to the headquarters of ahmed shafik who is the former prime minister who now hopes to be president. dan, tell us what is the feeling on the streets with just an hour to go before the expected announcement? >> well, we have been in tahrir square where there is great anticipation of the announcement. they all believe they have proof that mohamed morsi has won for the islam brotherhood, and they have just switched where their celebration party is, or what they hope it will be from the head quarters to the outskirts of cairo, where they say they have so many people coming that they cannot accommodate them at the party headquarters, but really, neither side knows for sure who is going to win. in fact, the country is really being building that if ahmed shafik is deeply aligned with hosni mubarak the ousted leader, and he was prime minister under mubarak at one time, and he is kind of anti-muslim government, and keep preserving the status quo. and mohamed morsi, the leader of the muslim brotherhood, kind of what was a pretty kind of outlawed organization for some 60 years, and nearly defines the struggle of what has gripped egypt for the last six decades between the muslim brotherhood, and the military establishment, and this is a real point in egyptian politics as to who is going to emerge the winner today. >> dan, as you are traveling, and we are sharing with the viewers the incredible live pictures of tahrir square, and huge crowds gathering and reminiscent of what happened more than a year ago when we had the arab spring and the uprising there. how influential do you believe that the new president can actually be? >> well, the policy, he is going to be in effect whoever it is, they will have to draw a new constitution and then fresh elections again. and both sides are trying to up the antion -- ante on this, and putting all sorts of threats of possible violence depending upon the outcome, but with the dissolved parliament, and now issued with emergency law to have the power to arrest anyone they want, and there is going to be another election in as little as a year's time. so while this is important for the stability on the streets, in terms of the power that the new president will have, well, not so much. >> dan rivers, we will let you keep going and making your way to the shafiq headquarters there, and once again, we will watch the story and bring you the results as they happen in an hour from now as soon as they are oishl ifly announced. new this hour, the turkish fighter jet downed by syria has been found. turkish television is saying that a search and rescue crew located the wreckage 3,000 feet underwater in the arabian sea. the matter has raised tensions between the two kcountries and turkey has requested a meeting in brussels with nato tuesday. and back home, the gulf coast, heavy rains and rising tides are raising concern all from tropical storm debby. we have bonnie snchneider watching it, and how predictable is this coast? >> well, it is predictable that everyone on the gulf coast needs to be aware. and we have new warnings and the circulation is 195 miles south of the coast of florida. the gusts are near hurricane strength, and the gusts are strong actually, and as you are seeing the track taking the storm more westward, as you can see, and really no change since the last advisory and notice the intensity coming up to a category one hurricane by the middle of the week, and move sog slowly in the gulf of mexico that debby is a concern for us and with us through most of the week. here is something else new, the warning areas have extended. originally just for louisiana from the mouth of the pearl river to morgan city, but now look at this, let's zoom into alabama and florida and i will read you the latest warning area. tropical storm warning for the mississippi/alabama border eastward all of the way towards florida. you can see that we are looking at more of an extended area where we have a threat of tropical storm force winds of 150 miles or greater will start to come in later tonight. and even though it is within 36 hours, you will see the plenty of rain through panama city and through much of the region. we are watching this closely and i will be talking about throughout the morning. >> and bonnie, which side of the storm do you want to be on? >> well sh, this one is a trick one, randi, because right now, you are seeing the convection to the east of the storm, but the track is taking it westward, so for this particular storm, storm surge is a concern as we go towards the next couple of days into louisiana. so, really, this is a tricky one. it is hard to say what side to be on because the convection is to the east, but we will see more movement to the west. >> thank you, bonnie. in 30minutes, i will speak live to the mayor of plaquemines parrish. >> and now to colorado where hundreds of firefighters are trying to contain a wildfire that is growing by leaps and fires. the hyde park fire has destroyed nearly 200 homes and thousands of square miles. firefighters concede it could take weeks to get it under control. and now take a look at rutledge, minnesota, heavy rains brought flash flooding, and now some of the people forced to eva vac waited are going back to their homes where they are getting a first look at the damage left behind. iran may be trying to build a nuclear weapon, but its people want something more simple, freedom. >> reporter: the koran is where the state got this law from, but us women know we are not happy with it. >> women in iran speaking out about equality, and we will learn much more about iran that we don't know when we talk to new york times columnist nick christoph, and he talks about the long road trip through the iranian countryside. but first, a good morning to new york city. lady liberty in the harbor soaking up sunshine. people with a machine. what ? 