreds of firefighters and 16 aircraft are battling the pilot fire. it has burned 4500 acres. smoke has blown all the way to las vegas. in pakistan today, lawyer. then a suicide bomber attacked the hospital where mourners had gathered. at least 70 people were killed. more than 90 were hurt. both the taliban and isis have claimed responsibility. tonight syria's biggest city is in danger of becoming a slaughterhouse. the assad regime's army backed by iran and russia surrounded aleppo, but they have not been able to lock it down. deborah potter reports tonight
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the key turning point was reached over the weekend. when a newly formed coalition of opposition fighters including some recently affiliated to al qaeda managed to barack through government lines. they released this drone footage which shows the moment a suicide bomber drove a truck through the city, and blew himself up, allowing rebel groups to advance forward and seize a military complex with ammunition and heavy artillery. it all looked so different just two weeks ago. after years of steal mate in the fight for control of the city, government troops backed by russian air strikes seized the rebels last remaining supply route, cutting off an estimated 250,000 people. in a desperate bid to break the siege, opposition forcings launched a successful counter offensive and surprisingly were also able to take over the main road into the government held part of the city.
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people live. the gain was greeted with celebrations in rebel controlled parts of aleppo. they could be short-lived. there are growing fears of food and food shortages. and the allies, say they're amassing thousand more fighters along the front lines. the fight or aleppo is clearly intensifying and could become a pivotal battle in this war. at this stage, charlie it is unclear whether either side can actu i talked to michael morell, former director of the c if a until recently a cbs news contributor. he suggests the united states should support more aggressive action by syrian rebels. >> when we were in iraq, the iranians were giving weapons to the shiaa militia willing american soldiers, iranians were making us pay a price. we need to make the, the
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here's what i want to do. i want to go after. i want to go after those things that assad sees as his personal power base. right? i want to scare assad. i want him to think about, this is not going to end well for me. >> coming up next, a day of fun at a water park turns tragic. later, a wedding guest brings a bride a priceless gift. ? the decision to ride on and save money. he decided to save money by switching his motorcycle insurance to geico. there's no shame in saving money. ride on, ride proud. geico motorcycle,
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an investigation is continuing tonight into a freak accident that took the life of a child at a water park in kansas city, kansas. it happened on a water slide whose name is german for insane. omar villafranco is in kansas city. >> excithe sunday afternoon when 10-year-old caleb swab was killed riding this 17 story water slide on a raft. two other passengers were injured. winter persapio is the water park spokesperson. >> all our rides are inspected every day. actually. our ride are inspected by an outside party. >> caleb the son of kansas state representative scott swab, enjoying the park on a day honoring state lawmakers.
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joy to our family and although he came into contact with. >> taller than niagara falls. >> it is dubbed the tallest water slide in the world. the attraction opened in 2014 after several delays. adjustments had to be made to the second hill when test runs showed the raft launching off the slide. in this promotional video released by the company, three riders strap into a raft and drop down more than 168 feet miles per hour. passengers are thrust up and over another 50 foot drop. to ride, each passenger must be at least 4'6." the combined weight of three riders must be 400 pounds. this girl took the plunge with friend on the watt r slide an hour before the deadly accident. the 18-year-old was concerned
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>> i felt i had to hold on to keep my body from going up. i was so scared. >> the autopsy is complete. the results have not been released yet. charlie, the kansas city police department is leading this investigation. >> thank you, omar. still ahead, michael phelps in rio, a gold medal and purple spots. we'll dive into this next. this is shaving. blades here, blades there. some more over there... whoa! that's not a blade. this is gillette shielding. with lubrication before and after the blades. shields from irritation for a close, comfortable shave. proshield from gillette.
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and phelps with olympic gold medal number 19. michael phelps off to a strong start in his fifth olympics. but there was something else that everyone steamed to be talking about today. ben tracy is in rio with our on the spot coverage. >> out comes team usa. >> when michael phelps made his r if o debut. there were two questions how fast would he swim and what's with the purple mark all over his body. an ancient chinese pain relief treatment known as cupping. you can see him getting the treatment in his underarmor add. here's how cupping works. specialized suction cups pull the skin up and away from underlying muscles breaking capillaries. that draws blood to the area and speeds recovery. phelps is such a fan. he instagramed the photo of himself mid cup treatment to. day, cody miller said he is also
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during training. i'll have her put cups on my back. and she is like. so gross. >> dara torres is a 12 time medalist in swimming. >> is this a fringe thing in sports or something a lot of athletes do. >> i think a low key trend now. that michael phelps has been seen with cup marks all over his body. more athletes will do it. i was doing it, in 2008 and not just for professional athletes. 2-year-old, gia san angelo uses the technique to relieve the back pain. this doctor treats her at mount sinai hospital in new york. >> cupping actually jump starts the body's natural healing process. you can increase the blood flow and let the body do what it does to help resolve the issue. >> reporter: there isn't a lot of good scientific evidence showing the technique works. many athletes here in rio swear by it.
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we end tonight with affairs of the heart. a decade ago, her father gave the stranger the gift of life. now the stranger has returned to give jenny the gift of a lifetime. here is jim axelrod. ? ? >> reporter: to make a wed day perfect, jenny stepian had a man walk her down the aisle she met the first time just the day before. >> hi! >> hi, jenny. >> reporter: but jenny was positive she could trust arthur thomas' heart. >> thank you so much for coming. >> are you kidding. >> after all, it belonged to her father michael. >> the heart, that's right.
