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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  January 14, 2022 3:12am-4:00am PST

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have the votes to get the bill through congress. here's cbs' scott macfarlane. >> reporter: mr. president, whose mind can still be changed? president biden tried to swing u.s. senators today, but was disarmed before he arrived. >> i don't know that we can get it done, but i know as long as i have a breath in me, i'm going to be fighting to change the way these legislators are moving. >> reporter: one of the two democratic senators the president needed announced on the senate floor, she was not on board. >> while i continue to support these bills, i will not support separate actions that worsen the underlying disease of division infecting our country. >> reporter: democrats are pushing voting rights legislation to make election day a federal holiday, require all states to allow early and mail-in voting, and make it harder for states to pass voter i.d. laws. but without all 50 democrats voting, there's no path forward. former president obama tried to nudge the holdouts, saying
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"america's long-standing experiment in democracy is being sorely tested." 19, mostly republican-controlled states placing limits on ballot drop boxes and imposing tougher rules for voter i.d.s. >> we missed this time and the state legislative bodies continue to change the law, not as to who can vote, but who gets to count the vote-- count the vote. count the vote! >> he's running scared. the left believes he's failed on multiple fronts and they don't believe he's fought hard enough to bring about voting rights. >> reporter: cbs news has learned those two holdout senators are meeting at the white house tonight, but there's no indication of any spark to jump-start his stalled political effort. norah. >> o'donnell: some late-night arm-twisting. scott macfarlane, thank you. a stunning turn in the prince andrew/jeffrey epstein scandal. queen elizabeth today stripped her son of all his military
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titles and royal duties. a terse two-sentence statement, a month before the queen celebrates her platinum jubilee marking her 70-year reign as monarch. cbs's imtiaz tyab reports from london. >> reporter: of all that glittered in prince andrew's life, it was the pomp and pageantry of the military that saw him on parade. and now, that's gone. in a brief statement from the queen tonight, she stripped her second son of a range of military affiliations and royal patronages. a alace source confirmed prince andrew would no longer use the title "his royal highness." this spectacular fall from grace comes just a day after a manhattan court judge rejected his efforts to dismiss a sexual assault civil lawsuit against
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him by virginia giuffre. giuffre says convicted late jeffrey epstein trafficked her to the prince in the early 2000s when she was just 17, and says she was raped by andrew-- allegations he denies. >> so the idea of a financial settlement is not the thing that's of interest to her, then, is it? >> a purely financial settlement is not anything that i think she's interested in. >> right. >> reporter: this latest twist after more than 150 military veterans wrote to the queen to ask her to strip the prince of his honorary military roles. andrew hasn't performed any official duty since 2019, and is rarely seen in public, but was pictured leaving his home in windsor today hours before the queen's announcement. a source close to prince andrew tells cbs news this case is "a marathon and not a sprint," and that andrew will continue to defend himself. but after tonight, that defense, the palace says, will be as a private citizen. norah. >> o'donnell: imtiaz tyab in london. some breaking news-- california governor gavin newsom
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has denied parole to robert f. kennedy's assassin, sirhan sirhan, after more than a half-century behind bars. newsom rejected a recommendation from a two-person panel of parole commissioners saying the 77-year-old sirhan sirhan was an unreasonable public threat. the kennedy family says they're deeply relieved by the decision. the net over do you struggle with occasional nerve aches in your hands or feet? try nervivenerve relief from the world's #1 selling nerve care company.
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♪♪ you pour your heart into everything you do, which is a lot. so take care of that heart with lipton. because sippin' on unsweetened lipton can help support a healthy heart. lipton. stop chuggin'. start sippin'. a hidden crisis in vulnerable communities-- many are living without things most of us take for granted, like running water and sanitation. the new trillion-dollar infrastructure act provides nearly $12 billion to fix that. i tonight's "eye on america," cbs's adam yamaguchi takes us to rural alabama, where help is desperately needed. >> reporter: america in 21st century hides its shame in the backyards of the rural poor.
