Drivers are scrambling to fill up as tropical storm continues to wreak havoc on the region's energy sector
"We don't think we're going to find any humans, but we're prepared if we do," said District Chief James Pennington of the Houston Fire Department
See why LinkedIn co-founder and venture capitalist Reid Hoffman thinks AI will help create more jobs
A look at the features for this week's broadcast of the Emmy Award-winning news program
The benefit is tentatively scheduled to air on Sept. 12
In the wake of Harvey, the Red Cross is helping more than 32,000 people in shelters and has served more than 180,000 meals and snacks
NASA evacuated most of the Johnson Space Center in Houston with only a skeleton crew for the International Space Station staying behind. The storm also delayed the airplane NASA uses to pick up returning astronauts, which means American Peggy Whitson, who will touch down Saturday in Kazakhstan, may need to catch a commercial flight home.
U-Flood's crowd-sourced interactive map of Houston's flooding shows which streets have been swamped
The president pardoned the former sheriff late Friday night last week
It seems partisanship can survive 15 trillion gallons of rain water and non-stop images of washed-out homes and overflowing shelters
Angels Flight has carried people on and off for the past 116 years. It travels around 300 feet on a 33 percent incline in the heart of downtown L.A. But on many occasions, it almost disappeared for good. CBS "Sunday Morning's" Lee Cowan shows us the decades-long effort to repair and save the pop culture icon.
Thousands of Mumbai buildings at risk, foundations weakened by heaviest monsoon rains in years
One of the most memorable images of Harvey's flooding devastation was of nursing home residents sitting in waist-deep water. Not long after, another picture emerged of the residents safe and dry at another facility. Jamie Yuccas spoke to one of the women in that original photo.
Leonardo DiCaprio joins the growing list of celebrities getting involved in helping Hurricane Harvey relief efforts
Hurricane Harvey could cause up to $30 billion in damages to homeowners, but a new Texas insurance law taking effect Friday may make it harder to sue insurance companies for delayed payment of claims. CBS News business analyst Jill Schlesinger joins "CBS This Morning" to discuss what the law means for those with flood insurance and those without coverage.
As floodwaters rise, some Texas residents are struggling with the wrenching decision of whether to stay in their homes or flee. CBS News' Kenneth Craig rode along with a volunteer rescue crew in their boat in northwest Houston.
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