tv CBS Overnight News CBS January 26, 2022 3:12am-4:00am PST
3:12 am
regards to deadly force, because it could have been bad. really, really bad. >> reporter: goodman would escort vice president kamala harris at the inauguration, and was later honored with the congressional gold medal. >> officer goodman, thank you. ( applause ) >> reporter: an iraq war veteran, goodman says his military training served him well. >> my platoon would say figure it out or die. >> reporter: one year later, officer goodman remains with the u.s. capitol police department. his colleagues say, like so many here, he returned to work right after january 6. his colleagues also say he's averse to the lime light and did that podcast because it involved one of his friends. norah. >> o'donnell: it's good to hear from officer goodman. scott macfarlane, thank you. now to some breaking news from the coast of florida. the coast guard has launched a search for 39 people missing missing after a boat believed to
3:13 am
be piloted by human smugglers capsized off the coast, coast, about 45 miles east of port saint lucie. according to a survivor, the boat left the bahamas on saturday, but encountered rough weather and then capsized. none of them apparently had life vests. few stories affect more americans than the rising cost of groceries. overall, the price of groceries are up 6.5% compared to a year ago. now it's the price of orange juice that's putting the squeeze on your pocketbook. cbs' manuel bojorquez is in florida, where they are expected to have the worst orange harvest since world war ii. >> it won't get any bigger than that. >> reporter: it's called "citrus greening" a disease afflicting florida orange groves spread by an invasive insect, leaving trees looking like this. it kills it from the inside. >> yeah, all the roots are going to go first. when you have no roots, you have
3:14 am
no leaves, no fruit. >> reporter: brian faryna's family established this grove near orlando 70 years ago. it's hard for him to imagine that the state is forecast to have its smallest orange crop since before the farynas laid down roots here. this is what you devote your life to. >> yup. all of our lanes are citrus. when you hear numbers like that, it is devastating. >> reporter: there is no known cure for citrus greening. in fact, in groves like this one, it's safe to assume most trees have some degree of it. one telltale sign, the amount of fruit that has fallen to the ground or it's unusually small. at its peak, florida produce 244 million boxes of oranges a year. it's set it's set to produce only 44.5 million this year. but demand for orange juice grew nearly 50% at the start of the pandemic, so prices for orange juice concentrate, already up 14%, will likely climb higher. >> lately, actually, i have been drinking less orange juice because prices are going up. >> reporter: what do you foresee in your future? >> that's a million-dollar question. we're going to stay in it, and we have diversified, so we're
3:15 am
making sure we spread ourselves out and try to find different ways to keep agriculture in our family. >> reporter: so they've added other crops, and even set up this store to supplement their income. but other farmers have sold their land to developers. and over the last 20 years, the number of acres harvested for oranges in florida has dropped by more than half. norah. >> o'donnell: manny bojorquez, the cbs overnight news will be right back.
3:16 am
(announcer) if you're an american age 50 to 85, and you're counting on social security to help your family with your final expenses, this news may surprise you. the social security death benefit is capped at just $255 and not everyone is entitled to claim it. today, the average funeral cost is over $8,700. that's quite a big gap. how will you fill it? hi, i'm jonathan, a manager here at colonial penn life insurance company,
3:17 am
and with coverage options starting at just $9.95 a month, you can get a whole life insurance plan to help close that gap, with a benefit check paid directly to your beneficiary. if you're between age 50 and 85, coverage options start at just $9.95 a month, and the rate is locked in. and it comes with two lifetime guarantees. one: your coverage can never be canceled. and two: your rate can never go up. call for free information and you'll also get this beneficiary planner free just for calling. use it to record important information and helpful direction for your loved ones. so don't wait, call now.
3:18 am
facing expensive vitamin c creams with dull results? olay brightens it up with new olay vitamin c. gives you two times brighter skin. hydrates better than the 100, 200, even $400 cream. see, my skin looks more even, and way brighter. ss es wit ayin cmyn cafathing. ecay.com new vicks vapostick. strong soothing vapors... help comfort your loved ones. for chest, neck, and back. it goes on clear. no mess just soothing comfort. try new vicks vapostick. 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.
