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2020

Новости за 21.06.2020

Developing world sees surge of coronavirus cases

CBSNews.com 

CBS News senior foreign correspondent Elizabeth Palmer reports on growing global fears about the coronavirus' impact on developing countries, even as Europe begins to reopen.



Open: This is "Face the Nation," June 21

CBSNews.com 

Today on "Face the Nation," alarming new increases in the number of COVID cases around the world as President Trump struggles to get the country -- and his campaign -- back on track.

Gerald Bostock on SCOTUS' landmark LGBTQ ruling

CBSNews.com 

A plaintiff in one of the discrimination cases decided this week by the Supreme Court speaks about the message sent by the justices with regards to protecting the civil rights of workers.

Gerald Bostock on the Supreme Court’s LGBTQ decision

CBSNews.com 

Gerald Bostock, a plaintiff in one of the job discrimination cases decided this past week by the Supreme Court, speaks about the message of hope sent by the high court with regards to protecting workers from being fired because they are gay or transgender.

The historic tension between black and blue

CBSNews.com 

Police officials, activists and researchers discuss relations between law enforcement and black communities, and how demands for wholesale changes in policing – to "defund the police" – may shift responsibility from cops to social services

Apple’s Tim Cook on a “giant leap” in social progress

CBSNews.com 

Tim Cook has been the CEO of Apple for nearly a decade now, and still carries on an Apple tradition: their Worldwide Developers Conference, which starts tomorrow (though in an age of social distancing, this marquee event will be virtual). "60 Minutes" correspondent John Dickerson talks with Cook about societal changes, corporate responsibility, and the role of smartphone cameras in helping advance social progress.

"Sunday Morning" Full Episode 6/21

CBSNews.com 

Hosted by Jane Pauley. In our cover story, Pauley talks with Governor Andrew Cuomo about how he marshaled New Yorkers to “flatten the curve” of the coronavirus pandemic. Plus: Ted Koppel looks at how some small business owners are trying to weather the economic storm of COVID-19; John Dickerson interviews Apple CEO Tim Cook; Tracy Smith talks with singer-songwriter Yusuf Islam about revisiting songs that he originally recorded as Cat Stevens; Michelle Miller explores the heritage of black cowboys... Читать дальше...

Passage: Voices of inspiration

CBSNews.com 

"Sunday Morning" remembers the British wartime singer Vera Lynn, and ambassador and presidential sibling Jean Kennedy Smith

Preserving the traditions of black cowboys

CBSNews.com 

After the Civil War, African Americans played a key role in settling the West, and their heritage is honored by black cowboys and rodeo riders today

Yusuf revisits the songs of Cat Stevens

CBSNews.com 

The singer-songwriter has re-recorded his iconic 1970 album "Tea For the Tillerman," with the perspective that 50 years of living can bring

Small businesses fighting to survive the pandemic

CBSNews.com 

Economists estimate more than 100,000 small businesses have already shut permanently since the COVID-19 outbreak. Others are struggling under staggering losses. "Sunday Morning" special contributor Ted Koppel talks with small business owners and independent operators about the pressures they are facing, and the optimism that is keeping them going.

Black cowboys saddle up

CBSNews.com 

After the Civil War, black cowboys played a key role in settling the West, and their heritage is honored by African American cowboys and rodeo riders today. "CBS This Morning: Saturday" co-host Michelle Miller talked with members of the Compton Cowboys, a Los Angeles group of riders who take to the streets of South Central on horseback; and with participants in the Bill Pickett Invitational Rodeo, named for the famed African American Wild West Show star.

Letters to Dad

CBSNews.com 

Back in 2011, Barry Lampke secretly installed a mailbox in the woods of Geprags Park in Hinesburg, Vermont specifically for the deposit of mail addressed to “Dad.” Word got out, and ever since, strangers have shared hundreds of messages of love to dads gone by. Steve Hartman reports.





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