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was killed in a robbery near pittsburgh ten years ago. hundreds of miles away in philadelphia, arthur thomas' failing heart had him on a transplant waiting list. but hope was slipping away. >> i was on death's door. when, when -- when he was murdered. and i needed a heart or i was going to be dying within the next few days. >> fast forward a decade to a letter jenny mailed to arthur thomas. >> and she said the daughter of the man whose heart is inside of you. would you walk me down the aisle. >> reporter: which is how jenny stepian got to have her father's beating heart with her for the biggest moment of her life. >> it awe just like having my dad here and better because we get to share the story with other people. and other people see that organ donors do matter. >> and that's how hearts were both breaking at this wedding
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this is the "cbs overnight news." welcome to the overnight news. republican presidential nominee donald trump has outlined his plans to create jobs and cut taxes in a major economic po speech in detroit. long argued that business experience qualifies him to lead the wrldorld's biggest economy. monday he offered details on the changes he would make if he wins the presidency. here is some of what trump had to say. >> i am proposing an across the board income tax reduction for middle-income americans. this will lead to millions of new, really good paying jobs. the rich will pay their fair share. but no one will pay so much that
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our ability, as a nation, to compete. tax simplification will be a major feature of the plan. our current tax code is so burdensome, and so complex, that we waste 9 billion hours a year in tax code compliance. my plan will reduce the current number of brackets from 7 to 3. process. we will work with house republicans, on this plan, using the same brackets they have proposed. 12%. 25%. and 33%. for many americans, their tax rate will be 0. under my plan, no american company will pay more than 15% of their business income in
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your taxes from 35% to 15%. small businesses will benefit the most from this plan. hillary clinton's plan will require small business to pay as much as three times more in taxes than what i am proposing. and her owners regulations will put them totally out of business and you went be able to start. you business under the tremendous regulatory burden that you have today in our country. i am going to cut regulations massively. my plan will also help reduce the cost of child care. by allowing parents to fully deduct the average cost of child care spending from their taxes. we are also going to bring back
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parked overseas, they can't bring their money back into our country. our plan will bring that cash home, applying only a 10% tax. >> hillary clinton will define her own economic vision in an address thursday. democratic presidential nominee will lay out her case in detroit. nancy cordes is covering the clinton kachl pcampaign. >> an economy that works for the economy as trump veers offcourse. >> she is a monster. >> may be paying off. 57% of virginians tell cbs news she is prepared to be president compared to 36% who say that about trump. name calling, probably doesn't help. >> she is a totally unhinged person. she's's unbalanced. >> the comparison enabled
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areas. a third of virginia voters think she can bring change to washington. or that she tells the truth. >> so i may have short circuited it. >> clinton gave a tortured explanation friday for why she mischaracterized the fbi director's comments, claiming incorrectly he said she never publicly lied about her e-mails. >> direct oor comey said my answers were truthful. that's the bottom line. what i t t said was truthful is consistent with what i said publicly. >> she is lying about lying. >> republicans argued she was parsing her word. >> she has a fundamental way to say to people. i didn't lie to you. i didn't remember what i was going to say. >> mystery surround the excushion of an iranian scientist accused of being informant for the united states. over the weekend. i ran announced he was hanged as a traltor.
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includes execution, nuclear secrets and u.s. diplomacy. a scientist with vital information on deadly nuclear weapons defects to the states. seven years later his family says he was hanged. the big question here is, what made dr. amiri return to iran. his love for his son, may have cost dr. amiri his life. he was reunited with his fame having received a hero's had been kidnapped by cia agents. he reap cysted spilling the beans on iran's nuclear program. it soon became clear iranian authorities weren't buying his version of events. he disappeared. presumably imprisoned until this weekend's announcement. officials said amiri was executed for giving america what they called the great satan, vital and secret information.
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he defected to the u.s. in 2009. secrets about his country's nuclear program. but months later, wanted to go home. >> he seems to have gotten cold feet. >> the senior vice president for the center for strategic and international studies. >> he came up with different stories all of which were about him going back and being with his family in iraq. >> one of the stories claimed he had been kidnapped while on pilgrimage to mecca and tortured in eight months of captivity. then secretary of state, clinton said amir is his own man. >> mr. amiri has been in the united states of his own free will. and he is free to go. >> reporter: being part of iran's nook leeruclear program dangerous game. amiri would have known the risks. >> from their perspective this is how uh you treat traitors it
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amiri couldn't have anticipated that when heap made the decision to go back to iran. >> now the state department would give no further comment on amiri this morning. in e-mails released from clinton's private servers, conversations refer to him as a friend who pose aid diplomatic, psychological issue in the days before he left the u.s. >> the "cbs overnight news" will
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at the rio summer olympics, michael phelps may be soaking up attention for the swim team. another american swimmer is in the middle of an extraordinary come back. >> his name may not be the most familiar on the u.s. swim team. anthony irvin, his story is certainly the most fascinating. later this week 35, he will be the oldest male swimmer to compete in an individual event at the games, since 1904. but this isn't his first olympics. he won gold back in 2000. at the age of 19. and then vanished from the sport entirely. >> 15 meters left. off awe when anthony irvan tied for gold as a 19-year-old in the 2000 games in sydney. >> no.