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in lowndes county, alabama, perman hardy knows all about it. >> when there's a lot of rain, you cannot flush the toilet. >> reporter: if you did, it would be all over your house. >> yes. when it goes bloop, bloop-- get ready, here it comes. >> reporter: in the un-incorporated areas of this cunty, where martin luther king famously led the selma to montgomery march, there's no municipal sewage system. and for an estimated 80% of households, no adequate septic system either. >> backs up in the shower, backs up in the tub, gnats everywhere kenneth gordon's 83-year-old mother's house. >> this is the tub, toilet that had the most problems. >> reporter: were you concerned about her health? >> yes, very concerned about her health. >> reporter: untreated sewage can lead to bacterial infections and intestinal parasites.
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the only solution is a new stem but the hard clay soil here requires specially designed septic systems that can cost as much as a median household income in lowndes county, alabama. >> with the brown car. >> reporter: which is why sherry bradley of the alabama department of public health and perman hardy are taking matters into their own hands. >> this is the first meeting of the black belt unincorporated waste water program. >> reporter: bradley and hardy raised $700,000 in donations to install working systems. qualifying residents make a one-time down payment, then pay a $20 monthly fee. >> every time it rains, people-- they know what might happen, they know that sewage may shoot out and come back in the house. >> reporter: what sort of damage does that do? >> i can't imagine. i just can't imagine. thank you so much for helping out here. >> reporter: but on this day, bradley and hardy's teamwork paid off. they got a new septic system
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installed at earnestine gordon's place. >> i am so happy that i don't have to come outside and look at this. it's going to go that way instead of that way. >> momma is like, hallelujah! hallelujah! >> it's great. been a long hot day. >> reporter: renna gordon can only hope she's next. do you know when it might happen? >> i really don't know. i hope it will be soon. >> reporter: adam yamaguchi for "eye on america," cbs news, lowndes county. >> o'donnell: and now we learned the justice department is opening an investigation into the state. well, still ahead tonight ordinary tissues burn when theo blows. so puffs plus lotion rescued his nose. with up to 50% more lotion, puffs bring soothing relief. a nose in need deserves puffs indeed. america's #1 lotion tissue. facing expensive vitamin c creams with dull results? olay brightens it up with new olay vitamin c.
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so don't fight heartburn, block it. prilosec otc. one pill in the morning blocks heartburn, all day and all night. >> o'donnell: tonight, a new york city police officer is in stable condition after trying to stop one of two carjackings that took place in manhattan on wednesday, within a span of an hour. one carjacking was caught on camera. a suspect armed with a taser forced his way into a black audi s.u.v. and plowed into several other cars, while the officer tried to stop him. tonight, more than 400,000 people with student loans will get some debt relief, after one of the nation's largest student loan companies reached a multi-state settlement. navient will cancel debt for some and pay more than $140 million to others.
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some and pay others. navient denied acting illegally, and did not admit to any wrngdoing under the settlement. coming up next-- a young woman's when you humble yourself under the mighty hand of god, in due time he will exalt you. hi, i'm joel osteen. i'm excited about being with you every week. i hope you'll tune in.u'll be il be encouraged. i'm looking forward to seeing you right here. you are fully loaded and completely equipped for the race that's been designed for you.
