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Tailored pieces feel refreshed with new cuts and a casual spirit that can take to the streets.
Pyongyang is flashing more military might in opposition of Washington-Seoul combined exercises.
From a statement choker to a pair of strappy slingbacks, these are the accents you’ll be reaching for all season.
The White House won’t release emails from his pseudonym accounts. Why?
Set out on a journey through the volcanic landscapes of the Canary Islands with fearless shapes, feathered pieces and untamed styles from the fall collections.
Gensler bids to match the losing legal record of Lina Khan’s FTC.
Gain insight on Orsted, and more in the latest Market Talks covering ESG Impact Investing.
The best releases, trends and openings to discover right now.
Corrections & Amplifications for the edition of Aug. 31, 2023
Cozy up in furry (and faux-furry) shoes that will have everyone following your tracks.
The Australian actor, who stars in Apple TV+’s Physical, on “cult”-like fitness classes, nose breathing and teaming up again with Melissa McCarthy.
Art dealer Jay Jopling is bringing his brand of British brashness to New York City with a new Upper East Side outpost of his White Cube gallery.
Youthful dramatics play out against the backdrop of the fashion capital, with performance-worthy clothing rehearsing for its own star turn.
No amount of money can make retirement worry-free, but $5 million might come close. Retirees share their stories.
When it came time to hire a new CEO, the luxury fashion house made a surprisingly bold choice in Leena Nair.
Democrats in Sacramento try again to override the voters and the state and U.S. constitutions.
Australian stock futures were pointing to an uncertain open for the S&P/ASX 200.
A judge held Rudy Giuliani liable for defamation against two Georgia election workers, ordering him and his business to pay more than $130,000 in legal fees.
Even with a teacher discount, one Texas mom spent almost $1,000 buying supplies for her two daughters and her own classroom.
Senator Mitch McConnell appeared to freeze up during an appearance in front of reporters Wednesday. The incident came just weeks after the same thing happened to the top Republican in the Senate. Scott MacFarlane has the latest.
Here's a look at the top stories making headlines on the "CBS Evening News with Norah O'Donnell."
A Delta flight from Italy to Atlanta encountered severe turbulence as it was about 40 miles from its destination, sending 11 people to the hospital. Passengers and crew members were among the injured. Kris Van Cleave reports.
Headteachers say it is ‘unsustainable’ to expect schools to keep stepping in to support desperate families One in four teachers in England brought in food for hungry pupils out of concern for their welfare, a survey has revealed, as headteachers said it was “unsustainable” to expect schools to keep stepping in to support desperate families. Just days before the start of the new school term, more than a third (35%) of the 9,000 teachers who took part in the poll said their school regularly provided food for children and their families, rising to almost half in the most deprived areas of England. Continue reading...
Idalia was downgraded to a tropical storm and had moved into Georgia by Wednesday evening. The Weather Channel meteorologist Mike Seidel looks at the storm's path as it moved toward South Carolina.
Idalia's record storm surge hit the small community of Steinhatchee, Florida, particularly hard. The town was submerged as the storm made landfall. Jason Allen reports.
The cost of school supplies has risen nearly 24% over the last two years. Janet Shamlian reports on how the increase in impacting families and what they can do to find deals.
The challenge has nothing to do with the fatal implosion of the Titan submersible in June. It hinges instead on a federal law and a pact with Great Britain to treat the wreck as a memorial to those who died and to prevent entry into its hull.
In our news wrap Wednesday, the White House announced a grant of $95 million to strengthen the electrical grid on the island of Maui following the wildfires there, a federal judge ruled Rudy Giuliani defamed two Georgia election workers by accusing them of ballot fraud in the 2020 vote and the U.S. says intelligence shows Putin is trying to buy weapons from North Korea for the war in Ukraine.
For the second time this summer, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell froze up while answering questions during a press conference. The Republican stared blankly for about 30 seconds Wednesday afternoon in Kentucky. There was a similar moment for the Senator on Capitol Hill last month. Congressional Correspondent Lisa Desjardins reports.
The swimmer developed amebic meningitis infection after swimming in Lake Lyndon B. Johnson in August.