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>> going to the olympic games is an honor, enormous privilege. >> gary hall, anthony irvan. share the gold. >> instead, it led to the most tumultuous time of his life. >> part of what led to a lot of the angst initially was doing well and performing well, the social kind of like joy that comes from others and knowing that one has done well, and you kind of get hooked on that. you kind of need that to sus taen yo irvan's parents are jewish, native american and african-american. >> the first swimmer of african-american descent to make the u.s. team. >> the only problem he never identified as a black man. >> did it really piss you off when people called you the first african-american swimmer? >> it caused confusion. >> at the height of it all, he
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>> post olympic champion status was about rediscovering, rebuilding myself, the way i wanted to be not the way others were, at least the way perceived wanted me to be. >> reporter: over the next decade, irvan sold his gold medal, donated money to charity and took off on a spiritual quest. he dabbled in everything from zen buddhism to the hard partying lifestyle of playing in rock band. instead of a pool, he sank depression. which add its deepest led to a suicide attempt, and a death defying motorcycle accident. nearing age 30, he desperately need a shot at redemption. >> for me, getting the tattoos was a way of reclaiming my skin and regaining control of myself. >> armed with ink he went back to school and started coaching at a swim camp for kids. the kids helped him remember what he loved about swimming in the first place. >> the water when i was a child,
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a place where everything else can kind of fall away and into this meditative state. and -- i got that back. >> he dove back into competition, and a dozen years after his last olympics, qualified for the 2012 games. with a personal best time in the 50 meter freestyle race. but in london, he only placed fifth. >> he is probably the most interesting human being on our team. maybe in the whole olympic team. >> david marsh one of the u.s. swim team head coaches. he has known irvan since anthony was 17 years old. earlier this year, he started training him for another shot at gold. >> he arrived in my place, eight weeks before the olympic trials. didn't seem as confident as i felt he need to be for the games. then he became anthony again. anthony has the most brilliant sprint freestyle stroke on the planet. the stroke carried him to one of the fastest times he ever posted
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this summer. and earned him a tick tight rio. >> wasn't like i demanded this of myself. >> reporter: you didn't stay i am getting back in the pool and going to make the next olympics. >> no way. he has no expectations for the future, but more importantly no regrets about the past. >> i really try to aindividual regret. i don't think anybody should be stuck in the past. that's a dead life if you are stuck in the past. life moves forward. >> because irvan helped the u.s. swim team win here, ties for the record for longest gap of a u.s. swimmer between medals. 16 years set way back in 1924. >> the "cbs overnight news" will
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mass shootings have become an all too familiar sight on television. this past week marked 50 years that kind of horror on tv. anna werner take is a look back in a story for "sunday morning." >> it is a summer day in austin, as students at the university of texas stroll the campus. a day much like the one 50 years ago, long before anyone knew the term mass shooting. >> this is where -- >> yeah. >> it's the day and the spot
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see the tower. >> oh, yeah. >> right over you. >> that day was august 1, 1966. walter cronkite anchored a special cbs news report. >> a deranged engineering student at university of texas climbed to an austin landmark at noon how to day. >> a man perched atop the university of texas clock tower began firing on the people below. west and south side of the campus as sniper zeroed in on his target with unerring accuracy. >> he shot at random. for more than 90 minutes. >> claire, an 18-year-old student, 8 months pregnant walking on campus with boyfriend tom eckman. at first didn't know what was happening. >> you never heard the shot?
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then i started falling. >> reporter: as she fell to the pavement, her boyfriend, tom, turned to ask her what was wrong. the next thing she knew, he was lying dead next to her. and she couldn't move. >> you thought you were dead? >> i thought i was going to die. yeah. >> the killer was 25-year-old charles joseph whitman, a former marine sharpshooter. unknown to anyone, he had mother in their homes, before heading to the tower's 2th floor observation deck with multiple guns. it was the first school mass shooting in modern u.s. history. he affect sewed many lives in that one day. retired texas ranger, martinez was a young officer with the police department at the time. arriving on campus. he couldn't believe what they
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going on. it was look a war. >> back then, there was no such thing as rapid response teams. it was left to martinez and civilian, followed by a fellow officer, houston mccoy to climb to the top of the tower. to face off against the sniper and his arsenal. as martinez described it at the time. >> he didn't have it level. he was trying t >> i could tell by impact that i hit him. i kept advancing. shooting. mccoy shot and hit him. and started going down. >> the shooter was dead. he killed 16 people that day. and injured dozens more. the mass shooting brought fundamental changes to police departments. and led to the creation of swat
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for decades at u.t. the only reminder of the terrible day could be find on this rock. keith maitland who went to school there wondered why he never heard more. >> this is a story i think that anybody who grew up here has heard a little bit about. but if you want to get past just that little bit there isn't really a lot out there to kind of fill in the blanks. >> so he made a called "tower." >> we can see the movement south side of the clock. >> it uses animation and archive footage to tell the story of the day. >> the shot hit me. rick shad ricochetted off the building. >> then what happened? >> then everybody ran. >> what i want to understand what was it look to live through something like this?
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>> the worst days of your lives. >> reporter: in the process he wound up reconnecting people who it turned out had not seen each other since that day, 50 years ago. >> people like claire wilson james. >> hi, claire. >> hello, baby. >> and artly snuff. snuff was just a teenager at the time. that's him on the right in the dark shirt. running out in full view of the steps to safety. something he says he simply felt he had to do. >> because she was shot. she was obviously pregnant. it was the most horrific day of my life. >> to this day? >> oh, gosh, yes. i didn't go to war. that was my war. >> because why? >> because the blood.