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[ male announcer ] aggressive styling. a more fuel-efficient turbocharged engine. and a completely redesigned interior. ♪ the 2012 c-class with over 2,000 refinements. it's amazing...inside and out. see your authorized mercedes-benz dealer for exceptional offers through mercedes-benz financial services. ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] you've been years in the making. and there are many years ahead. join the millions of members who've chosen an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. go long. welcome back. the world is watching iran with a close eye especially amid concerns that it is trying to develop a nuclear weapon, and it is what many call a police state that squashes dissent. nick christoph is back from a travel there where he traveled to the second largest city 1,700 miles on the ground the learn if there is another iran that we don't know about. nick joining me now. nick, good morning to you. >> good morning, randi. >> in your column in "the new york times" today, you say that there is much more to iran than meets the eye especially when it comes to how americans view that country. you say that iran is pretty complex. what struck you most on the ground there? >> well, i think they here in this country we tend to associate iran with the government with the regime, because that is the side of it that we always see. and what really struck me was just the mo dedernty of the country, and the warmth toward america, and the regime which frankly seemed to me to be losing legitimacy and in trouble, and i think that at some point hopefully before too long, it is going to look much less like what we associate with iran and much more like say turkey. >> and the threat of nuclear iran is real, and you say you are concerned that the u.s. has not used all of the diplomatic tools, but what more can be done and are you concerned about the imminent strike that is getting so much attention that could be coming from israel? >> absolutely. look, the problem is that we have been relying very much on a kind of a hard military tool box, and you know, there is talk, as you know, about israeli strike that could lead to a new war between iran and the west. it seems to me that would be catastrophic for, well, for everything in the region. if we have patience, then i think that we will see iran evolve away from the present system. if we go ahead and a new war, that is the one thing that would keep the yay toe las in power and nationalist backlash, people embracing the regime with the war with foreigners and that would cement in place the atoe las who are extremely in power right now. >> and we watched many young citizens and iranians in the streets and the u.s. was blamed for not doing enough to support the show of disobedience and is that fire still hot, and will there be an iranian spring like what we saw in egypt? >> i would say that the dissatisfaction is higher than ever with the government, and people are unhappy with that violent repressive of the movement. and they are also very unhappy about the economics. the prices are rising and people are out of work partly because of to sanctions and the dissatisfaction is high, but as in egypt, it is difficult to predict when that change will happen, but what is sure of is that what is unsustainable does not last as true in tunisia and other places. >> in 2012, are citizens of iran more fiercely independent than ever before? >> yes. one of the few things that iran has really done well is to raise education standards, and in particular for women. so, almost 60% of university students now are women. and they are so sophisticated. they fill important roles in the economy, and yet, there is this basic discrimination that they inherit only half as much as men, and women can be judges, but in a courtroom, the woman's testimony is only half that of a man. indeed, women cannot even go skiing by themselves, because a new law was pass ed that women need a male guardian to go skiing, so i believe they will be engineering of change. >> i have to ask before i let you go, i know you brought your two kids with you, and what did they take away with them from the trip? >> well, frankly, they were nervous. all of their friends were telling them, wow, you are going to iran, you will be strung up in the streets, and they were blown away by how hospitable people were. my daughter especially, she is 14, and she had to wear a hajab on her head, and she was a canvas that the iranian women painted her view, and so they helped her to tighten her hajab and showing her to cover her hair, and show you how monolithic iran was. >> it sounds like a wonderful experience for you and your kids as well. thank you for your column today in "the new york times."" not so crazy in iran" is the headline. and and expected decision from the supreme court this week. will the justices upheld or strike down obama care? it's time to live wider awake. only the beautyrest recharge sleep system combines the comfort of aircool memory foam layered on top of beautyrest pocketed coils to promote proper sleeping posture all night long. the revolutionary recharge sleep system... from beautyrest. it's you, fully charged. thor's couture gets the most rewards of any small business credit card. your boa! 