pawns. everyone should watch that video tonight. everyone should watch it. it tells you the whole story. and we ll be playing some of it in this hour. good, it bears repeating. it does. thanks to you, chris. and thanks you all at home in just a few minutes i ll be joined live on set by representative pramila jayapal. chair of the congressional caucus. just three weeks left before the midterms. first, during his second half of his presidency, every since he s been out of office, donald trump is obsessed with a man named bull durham. i look forward to durham s report. whapd to durham? where s durham? by the way, where s durham, he disappeared. trump was obsessed with a man called john durham, who he called bull durham. because he was convinced that the whole investigation was a hoax. exactly as trump would say, justice was coming, it was just around the corner. john durham had been hand-picked by trump s attorney general bill barr for expressly that purpose. a
ban sales of new gas powered cars. ready the road for an electric vehicle future. reporter: ev sales are surging, but will people be able to replying in? and later, he s a big hit in baseball s minor leagues. meet ripken, an expert at fetching bats. announcer: this is the cbs weekend news. good evening. adriana diaz is off. tonight an even more dangerous phase of russia s invasion of ukraine is taking hold as the war stretches beyond the half year mark. with artillery hitting uncomfortably close to nuclear reactors. the fate of europe s largest nuclear power plant is on the line as both ukraine and russia wrestle for its control. debora patta reads our reporting. reporter: the zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant has turned into a deadly front line, two days after it was disconnected for the first time ever. for more than 24 hours, this past week, the zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant was operating on backup diesel generators. this one step. reporter: the energy mi
it s going to get worse, and i think that we will be updating it maybe even for weeks to come. we don t lose this many people in a flood, yet, there are still so many people unaccounted for. meteorologist gene norman is in the severe weather center for cnn. gene this is just devastating what has happened in kentucky right now, and as bad as it is at the moment, the flood threat is not over yet, is that correct? that is correct, jim. brand new flood watch is issued as new storms are beginning to percolate in western kentucky and western tennessee, and they re going to be marching eastward throughout the overnight. it s probably going to start raining in a place like hazard where the flooding was really bad. sometimes after midnight tonight. also seeing a bunch of storms firing up along a cold front. that front is going to lift northward. that s going to help these storms develop. new flood watch just issue that does include southern and eastern kentucky until monday morn
from ukraine, as fears grow about retaliation. back-to-school spending skyrockets. cbs janet shamlian talks to a single mom struggling to check off her preschooler s supply list. i would probably put it around $50 to $75. reporter: and it s not complete. it s not complete, no. this is the cbs evening news with norah o donnell, reporting tonight from new york city. o donnell: good evening to our viewers in the west and thank you for joining us, as we start a new week together. tonight, millions of americans in the southwest are under flood warnings, after monsoon rains drenched communities across parts of six states, north texas getting worst of it. the dallas-forth worth area, suffering from a months-long drought, was pummeled with more than nine inches. that s the second heaviest rainfall in the city s history. it was the equivalent of a summer s worth of rain in one 24-hour period. floodwaters rushed through the streets, submerging vehicles. and, we re learning t
ukraine as fears grow about retaliation. back-to-school spending skyrockets. cbs janet shamlian talks to a single mom struggling to check off their preschooler s supply list. i would probably put it around $50 to $75. reporter: and it s not complete. it s not complete, no. this is the cbs evening news with norah o donnell, rank tonight from new york city. o donnell: good evening, and thank you for joining us as we start a new week together. tonight, millions of americans in the southwest are under flood warnings after monsoon rains drenched communities across parts of six states, north texas getting worst of it. the dallas-forth worth area suffering from a months-long drought was pummeled with more than nine inches. that is the second heaviest rainfall in the city s history. it was the equivalent of a summer s worth of rain in one 24-hour period. floodwaters rushed through the streets, submerging vehicles, and we re learning tonight, a woman was swept off a bridg