told a race marshal, according to her that she was ready to drop out exactly what she said to them was that she was just feeling too tired to hurt at this point, and she needed to drop out of the race no longer running. officially that s what she told him at the aid station . she also said that she really would never, ever cheat. that s what she said. nonetheless, she went to the end. they gave her the third place trophy. she took pictures with it. she went away, and according to the race director for days, they never heard a word from her just like she won. she would never, ever cheat, and yet she s pictured holding the metal celebrating. yeah it s not a good thing. it s not a good thing to be glad we re doing this story with you, tom and our viewers may not realize this because you re decked out in a suit, but tom is an ultra the athlete. you are an ultramarathon runner a long distance and he wrote a book about it. um how difficult would it be for you say you were in that position? y
Charities and human rights groups working with refugees have demanded better protection for vulnerable people after a vessel carrying around 200 migrants sank in rough seas off the coast of Italy on Sunday.
sam kylie, thank you so much. i want to talk now with cnn military analyst with general mark hertling. can you tell us what goes into getting soldiers away from the front line and getting them the time to save lives. that golden hour is critical. yes, it is critical. it s a process. the first thing that normally happens is what s called buddy aid. if it s in a good unit, you have something called combat lifesavers, soldiers trained in advanced techniques. then it goes to a medic that does a triage to see what kind of condition you re in, saving the life, getting the blood flow going. if the medic can t handle it, they medevac you back to an aid station. if it even more catastrophic and you have to have to surgery, then those medevacs usually take you back further to the rear to a place called a combat support
tension and time to save their lives? because obviously that golden hour is critical. yeah, the golden hour is critical, anderson. and what i will tell you is it is a process. you know, the first thing that normally happens is what is called a buddy aid. if it isn t a good unit, you also have something called combat lifesavers, which our soldiers who have been trained in advanced medical techniques. and then it goes to a medic which kind of does a triage to see what kind of conditions you are in, saving your life, getting the blood flow going making sure you are getting an airway that s clear. and then of the medic can t and then if the medic can t handle it, they medivac you either by helicopter around and goes back to an aid station. if it s even more catastrophic and you have to have surgery, then those medevacs usually take you back further to the rear to a place called a combat support hospital. i have explained all of, that because this is a technique the u.s. army uses we have
Tens of thousands of people in Florida are struggling with the devastation left behind by Hurricane Ian. In response, more than 1,800 American Red Cross disaste