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>> o'donnell: tonight, we have a story of inspiration and perseverance. cbs's jan crawford introduces us to a brave young woman who is creating change despite the odds. >> reporter: on this quiet bike path outside washington, d.c., rukhsar habibzai is free. >> i am flying in the sky. >> reporter: flying? >> yeah, i'm flying in the sky. i feel peace of mind. i'm free. >> reporter: as a young girl in afghanistan, peace and freedom were a constant struggle. >> women weren't allowed to ride a bike. >> reporter: were you afraid? >> yeah, i was afraid in, like, if someone is seeing me, like, they will beat me or maybe they will harass me. >> reporter: she persevered, ultimately leading the
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afghanistan women's cycling team, which was nominated for the nobel peace prize. but then last summer, the taliban resumed control. what was behind your decision to get out, and were you afraid then? >> i'm sorry... >> reporter: after four dangerous days of waiting, she finally got a flight out. >> i left my bicycle, my everything, my family. >> reporter: she's starting a new life in virginia, pursuing her goal of becoming a dentist and joining a competitive bike team. her focus, to compete in the olympics. what flag would you hope to represent? >> for my country. >> reporter: for afghanistan? >> for afghanistan. >> reporter: and for all the young girls still there. jan crawford, cbs news, fairfax, virginia. >> and that's the overnight news for this friday. others, check back for cbs mornings and follow us anytime for cbs news.com. reporting from the nation's
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capitol, i'm nora o'donnell. ♪ this is cbs news flash. in a move that could shake up presidential politics, the rnc says it may prevent future nominees from participating in presidential debates unless changes are made. and they'll soon allow teens to drive big rigs. under the new rules, 18 to 20-year-olds with a good driving record will be able to cross state lines. and who says a dog can't have nine lives? seattle fire crews rescued sammy the dog, after a devastating land slide.
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surviving off rain water when rescuers heard a whimper and pulled her out. fall though news app on your cell phone or tv. i'm tom hanson, cbs news, new york. this is the cbs overnight news. good evening and thank you for joining us. we start tonight with very significant decisions by the u.s. supreme court. a mixed pair of rulings that will directly impact nearly 100 million americans. they say the biden administration does not have the authority to impose a vaccine or test rule on private companies. but does have the ability to mandate covid shots for most health workers. president biden says he was disappointed by the decision to, quote, block commonsense rules.
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but the keeping of rules for doctors, nourishes and others will save lives. this comes as the u.s. is facing a surge in cases and records hospitalizations. as we come on the air, nearly 63% of americans are fully vaccinated. meg oliver joins us with the latest developments. >> reporter: the news comes as president biden announced new resources for hospitals facing staffing issues like this one and theed aman stragz will buy 100 million more at-home tests for americans. >> reporter: tonight a blow to the biden administration as case careen out of control. the supreme court blocking the president's plan to require employees to be vaccinated or test weekly for covid. but the court is allowing the mandate for most health care workers. this comes as the president
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called in the military to help overwhelmed hospitals in six states survive the surge. >> if you're unvaccinated, if they test positive, you're 17 times more likely to get hospitalized. as a result, they're crowding the hospitals, leaving little room for anyone else who might have a heart attack or an injury in an automobile accident in new jersey hugs hosizations are up compared to this time last month. more than 300 workers are out. while patients continue to stream in, more than half are infected with covid. 17 are on ventilators. how dire is your staffing shortage? >> it's extremely dire right now and i'm being transparent with the public and also with my staff. >> reporter: 23 military medics will arrive to help for a month.
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>> the risk of care and losing more hospital staff, does keep me up at night. >> reporter: one of every five hospitals have a capacity shortage nationwide. you've reached the breaking point. >> i really do think so. i think our nurses, who have been working for weeks on end and our doctors and support staff are at the limit. >> there is a glimmer of hope. over the last four days here, he says cases have levelled off but the severe staffing shortages could last several weeks, if not months. >> thinking of our health care workers, meg oliver, thanks. we turn to a significant neg tan capitol. theuspartnt, for the first time, filing the most serious charge yoet against members of the oath keepers,
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sedishes conspiracy. >> reporter: prosecutors say the 11 oath keepers charged with sedishes conspiracy began planning shortly after the election was made official. >> amazing he would let our government be stolen like this. >> reporter: the far right's extremists group's leader with a yale law degree, sent a message to a group chat november fifth. we aren't getting through this without a civil war. over the next month, prosecutors say roads used encrypted aps to organize a january 6th assault. members of the oath keepers outfitted in full combat gear were seen marching in a military style stack formation up the east steps to the capitol.
