here at all saints food pantry here in detroit, which could lose a third of its annual budget. there could become a point where we don t have any more food to give. reporter: divine telling us she relies on this food. her family already struggling with high inflation. the cost of living went up. yeah. a lot. so it s hard. reporter: a potential default could also put federal benefits for veterans at risk. we met shannon galloway whose husband chris served in iraq and afghanistan. since he died 14 years ago, the galloways have relied on payments from the government. those benefits literally are how we pay our mortgage, how we pay our mortgage, how we pay our utilities, how we pay daily cost of living. reporter: so what would your message be to the leaders in washington? this isn t just politics to us. this is our family. this is our daily life. and kayla, we re now hearing there will be another meeting this week in washington? lester, president biden moments ago cal
around here that can be just about anyone. they are concerned enough they ve called an emergency shrimp season and oyster season. basically what they re saying is, get out there, get your boats out there, get everything you can. because it s not if the oil comes in, it s when the oil comes in. sam champion, abc news, venice, louisiana. a kentucky coal mine where two miners have been killed has a long history of safety violations. a roof collapse about four miles inside the mine late wednesday killed both men. federal inspection records show the mine was cited 840 times for safety violations since january of last year. during that time, 11 orders to close portions of the mine were issued. the dean of harvard law school has denounced a private e-mail written by a student that got around on the internet. the boston globe reports stephanie grace, the student editor of the harvard law review, wrote i absolutely do not rule out the possibility that african-americans are gene
forecast. downpours and flooding from texas to wisconsin. severe weather in the twin cities, des moines, st. louis, little rock and houston. gusty winds for the southwest. heavy snow from montana to colorado. and scattered showers in florida. 80s in miami, new orleans, and atlanta. high 70s along much of the east coast. 82 in detroit. 77 in chicago. 75 in kansas city. just shy of 60 in seattle and portland. 56 in boise. 48 in salt lake city. you know how i always question on this show whether or not something is real or photo shopped. this time there is no doubt about it. take a look at these. a swedish artist is turning images of everyday life into quirky works of art like this piece called what a drag. eric johanson uses photo shop to bend loads and distort the human body like this man, ironing his clothes while still in them. awesome. he says he starts by taking a picture of an everyday situation, then giving it a mind-boggling twist. that is cool. it is.