it s one, two, three strikes he s out at the old ball game and what the team did to help him. come on, guys. it s not as easy as it looks. apparently not. kind of a helpless yankee fan there, bam! oh, well. oh. oops. oh. oh. right in the glasses. oh, my goodness, it s a busy wednesday morning. in just a minute kim davis on that secret meeting with the pope. you see her right there and it is a wet day here in new york with a lot more to come. right to the weather. we begin with that massive storm churning in the atlantic. joaquin picking up strength as it moves towards the east coast as a hurricane warning is issued this morning for the bahamas. ginger following its path and this one could be a big problem. now we have got hurricane joaquin. 75 miles per hour moving southwest at six miles. lots of warm water. we got hurricane watching and warnings for central and northern bahamas and rip current and advisories from kousle south carolina. it s very slow and mo
the leviathan two, owned by jamie s whale watching, is one of the largest in the company s fleet. the company went through another deadly accident in 1998 when one of their vessels capsized during an excursion.killing the boat s captain and a german tourist. don champion cbs news. 3 officials with canada s transportation safety board are planning to investigate this. now the boat did have life jackets. but passengers are not required to wear them. 3 a body was found in the missouri river last week. and the dakota county sheriff s office and south sioux city police department say it was an accident. a kayaker going down the river late thursday afternoon. officials couldn t look for the body until friday because of the weather and poor light. a dakota county sheriff s patrol boat found the body just south of the homer boat ramp. and identified it as 32 - year - old robert galvin. who d been reported missing last sunday. an autopsy showed galvin had drowned and he d been i
372 roads and bridges are closed, and 17 dams have failed. the waters are still rising, filling not just basements but attics. david begnaud is in the flood zone. wow, look at that. reporter: this is the scene in andrews, south carolina, a town nearly 100 miles southeast of columbia. all you can see are the rooftops of two-story homes. the local shriner s club is barely visible. this is a home which was on stilts and is now at risk of floating away from its foundation. nearly four feet of water has ruined the home of 72-year-old shelfia postman. i ve lost everything that i worked 50 years for. reporter: her house is not in a flood zone, so like most people in this area, she does not have flood insurance. well, i would have to use my life s savings to rebuild that house. reporter: we boated through the devastation with andrews police chief kaynnera capers and state senator ronnie sabb. there is no other way to describe it it is sheer devastation. reporter: we
him. come on, guys. it s not as easy as it looks. alrntsly not. bam. oh, well. oh. oops. oh. oh. right in the glasses. oh, my goodness, it s a busy wednesday morning. in just a minute kim davis on that secret meeting with the pope. you see her right there and it is a wet day here in new york with a lot more to come. right to the weather. we begin with that massive storm churning in the atlantic. joaquin picking up strength as it moves towards the east coast as a hurricane warning is issued this morning for the bahamas. ginger following its path and this one could be a big problem. right, so max sustained win, 70 miles per hour with joaquin drifting west-southwest at only six miles per hour. hurricane warnings for the central and northern bahamas and rip current and advisories from coastal south carolina to miami. our confidence is high through friday. it s got hot water. it will develop into a hurricane. could even become a category 2 through friday into ear
need more rain. the worst flooding there on record is already blamed for at least 19 deaths. 372 roads and bridges are closed, and 17 dams have failed. the waters are still rising, filling not just basements but attics. david begnaud is in the flood zone. wow, look at that. reporter: this is the scene in andrews, south carolina, a town nearly 100 miles southeast of columbia. all you can see are the rooftops of two-story homes. the local shriner s club is barely visible. this is a home which was on stilts and is now at risk of floating away from its foundation. nearly four feet of water has ruined the home of 72-year-old shelfia postman. i ve lost everything that i worked 50 years for. reporter: her house is not in a flood zone, so like most people in this area, she does not have flood insurance. well, i would have to use my life s savings to rebuild that house. reporter: we boated through the devastation with andrews police chief kaynnera capers and state senator