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the loss of innocence. i think what i probably learned the most is that you have to deal withdr trauma. for people who weren't given an opportunity it really sits with them and kind of eats away at them over the course of the rest of their lives. >> reporter: even people you might not expect. like ray martinez, who before he was a police officer, was a [ gunfire ] >> reporter: he told us on the way to the tower to stop the sniper that day he was forced to run past claire as she lay bleeding on the quad without stopping to help her. >> that day -- i was thinking like a medic but also thinking like a policeman. i saw her wounded. and i felt like it was my duty to grab her and take her out of there. >> reporter: in the movie version of this, you're the guy
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the day. and you are telling me that even you, are wracked by guilt? >> well, if you are a human being and you got feelings for people, yes. >> reporter: the university is now taking steps to remember those lost. this past week, a new larger memorial was dedicated. listing the names of those killed. including claire wilson james boyfriend and also her baby. and in the shadow of the tower, there is now friendship. and healing for survivors. and from claire, something else. and you forgive him? >> oh, yeah, how could -- god's forgiven me everything i have done. that kind of person.rom being - you know, that, that decide to go that way.
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a video of a massive alligator roaming a golf course is getting a lot of attention on line. david begnaud has the story behind the siting. >> reporter: the golfers who took the video were in disbelief. a giant gator standing high on the golf course. it is a sight so unreal, that chubs, as he has become known, is something of an internet phenomenon. the individually that made him famous has been viewed more than 19 million times. but regulars here in palm meadow, florida, are unfazed. >> this is a great course, you see a lot of gators out here. big ones. fighting. running across. it's pretty interesting course. i mean it's fun.
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realize, these things go very short distances billion out they tire out quickly. >> they're fast. >> they're fast for a short distance. like us old guys. you know? >> his head was about -- here. >> course manager ken powell says chub has been a fixture on the fairway for years. he believes the gafor is at least 15 feet long and likely 40 or 50 years old. when chubs comes out, play doesn't stop. if golfers hit a ball close to th another one. and play right on through. >> he is not a nuisance alligator. we have no plans to have anybody come and take him away. he is not hurting anybody. >> reporter: once kidded endangered. alligators are federally protected species. more than 1 million reptiles in habit florida. fatal attacks on humans are rare. only six have been recorded in the state in the last 10 years. and that includes the killing of a 2-year-old boy at disney world
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body of freshwater. tim geist is a trapper and says% alligators should always be treated as a potential threat. >> a lot of the public doesn't understand when they feed an alligator they're creating a monster. feed the alligator, he is going to coop coming back for more, gets bigger, bigger, bigger. sees you as potential meal. >> reporter: chubs may look like a monmonster, but the club belis as long as patrons leave him peacefully cope exist. that's the "cbs overnight news" for this tuesday morning. 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
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delta down. >> so we are just here, twiddling our thumbs having no idea what to do. >> a computer crash ground one of america's largest airlines, lein also tonight, a new zika infection in florida, but this one miles north of miami. >> a new donald trump, reads his policy off a prompter. prompting this. >> there is no other donald trump. >> at the olympics, much adieu about cupping. >> and the special guest who made a brides wedding.
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oh. oh. ? ? this is the "cbs overnight news." it was a monday meltdown for this country's second biggest airline. delta's computer system crashed. and that forced the airline to cancel 650 flights. many more were delayed leaving thousand of passengers stranded at airports all over the world. here is transportation correspondent kris van cleave. >> reporter: the fbi tells cbs news it does not believe the computer issue that paralyzed delta air lines was due to hacking. instead the airline blames a power outage in atlanta overnight. flier paulette vernon. >> we are just here. having no idea what to do. e usually busy monday morning.ng 23 delta planes were in the air as global computer outage grounded flights for hours. passengers couldn't check in.
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dispatch planes creating long lines at airports from los angeles to london. where passengers had to deboard some flights. in washington angela goff worried she wouldn't make it to her cruise ship in time. >> you show up. think you are getting your boarding pass and getting on the plane. we're grounded. >> reporter: the four biggest carriers have experienced computer outages. a week ago, a glitch crippled southwest for days. ed bastion. >> i apologize for the challenges this created for you with your travel happening? >> people have come to realize this is an industry wide problem. >> the airlines are using old systems. >> they have these multidecade old systems for dealing with passengers that are suddenly expect to deal with mobile apps, onlike check ins on the web. a lot more demand for what they're doing and doing it with pretty limited capacity. >> reporter: delta says its systems are operating once again. and is investigating why its backups didn't kick in as they
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charlie, delays in some places are still in the three-hour range. so the airline continues to struggle to get back on track. >> thank you, kris. it wasn't the fiery donald trump we are used to today. rather than speak off the cuff, he read off the prompter. as he delivered an economic address in detroit. a new national poll out today shows him trailing hillary clinton by 12 points among registered voters. major garrett on trump's attempt to get his troubled campaign back on track. >> she is the candidate of the past. >> donald trump's top advisers have been begging him for weeks to get back on message and position himself as agent of change against hillary clinton to. day evidence of a trump conversion. >> when we reform our tax, trade, energy, and regulatory policies, we will open a new chapter in american prosperity. >> yet, trump's economic proposals align with every republican president and nominee since ronald reagan. with across the board tax cuts. federal regulations and fossil
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>> my plan will reduce the current number of brackets from seven to three and dramatically streamline the process. >> in a significant shift, trump scrapped his original tax plan. and embraced a less expensive one drafted by house republicans. with income tax brackets of 12, 25% and 33%. trump's first plan had a top rate of 25%. and a more generous standard deduction. the nonpartisan tax policy center estimated trump's original plan would have cost more than $10 trillion in its first ten years. the house gop plan is about a third less costly. >> trump's speech was interrupted more than a dozen times by protesters in what appeared to be a coordinated effort to throw him off course.
