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CBSNews.com
Сентябрь
2021

Новости за 30.09.2021

How the pandemic is making the child care crisis worse

CBSNews.com 

The high cost of child care and worker shortages are causing problems for American families and the U.S. economy. CBS MoneyWatch reporter Megan Cerullo joins CBSN's Tanya Rivero with more on the story.

Loan forgiveness program causes frustration

CBSNews.com 

The Public Service Loan Forgiveness Program was meant to wipe clean students' debt in return for a decade of public service. But in practice, a group of military lawyers tell Lesley Stahl they got lost in a maze of bureaucracy. 60 Minutes reports, Sunday.



Couple marries at closed Canadian border so wife's family could attend

CBSNews.com 

Karen Mahoney, who lives in New York, used to visit her family in Quebec every week. But during the pandemic, the borders closed – and it threw a wrench in her wedding plans. She didn't think her family would be able to attend her nuptials, but then she found a unique wedding location.

Lawmakers grill Facebook over teen mental health concerns

CBSNews.com 

One of Facebook's top executives, Antigone Davis, is testifying before the Senate subcommittee on Consumer Protection, Product Safety, and Data Security on issues including Instagram's impact on the mental health of teenage users. Clinical psychologist Ramani Durvasula, author of "Don't You Know Who I Am?": How to Stay Sane in an Era of Narcissism, Entitlement, and Incivility," joins CBSN to discuss social media and teen mental health.

60 Minutes Archive: The Lord God Bird

CBSNews.com 

From 2005, Ed Bradley reports on the Ivory-Billed Woodpecker, a bird whose nickname was derived from, "Lord God, what a bird," a common reaction to its beauty. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service declared the bird extinct this week.

Senate expected to pass bill to prevent government shutdown

CBSNews.com 

The Senate is expected to pass a bill to prevent a government shutdown hours before the deadline. CBS News' Debra Alfarone reports from Washington, and then Nicholas Wu, a reporter covering Congress for Politico, joins CBSN's Tanya Rivero with more on that plus the battle over the debt ceiling and President Biden's budget package.

Report: CIA considered kidnapping, killing WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange

CBSNews.com 

After a major intelligence leak, the CIA looked into the possibility of abducting or even assassinating WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, according to an investigation by Yahoo News. Yahoo New chief investigative correspondent Michael Isikoff, who co-wrote the story, spoke with Anne-Marie Green and Vladimir Duthiers on CBSN about what interviews with 30 former U.S. intelligence and national security officials revealed. They also discussed the response from former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who was CIA director at the time.

The number of wild boars traipsing around Europe has grown

CBSNews.com 

The number of wild boars has exploded across Europe, and some cities are working to curb their wild boar population. Wild boars traipsing through Italy, Poland and Germany have been caught on camera in recent years. "Even walking to school ... has become dangerous here," Nunzia Cammino, who lives in Rome, told Reuters.

WorldView: Deadly prison riot in Ecuador

CBSNews.com 

More than 100 people are dead after a massive prison fight in Ecuador. Former London police officer Wayne Couzens gets a life sentence for the murder of Sarah Everard. Beijing announces COVID-19 restrictions for the Winter Olympics. And a court in Canada upholds compensation for Indigenous families. Ian Lee joins "CBSN AM" from London with a roundup of global headlines.





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