3:19 am
america's #1 lotion tissue. >> all right, if you have a child that's getting ready for college, you'll want to listen carefully to this next story. some big changes are coming to the s.a.t. exam. cbs' meg oliver reports it's headed into the digital age. >> reporter: high school junior natalia cossio is one of the first students to take a test run at the new version of the s.a.t. which version of the s.a.t. did you prefer and why? >> i preferred the digital version because it was a lot more concise. >> reporter: the updated test will be online only. it will be two hours instead of three, with shorter reading passages, and calculators allowed for the entire math portion. >> students are going to get their scores back faster and we're going to be able to be a lot more flexible with schools in how and when they give the s.a.t. to students. >> reporter: the s.a.t. has drawn fire from critics for decades. a 2021 study shows that
3:20 am
admissions tests discriminate against minority and low-income students at selective colleges. are the s.a.t.s still relevant with so many schools going test optional? >> not really. >> reporter: in fact, some of the most prestigious schools in the country have dropped the s.a.t., schools like princeton, stanford, and notre dame all make test scores optional on their applications. >> it's an inaccurate predictor. it's highly coachable. it's biased against many important populations. and, most importantly, schools don't need it. >> reporter: nearly 80% of schools no longer require the test, despite high interest in the s.a.t. from some students, like natalia cossio. >> it's like a confidence booster if you get a really good score. >> reporter: maybe a boost of confidence, but no longer a barrier for students striving for their dream school. meg oliver, cbs news. >> o'donnell: and we have some breaking news from the baseball hall of fame. three-time world series champ
3:21 am
and former boston red sox, david "big papi" ortiz is the lone inductee voted into the class of 2022. it's his first year of eligibility. baseball writers for the tenth straight year rejected former slugger barry bonds, and pitching ace roger clemens, over their suspected use of performance-enhancing drugs. all right, still ahead here on why tom brady says it's not all about what he wants when it comes to his football career.
3:22 am
3:23 am
3:24 am
>> o'donnell: tom brady is adding to the suspense about whether or not he played his last game in the n.f.l. the future hall of famer took to instagram today to thank his teammates and fans. he says he'll make a decision with his family, but on his podcast, brady addressed retirement talk, saying football brings him joy, but that being there for his wife and kids are just as important. >> my wife is my biggest supporter. u knowains h to seme get hit out e, andyou t sh fre as husband. my kids deserve what they need from me as a dad. it's not always what i want. it's what we want as a family. and, you know, i'm going to spend a lot of time with them he f's next.u know, figure out h >> o'donnell: brady had previously said he'd play until he's 45, and that's how old he'll be next season. all right, coming up next, a community comes together to fight back against the rise of anti-asian attacks.
3:26 am
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. you'll be inspired, you'll 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.
3:27 am
>> o'donnell: hate crimes against asian americans have risen dramatically since the start of the pandemic. in new york city alone, anti- asian attacks were up 343% last year, according to the n.y.p.d. cbs' elaine quijano visited with a group of seniors. >> hit, nice! >> reporter: they've been taunted and had some close calls, but these asian american seniors never trained to defend themselves, until now. septuagenarians like new york city native mary yuen. >> good, mary, good. >> reporter: what do you think is the most important thing you've learned so far from the class? >> to be very aware of your surroundings. i'm always very aware, but i do have friends who are older and younger, they don't pay attention. >> reporter: sammy yuen started teaching these self-defense classes at new york city's
3:28 am
university settlement center after someone told his dad to go back to china. armed with years of martial arts training, yuen's objective is clear. >> the goal is to empower the studen te res, go to work, and just get home safely, be aware of threats before they happen and give yourself time to get away. >> reporter: mary yuen now carries that knowledge with her and gratitude for her young >>ter: wdoou think y good! >> he's really wonderful. he's very dedicated. he doesn't mind if you punch him the wrong way. oh, my. harder. harder? >> reporter: sounds like you enjoy that a little bit. >> too much. >> reporter: defying hate with power and joy. elaine quijano, cbs news, new york. pfrmt -- and that's the overnight news for now. follow us online any time at cbs
3:29 am
news.com. reporting from the nation's capitol, i'm norah o'donnell. c. i'm tom hanson in new york. house speaker nancy pelosi said she will seek re-election. the 81-year-old democrat made the announcement on twitter and did not say if she plans to run again for house speaker. if re-elected it would be the 19th term in congress. elton john is saying goodbye to his yellow brick road tour in texas. at least temporarily, the music icon tested positive for covid and postponed several texas shows this week. he expects to pick back up in arkansas this weekend. >> take a look at this, the moment a california dog was rescued after swimming too far from shore. 600 yards to be exact. l.a. county lifeguards sprung in to action, bringing the paddling
3:30 am
pooch back to solid ground. for more, download the cbs news app on your device or connected tv. i'm tom hanson, cbs, new york. >> o'donnell: good evening, and thank you for joining us. president biden is ramping up the pressure on vladimir putin, warning the russian president of "enormous consequences" if he invades ukraine and taking the rhetoric a step further, issuing a personal threat to putin. ukrainian leaders are trying to calm citizens, saying there is no sign that a russian invasion is imminent, but the war games on the country's border are telling a different story. thousands of russian troops conducted military drills using warplanes, naval ships and ballistic missiles. and while u.s. troops wait on heightened alert here, about 300 antitank missiles and other american-made weapons, like bunker busters arrived in kyiv today and we were there to see it.