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>> while trump tried to drive his economic message. 50 high ranking republican national security and diplomatic advisers to presidents from richard nixon to george w. bush signed a letter opposing trump. charlie, they said trump if elect would be the most reckless president in history. trump dismissed the letter saying those to sign it were to blame making the world such a dangerous place. >> thank you, major. hillary clinton's reaction to trump came as the it usually does quickly. here is nancy cordes. >> he wants to roll back regulations on wall street. >> reporter: in saint petersburg, florida, clinton said trump would explode the debt cutting taxes for the wealthy and spending more. >> he wants to basically just repackage, trickle down economics.
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fool me once, shame on you. fool me twice shame on me. trickle down economics does not help our economy grow, it does not help the vast majority of americans. >> she also mocked his new economic team. made up of 13 white men. >> hedge fund guys, billionaire guys. apparently. >> clinton's advantage with women is one factor in her widening lead. and here is another. according to the cbs news battleground tracker, 57% of virginians think she is prepared to be president. compared to just 36% who say that about trump. after an erratic couple of weeks. >> she is truly unhinged.
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clinton in the new polls as well. just 36% of voters view her favorably. slightly more than trump. but still lower than any winning presidential candidate in modern history. >> i want you to tell your friend, don't let a friend vote trump. >> reporter: clinton has consolidated the party around her. more than nine in ten democrats now say they plan to vote for her compared to fewer than eight in ten republicans who say that about trump. may not sound look a big difference, charlie, but it ca
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the number of nontravel related zika infections in florida rose to 16. this time the person is in palm beach county. 75 miles north of the miami zika zone but had traveled to miami-dade county. david begnaud >> reporter: there has been aerial spraying over the zika zone at least three times now. with 17 locally transmitted zika cases. the one mile area of wynwood was a ghost town. she feared she had zika. she started having flu like symptoms. today she received good news. >> we did your test last week.
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reaction when you got it? >> whew. one less thing to worry about. >> reporter: she says she has been taking precautions including using bug spray any time she is outside. >> reporter: you understand how randomly it could have been you? >> absolutely. and, and in any situation, when you become pregnant, you just accept you are not in control. one thing that you are in control of, with zika is you can prevent. >> reporter: her obstetrician, dr. maria beacham worries some patients are forgetting abut prevention. >> people want to beep tested. but do you have bug spray in your purse. you are getting tested. do you have bug spray in your purse. you have to focus on. images have to be of the mosquito, bites, that's what you need to avoid. >> reporter: tonight in palm
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asking people for voluntary urine samples to see who else may have been infected. charlie the kids are about to go back to school in florida. today the governor asked education leaders to start teaching students about zika protection. >> thank you, david. folks in florida bracing for severe flooding in port richard, roads have been closed because of heavy rains. and forecast is only getting worse. some places could get 9 inches of rain in the next few days. that's because a storm system has stalled over the florida panhandle. the bad weather extends all the way to new orleans. in the pacific, tropical storm javier is bearing down on baja california. heavy air expected to pass by cabo san lucas tonight. half a foot of rain is in the forecast. and earlier storm earl dumped month worth of rain on central
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mud, that killed at least 45 people. today, soldiers and rescue teams searched for survivors in the mud and rubble. survivors were transported in military vehicles to safety. by contrast the western u.s. is bone dry. tonight, dozens of wildfires are burning out of control. evacuations have been ordered in the san bernardino mountains, east of los angeles. hundreds of firefighters and 16 aircraft are battling the pilot fire. las vegas. in pakistan today, militants shot and killed a prominent lawyer. then a suicide bomber attacked the hospital where mourners had gathered. at least 70 people were killed. more than 90 were hurt. both the taliban and isis have claimed responsibility. tonight syria's biggest city is in danger of becoming a slaughterhouse. the assad regime's army backed
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aleppo, but they have not been able to lock it down. deborah potter reports tonight from inside syria. the key turning point was reached over the weekend. when a newly formed coalition of opposition fighters including some recently affiliated to al qaeda managed to barack through government lines. they released this drone footage which shows the moment a suicide bomber drove a truck through the city, and blew himself up, allowing rebel groups to advance forward and seize a military complex with small arms ammunition and heavy artillery. it all looked so different just two weeks ago. after years of stalemate in fight for control of the city, government troops backed by russian air strikes seized the rebels last remaining supply route, cutting off an estimated 250,000 people. in a desperate bid to break the siege, opposition forcings launched a successful counter offensive and surprisingly were also able to take over the main road into the government held part of the city.
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celebrations in rebel controlled parts of aleppo. they could be short-lived. there are growing fears of food and food shortages. and the allies, say they're amassing thousand more fighters along the front lines. the fight or aleppo is clearly intensifying and could become a pivotal battle in this war. at this stage, charlie it is uncleaet former deputy director of the cia and until recently a cbs news contributor. he suggests the united states should support more aggressive action by syrian rebels. >> when we were in iraq, the iranians were giving weapons to the shiaa militia willing american soldiers, iranians were making us pay a price. we need to make the, the iranians pay a price in syria,
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i want to go after. i want to go after those things that assad sees as his personal power base. right? i want to scare assad. i want him to think about, this is not going to end well for me. >> coming up next, a day of fun at a water park turns tragic. later, a wedding guest brings a bride a priceless gift. breyers peanut butge rich chocolate sauce. peanut butter cups. tonight is perfect. can someone read me another story? daddd? mmm coming breyers gelato indulgences
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an investigation is continuing tonight into a freak accident that took the life of a child at a water park in kansas city, kansas. it happened on a water slide whose name is german for insane. omar villafranco is in kansas city. >> reporter: excitement turned to horror sunday afternoon when 10-year-old caleb schwaab was killed riding this 17 story water slide on a raft. two other passengers were injured. winter persapio is the water park spokesperson. >> all our rides are inspected every day. actually. our ride are inspected by an outside party.
