. will: there is some beautiful pictures this morning of back to school amid the patriotic sunday morning on fox and friends. send in your photos to friends@foxnews.com. happy sunday to both of you. a lot of kids are not starting until next week. pete: still kids have not seen the inside of a school yet, that is true. the last sunday of summer. the last summer before football. pro football. i don t know how it went yesterday. i didn t watch any games. will: sleep is already, i woke up this morning, this will be a rough couple months. i did not go to bed on time. what time did you go to bed. will: it was 10ish, not good for me. because college football kicked off yesterday. yesterday was the big kick off. pete: big day for tight ends. rachel: hats off to you, pete. tighteneds. he brought up my comment. will: you said hats off to you, like getting a tightened award? [laughter] rachel: i don t know anything about that. hats off to you for your mullet. pete: apparently you c
once-in-a-thousand year storm. cbs omar villafranca is there. firefighters are here, and they re going to try to help him balls the house at this point is not livable. o donnell: plus, cbs kris van cleave on the summer travel nightmare made worse by the storm.m. coululd the govovernment force airlines to pay back fliers? and how schools are working to keep kids safe as they return to the classroom. cbs carter evans tonight shows the new normal. reporter: covid hasn t gone away, but it appears the fear of it has in schools. this is the cbs evening news with norah o donnell, reporting from the nation s capital. o donnell: good evening, and thank you for joining us on this tuesday night. well, tonight, we re learning new information about the f.b.i. search at former president trump s mar-a-lago estate, giving us a glimpse into what kind of classified materials were allegedly kept at the 45th president s florida home. cbs news previously reported classified documen
are being told, we will go there live when it happens. another fox news alert now. house minority leader kevin mccarthy and a dozen other house republicans are going to visit migrant facility in texas amid the escalating crisis at our southern border. meanwhile, the bad and white houses deploying emergency officials from fema to help with the surge of unaccompanied minors despite the president denying there is a crisis. fema goes where there are disasters. u.s. border patrol reportedly is holding more than 4200 migrant children in short-term facilities. nearly 3,000 of them held longer than the 72 hours legally allowed. house speaker nancy pelosi is blaming former president trump s policies for the situation and echoing biden and calling it a challenge, not a crisis. what the administration has inherited is a broken system at the border and they are working to correct that in the children s interest. so this, again, is a transition from what was wrong before to what is righ
might, might put the heart into fib brill ages and shock it to get a regular heartbeat. so that is rachel: that s the protocol, that s the protocol, you keep going until the ambulance arrives? that is what life guards do? yeah, that s correct. we swapped in and out, two minutes of cpr, compressions. big guy like david, you know, takes a lot out of you. your adrenaline is pumping. you re doing cpr. you have to switch in and out because if you re not doing effective cpr, the blood flow is not, you know, not circulating the, blood as it should be. rachel: yeah. so we swapped in and out. we had 15 guards at the scene just swapping in and out doing compressions and ventilations. keeping that blood flow. rachel: john, david, we re so glad you re here with us. there has been a lifeguard
again. reporter: after more than two years of uncertainty. we re coming back, we re not coming back, masks on, masks off. contact tracing, not contact tracing, it s been difficult. reporter: .this year, districts nationwide are dropping testing requirements and nearly 96% no longer require masks. the lesson now says nurse melissa lofton is safety. it s standard to have sanitizing stations at every coroner. reporter: the district used federal funds to improve ventilations in every classroom, and if a student tests positive. we notify families. living with covid now i think is doable. reporter: do you see the fear you used to see? no, it is not at the forefront of what they think when they come to school anymore. reporter: that s echoed by parents like rita covington. i m happy the kid are back with their friends at school with teachers. this is where they■ need to be. keeping students in school has really helped with mental health. and the emotional well-being.