3:31 am
the administration says diplomacy isn't dead but tensions are still mounting. the u.s. and allies have vowed to hit russia with sanctions like never before if moscow invades. we have two reports tonight, one from inside ukraine. but we'll start here in washington with cbs' ed o'keefe at the white house. good evening, ed. >> reporter: good evening, norah. the white house continues to believe russia could invade ukraine at any time and today went further than ever before to make clear, vladimir putin will face economic sanctions if he invades and u.s. troops could be headed to the region sooner rather than later. a russian military show of force today on the country's western border with ukraine, and no signs that vladimir putin plans to back down. that's why president biden, shopping today at a small business in washington, says he may soon deploy to eastern europe some of the almost 9,000 u.s. troops he's put on heightened alert. >> i may be moving some of those troops in the near term, just because it takes time, and, again, it's not provocative.
3:32 am
>> reporter: several thousand u.s. troops already in europe also could be repositioned, but the growing allied response force is still no match for putin's roughly 100,000 troops on the ground. at this point, almost completely encircling ukraine. the white house says an invasion is imminent, and mr. biden summoned his top national security advisers for a meeting on the crisis, saying he would specifically target putin with economic sanctions if the russian leader invades. >> if he would move in all those forces it would be the largest invasion since world war ii. it could change the world. >> reporter: the russians reiterated today they plan no attacks. but the administration, fearing putin could cut off fuel shipments that run through ukraine in the coming weeks, is now working with oil and gas suppliers arou is now working with oil and gas suppliers around the globe to ensure there is adequate supply. some republicans fear mr. biden is still moving too slowly against putin. >> even when they're taking
3:33 am
those right steps now those right steps tend to be half- measures and they're certainly much too late. >> reporter: but senate majority leader mitch mcconnell, a frequent critic of the president, has a different view. >> it appears to me the administration is moving in the right direction. >> o'donnell: ed joins us now from the white house. so what are you hearing about u.s. troop deployments? >> reporter: well, cbs news has learned tonight the pentagon is preparing to announce elements of the army's 82nd division out of fort bragg, north carolina, could be among the elements deployed to the region. norah. >> o'donnell: ed at the white house, thank you. now to ukraine, where the crisis deepens as the latest round of military equipment arrives. in support of kyiv's defense and cbs' holly williams was there. >> reporter: in ukraine tonight, a delivery of nearly 300 javelin antitank missiles and other munitions. this is just the latest shipment in $200 million worth of emergency military assistance from the u.s. russia still denies it has plans to invade, despite the roughly 100,000 troops it's massed on ukraine's border. but the u.s. but the u.s. has warned russia may use unconventional tactics. >> paramilitary tactics, so- called gray zone attacks, and
3:34 am
actions by russian soldiers not wearing russian uniforms. >> reporter: ukraine's even suggested russia could stage an accident in a chemical factory as a pretext for moving in. today, ukraine arrested what it called a gang planning attacks on infrastructure, and claims they were coordinated by russia. in eastern ukraine in 2014, we witnessed russian-backed fighters take control of towns and cities. that conflict has now killed more than 14,000. the u.s. says russia controls the armed rebels. can you tell me, are you ukrainian or are you russian? >> i'm just a person. >> reporter: you're just a person. >> yes. >> reporter: you won't tell me. >> no. >> reporter: and suspected russian hackers have succeeded
3:35 am