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enjoying the park on a day honoring state lawmakers. the family released a statement saying caleb brought abundant joy to our family and although he came into contact with. >> taller than niagara falls. >> it is dubbed the tallest water slide in the world. the attraction opened in 2014 after several delays. adjustments had to be made to the second hill when test runs showed the raft launching off the slide. in this promotional video released by the company, three riders strap into a raft and drop down more than 168 feet reaching speeds of more than 60 miles per hour. passengers are thrust up and over another 50 foot drop. to ride, each passenger must be at least 4'6." the combined weight of three riders must be 400 pounds. this girl took the plunge with
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the 18-year-old was concerned about the velcro harness. >> i felt i had to hold on to keep my body from going up. i was so scared. >> the autopsy is complete. the results have not been released yet. charlie, the kansas city police department is leading this investigation. >> thank you, omar. still ahead, michael phelps in rio, a gold medal and purple spots. we'll dive into this next. why am i so devastatingly handsome, i'm in a fragrance... ...ad, and my sweethearts gone sayonara. what! she washed this like a month ago! how's a guy supposed to move on! the long lasting scent of gain flings.
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medal number 19. michael phelps off to a strong start in his fifth olympics. but there was something else that everyone steamed to be talking about today. ben tracy is in rio with our on the spot coverage. >> out comes team usa. >> when michael phelps made his r if o debut. there were two questions how fast would he swim and what's his body. turns out they're the result of an ancient chinese pain relief treatment known as cupping. you can see him getting the treatment in his underarmor add. here's how cupping works. specialized suction cups pull the skin up and away from underlying muscles breaking capillaries. that draws blood to the area and speeds recovery. phelps is such a fan. he instagramed the photo of himself mid cup treatment to. day, cody miller said he is also
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>> my fiance, ally does it during training. i'll have her put cups on my back. and she is like. so gross. >> dara torres is a 12 time medalist in swimming. >> is this a fringe thing in sports or something a lot of athletes do? >> i think a low key trend now. that michael phelps has been seen with cup marks all over his body. more athletes will do it. i was doing it, in 2008 and helped alleviate the soreness. athletes. 2-year-old, gia san angelo uses the technique to relieve the back pain. this doctor treats her at mount sinai hospital in new york. >> cupping actually jump starts the body's natural healing process. you can increase the blood flow and let the body do what it does to help resolve the issue. >> reporter: there isn't a lot
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we end tonight with affairs of the heart. a decade ago, her father gave the stranger the gift of life. now the stranger has returned to give jenny the gift of a lifetime. here is jim axelrod. ? ? day perfect, jenny stepian had a man walk her down the aisle she met the first time just the day before. >> hi! >> hi, jenny. >> reporter: but jenny was positive she could trust arthur thomas' heart. >> thank you so much for coming. >> are you kidding. >> after all, it belonged to her father michael.
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>> jenny's dad, michael stepian was killed in a robbery near pittsburgh ten years ago. hundreds of miles away in philadelphia, arthur thomas' failing heart had him on a transplant waiting list. but hope was slipping away. >> i was on death's door. when, when -- when he was murdered. and i needed a heart or i was going to be dying within the next few days. >> fast forward a decade to a thomas. >> and she said, dear tom, i'm the daughter of the man whose heart is inside of you. would you walk me down the aisle. >> reporter: which is how jenny stepian got to have her father's beating heart with her for the biggest moment of her life. >> it awe just like having my dad here and better because we get to share the story with other people. and other people see that organ donors do matter. >> and that's how hearts were
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this is the "cbs overnight news." welcome to the overnight news. republican presidential nominee donald trump has outlined his plans to create jobs and cut taxes in a major economic policy speech in detroit. long argued that business experience qualifies him to lead the world's biggest economy. monday he offered details on the changes he would make if he wins the presidency. here is some of what trump had to say. >> i am proposing an across the board income tax reduction for middle-income americans. this will lead to millions of new, really good paying jobs. the rich will pay their fair share. but no one will pay so much that
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our ability, as a nation, to compete. tax simplification will be a major feature of the plan. our current tax code is so burdensome, and so complex, that we waste 9 billion hours a year in tax code compliance. my plan will reduce the current number of brackets from 7 to 3. and dramatically streamline the process. we will work with house republicans, on this plan, using the same brackets they have proposed. 25%. and 33%. for many americans, their tax rate will be 0. under my plan, no american company will pay more than 15% of their business income in taxes. in other words, we're reducing your taxes from 35% to 15%. small businesses will benefit the most from this plan.
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require small business to pay as much as three times more in taxes than what i am proposing. and her owners regulations will put them totally out of business and you went be able to start. you cannot ever start a small business under the tremendous regulatory burden that you have today in our country. i am going to cut regulations massively. my plan will also help reduce the cost of child care. by allowing parents to fully deduct the average cost of child care spending from their taxes.
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american businesses that are now parked overseas, they can't bring their money back into our country. our plan will bring that cash home, applying only a 10% tax. >> hillary clinton will define her own economic vision in an address thursday. democratic presidential nominee will lay out her case in detroit. nancy cordes is covering the clinton campaign. >> an economy that works for everyone. not just those at the top. >> reporter: clinton's focus on the economy as trump veers offcourse. >> she is a monster. >> may be paying off. 57% of virginians tell cbs news she is prepared to be president compared to 36% who say that about trump. name calling, probably doesn't help. >> she is a totally unhinged person. she's's unbalanced. >> the comparison enabled
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a third of virginia voters think she can bring change to washington. or that she tells the truth. >> so i may have short circuited it. >> clinton gave a tortured explanation friday for why she mischaracterized the fbi director's comments, claiming incorrectly he said she never publicly lied about her e-mails. >> director comey said my answers were truthful. that's the bottom line. what i told the fbi which he said was truthful is consistent >> she is lying about lying. >> republicans argued she was parsing her word. >> she has a fundamental way to say to people. i didn't lie to you. i didn't remember what i was going to say. >> mystery surround the execution of an iranian scientist accused of being informant for the united states. over the weekend.
