0 good morning everyone, i am ayman mohyeldin. it is 2 am here in new york, 9 am in ukraine where we are continuing to following the latest in ukraine. it is now the second day of war in that country, where sirens have already been activated in the capital city of kyiv. telling residents to shelter immediately, those in the city had already been hearing explosions throughout the night. and this video, posted to the adviser of the military of ukraine. shows the damage of a residential building in kyiv after a russian was shot down. they re working to keep out the fire, and save residents. meanwhile, they are working to deter the russian army as they are closing in on kyiv. this is showing a bridge about 15 miles outside of the city that forces , to block easy axes to the casual. the most recent news are killed 315 injured. but that was from hours ago. and unfortunately, it s likely much higher. all of this comes as president biden is said to meet with fellow navy though heads of
Amy’s Donuts, whose more than 100 varieties range from the traditional to the exotic, will add a second location next year in fast-growing northern Colorado Springs while it keeps its
reporter: they searched her home, and later sat her down in an interview room and hooked her up to a polygraph machine. asked her questions like this one, among others. reporter: did you go to big lakes park that day? um, no. reporter: amy also denied that she shot liz. again and again. but she failed the polygraph. still, something didn t add up. when that local detective arrived at amy s place right after the shooting, he felt the hood of her car. ice cold, hadn t been driven for a while. and the neighbor said amy was home all afternoon. so was amy so nervous she blew the polygraph? or was something else going on? detective avis went to see liz at the hospital, his recorder rolling. i feel like it s just written on the wall what it is. it s amy shot you with dave s gun, isn t it? pretty much, that s what i m thinking. dave still doesn t think so. reporter: you seemed like the friendly cop. or the dumb one, i ll be whatever she wanted, as long as she kept telling u
been able to hind behind row, either you re for it or against it. so in your view, when should abortion be legal or be available? in my case when you believe in the sanctity of life, you want abortions to be eliminated from the landscape if you can. you re also in the context of reasonability. the fact is, regardless of any one individual, maybe in the point of view of mine or amy s, you re not going to settle it in a homogenized way. that needs to reflect itself throughout the states what everyone s opinion is, whatever you re trying to do politically, why try to do it at the national level? we generally don t do things well here anyway. on something as contentious as this, it seems like it would make common sense, it would be practical, not political, to send it back to the states and let every state do what they want to do and live with it, and if you don t like it, then go to work within those legislatures.
0 than 8500. fair to say, pam bozanich is not one of them. life in prison for those two is just fine. i hope they live a long, long life. this sunday, the fate of roe v. wade. life is so precious, and these babies have a chance now. the supreme court signals it s ready to allow an abortion ban at 15 weeks. is it going to weaken or overturn roe v. wade? is it really an issue about choice? why is 15 weeks not enough time? lawyers defending roe argue that fetal viability should remain the standard. mississippi s ban on abortion two months before viability is flatly unconstitutional under decades of precedent. and liberal justices warn of damage to the court s reputation. my guests this morning, democratic senator amy klobuchar and republican senator mike braun. plus omicron. we re going to fight this variant with science and speed, not chaos and confusion. new travel restrictions amid concerns about transmissibility and how effective vaccines will be. because of th