#CBSN10: January 13
Check out the top stories on CBSNews.com for January 13, 2015.
Check out the top stories on CBSNews.com for January 13, 2015.
The video, taken after the January 7 Charlie Hebdo attack, shows brothers Said and Cherif Kouachi calmly reloading their automatic weapons, opening fire at police and escaping. Bob Orr reports.; The stark beauty of El Capitan always seizes the gaze of sightseers in Yosemite Valley. But two small dots on the granite wall are the focus of the attention now. Climbers Kevin Jorgenson and Tommy Caldwell are near the end of a climb long thought impossible. John Blackstone reports.
CBSN talks to former assistant attorney general Judith Beals about Mark Wahlberg's plea for a pardon in his conviction from 25 years ago for a racially-charged attack on two Vietnamese boys in Boston.
A predominantly Muslim community in Paterson, New Jersey was one of the areas under police surveillance after the September 11, 2001 terror attacks. New York Police Department officers monitored mosques, restaurants and schools, in what the department said was an effort to root out potential terrorists. But in court Tuesday, Muslim groups argued their constitutional rights were being violated. Anna Werner reports.
The FBI says someone was planning to kill Speaker of the House John Boehner. CBS News has learned that the FBI arrested a bartender at a country club that Boehner frequents. CBS News congressional correspondent Nancy Cordes tells CBSN's Jeff Glor about the attempt to kill Boehner.
The stark beauty of El Capitan always seizes the gaze of sightseers in Yosemite Valley. But two small dots on the granite wall are the focus of the attention now. Climbers Kevin Jorgenson and Tommy Caldwell are near the end of a climb long thought impossible. John Blackstone reports.
Hundreds of rush-hour passengers were trapped inside a Washington Metro train as it filled with thick smoke Monday. They were eventually escorted off by firefighters, hundreds of feet through a dark smoke-filled tunnel. Chip Reid reports.
The Labor Department says job openings rose 2.9 percent to 4.97 million, the most since January 2001. Anthony Mason reports.
It's estimated Texas could lose 140,000 direct and indirect energy jobs by midyear if oil stays around $55 a barrel. Meanwhile, the cheaper gas is saving many businesses big bucks. Manuel Bojorquez reports.
In its rampage across northern Nigeria, the militant group Boko Haram has used child suicide bombers in two attacks just this weekend. Sources tell CBS News they think it signals a desperation on the part of Boko Haram. Debora Patta reports.
At the memorial service for the three officers held at police headquarters, President Francois Hollande said they represent the diversity of France. Elizabeth Palmer reports.
The video, taken after the January 7 Charlie Hebdo attack, shows brothers Said and Cherif Kouachi calmly reloading their automatic weapons, opening fire at police and escaping. Bob Orr reports.
CBS News chief medical correspondent Dr. Jon LaPook and medical contributor Dr. Tara Narula discuss how mental health plays a role in heart health.
CBS News chief medical correspondent Dr. Jon LaPook and medical contributor Dr. Tara Narula talk about the measles vaccine and how effective vaccines can be years after the drug is administered.
TSA has screened more than 1 million passengers at U.S. airports for 17 days in a row, unheard of numbers since pandemic started.
Do the research; a good diet may not be good for you. U.S. World and News Report News released the best diets of 2015. But CBS News chief medical correspondent Dr. Jon LaPook and medical contributor Dr. Tara Narula give advice on the best diet for you.
CBS News chief medical correspondent Dr. Jon LaPook and medical contributor Dr. Tara Narula discuss the latest flu outbreak and how likely you are to get the virus.
CBS News chief medical correspondent Dr. Jon LaPook and medical contributor Dr. Tara Narula discuss a new study that uses bugs to harvest bacteria.
President Obama sat down with Democratic and Republican leaders in Congress today to look for areas where they could work together in 2015.
Dylan Polin, a 23-year-old from Norwood who teaches the acrobatic street sport of parkour flipped over the Red Line tracks in Boston to show off his skills. MTA called his act incredibly foolish. Transit police are looking into it
CBS News has confirmed that Amedy Coulibaly, the gunman who killed a French police officer and four hostages at a Jewish market, was on a U.S. terror watch list -- but not on the no-fly list. CBS News correspondent Elaine Cobbe reports.
After observing a minute's silence on Tuesday, the French Parliament sang "La Marseillaise," the country's national anthem.
Ahmed Aboutaleb, the Muslim mayor of Rotterdam, the Netherlands' second largest city, is getting attention for saying that Muslims who "do not like freedom can pack up your bags and leave."
A fire early Tuesday morning in an underground construction site near New York City's Penn Station was deemed suspicious by the FDNY. The fire resulted in delays for commuters on the Long Island Raid Road and the city's subways. Nearly 150 firefighters responded to the blaze, with two sustaining minor injuries.
Ashlynn Marracino, a 16-year-old from Southern California, sends a balloon to the heavens on her late father's birthday every year. This year, a message came back, along with some other items, from a stranger almost 450 miles away. Stacey Butler from CBS Los Angeles reports.