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( older sister ) far. what will you inspire, with the eos rebel t3i and ef lenses, for ron's next project ? learn more at youtube. his morning starts with arthritis pain. and two pills. afternoon's overhaul starts with more pain. more pills. triple checking hydraulics. the evening brings more pain. so, back to more pills. almost done, when... hang on. stan's doctor recommended aleve. it can keep pain away all day with fewer pills than tylenol. this is rudy. who switched to aleve. and two pills for a day free of pain. ♪ and get the all day pain relief of aleve in liquid gels. it is a big week coming up for the supreme court. the supreme court justices, nine people whose decisions this week will have the power to fundamentally change all of our lives and impact possibly a presidential election. the high court is deciding whether president obama's 2700-page affordable act is constitutional. as you know it requires individuals to buy health insurance or face a fine. author, lawyer and supreme court reporter joan biscuynpick joining us. >> they have only a few more rulings to issue, and they are trying to get out of town as well. so it could come monday, but certainly by the end of the week unless there is real trouble. if they slop over into july, it means real problems behind the scenes, but i don't believe that is the case. >> do you think that it is likely that all of the decisions have been made? i mean the justices had preliminary votes back in march? >> that is exactly right. as you remember the health care case was heard over three days in the end of march and the justices took a preliminary vote march 30th in their preliminary conference and the assignments were made for the majority dissent, and it is just like anybody going up to a deadline. and june opinions are known to be messy with compromises, but this is a case where they don't want to be messy. >> and what is the purpose of the preliminary vote? to sort of feel each other out, because they can flip-flop until the final vote? >> oh, they can, but no, no, this is what happens. the preliminary vote usually stick, because they have heard the oral arguments and read the briefs, but now they are writing it. so much of what they produce is a written decision that justifies the bottom line vote, and the rational that justifies the vote will guide lower courts. so that is almost as crucial as the judgment and the standard of does it stand or fall? >> and in washington, as a town that loves leaks tlshg sleaks,a single leak about the vote? >> well, so much speculation, and there have been leaks, but no real leaks, but speculation that somebody's cousin told me that somebody's brother-in-law who is a janitor told me, or people reading the body language, but nobody knows for sure what they have decided except for the nine and the closest assistants. >> you have covered the supreme court for some time, and do you have any indication of what the outcome might be? >> i am surprised by the speculation of when we will get a ruling, because at any moment we could all be proved so wrong. but what i have said is that despite all of the predictions that came out after oral argument s th arguments that for sure it is going down, i think that there's reason for people to believe that confidence there on that kind of prediction is misplaced. good reason to think that they could equally uphold it, and maybe tip more toward upholding it given where the law in the land has been in the past on the powers of congress. it is a very big deal for the supreme court to strike down an act of congress, especially one that in this case forms a major plank of a president's agenda. so, you know, there are just lots of reasons to think that we should be cautious at the last minute, and as i said, we can predict, but i don't want to be wrong in just 24 hours. >> the oral arguments took place in march, and now the end off june we are looking at, so what takes so long? >> well, this is not unusual for it to take this long, because they have to -- this is hundreds of pages to produce, and maybe not as long as hundreds of pages and that would be wonderful for tomorrow or later in the week that it would not be that long, but it is sort of justifying the decision, and it is not like they come down and say, well, this side wins or loses, but they justify it based on the law and answer each other. here is something that people don't understand that the dissenting justices would be cou countering and the majority wants to answer them back and then they can get into a battle of footnotes. i have gone through the papers of retired justices to see what upholds a case and the kinds of questions that you have, randi, and the issue is sometimes over the core legal reasoning, but somebody wants to keep responding, and then they get into a battle of the footnotes and then finally says, this is not worth it, get this sucker out. >> and