
Longtime CBS correspondent Scott Pelley lived many workers fantasy: Telling your boss off
NEW YORK (AP) — As if Scott Pelley’s years in a glamorous, globetrotting, seven-figure dream job weren’t enough, he’s pulled off one more thing to stir your envy: a cutting takedown of his boss that went loudly public. The “60 Minutes” correspondent’s searing rebuke of CBS management this week, in which he questioned his bosses’ credentials and motives, may have ended in his firing, but amounted to the sort of mouthing-off that workplace peons typically only fantasize about. to...
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- Longtime CBS correspondent Scott Pelley lived many workers fantasy: Telling your boss off
- Californias slow ballot count makes it a target for critics. It doesnt mean elections are rigged
- Copilot of United jet that struck a light pole realized flight was low, but not in time, report says
- Murder charge dropped for Arkansas sheriff nominee who killed daughters alleged abuser
- Homicide convictions reversed for Colorado paramedics who injected ketamine into Elijah McClain
Senate in overnight session as Republicans debate limits on $1.8B Trump settlement
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate is working overnight to pass legislation that would fund President Donald Trump’s immigration enforcement agencies as Democrats and some Republicans have tried to add language to permanently block Trump from creating a $1. 776 billion settlement fund. Earlier in the day, Republicans turned back a Democratic effort to block the fund, which would compensate the president's allies who say they have been politically persecuted. But there were potentially more to as...
Read MorePolitics
- Senate in overnight session as Republicans debate limits on $1.8B Trump settlement
- Graham Platner to hold Maine rally with Rep. Ro Khanna as scandals shake up campaign
- US sanctions Cuban President Miguel Daz-Canel in latest move to pressure islands leadership
- Republicans debate limits on $1.8B Trump settlement in late-night Senate session
- Californias slow ballot count makes it a target for critics. It doesnt mean elections are rigged
Wildfires are making the US smoggy again, reversing progress on cleaner air, study finds
WASHINGTON (AP) — For more than a decade, the United States dramatically reduced its national smog levels, but since 2015 smoke from increasingly larger wildfires is reversing that clean-up trend and making the air dirtier and deadlier, a new study finds. Scientists say climate change deserves much, but not all, of the blame. The national smog level dropped by 11% from 2003 to 2015 as strict federal regulations on power plants, cars and diesel engines kicked in. But since then, as wildfires...
Read MoreScience News
- Wildfires are making the US smoggy again, reversing progress on cleaner air, study finds
- Screwworm fly detected in Texas decades after cattle threat was largely eradicated in US
- Tools to fight hantavirus show promise despite limited funding. Now researchers hope to continue
- SpaceXs IPO is set to be the biggest ever and could make Elon Musk a trillionaire
- Canadian government endorses a plan to move whales from shuttered Marineland park to US and Spain

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