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Новости за 21.03.2021

New federal rules look to inject life into housing market

CBSNews.com 

Federal regulators are considering a shift away from rules requiring a 20 percent down payment for government-backed home loans. Rising mortgage rates and fewer foreclosed properties selling at bargain prices have slowed the steep recovery in the housing market. Vicente Arenas reports.

Obama: “Future of Afghanistan must be decided by Afghans”

CBSNews.com 

President Barack Obama’s plan to remove all combat troops from Afghanistan by the end of 2016 hinges on the next Afghan president signing a security agreement this summer. Without the agreement, all U.S. troops would come home by end of the year. Major Garrett reports.

Egypt extends presidential vote due to low turnout

CBSNews.com 

The outcome of Egypt's presidential election has been known from the start, with Abdul Fattah al-Sisi expected to win a landslide victory. But the big surprise is that there are no lines at polling stations, a development one opposition leader says is revealing. Clarissa Ward reports.

Destructive North Dakota tornado captured on video

CBSNews.com 

A new batch of severe weather is moving through the South, where flood watches and warnings are in place from Texas to Louisiana. In North Dakota, residents are cleaning up from a tornado that struck with little warning and was captured on video by oil workers as it roared toward their camp. Additional video provided by Ian Livingston. Manuel Bojorquez reports.

Santa Barbara students mourn shooting victims

CBSNews.com 

It was a day of hugs and tears around the campus of University of California, Santa Barbara. Students visited a memorial in front of the Tri Delta sorority, where two women were killed in Friday's shooting rampage, while the college’s student body president is set to address her fellow students at a planned memorial service. Danielle Nottingham reports.

NYPD officers to carry emergency heroin antidote kit

CBSNews.com 

Communities across the country are struggling to control the heroin epidemic and the spike in deadly overdoses. One tool that's gaining ground with police departments is an emergency antidote that's already saving hundreds of lives. And, Alison Harmelin reports, New York City is signing on.

Flash Points: What is the Obama Doctrine?

CBSNews.com 

CBS News Homeland Security Correspondent Bob Orr and CBS News Senior National Security Analyst Juan Zarate discuss the president’s foreign policy ahead of his commencement address to the U.S. Military Academy at West Point.



Santa Barbara shooting victims' parents speak out

CBSNews.com 

Kelly Wang and Johnny Chen, parents of George Chen - one of the victims of Elliot Rodger's shooting spree in Isla Vista, California - added their names in chalk to the memorial that stands in honor of their son and his friends James Hong and David Wong and spoke about their grief.

Born 13-ounces, premature baby defying the odds

CBSNews.com 

A Pennsylvania couple fought to be parents with the use of in vitro fertilization. Their baby was delivered 12 weeks early and weighed 13-ounces. Now, as WHP-TV's Donna Kirker-Morgan reports, "Warrior" is over five months old, weighs over seven pounds and is getting ready to go home.

World's longest TV ad clocks in at 13 hours

CBSNews.com 

If you've got 13 hours to kill you can watch the world's longest TV commercial: Arby's shows you every single minute of how it slow cooks the brisket for its new sandwich. The commercial aired this weekend on a station in Minnesota and snagged the Guinness world record for longest commercial. Jill Wagner has that story and more MoneyWatch headlines.

North Dakota RV park residents talk about tornado

CBSNews.com 

A RV park south of Watford City was destroyed yesterday when a dangerous tornado touched ground. All 15 RVs were destroyed and nine people were injured. Eyewitnesses describe the terror and recovery efforts.

"D-Day's Sunken Secrets": New documentary goes underwater with WWII veterans

CBSNews.com 

More than 5,000 ships stormed France's Normandy beaches on June 6, 1944, to free Europe from the Nazis. Hundreds of those ships sank and created one of the largest underwater archeological sites, and now WWII veterans who fought at Normandy are returning to the site. Doug Hamilton, producer, director and writer behind the NOVA/PBS special talks to the "CBS This Morning" co-hosts about what he found.





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