historically, again, put this in perspective for us, how big of a decision is this? >> this is huge. of course, much will depend upon how much they actually rule, but here we have in the middle of a major election year, and we are dealing with core powers of congress to regulate interstate commerce and act on major social pr problem likes the health care dilemma, so it has lots of consequences for how people live out there, and then coming in the middle of this election year, both sides are, you know, sort of running on this law that was sponsored by barack obama. so i can't think of another case that has so much potential consequence even with "bush v. gore" and remember how quickly that was decided. this is much larger and this is going to dictate federal powers going forward for many decades. >> joan, thank you so much, and nice to see you again. >> thank you, randi. and now a southern baptist convention has a new face, and how frank luter is changing the face welcome back, everyone, to cnn sunday morning. i'm randi kay, and bottom of the hour now. here is a check of the top stories. we are watching egypt this morning as we are closer to having an official announcement of who won the presidential election. that announcement is to come in about 30 minutes. the islam candidate of the brotherhood is mohamed morsi, and crowds are waiting there. and also, tropical storm debby. this storm could become a hurricane later in the week. in a few weminutes, i will talko billy gus si mer who is the mayor there in plaquemines. and also, in guantanamo bay, inmates are wearing orange jumpsuits as part of the protest there. >> and faces of faith, a church that was founded by slaveholders has elected the first african-american president. fred luter became the leader of the southern baptist convention and nobody wanted to even run against him. >> it was a surprisingly that i was unopposed particularly because there is a large convention, and it is a year of the presidential election, and it is -- so i was really, really surprised that nobody stepped up and wanted to run against me, and then scene of support i got from the floor brought tears to my eyes. >> luter's election is of huge significance, because it is the largest protestant congregation in the u.s., and did not apologize for the support of white supremacy until the 1990s, and now joining us is dr. richard land, the president of the ethics and the religious liberty commission of the southern baptist commission. thank you for joining us. this is a convention that used to support jim crow law, and how does this evolution feel? >> it is wonderful and liberating and it was a joyous moment, and dr. king used to say that the arc of the law of the universe is long. and we were privileged to be there tuesday to see one of the bends of justice. >> you believe that dr. king is smiling down on this and seeing the incredible change. >> yes. yes, i believe that these are the children of the civil rights revolution that have brought this about. 10% of the congregations now are african-american. we are 22% ethnic, and that makes us the most ethnically diverse denomination in the country from all white in 1965 to the most ethnically diverse today is a good beginning. >> so what sparked this change in the church, and this acceptance of diversity? >> well, i believe it was the direct intervention of god. i think that we need to give god the credit for changing the che collective heart of the southern baptist convention on the issue of race, convicting us of the fact that this was sin, convicting us that we needed to take the bible as our goal instead of quoting the southern way of life, and we needed to repent of our past sin, and we needed to reach out to our african-american broerers this a -- brothers and sisters. >> what do you make of the lack of resistance within the church to have a black president? >> well, this shows that we have changed. i think that this is the end of the beginning. we are now a fully ethnically diverse denomination, and the next goal is to reflect the demographic makeup of the country to have it so there is no different of the demographic makeup of the country and the demographic makeup of the southern baptist convention. >> what is it about fred luter that makes him so special? >> well, he is -- he's a tremendous preacher. he is a tremendous christian. he's built a great church twice. now, you know, he built a church in the lower 9th ward, a great church in the most difficult city in america to build a ev evangelical church in new orleans and then when katrina came to flood it out, he became an itinerant pastor going to birmingham and memphis, and ministering to the flock that had been spread like the four winds, and like a phoenix are the the ashes, he has rebuilt that great church since katrina. it is one of the most incredible examples of pastoral leadership and shepherding a flock than i have ever seen in my entire life. >> he does have an incredible story. let me ask you about the church, because the church approved a alternative name the great alternative, and how do you think this will help? >> well, it will help in some areas, and i went to college in princeton, and there are some people when they hear the name southern baptist or southern baptist, they have connotations that make it more difficult to reach them with the gospel, and the apostle paul told us to