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they say roads, who was not inside the capitol, was directing them via cell phone and a chat app. it alleges the stack, split in two once inside the capitol. one towards the senate chamber speer posi.r towards the house prosecutors say roads and several armed quick reaction forces on stand by in virginia that could be called in to escalate the attack. to date about 20 oath keepers have been charged in connection with the insurrection. >> it wasn't just an unruly mob. we're past the points of seeing this as some kind of spontaneous riot and really into seeing it as an actual assault on the operation of u.s. law itself. >> reporter: tonight rhodes' attorney disputed the charges contained in the court documented, including the
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allegation that, after all the violence here on january 6th, some of the oath keepers went to a restaurant in nearby virginia, and they celebrated, and also allegedly planned what was coming next. norah. >> o'donnell: jeff pegues on capitol hill. now to the weather. a massive storm system will bring up to a foot of snow for parts of the plains and midwest on friday before taking aim at the south and east this weekend. cbs's lonnie quinn is tracking the storm for us. all right, what are we going to get, lonnie? >> reporter: first, we're watching a storm that doesn't look like a storm now. it's going to develop. if you take a look at the radar picture, off the west coast, around seattle, just coming onshore. now it's a mess. it organizes, gets pushed through the northern plains. and take a look at how the future cast is handseling everything. places like des moines picks up a half a foot or more by saturday morning at 6:00 a.m., snowing toward st. louis. sunday morning snow as far as jackson, mississippi, stretching up to places like north carolina or so. the icing is taking place from atlanta into raleigh.
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by sunday we have snow falling from atlanta, into pennsylvania. wednesday, north carolina and western virginia, upstate new york the biggest numbers, nashville 6 inches, asheville 16 inches. the biggest number buffalo 20 inches. but the big northeast cities missed this one-- about an inch around philadelphia, boston and new york city. norah, that's the way we see this storm. >> o'donnell: lonnie quinn, thank you. there's a lot more news ahead on the cbs overnight news.
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i'm ben tracy in washington. britain's prince andrew has return said all of his military titles and royal patronages to queen elizabeth. more than 150 army and navy veterans ask the queen to strip andrew of his ranks and titles, saying he's brought the services into disrepute. a judge rejected prince andrew's request to have the case thrown out and a trial is scheduled for later this year. the british monarchy, this
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nearly 1,000-year-old institution has never seen anything quite like this. the queen's second son, said to be her favorite son, does still have legal options. but all could prove to be expensive, both financially and in terms of his reputation. >> this case is going forward and going forward now. >> reporter: cbs legal analyst says this may have been prince andrews last chance to get the civil suit dismiss said. >> the last thing prince andrew wants and that the royal family want is further publicity in this degrading saga. >> reporter: his accuser is virginia defree, who claimed the prings sexually assaulted her on multiple occasions when she was a teenager. >> prince andrew should be panicking. he needs to be held accountable. >> reporter: he denies it, and says he has no recollection of ever meeting her, despite this
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image of them together. she alleges she was trafficked to the prince by jeffrey epstein and lawyers for her claim a lawsuit shielded the british loyal from legal action. but a judge ruled the case can proceed. as a u.k. resident, prince andrew could refuse cooperate. >> we never had any sexual contact whatsoever. >> reporter: though that tactic could be disastrous. >> if he does not participate in this case, what would happen is the plaintiff would move for a default judgment against him for 500,000, a million, 10 million, whatever it would happen to be. >> reporter: he was once regarded as a handsome, playboy prince but his name is now stained by his friendships with convicted sex offenders epstein
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and ghislaine maxwell. on the streets of windsor, the town dominated by the royal castle, some are angry. >> everybody feels for the queen a lot in this circumstance. it is her son and of course she's going to want to protect him and her family and their privacy. but that doesn't mean you get a get out of jail free card either. >> reporter: believes the best option is to reach a settlement, stopping the case from going any further but that depends on her. >> i think she's determined to have her day in court. but there's always a magic number. for most people there's an offer that can't be refused. unless the money means absolutely nothing to you. >> reporter: virginia's lawyer says he believes she's not interested in a purely financial settlement. she may only agree if prince andrew acknowledges he has done
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something wrong. a grand jury in florida has heard potentially explosive testimony in the sex trafficking investigation connected to republican congressman, matt gatsz. his former girlfriend was questioned under oath as he provided goods and payment in exchange for sex. >> reporter: back in june, representative gates seemingly unconcerned about the chance of being indicted in a federal sex trafficking case. but the emergence of a potential key witness could be a serious threat. cbs learned gates' exgirlfriend appeared webz. his ex has been negotiating an immunity deal related to an obstruction probe regarding witness tampering with the case.
