Fertility treatments on hold. Rumen heartbroken as the coronavirus outbreak prevents them from getting needed treatment to start a family. What you need to know if youre trying to conceive. Mourning a legend. For someone to say hello odonnell he was called the mark twain of american songwriting. Tonight we remember folk legend john prine, who lost his life to covid19. Covid19. And education on parade with their classrooms closed, well introduce you to some creative teachers who found more than a passing way to stay connected with their students. This is the cbs evening news with norah odonnell, reporting from the nations capital. Odonnell good evening, and thank you for joining us. We begin with breaking new we begin with breaking news tonight because the death toll from the pandemic continues to rise, even as there are signs that the spread of the virus is slowing. Are signs that the spread it is an especially cruel contradiction for those who have lost loved ones. In the epicenter of
Good morning from the studio 57 newsroom at cbs headquarters here in new york. Annemarie green is off, im brook silvabraga. President trump is lashing out after the release of an explosive whistleblower complaint that is fueling the impeachment inquiry. It accuses mr. Trump of abusing his power and officials of covering it up. A new npr pbs hour marist poll shows the nation is split over the democrats impeachment investigation. 49 approving, 46 disapproving. Marc liverman is in new york with what were learning about the president s response. Good morning. Reporter good morning, brook. The president compared the person in the white house who supplied information to the whistleblower to spies and suggested that he committed treason. President trump says hes at war following the release of a whistleblower complaint detailing his phone call with ukraines president. Whos the person that gave the whistleblower the information . Reporter in a video of a closed door gathering of u. S. Diplomat
rates still attest. but in silicon valley it made for an epic pay day. it was soon reflected on the balance sheets of its biggest local lenders which was called silicon valley bank. in 2018, svb had about $49 billion on deposit. three years later that same bank had amassed more than $189 billion. that is a gargantuan amount of deposits over a short period of time. dramatic enough to have raised a serious question and an obvious one. what was silicon valley bank gonna do with all that money? even the san francisco bay area, it would be hard to find qualified borrowers for $189 billion. you could not responsibly loan all of that money even if you wanted to. so what would you do with it? that s the question you would have asked if you were paying attention, both from inside svb or the regulatories action. turns out nobody was paying attention. nobody thought to ask for questions. we thought stress test silicon valley bank in the middle of a room. with a narcissism complex who ta
Fertility treatments on hold. Women heartbroken as the coronavirus outbreak prevents them from getting needed treatment to start a family. What you need to know if youre trying to conceive. Mourning a legend. For someone to say hello odonnell he was called the mark twain of american songwriting. Tonight we remember folk legend john prine, who lost his life to covid19. And education on parade with their classrooms closed, well introduce you to some creative teachers who found more than a passing way to stay connected with their students. This is the cbs evening news with norah odonnell, reporting from the nations capital. Odonnell good evening, and thank you for joining us. We begin with breaking news tonight because the death toll from the pandemic continues to rise, even as there are signs that the spread of the virus is slowing. It is an especially cruel contradiction for those who have lost loved ones. In epicenter of the crisis, in new york state, 7,000 people have died in the past
School methodically, door by door, clearing each room, making sure there were no other perpetrators on the loose. And of course getting the surviving kids and Staff Members out of that school to safety. This was the time we learned later when the police had to convince the teachers and the Staff Members behind those doors at the school that they really were the police. The teachers were still trying to protect the students. They did not want to open the doors to somebody who was just saying they were police. Who knows if they really were . And so the police at that time were taking off their badges and shoving their badges up to the windows of the classroom doors and putting their badges under the doors to prove who they were to the teachers who were inside, still trying to protect their kids. Detective jason frank from newtown later told ray rivera of the New York Times, who wrote a really remarkable article interviewing the First Responders who were on scene there, the detective told