be seeking to be all things to all men and by that we might win some to the cause of christ. if the name is an impediment to the witness, then we need to change it. i think that what we did as a convention was said, if you find that great commission baptist helps you to get an open door to share the gospel in a way that sou southern baptist doesn't, then by all means, use it. >> dr. richard land, great to talk to you this morning. thank you. >> thank you. and for more stories on faith, be sure to check out our widely popular belief blog. you can find it at cnn.com/belief. a sneaky sailor dressed up in disguise to surprise his kids after a long deployment. >> what's up? see more of this heartwarming reunion, and people all across the gulf coast getting ready for the worst. tropical storm debby on her way, and growing stronger. those little things still get you. for you, life's about her. but your erectile dysfunction - that could be a question of blood flow. cialis tadalafil for daily use helps you be ready anytime the moment's right. you can be more confident in your ability to be ready. and the same cialis is the only daily ed tablet approved to treat ed and symptoms of bph, like needing to go frequently or urgently. tell your doctor about all your medical conditions and medications, and ask if your heart is healthy enough for sexual activity. do not take cialis if you take nitrates for chest pain, as this may cause an unsafe drop in blood pressure. do not drink alcohol in excess with cialis. side effects may include headache, upset stomach, delayed backache or muscle ache. to avoid long-term injury, seek immediate medical help for an erection lasting more than four hours. if you have any sudden decrease or loss in hearing or vision, or if you have any allergic reactions such as rash, hives, swelling of the lips, tongue or throat, or difficulty breathing or swallowing, stop taking cialis and get medical help right away. ask your doctor about cialis for daily use and a 30-tablet free trial. olaf's pizza palace gets the most rewards of any small business credit card! pizza!!!!! 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was it fun? >> yeah. >> now, who is that guy in the blue suit? let's see. >> what's up? >> hi. >> daddy! >> who is that random guy in the blue suit? he has been away from his kids for four year, and he just finished a seven-month-deployment, and his cades thought he would not be back until july. communities in the gulf coast are on alert because tropical storm debby is on the way. the storm is getting stronger and could soon become a hurricane. i want to show you live pictures before we get to the gulf. out of tampa, florida, where the skies are beginning to look ominous. look at that. the palm trees are starting to blow and the umbrellas a little bit and looking ugly in that live picture. joining me on the phone is billy nungesser who is the mayor of plaquemines, and you have not yet declared a state of emergency, but have you now? >> yes, we have declared a state of emergency, and crews are g g going to help the clearance over the top, and we are anticipating being right at the level, so we are adding a couple of feet of sandbags to the top of the levee at plaquemines. >> is that the most urgent concern? >> yes, in is going to bring us up to four feet of the there is a storm surge of four feet. we have a higher levee, but if it is projected to be higher than four feet we will put baskets and tubes along highway 23 and flood fight along the area like we did last year. but that is the only area in plaquemines that people are coming in from offshore, it is the only way they have out of plaquemines parish, so it is important to keep the route clear. >> yes, it is. what about shelters and people in trouble at home, is there a safe place to go? >> well, right now we are not anticipating the highway flooding, but if the storm come s more to the tip of louisiana, we are sticking 30 to 40 miles out into the gulf, that finger, then we will start talking about shelters and bringing people to the north end of the parish. but right now, we are not anticipating doing that at this time. >> billy, you have been through so much there, and we wish you the best of luck and we will keep an eye on it along with you. plaquemines parish billy nungesser there with us. thank you. and now let's go get an update from bonnie schneider. >> well, it is the east side we are getting more of a threat. you will see the rain is sweeping on shore, and this is for eastern charlotte and northern lee county until 9:00 a.m. a wider spread look showing the heavy rain to the panhandle of florida down to south florida and fort myers, and this is the region we had tornadoes reported in collier county yesterday, so look for the risk to continue today, and incidentally the coastal flooding will extend for a large portion of the gulf coast from debby, and all of the way to louisiana where we have tropical storm warnings from florida and alabama and mississippi and notice the rain which is up to 10 inches and not just louisiana, but particularly for florida, because this is incredible. we could see six inches plus over to the next couple of days and some parts of florida need the rain, but others saw a lots so that could lead to lots of flooding. and egyptians are awaiting word on the first democratically elected president. unless you have the right perspective. bny mellon wealth management has the vision and experience to look beyond the obvious. we'll uncover opportunities, find hidden risk, and make success a reality. bny mellon wealth management throughout our entire lives. ♪ one a day women's 50+ is a complete multi-vitamin designed for women's health concerns as we age. ♪ it has more of seven antioxidants to support cell health. that's one a day women's 50+ healthy advantage. sven's home security gets the most rewards of any small business credit card! how does this thing work? 