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her lawyer remained tight lipped. >> i apologize and i would but i have no comment. >> reporter: gates has been under investigation to determine if he violated sex trafficking laws and obstructed justice. the congressman is accused of having sex with a 17-year-old in exchange for money. federal prosecutors are looking to a trip he made to the bahamas in 2018 and want to know if he took an underage teenager across state lines for sex. c cbs -- he was with an entrepreneur and hand surgeon who allegedly paid for travel and female escorts. multiple sources say the exgirlfriend travelled with gates to the bahamas in 2018. and an attorney for gates said that, quote, we have seen no credible basis for a charge
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against congressman gates. we remain stead fast in our commitment to challenge any allegations with the facts and law. >> it is a horrible allegation and it is a lie. >> reporter: the grand jury testimony of the law makers's acts may indicate this is advancing quickly. and they are potentally inching closure to an indictment. introducing the all-new gillettelabs with exfoliating bar. it combines shaving and gentle exfoliation into one efficient stroke, for a shave as quick and easy as washing your face. ♪♪ you pour your heart into everything you do, which is a lot. so take care of that heart with lipton. because sippin' on unsweetened lipton can help support a healthy heart. lipton. stop chuggin'. start sippin'. new vicks convenience pack. stop chuggin'. dayquil severe for you...
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during the early months of the pandemic, stay-at-home orders led to a decrease in pollution. but as the economy rebounded, greenhouse gases in the u.s. have come roaring back. former vice president al gore i warning about the climate emergency for decades. he recentlnv to his farm in tennessee and we found he's still hopeful the world will tackle the threat of climate change. >> this farm is 400 acres. >> reporter: former vice president, al gore, took us for a ride in his electric atv, to show us his farm where he's been living since the pandemic hit. i bet most people don't think of you as farmer al. >> no, i don't think so. and truth to tell i don't have many callouss on my hand either.
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>> reporter: his team handles most of the farm work, tending the sheep and raising the animals that help fertilize the land where they're growing everything from carrots and beats to a variety of greens. all sent to local markets. but this land outside nashville is also gore's climate change laboratory. >> and push it in. >> reporter: he's cleollecting soil sample as he experiments with what's known as regenerative farming. there's actually three times more carbon stored in the top soil of the earth than all the trees and plants combined. by plowing less and making the soil more fertile, scientists say farmers could help trap massive amounts of climate warming emissions. >> stop using the sky as an open sewer and that's what's making the weather crazy and dangerous,
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leading to all of the consequences that are on the tv news almost every night now. >> reporter: he says mother nature is now making the most effective argument for climate action. and he's encouraged by the rapid growth of solar and wind power and people buying electric vehicles in record numbers. but the planet is still rapidly warming, as we continue to pump near record aamounts of pollutin into the sky. >> reporter: there's all this progress being made but is it enough? >> a realest will tell you, look we've done some damage. some of it, regrettably, is not recoverable. but we go from where we are. you want to avoid tipping people into despair. because some people go from denial to despair without pausing on the intermediate. >> it's as if we can throw a switch and save the future of our civilization. >> reporter: after attending the
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recent climate conference in scotland, he says 2022 is the year world leaders need to stop talking and actually start cutting their greenhouse gas emissions. >> some of the pledges are still weak. and we need measure what they're doing and keep an eye on them. >> reporter: it's amazing how precise this is. gore is a major investor in something called climate trace. it uses satellites, sensors and artificial intelligence to track greenho greenhouse gas around the world. >> this is middle town steel works in ohio. >> reporter: to individual cargo ships and forests, which release all of their stored carbon when they burn. he believes this is a tool to hold countries accountable. what do you do with the data? >> publish it. we're not the climate cops. maybe the neighborhood watch but our neighborhood is the whole world. >> we're in constant