in crashing the power grid here. when this power station came under attack in 2015, nearly a quarter million people lost electricity. there are still hopes for a diplomatic solution. tomorrow, ukrainian and russian officials will meet in paris, along with their french and german counterparts. norah. >> o'donnell: holly williams in ukraine for us. thank you. well, turning now to covid. pfizer has announced the start of a clinical trial for a new vaccine that will specifically target the omicron variant, and it couldn't come soon enough as the seven-day average for covid deaths near 2200 a day. that's the highest it's been in nearly a year. cbs' kris van cleave is in hard- hit oklahoma city. >> reporter: tonight, a new look inside an oklahoma city e.r., overflowing with covid patients. dozens are waiting for i.c.u. beds, but every single one at four of the state's largest hospitals is full. police officer brandon owens has been in the i.c.u. and on a
3:36 am
ventilator for more than two weeks. >> he spent 14 years in the military. he did three deployments overseas. we never expected this to be something that would get him down. >> reporter: the situation is so dire, it prompted this warning: the oklahoma city healthcare system is at a breaking point. >> it feels like a war zone when there are fires everywhere. and it's a battle trying to take care of the wounded, trying not to get wounded yourself. >> reporter: dr. julie watson is the chief medical officer at integris health. monday, its hospitals set a new record for covid patients as the state's vaccination rate lingers at less than 55%. do you feel like you would be in a better situation if the state's vaccination rate was higher? >> there is no question in my mind. an i.c.u. physician and i were talking yesterday. he is seeing still mortality rates of up to 50% in i.c.u. patients who are mortality rates up to 50% in i.c.u. patients unvaccinated, up to 50%. >> reporter: the c.d.c. says new
3:37 am
data shows omicron causes less severe disease than other variants, but it's so infectious, it's causes hospitalizations and deaths to rise, something oklahoma is seeing right now. is this as bad as it's ever been for your hospitals? >> i would say yes. this is our fourth wave. and it's demoralizing to not be able to do your job the way that you were trained to do when our job is to save people's lives. >> reporter: many of the people we've spoken with here in
3:38 am
hey, come here! nurtec odt is the first and only medication proven to treat and prevent migraines. don't take if allergic to nurtec. the most common side effects were nausea, stomach pain, and indigestion. ask your doctor about nurtec today! introducing ask your doctor 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. does sinus congestion and pressure make breathing feel impossible especially at night? try vicks sinex. unlike most sinus treatments, it provides instant relief that lasts up to 12 hours. its powerful decongestant targets congestion at the source, with a dual action formula that relieves nasal congestion and soothes sinus pressure by reducing swelling in the sinuses. for instant relief that lasts up to 12 hours,
3:40 am
♪ this is the cbs overnight news. welcome back to the overnight news. with the beijing winter olympics less than two weeks away, china is doing everything that it can to keep the pandemic under control are. one district in a capitol is being targeted under the zero covid policy. millions people have been told not to leave the area. elizabeth palmer has more on the chinese government's efforts to keep the virus from are disrupting the games. >> reporter: all the residents lined up in the cold for mandatory covid testing this
3:41 am
weekend after 31 cases were reported locally. and with the opening of the winter olympics just ten days away, smaller scale testing was going on across the city. the overwhelming priority is to stage an olympic spectacle, mainly for tv, virus free. >> the venues are ready. there's even fresh snow at some of the alpine locations. but to minimize any chance of outbreaks, local people are not allowed to buy tickets. instead, spectatorsbeec screenen inside china and from outside china, olympic athletes and officials have begun to arrive. they are being tested in the airport and then they have to enter a covid free bubble. the so-called closed loop. which means they are confined to fenced off areas and ride special buses between the hotels and the sports venues.