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[ engine revs ] the all-new cadillac xts has arrived, and it's bringing the future forward. let's head to washington now. cnn state of the union coming up at the top of the hour and possibly the egyptian election results. good morning to candy crowley joining us live from d.c. candy -- >> good morning. >> could the election results hurt the u.s./egyptian relations possibly depending how it ends up? >> either way it could hurt it, because the u.s. relationship with the egyptian military which has been close has been in question with some folks who say that the military has moved in, and the parliament has been disbanded, and they've taken control of writing the constitution, and is it time for the u.s. to pull back support for the egyptian military, and each candidate with both internal and external problems. i would imagine that the state department that we certainly hope that the state department and others have gained out either scenario. >> and i know that on the other big issue, we are expecting a few big rulings from the supreme court this week, and you will have a couple of guests on this week to talk about the looming ruling on arizona. >> yes. arizona strict immigration laws that were passed and in particular people looked at that part of the law that called for state police officers to question any suspect that may have been pulled over for other reasons if they are also suspicious that suspect has no papers. they are supposed to ask for documentation if they are legal ly in the u.s. we will talk to luis gutierrez who is a congressman from illinois and dem drat and supporter of the president, but pushing the president hard on the issue of immigration. we will talk to carlos gutierrez who is now an advisory to the romney campaign and used to be commerce secretary to george bush. they are not related and they don't have the same ideas about immigration. so we want to talk about the court ruling and what it will mean politically on the campaign trail and what it means in general for other states who are watching this supreme court ruling on arizona to see what they will be allowed to do in their states to try to deal with the illegal immigration problem. >> it is going to be an interesting discussion and interesting show. candy, thank you very much. >> thanks. >> we will check in with you at the top of the the hour. from the fallout of the jerry sandusky case, and the jury found him guilty and now the attention is going toward penn state, and we will break down what it all means with paul cow henn. come from any faucet a. the brita bottle with the filter inside. your doctor will say get smart about your weight. i tried weight loss plans... but their shakes aren't always made for people with diabetes. that's why there's glucerna hunger smart shakes. they have carb steady, with carbs that digest slowly to help minimize blood sugar spikes. and they have six grams of sugars. with fifteen grams of protein to help manage hunger... look who's getting smart about her weight. 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[ male announcer ] learn how to protect your heart at i am proheart on facebook. what's nextt in the jerry sandusky case? he is behind bars and will likely spend the rest of his life there, but what about the victims? earlier i asked our legal contributor about that, and the possibility of civil claims. >> i think that you will see anywhere from five to 15 lawsuits being filed. mike h mcqueary, remember, the assistant coach who testified also has a lawsuit against penn state which he's filed, is going to file formally in the near future, and so lots of suits against the university. >> let me ask you about one of the sandusky's defense attorneys carl rominger went on a radio show yesterday and listen to what he said and then i want to ask you about it, because it is very intriguing. >> we actually asked to resign from the case, and that is done in secret. joe amendola and i asked the judge if we could withdraw from representing jerry sandusky, because we felt we were unethically unable to go forward. >> when did you ask to do that? >> the morning before jury selection started, and it was denied. >> paul, when hear a defense attorney say they were ethically unable to move forward and those were his words, what would that mean possibly? >> this is an astonishing claim by this attorney. and by the way, this is the same attorney who said before trial that the defense was going to be, that sandusky gave showers to disadvantaged boys and teaching them how to take showers. usually in the criminal cases the criminal defendants claim they have not had a speedy trial which is guaranteed by the constitution, and this is going to be the reverse of this, because they are going to say he was forced into trial