1/10/12
CBS News:
Alaska town gets help digging out of snowy prison
The town of Cordova, Alaska is quite simply buried. CBS News correspondent Ben Tracy reports a record 18 feet of snow has already fallen this winter - six feet in just the past few days. It's reached crisis level, and on Sunday, Cordova's mayor declared a state of emergency and called in the National Guard.
Can Mitt Romney be stopped?
Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney looks as if he's about to trounce his GOP rivals in the New Hampshire primary today, but you wouldn't know it by listening to him on the campaign trail.
Romney has for weeks held a double-digit lead over all of his competitors in New Hampshire. If he wins, Romney will have set a milestone: No other non-incumbent Republican has ever won both the Iowa caucuses and the New Hampshire primary.
N.C. sterilization panel: Victims deserve $50K
People sterilized against their will under a discredited North Carolina state program should each be paid $50,000, a task force voted Tuesday, marking the first time a state has moved to compensate victims of a once-common public health practice called eugenics.
CBS News:
Alaska town gets help digging out of snowy prison
The town of Cordova, Alaska is quite simply buried. CBS News correspondent Ben Tracy reports a record 18 feet of snow has already fallen this winter - six feet in just the past few days. It's reached crisis level, and on Sunday, Cordova's mayor declared a state of emergency and called in the National Guard.
Can Mitt Romney be stopped?
Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney looks as if he's about to trounce his GOP rivals in the New Hampshire primary today, but you wouldn't know it by listening to him on the campaign trail.
Romney has for weeks held a double-digit lead over all of his competitors in New Hampshire. If he wins, Romney will have set a milestone: No other non-incumbent Republican has ever won both the Iowa caucuses and the New Hampshire primary.
N.C. sterilization panel: Victims deserve $50K
People sterilized against their will under a discredited North Carolina state program should each be paid $50,000, a task force voted Tuesday, marking the first time a state has moved to compensate victims of a once-common public health practice called eugenics.
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