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story. >> this strange series of events includes execution, nuclear secrets and u.s. diplomacy. a scientist with vital information on deadly nuclear weapons defects to the states. seven years later his family says he was hanged. the big question here is, what made dr. amiri return to iran. his love for his son, may have cost dr. amiri his life. he was reunited with his fame having received a hero's welcome in tehran in 2010. his story at the team that he had been kidnapped by cia he resisted spilling the beans on iran's nuclear program. it soon became clear iranian authorities weren't buying his version of events. he disappeared. presumably imprisoned until this weekend's announcement. officials said amiri was executed for giving america what they called the great satan, vital and secret information. his execution ends what was a
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he defected to the u.s. in 2009. secrets about his country's nuclear program. but months later, wanted to go home. >> he seems to have gotten cold feet. >> the senior vice president for the center for strategic and international studies. >> he came up with different stories all of which were about him going back and being with his family in iraq. >> one of the stories claimed he had been kidnapped by the cia while on pilgrimage to mecca and captivity. then secretary of state, clinton said amir is his own man. >> mr. amiri has been in the united states of his own free will. and he is free to go. >> reporter: being part of iran's nuclear program is a dangerous game. amiri would have known the risks. >> from their perspective this is how uh you treat traitors it is a little surprising to me.
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at the rio summer olympics, michael phelps may be soaking up attention for the swim team. another american swimmer is in the middle of an extraordinary come back. >> his name may not be the most familiar on the u.s. swim team. anthony vi 35, he will be the oldest male swimmer to compete in an individual event at the games, since 1904. but this isn't his first olympics. he won gold back in 2000. at the age of 19. and then vanished from the sport entirely. >> 15 meters left. when anthony ervan tied for gold as a 19-year-old in the 2000 games in sydney. >> no.
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>> going to the olympic games is an honor, enormous privilege. >> gary hall, anthony irvan. share the gold. >> instead, it led to the most tumultuous time of his life. >> part of what led to a lot of the angst initially was doing well and performing well, the social kind of like joy that comes from others and knowing that one has done well, and you kind of get hooked on that. you kind of need that to sus sustain yourself. ervan's parents are jewish, native american and african-american. >> the first swimmer of african-american descent to make the u.s. team. >> the only problem he never identified as a black man. >> did it really piss you off when people called you the first african-american swimmer? >> i wouldn't say it pissed me off, but it created an an immense amount of confusion. >> at the height of it all, he
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2003. >> post olympic champion status was about rediscovering, rebuilding myself, the way i wanted to be not the way others were, at least the way perceived wanted me to be. >> reporter: over the next decade, ervan sold his gold medal, donated money to charity and took off on a spiritual quest. he dabbled in everything from zen buddhism to the hard partying lifestyle of playing in rock band. which add its deepest led to a suicide attempt, and a death defying motorcycle accident. nearing age 30, he desperately need a shot at redemption. >> for me, getting the tattoos was a way of reclaiming my skin and regaining control of myself. >> armed with ink he went back to school and started coaching at a swim camp for kids. the kids helped him remember
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>> the water when i was a child, a place of freedom the a place of expression and play. a place where everything else can kind of fall away and into this meditative state. and -- i got that back. >> he dove back into competition, and a dozen years after his last olympics, qualified for the 2012 games. with a personal best time in the 50 meter freestyle race. but in london, he only placed fifth. >> he is probably the most interesting human being on our team. maybe in the whole olympic team. we're g >> david marsh one of the u.s. swim team head coaches. he has known ervan since anthony was 17 years old. earlier this year, he started training him for another shot at gold. >> he arrived in my place, eight weeks before the olympic trials. didn't seem as confident as i felt he need to be for the games. then he became anthony again. anthony has the most brilliant sprint freestyle stroke on the planet.
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and earned him a ticket to rio. >> wasn't like i demanded this of myself. >> reporter: you didn't stay i am getting back in the pool and going to make the next olympics. >> no way. he has no expectations for the future, but more importantly no regrets about the past. >> i really try to avoid regret. i don't think anybody should be stuck in the past. that's a dead life if you are stuck in the past. life moves forward. >> because irvan helped the u.s. last night, he ties for the record for longest gap of a u.s. swimmer between medals. 16 years set way back in 1924. >> the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. dove men+care. the strength test. like leather, skin is stronger when it's hydrated. that's why dove men+care bodywash has a unique hydrating formula to leave skin healthier and stronger.
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mass shootings have become an all too familiar sight on television. this past week marked 50 years since americans first witnessed that kind of horror on tv. anna werner takes a look back in a story for "sunday morning." >> it is a summer day in austin, as students at the university of texas stroll the campus. a day much like the one 50 years ago, long before anyone knew the term mass shooting.
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>> it's the day and the spot claire wilson james will never forget. >> as you lay here -- you can see the tower. >> oh, yeah. >> right over you. >> that day was august 1, 1966. walter cronkite anchored a special cbs news report. >> a deranged engineering student at university of texas climbed to an austin landmark at noon how to day. >> a man perched atop the university of texas clock tower began firing on the people below. >> victims were cut down on the west and south side of the campus as sniper zeroed in on his target with unerring accuracy. >> he shot at random. for more than 90 minutes.