and a rush to judgment. what it makes me think, randi, in the end, a claim of incompetence of counsel. you don't hear the attorney saying that, but essentially i think that sandusky may have a claim that his attorneys acted incompetently, and that is one of his claims, and they will put on the list that they were forced the trial too quickly and they could not adequately prepare for trial, and then other assorted things that arose in the course of the trial about things that were admitted into evidence. so there are areas where they can file an appeal, whether that appeal would be granted by an appellant court is another matter. >> let me ask you about it, because it is as fascinating statement, and that is why we wanted your take on it. penn state issued a statement saying that the university wants to provide a forum to where the university can expeditiously, and fairly address the victims' concerns and compensate them for claims. what do you believe of this? >> well, this is a very, very good thing the university did. they have a new president on. the university has a $1.8 billion endowment, and there are funds available and of course some insurance coverage available. this indicates a willingness to settle these cases out of court and quietly, so that you don't have to put the victims of sex abuse through a public trial again. i am hopeful that the victims and the university can sit down to reach an agreement on these cases. of course sh, the hardest thing always trying to decide what is an appropriate measure of damages. some people want millions and millions of dollars and the university will try to limit its exposure there. there are going to be some hard negotiations about how much to pay these victims. >> for more of my guest and stories, you can check out the newsroom blog. go to cnn.com/randi, and you will find it all there. any minute now we could find out who egypt's new president will be. the results could mean more violence in that country. oarthr. imagine living your life with less chronic low back pain. imagine you, with less pain. cymbalta can help. cymbalta is fda-approved to manage chronic musculoskeletal pain. one non-narcotic pill a day, every day, can help reduce this pain. tell your doctor right away if your mood worsens, you have unusual changes in mood or behavior or thoughts of suicide. antidepressants can increase these in children, teens, and young adults. cymbalta is not approved for children under 18. people taking maois or thioridazine or with uncontrolled glaucoma should not take cymbalta. taking it with nsaid pain relievers, aspirin, or blood thinners may increase bleeding risk. severe liver problems, some fatal, were reported. signs include abdominal pain and yellowing skin or eyes. tell your doctor about all your medicines, including those for migraine and while on cymbalta, call right away if you have high fever, confusion and stiff muscles or serious allergic skin reactions like blisters, peeling rash, hives, or mouth sores to address possible life-threatening conditions. talk about your alcohol use, liver disease and before you reduce or stop cymbalta. dizziness or fainting may occur upon standing. ask your doctor about cymbalta. imagine you with less pain. cymbalta can help. go to cymbalta.com to learn about a free trial offer. support team usa and show our olympic spirit right in our own backyard. so we combined our citi thankyou points to make it happen. tom chipped in 10,000 points. karen kicked in 20,000. and by pooling more thankyou points from folks all over town, we were able to watch team usa... 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[ male announcer ] great tasting tap water can come from any faucet anywhere. the brita bottle with the filter inside. the bottom checking the morning top stories. we are keeping an eye on tropical storm debby, and there are watches along the gulf coast to watch the storm. billy nungesser is already declaring a state of emergency in louisiana. and a path of destruction have brought flash flooding as people are returning to their homes and devastation and loss in minnesota. and we are watching people in tahrir square where we are moments away from the expected announcement of the presidential runoff results. there are efears that there coud be violence in the tahrir square if mohamed morsi is not declared the winner. and we have seen rioting outside of the square as well. we hope you have a great day. thank you for watching. you can continue the conversation on twitter @ @ randikayecnn. "state of the union" with candy crowley starts right now. the uncertain arab spring turns to an arab summer. you are looking at live pictures in tahrir square in cairo. what we are awaiting today is an announcement from the egyptian government as to who has won the election. this has been a runoff vote. i'd like to bring in to our conversation here christiane amanpour, and our chief international correspondent, and she is alongside ben wedeman who is in cairo. and thank you both, and i don't know what question to ask other than how do you think this is going to come out? ben, let's start with you. >> well, i mean, this is the question that the egyptians have been fixated on for quite some time. the results were supposed to be announced thursday, but that announcement was postponed because the electoral commission wanted the look into more than