and the prospects of agreement in the new talks. also tonight. tensions between russia and lithuania following a ban on the transfer of some goods to the russian territory of kaliningrad. some pharmacies run by boots are criticised for telling patients they can no longer have their drugs organised in plastic trays. game, set, match. williams. and serena williams comeback to tennis after almost a year out of the game brings victory in eastbourne. and coming up on the bbc news channel. a great day for the brits at eastbourne as katie boulter and jodie burrage pick up the biggest wins of their careers. welcome to bbc news at ten. the biggest train strike in 30 years has disrupted travel for millions of people. it was planned as the first of three days of action, but rail bosses and the unions now say they will hold new talks tomorrow to try to find common ground. the effects of today s action were severe, with only a fifth of services running across england, scotland and wales.
it strikes and claims it makes neither of which are typical of the category. quoting now from the introductions first line, politics cannot be allowed to impact the use of justice. so, we ll focus on the filing ahead in the chances that a judge will agree with any or all of it given how early in the process it is. as well so examine how the various a surgeons are in fact in the filing, actually stand up to the facts themselves. also tonight, cnn exclusive that the justice department is issued a new subpoena for more january six related documents. katie collins starts us. off what is the president seeking and with this? one, is a third party attorney which is known better as a special master. it can go through these documents if they re appointed. see what has regal privilege, what doesn t. it takes up time though. it s a little unusual that they waited two weeks to file for this. there s a chance for the justice department has already gone through this, the investigators ar
oui’ across western areas and no longer our temperature is particularly high. stilla our temperature is particularly high. still a residual warmth left in lincolnshire and maybe east anglia tomorrow and on friday that s when we are going to see showers moving through glastonbury, so i think that mud potential is rising, or thinking, think that mud potential is rising, orthinking, depending think that mud potential is rising, or thinking, depending on your point of view, of course. so yeah, i think the breeze is certainly on the way and with a bit of luck not too many showers. so, here is the forecast for saturday. low pressure over ireland, it s not moving, it will still be here on sunday and probably monday more or less as well and that basically means an increasing breeze around western areas, showers, and look at these modest temperatures, 16 in plymouth, 16 in belfast, with just approaching 20 degrees in the midlands, where today it will actually be in the high 20s and
Prime minister netanyahu. The fire at senator Bernie Sanders office in vermont. Investigators late today saying it was arson. President Biden In Baltimore touring the site of the deadly bridge collapse and meeting with First Responders and victims families. The countdown to the Total Eclipse, the excitement causing a Business Boom in some of the most unlikely places. And final four fever in cleveland. Will Caitlin Clark and iowa punch their ticket to the championship tonight announcer this is . Announcer this is Nbc Nightly News with lester holt. Good evening, and welcome. A lot of conversations here in the east today began with the words, did you feel it . Well, potentially tens of millions of people did. An unusually strong earthquake felt from maryland to maine. The shocker sending Tall Buildings swaying in philadelphia, new york, and boston among other places, and a new aftershock shortly before we came on the air this evening. At 4. 8 magnitude, folks in the west would likely have
is expected to climb even higher as night continues to grind on there in morocco. sam kiley joins us from morocco. i think perhaps you saw the ceiling above you giving way just a touch. how are things where you re at? reporter: well, jim, you put your finger on what everybody here is most afraid of here in the medina in the old city of marrakech. an environment that certainly not in living memory and for many people, not even in the history books has any recollection of being worried about an earthquake. here you have the direct results of it. it is the collapse of a roof, that blank space there is the night sky above it. you have a roof, a floor, two ceilings, all collapsed down on to the ground here where i m standing. if you look at these buildings, we re in these very narrow streets, these very, very narrow streets. all of these buildings have enormous cracks down the side. the concern obviously is, if any of these cracks give way as a result of future tremors, then the