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walking on campus with boyfriend tom eckman. at first didn't know what was happening. >> you never heard the shot? >> no. i never heard the shot. i just felt a big jolt. then i started falling. >> reporter: as she fell to the pavement, her boyfriend, tom, turned to ask her what was wrong. the next thing she knew, he was lying dead next to her. and she couldn't move. >> you thought you were dead? >> i thought i was going to die. yeah. >> the killer was 25-year-old charles joseph whitman, a former marine sharpshooter. unknown to anyone, he had already killed his wife and mother in their me heading to the tower's 2th floor observation deck with multiple guns. it was the first school mass shooting in modern u.s. history. he affected so many lives in that one day. retired texas ranger, martinez was a young officer with the police department at the time. arriving on campus.
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>> when i got out of the car, i could hear all of the shooting going on. it was look a war. >> back then, there was no such thing as rapid response teams. it was left to martinez and civilian, followed by a fellow officer, houston mccoy to climb to the top of the tower. to face off against the sniper and his arsenal. as martinez described it at the time. >> he didn't havit he was trying to bring it down. and i just kept firing. >> i could tell by impact that i hit him. i kept advancing. shooting. mccoy shot and hit him. and started going down. >> the shooter was dead. he killed 16 people that day. and injured dozens more. the mass shooting brought fundamental changes to police departments. and led to the creation of swat teams used around the country.
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reminder of the terrible day could be find on this rock. keith maitland who went to school there wondered why he never heard more. >> this is a story i think that anybody who grew up here has heard a little bit about. but if you want to get past just that little bit there isn't really a lot out there >> we can see the movement south side of the clock. >> it uses animation and archive footage to tell the story of the day. >> the shot hit me. ricochetted off the building. >> then what happened? >> then everybody ran. >> what i want to understand what was it look to live through something like this? and how would it impact you?
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>> the worst days of your lives. >> reporter: in the process he wound up reconnecting people who it turned out had not seen each other since that day, 50 years ago. >> people like claire wilson james. >> hi, claire. >> hello, baby. >> and artly snuff. snuff was just a teenager at the time. that's him on the right in the dark shirt sniper to pick claire up and carry her some 100 yard down the steps to safety. something he says he simply felt he had to do. >> because she was shot. she was obviously pregnant. it was the most horrific day of my life. >> to this day? >> oh, gosh, yes. i didn't go to war. that was my war. >> because why? >> because the blood. the death.
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i think what i probably learned the most is that you have to deal with trauma. for people who weren't given an opportunity it really sits with them and kind of eats away at them over the course of the rest of their lives. >> reporter: even people you might not expect. like ray martinez, who before he was a police officer, was a combat medic. [ gunfire ] >> reporter: he told us on the way to the tower to stop the sniper that day he was forced to run past claire as she lay bleeding on the quad without stopping to help her. >> that day -- i was thinking like a medic but also thinking like a policeman. i saw her wounded. and i felt like it was my duty to grab her and take her out of
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>> reporter: in the movie version of this, you're the guy that shoots the sniper and saves the day. and you are telling me that even you, are wracked by guilt? >> well, if you are a human being and you got feelings for people, yes. >> reporter: the university is now taking steps to remember those lost. this past week, a new larger memorial was dedicated. listing the names of those killed. including claire wilson james boyfriend and also her unborn baby. and in the shadow of the tower, there is now friendship. and healing for survivors. and from claire, something else. and you forgive him? >> oh, yeah, how could -- god's forgiven me everything i have done. and he has kept me from being that kind of person.
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a video of a massive alligator roaming a golf course is getting a lot of attention on line. david begnaud has the story behind the sighting. >> reporter: the golfers who took the video were in disbelief. a giant gator standing high on the golf course. it is a sight so unreal, that chubs, as he has become known, is something of an internet phenomenon. the individually that made him famous has been viewed more than 19 million times. but regulars here in palm meadow, florida, are unfazed. >> this is a great course, you see a lot of gators out here. big ones.
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running across. it's pretty interesting course. i mean it's fun. >> what most people don't realize, these things go very short distances billion out they tire out quickly. >> they're fast. >> they're fast for a short distance. like us old guys. you know? >> his head was about -- here. >> course manager ken powell says chub has been a fixture on the fairway for years. he believes the least 15 feet long and likely 40 or 50 years old. when chubs comes out, play doesn't stop. if golfers hit a ball close to the reptile they just drop have no plans to have anybody come and take him away. he is not hurting anybody. >> reporter: once considered endangered, alligators are federally protected species. more than 1 million reptiles in habit florida. fatal attacks on humans are rare. only six have been recorded in the state in the last 10 years. and that includes the killing of a 2-year-old boy at disney world back in june.
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body of freshwater. tim geist is a trapper and says alligators should always be treated as a potential threat. >> a lot of the public doesn't understand when they feed an alligator they're creating a monster. feed the alligator, he is going to coop coming back for more, gets bigger, bigger, bigger. sees you as potential meal. >> reporter: chubs may look like a monster, but the club believes as long as patrons leave him alone. golfers and gators can
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? it's tuesday, august 9th, 2016. this is the "cbs morning news." donald trump tried to sta message, but his economic speech couldn't keep ranking republicans from jumping ship. a new poll gives hillary clinton an even larger lead, but a new lawsuit blames her for two deaths in benghazi. and bad blood in the water. with the staredown and a record breaking swim american gets her
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