3:42 am
already the chinese said they have picked up 78 covid cases among travelers arriving for the games. and the influx has only just gun. >> the chinese authorities are so hyper determined to catch every covid case that people who go to the drug store these days wanting cough and cold medication, or something to bring down a fever automatically get an alert ordering them to go and get tested. elizabeth palmer. here in the u.s. a nurse in south carolina is giving a unique glimpse of the human suffering caused by the pa pandemic. she picked up a camera and picked up scenes that people have never seen before. when he goes to work, he brings with him a special ability. a talent, really. that he uses when he cares for the sickest of the sick covid patients. he takes pictures.
3:43 am
of what y usually never see because before he became a nurse 11 years ago, he spent 23 years as a newspaper photographer. and that gives him the ability to tell the stories of these patients. >> this is an agentleman named ryan simpson. we had to send him to our cardiac icu. >> and y'all believe covid is what damaged the heart so severely? >> oh, yeah, his heart was bating so fast for many days. >> how fast? >> 135-165. >> oh. >> and this is his wife sarah. so, this is the first moment that she saw him that day. and was, i think, taken aback by all the people in the room. as they were preparing to take him to the operating room. >> so many front line workers have said to us, if only the public could see what we see. well, allen hawes convinced the hospital to allow him to give sight to what the care givers
3:44 am
routinely see. >>s that woman who is very sick. she was with us for a long, long time. and her family brought in this prayer cloth. >> the family was not able to visit but the prayer cloth was their representative. >> what happened to the lady? >> she didn't make it. >> his pictures document covid's grip as it tightens. >> and he was totally there as you can see, he is texting people on his cell phone. telling them what's going on. >> why did you want to capture this? >> i felt like i knew where he was going. >> what happened? >> this is what happened. >> oof. >> so, two days later. >> i walked in and there he was. >> vaccinated? >> he is unvaccinated. >> so you are now in a place, if i'm hearing you right, where you are like, it is what it is. don't want to get vaccinated wind up here. >> i have quite a few a times had a patient who's unvaccinated and i will think to myself, you did this to yourself. but that doesn't last long.
3:45 am
it's part of being a good nurse is having empathy. once you thehear the stories ofe patients, from the family members, you become a fan of that person and you know they made a bad decision. >> you humanize them? >> yeah. >> you are mad at them when they come in the door and you start to find out who they are. >> i have had really hard times with that. i mean, nurses are broken right now. emotionally. >> are you? >> i feel like i am, yes. >> how long did you have to work over the hospital to get permission to do this? >> a year and a half. >> oh. >> yeah. >> i think the time when i got approval to do the project i titled my e-mail public service project. >> hm-mm. >> and i think that's what made the difference. >> every time he gets permission to photo grarvegs either from the patients or family members. >> i think people have a message that they want to get out there. >> the mother holding a picture of the newborn she can't touch and the girlfriend who keeps a
3:46 am
bed side journal. >> stephen james lavender, you know that i love you with all of my heart and soul, you better not ever leave me. >> i tell all of my patients and family members,s that roller coaster, it's two steps forward and one step back. >> this is allen's colleague, a nurse, he is triple vaccinated and a life long asthma patient. >> with all due respect, this is one example where a picture doesn't actually do it justice. >> no, it doesn't. this is a picture where i wish i had video. >> my um, give me a consesecond >> no, you slow down. >> our producer was in the room with the video camera. >> i do wonder whether people are going to be like, put that camera down and pay attention. like full time nurse. >> yeah, well, when i'm doing that, they are not my patients. i don't take pictures of my own patients. >> kim, can you open my eyes force me. >> 27-year-old kim was an
3:47 am
exception. >> this is kim, she such a unique patient that she tolerated the ventilator and did not require complete sedation. >> what did she write? >> i feel miserable. as the day went on, she ended up getting more sick and we ordered music therapy for her. >> you think kim's going to make it? >> i think so. she has just such a spark of life, i can't imagine if she has anything to do with it. >> finally, this is mr. crockston, he had the heart strings of every nurse in our unit. >> joel david crockston, the nurse that broke down when she called husband wife to say
3:48 am
goodbye. this was the picture of crocston that worried allen, would it be too painful for his wife to see? then again, hawes usually never sees the families again. >> someone would like to see you. on this day, they did. allen hawes saw sandy crocston again. >> how are you doing? >> this time they held each other. no pictures needed. just thank you. to each other. the cbs overnight news
3:51 am
nyquil severe gives you powerful relief for your worst cold and flu symptoms, on sunday night and every night. nyquil severe. the nighttime, sniffling, sneezing, coughing, aching, stuffy head, best sleep with a cold, medicine. itchy? scratchy? family not getting clean? get charmin ultra strong. it just cleans better, so your family can use less. hello clean bottom! enjoy the go with charmin.
