smi24.net
CBSNews.com
Сентябрь
2018

Новости за 09.09.2018

Open: This is "Face the Nation," September 9

CBSNews.com 

This week on "Face the Nation," moderator Margaret Brennan interviews Vice President Mike Pence, Sen. Mark Warner, DNC Chair Tom Perez and RNC Chair Ronna McDaniel. Plus, Mark Leibovich of the New York Times joins our panel to talk about his new book on the future of football.

Nature: Black bears

CBSNews.com 

We leave you this Sunday Morning among the black bears at the Alligator River National Wildlife Refuge in East Lake, North Carolina. Videographer: Carl Mrozek.

Remembering 9/11: Wind chimes for the silenced

CBSNews.com 

In Shanksville, Pa., at the site of the crash of Flight 93 on September 11, 2001, wind chimes now remember the 40 passengers and crew who brought down the plane hijacked by terrorists and directed towards Washington, D.C. Chip Reid reports on the unveiling of the "Tower of Voices" at the Flight 93 National Memorial.

Bob Woodward on "Fear" in the Trump White House

CBSNews.com 

Washington Post reporter Bob Woodward has covered nine White Houses going back to President Richard Nixon and Watergate. His latest book, "Fear: Trump in the White House," is revelatory in its look at chaos and discord within the current administration as witnessed by those inside the West Wing. In his first TV interview for his new book, Woodward talks with CBS News national security correspondent David Martin about the behavior of President Donald Trump and his staff that, his book suggests, may... Читать дальше...

Calendar: Week of September 10

CBSNews.com 

From remembrances of lives lost on 9/11 to the Global Climate Action Summit, "Sunday Morning" takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead. Jane Pauley reports.

Rodgers & Hammerstein's musical treasures

CBSNews.com 

Mo Rocca looks back at one of Broadway's greatest songwriting teams, Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II, who created such classic shows as "Oklahoma!," "South Pacific," "The King and I" and "The Sound of Music." He also talks with Tony Award-winner Kelli O'Hara, today's most celebrated interpreter of Rodgers & Hammerstein. (This story was originally broadcast on June 10, 2018.)



Passage: Remembering Burt Reynolds

CBSNews.com 

The easy-going star of "Smokey and the Bandit" and "Deliverance," who died this week at 82, was one of Hollywood's most popular and enduring actors

Milepost: National Museum of Brazil destroyed by fire

CBSNews.com 

A Rio de Janiero treasure trove of history was reduced to ashes this past week, when fire tore through the National Museum of Brazil, destroying approximately 90 percent of its 20 million artifacts. Jane Pauley reports.

Tearing down a wall

CBSNews.com 

A predominately black neighborhood in Summerville, South Carolina, was torn apart when a white resident, Annie Caddell, put up a Confederate flag. It stirred a public fight, including the erection of a wall around her property to block views of the flag. But after Caddell suffered a heart attack, she also had a change of heart, and took the flag down, as Steve Hartman reported a few months ago. Hartman has now returned to Summerville to follow up on new developments in the story about restoring a community.

Alberto Giacometti's masterpieces

CBSNews.com 

He pushed, prodded, and gouged his sculptures into existence. But for this hard-living, chain-smoking legend of 20th century art, the goal was more impossible than beauty; Alberto Giacometti hoped to make his artwork feel, however faintly, alive. His ragged, bone-thin statues and haunting portraits are just some of the works in "Giacometti," a sweeping retrospective at New York's Guggenheim Museum. Tony Dokoupil reports.

Bearing an off-beat name

CBSNews.com 

A correspondent by the name of Susan Spencer explores why more and more parents today are gifting their babies with less-traditional names, from North West to Moxie Crimefighter Jilette. She talks with Michael Ayer, whose son is named Billion Ayer. (Originally broadcast on September 24, 2017.)

Almanac: The day Japan bombed Oregon

CBSNews.com 

On September 9, 1942, the U.S. mainland was firebombed by an enemy pilot. Jane Pauley reports on a little-known chapter of World War II history.

Who Killed Fabio?

CBSNews.com 

A famed Los Angeles hairstylist is killed in his backyard - was it a robbery gone wrong by thugs called the knock-knock burglars or a twisted plot no one could believe? CBS News correspondent Michelle Miller investigates.





СМИ24.net — правдивые новости, непрерывно 24/7 на русском языке с ежеминутным обновлением *