Steve 7 00 a. M. In new York City on a couch on this tuesday, september 10th. Its Fox Friends for Debate Day we are 15 hours 26 section away from the president ial debate. Kamala harris has a lot of explaining to do. Did that interview with cnn and they asked her what will you do on Day One . And she couldnt answer. How do you not know the answer to that question when you are the major Party Nominee . Great question. We hope we will get some answers this morning when her senior Campaign Spokesperson joins us live this hour. I was drawn by my reaction. Ainsley you were smiling. Brian i was. Migrant Mayhem Ohio residents plead for help as haitian immigrants transform their town and not in a good way. In maryland an Ms13 Gang Member suspected of murder, hey, why not go to High School . He is enrolled at the local High School. What is happening i ask you generically. Answer at home. Stunning video from tyreek hills detainment. Attorneys for one of the officers involved speaking out in Fox
moon, scrubbed. this is just part of the space business. o donnell: cbs mark strassmann reports tonight on why artemis 1 failed to launch, and when nasa will try again. and, the end of an era. the greatest of all time, serena williams, takes center court at the u.s. open, and cbs jericka duncan is there. this is the cbs evening news with norah o donnell, reporting from the nation s capital. o donnell: good evening to our viewers in the west and thank you for joining us as we start a new week together. tonight top officials are beginning to assess whether intelligence was compromised as they review the material seized from former president donald trump s mar-a-lago resort. the justice department believes some of those documents includes intelligence gathering and information derived from clandestine human sources, among america s most closely-held secrets. and it comes as a federal judge is indicating she is open to appointing what s called a special master that s a
space business. o donnell: cbs mark strassmann reports tonight on why artemis 1 failed to launch and when nasa will try again. and the end of an era. the greatest of all time, serena williams, takes center court at the u.s. open, and cbs jericka duncan is there. capital. o donnell: good evening, and thank you for joining us. top officials are beginning to assess whether intelligence was compromised as they reviewed the material seized from former president donald trump s mar-a-lago report. the justice department believes some of those documents includes intelligence gathering and information derived from clandestine human sources. those are among america s most closely held secrets. ands it comes as a federal judge is indicating she is open to appointing what s called a special master. that s a neutral party to examine those materials. the hearing on that is set for thursday. so this week is already proving to be a big one. there are signs tonight that it may be too lat
best option. but classes online often in isolation have created their own health concerns. this has resulted in frustrated students, struggling parents, millions of whom cannot afford or access high speed internet or childcare, and teachers, working to save a generation of young minds while too often fearing for their own lives. and their health and that of their loved ones. tonight we will try to explore every part of the educational crisis this pandemic created. but let s start with an obvious admission. there are no simple answers here. there is no one size fits all, inexpensive solution that would end the struggle like that. if this were easy, it would have been solved long ago. so let us listen and learn and try to figure out what to do. so here s a snap shot of where things stand. the families of more than 50 million kids rely on public schools in some 14,000 school districts. so let s bring in our chief medical corn, dr. sanjay gupta. let s start with the most basic qu
here s our chief business correspondent rebecca jarvis tonight. reporter: tonight, former disney ceo bob iger making a surprise comeback, returning to the top job less than a year after leaving the company. disney s board of directors asking iger to return. iger starting at abc more than four decades ago. he began as an entry level studio supervisor, once joking, i was the assistant to the production assistant. he would work his way up to ceo and spend 15 years in that role. time magazine naming him business person of the year in 2019. tonight, iger taking over with a mandate from the board of directors to lead the company through this pivotal period. during his tenure as ceo, iger oversaw tremendous growth. leading the charge on major acquisitions including pixar, to infinity and beyond! reporter: marvel avengers!