3:52 am
a lot of americans are feeling the squeeze as prices keep going up at the grocery store. fruit and vegetable prices went up by 5% in 2021 according to government figures and our own eyes. now, orange juice could be in shorter supply, making breakfast more expensive as well. cbs has more from florida. >> see all of that, that is all next year's crops right there. >> reporter: at one of the groves he showed up us what a healthy orange tree looks like and what a tree plagued by
3:53 am
citrus greening. >> when you have no roots, no leaves, no fruit. >> reporter: some trees don't die, but produce oranges that are green, and less sugar. not as sweet and harder to sell. that is bad for business. it's safe to assume that most trees here have some degree of it, the telltale sign, the amount of freuit that has falle to the ground. the state produced at its peak a, 244 million boxes of oranges a year. this year, it is forecast to produce 44.5 million. price force orange juice concentrate rose 14% in the last year, amid strong demand in the coronavirus pandemic and the low crop yield will likely drive prices even higher in 2022. >> about 93% of the crop goes in to juice processing. we have seen strong stable demand for florida orange juice but we don't quite have the
3:54 am
production that we had before. >> reporter: the disease is threatening family farms like fiorinas, they first put down roots in lake county florida. s that when you devote your life to. >> yeah, all of our land is citrus and you hear numbers like that and it's devastating. >> reporter: florida's fruit and conveniently table association said that the numbers of harvest has dropped by half. these farmers do not plan to sell but they have diversified what he grows. the cbs overnight news will be right back.
3:55 am
3:56 am
and circumstances of the world than it is today. i believe there are ten phenomenon we are witnessing today that were recorded centuries ago in bible prophecy. (male announcer) join dr. david jeremiah in his new series, "where do we go from here?" on the next episode of "turning point." right here on this station.
3:57 am
scientists have made a spectacular discovery deep in the ocean off the coast of tahiti. >> diving beneath the big blue reveals a sea of color. a magical mountain of color stretching for two miles, hid en until now. >> it's physically a field of huge flowers, coral garden in a way. some of them look like roses. >> some of the rose shaped corals span six feet. but this reef is not like others around the world. for one, it's a lot deeper. between 100-200 feet below the waves. >> it's quite impressive to find such a system in a very good state of health in that depth.
3:58 am
> while most coral is damaged by over furnishing, pollution and climate change, this floral forest looks untouched. >> i think it has managed to dodge the bullet. >> ocean experts now want to learn the secrets of the coral's resilience. >> there gives me hopes that there's systems in the world like this. >> with so many of the world's water waiting to be explored who knows what else the divers can discover. >> and that's the overnight news for this wednesday. reporting for the nation's capitol i'm jan crawford. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
3:59 am
this is cbs news flash, i'm tom hanson in new york. house speaker er nancy pelosi w seek re-election. she has not said if she plans to run again for house speaker. if re-elected it would be her 19th term in congress. elton john is saying goodbye to his yellow brick tour in texas. the music tested positive for c texas shows this w he expects to pick back up in arkansas this weekend. and take a look at this, the moment a california dog was rescued after swimming a little too far from shore, 600 yards to be exact. l.a. county lifeguards sprung in
4:00 am
to action, bringing the paddling pooch to solid ground. for more news, download the cbs news app on your device or it's wednesday, january 26th, 2022. this is the "cbs morning news." no reason for panic. ukraine is offering up a different message to the world as russia continues to threaten an invasion. it feels like a war zone when there are fires everywhere, and it's a battle. >> pushed to the brink. we go inside a hospital overwhelmed with covid patients as concern grows about a new omicron subvariant. breaking his silence, a capitol police officer who led rioters away from the senate chamber on january 6 gives his first interview since the attack. good morning, and good to be with you. i'm anne-marie green.
78 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
KPIX (CBS) Television Archive Television Archive News Search ServiceUploaded by TV Archive on