he would be pushing her around. a puzzle seemingly solved, then long apart. we recorded that conversation, then it was dynamite. mckayla was on the ground, and she wasn t really moving. to unravel the mystery, investigators would follow a trail through high school hallways, teaming the secrets and schemes. the hatred grew more and more and more. the whole idea became a horrible idea. a bad idea that went very, very bad. he waves at you from miles. the big neon cowboy. wendover whale is what they call him, and it was his job for more than 60 years. and it s here at the nevada utah border. pull him off the road to this tiny high desert casino casino, and most leave again a little and the wallet. knowing precious little about the stories west winter love loves to tell, about the races who come here, who breaks speed records of flats. about the local airbase, and the gate took up from hiroshima. but there s also the story they whisper to each other, up a
of three girls. she was a star student and athlete, but sure beyond her years, she liked to write poetry, short stories, and she was pretty, and very popular. she was the one out of all three of us girls that i say was just going down the path you would want any child to go down. she was doing it the right way. stereotypically. bright, talented, good-looking. . the trifecta yes, she had it all. one of those special gets, that celia. born happy. she was always positive. she just had a different approach to life. she found the good in everything and everybody. a depressive personality, she was not? no, oh no, not at all. oh, and one more thing, mickey and dj her middle sister where inseparable. i consider us twins. everything we did, we had to be
finally, the late senator bo dole. he will lie in state on the capitol rotunda on thursday, and we remember. born in 1923 in russel, kansas,, bob dole grew up poor during the great depression. a star student and athlete. and at 19, he enlisted to fight in world war ii. he served and was severely injured in final days of the war. he would lose the use of his right arm. he served in congress for 36 years. he ran for president three times. in 1996, losing to president bill clinton. his trademark dignity and humor in the days after. bob, what have you been doing lately? apparently not enough. but in any event maybe you ll take some kind of position in the clinton
crash, the train was going at 100 miles per hour. and it actually crashed at 106 miles per hour. it s not supposed to happen like that and they want to know why it did. they are also telling us, this is important for people who ride these rails that they hope to have amtrak service from washington to new york returned in a limited basis by monday and back in full operation on tuesday. that is their hope. jose? ray may ma ellis, thank you. next hour the first funeral for one of the eight victims will be held in new york. his stunned community is remembering him as a star student and athlete. he ll be laid to rest with full military honors. this morning outside the u.s. naval academy, the flag is flying at half staff outside the dormitory where he and all midshipmen reside. and in brooklyn, new york. mourning the loss of 42-year-old