Police west of Toronto on Wednesday warned drivers to keep their car windows closed after a truck spilled crates carrying five million bees onto a road. Halton Regional Police said they received a call around 6:15 a.m. reporting the bee crates had come loose from a truck and spilled onto Guelph Line, north of Dundas Street, in Burlington, Ontario, just west of Toronto. It was "quite the scene," Const. Ryan Anderson said. PIGS RUN LOOSE ON ST. PAUL-AREA HIGHWAY AFTER SEMITRAILER CRASH "Crates were literally on the road and swarms of bees were flying around," he said. "The initial beekeeper that was on scene was apparently stung a few times." The scene prompted police to warn drivers to close their windows as they passed by and for pedestrians to avoid the area. About an hour after police put out a notice on social media, several beekeepers were in touch with police offering to help. Six or seven beekeepers eventually arrived at the scene, Anderson said. BEES SWARM ARIZONA FAMILY DURING PHOTO SHOOT, STING MOTHER MORE THAN 75 TIMES AS SHE PROTECTS KIDS By around 9:15 a.m., police said most of the five million bees had been safely collected and the crates were being hauled away. Some crates had been left behind for the uncollected bees to return to them on their own. A colony of honeybees in summer has around 50,000 to 80,000 bees, according to the Canadian Honey Council, a national association of beekeepers.
Nearly 170 migrants returned to Senegal on Wednesday after spending almost a week in limbo on a Spanish rescue boat. Deputy Mayor Lamine Ndiaye confirmed 168 migrants were safely transferred from a Spanish vessel to Senegalese authorities. They were expected to arrive in Dakar by sea Wednesday evening. Since Thursday, the migrants had been stuck aboard a Spanish Civil Guard vessel near the northwest African nation of Mauritania after authorities there refused to let them disembark, according to Spanish media. MIGRANTS TRAPPED ON TUNISIA-LIBYA BORDER TRANSFERRED BACK TO TUNISIA AFTER FACING DANGEROUS CONDITIONS The Civil Guard is one of two national police forces in Spain. For years, it has worked with local authorities in Mauritania and Senegal to try to prevent migrants from attempting to reach Spain’s Canary Islands, an archipelago in the Atlantic Ocean off the northwest coast of Africa. The crew on the Tagus River Civil Guard boat spent days at sea with the survivors, and at multiple points fired gunshots into the air to quell riot attempts, according to a post shared by the account of the union representing Civil Guard members on X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter. In recent months there has been a surge of migrants departing from Senegal, who must navigate north past Mauritania to reach the Canaries. Mauritanian authorities declined to comment on why the migrants were barred from disembarking on its shores. International maritime law mandates that any person found in distress at sea must be rescued and brought to the nearest place of safety, and that asylum seekers should not be forcibly returned to a country where they might face persecution. MEDITERRANEAN NATION FACES CEMETERY CHAOS AS HUNDREDS OF BODIES WASH ASHORE In a statement Tuesday, the Spanish Commission for Refugees (CEAR) asked Spanish authorities not to bring the migrants back to Senegal, since "the current political and social situation in Senegal is very delicate and could put these people at risk." Tensions have recently run high in Senegal, where a popular opposition leader's arrest in July spurred violent unrest. Tens of thousands of people across West Africa board rickety wooden boats bound for Europe every year. Many seek to escape political unrest, youth unemployment and worsening conditions for fishing and farming. The route from West Africa to Spain is one of the world’s most dangerous. Nearly 1,000 migrants died while trying to reach Spain by sea in the first six months of 2023, says Spanish rights group Walking Borders.
Maui's mayor told CBS News he couldn't say who was "responsible for communicating" with the state's head of emergency management.
One of the reporters who works at the small Kansas newspaper that was raided by authorities earlier this month filed a federal lawsuit against the police chief Wednesday.
Hurricane Idalia made landfall Wednesday blasting Florida with winds near 125 miles an hour and a wall of water that caused heavy flooding. Thousands chose to get out of harm's way, while others hunkered down for the first major storm to strike the state this year. So far, officials reported two rain-related traffic deaths. Geoff Bennett reports.
The United States, the United Kingdom, South Korea and Japan are urging North Korea to halt arms negotiations with Russia following revelations Russian and North Korean talks on a weapons sale are advancing.
New York Attorney General Letitia James raised the allegation in a lawsuit seeking $250 million and sanctions that would halt the Trump Organization's operations in New York.
The Justice Department is seeking a 33-year prison sentence for the 39-year-old Tarrio, who's from Miami. That's nearly twice the length of the longest prison term so far among hundreds of Capitol riot prosecutions.
FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell is heading to Florida to assess Hurricane Idalia's damage first-hand. Before departing Washington, she joined Amna Nawaz to discuss the federal response.
In the last two years, six countries across western and central Africa suffered what the UN has called an epidemic of coups. That number is now seven. Wednesday, soldiers in Gabon seized power immediately after election results were announced. Gabon is an oil-rich country and one of France's most important allies in Africa. Nick Schifrin discussed more with Oge Onubogu of the Wilson Center.