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communication with the scientific community. >> reporter: al gore has been sounding the climate alarm for more than four decades. first as a young congressman. >> the arctic is experiencing faster melting. >> reporter: and then his film "the inconvenient truth." that earned him an oscar, nobel peace prize and plenty of scorn from climate change deniers. some called you a cook for being too far left. in an unfortunate way, do you feel like what you've been saying all along has been validated? >> i certainly wish i had been wrong. and more to the point what i've been saying is really just channelling what the scientific community has been saying. >> reporter: at it top of the film you say i've been trying to -- >> tell the story for a long time and i feel as if i failed to get the message across. >> reporter: do you feel like you succeeded in getting the message across? >> i have not succeeded. the crisis is getting worse
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before we can have solutions. there's a question about whether we can solve it in time. >> he's still optimistic, mainly because of young people all around the world, demanding change. >> reporter: a lot of the young people seem pretty fed up with politicians. >> blah blah blah as greta says and i'm with her. >> greta thunberg and her fellow climate activists accuse world leaders of not doing nearly enough. and this politician doesn't want them to tone down their criticism. >> i want them to turn it up to an 11. and the more they can march, the more noise they can make, the more demands they insist upon, the faster progress will make. i'm a firm believer in that. i call this a farmer-led movement. >> reporter: and he still believes the climate crisis we created is one we can solve.
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>> the direction of travel is clear. and i do believe that we will get there. >> reporter: but gore does say the world needs act now.
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in a time when this nation seems so divided, two journalists from two very different parts of the country show us there's still a lot that unites us. >> reporter: alabama's tuskegee news has never had a journalist like amy miller. for one thing she lives more than a thousand miles from tuskegee and someone she share as twice monthly column. >> i can have this idea anyway about doing a column from a white perspective and trying to match it with somebody doing it with a black perspective. >> reporter: color of connected covers amy's community. her idea, after the mostly white
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new england town became sister cities with the predominantly black southern city. tuskegee welcomes south brew wk residents. what has this relationship meant to you? >> this is one opportunity to bring people together. instead of a divided state, we're the united states. >> reporter: there's no politics in the columns. they simply share a slice of life from their perspective. a black man from the south, a white woman from the north. >> so, now we feel like we're walking together towards the progress we want to make in this country. >> reporter: once you move to relationships, something real can take place. >> reporter: two communities finding common ground. cbs news, tuskegee, alabama. >> and that's the overnight news for this friday. for some the news continues, for others check back later for cbs mornings and follow us online at
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cbs news.com. reporting from the nation's capitol, i'm ben tracy. this is cbs news flash. the rnc says it may prevent future republican nominees from participating in official presidential debates unless changes are made. the rnc has been critical of past moderators and debate formats. the federal government will soon allow teens to drive big rigs, as response to the nation wide r shortage. 18 to 20 yield-year-olds with a good driving record will be able to pass state lines. seattle fire crews rescued sammy the dog, after a devastating land slide. she was trapped almost a week,
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surviving off rain water when rescuers heard a whimper and pulled her out. for more, download the app n it's friday, january it's friday, january 14th, 2022. this is the "cbs morning news." day of defeat. president biden loses two major battles within hours of each other. the stinging setback to his agenda. seditious conspiracy. the leader of the oath keepers is arrested in connection to the capitol riot. why he's facing the most serious charge yet in the sprawling investigation. breaking overnight, visa revoked again. australian officials want novak djokovic out of the country over his covid vaccine exemption. what happens now just days before the australian open. good morning, and good to be with you. i'm anne-marie green.

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