Aid official calls for increased global pressure on Israel to work with UN


Philippe Lazzarini, the commissioner-general of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA), called for increased global pressure on Israel to work with the U.N.

In a Friday post on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter, Lazzarini referenced a Thursday order from the International Court of Justice (ICJ) to Israel to facilitate humanitarian aid getting into Gaza. The order also noted that there is no substitute for crossings via land for supplies.

“Member states should exert more pressure to implement the ICJ order,” Lazzarini said in his post. “Those who stopped funding UNRWA should reconsider their decision to allow the Agency to fulfill its mandate including help averting famine.”

Last week, Cindy McCain, executive director of the United Nations’ World Food Programme (WFP), said that there is an urgent need for food in Gaza amid the war occurring there.

“[O]ur obstacles are many,” McCain said in an interview on MSNBC’s “Andrea Mitchell Reports”. “We have to be cleared at every level, the Israelis block the — whether or not we’re cleared … drivers are cleared, we don’t have the access on the roads. We need clear, unfettered access to get in at scale, so we can feed the millions of people who are on the verge of famine.”

The ICJ’s order followed a plea from South Africa for the U.N. high court to do more after an earlier ruling from January has not bettered the current drastic humanitarian situation in Gaza. In their recent order, the ICJ said that Gaza’s situation has gone downhill since January.

“The Court observes with regret that, since then, the catastrophic living conditions of the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip have deteriorated further,” the ICJ said in the order, “in particular in view of the prolonged and widespread deprivation of food and other basic necessities to which the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip have been subjected.”

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Israel declares it will no longer work with UNRWA


Israel declares it will no longer work with UNRWA – CBS News

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This week, Israel announced that it would stop working with the United Nations agency helping Palestinians in Gaza. The agency recently fired about a dozen of its roughly 12,000 employees after they were accused of being involved in the Hamas-led Oct. 7 attack, and has since lost funding from the U.S. and other countries.

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Work begins to reopen Port of Baltimore after Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse


Work begins to reopen Port of Baltimore after Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse – CBS News

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The complex operation to reopen the Port of Baltimore after the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge is underway. Several cranes, including the largest floating crane on the East Coast, recently arrived at the site, and more vital equipment is on the way.

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A solution to the retirement crisis? Americans should work for more years, BlackRock CEO says


Committee proposes raising Social Security retirement age


Committee proposes raising Social Security retirement age

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With Americans living longer and spending more years in retirement, the nation’s changing demographics are “putting the U.S. retirement system under immense strain,” according to BlackRock CEO Larry Fink in his annual shareholder letter. 

One way to fix it, he suggests, is for Americans to work longer before they head into retirement.

“No one should have to work longer than they want to. But I do think it’s a bit crazy that our anchor idea for the right retirement age — 65 years old — originates from the time of the Ottoman Empire,” Fink wrote in his 2024 letter, which largely focuses on the retirement crisis facing the U.S. and other nations as their populations age. 

Fink’s suggestions about addressing the nation’s retirement crisis come amid a debate about the future of Social Security, which will face a funding shortfall in less than a decade. Some Republican lawmakers have proposed raising the retirement age for claiming Social Security benefits, arguing, like Fink, that because Americans are living longer, they should work longer, too. 


How to maximize retirement savings by minimizing taxes

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But that ignores the reality of aging in the workplace, with the AARP finding in a 2022 survey that the majority of workers over 50 say they face ageism at work. And because of ill health or an unexpected job loss, many older Americans stop working before they planned to. In fact, the median age of retirement in the U.S. is 62 — even lower than the “traditional” retirement age of 65. 

Fink is right in saying that the retirement system isn’t working for most households, noted retirement expert and New School of Research professor Teresa Ghilarducci told CBS MoneyWatch. But his assessment that people should work longer misses the mark, she added.

“After a 40-year-old experiment of a voluntary, do-it-yourself-based pension system, half of workers have no easy way to save for retirement,” she said. “And in rich nations, why isn’t age 65 a good target for most workers to stop working for someone else?”

She added, “Working longer won’t get us out of this. Most people don’t retire when they want to, anyway.”

Vested interest?

To be sure, America’s retirement gap, or the gulf between what people need to fund their golden years versus what they’ve actually saved, isn’t new, nor is Social Security’s looming funding emergency. Yet Fink’s comments are noteworthy because of his status as the head of the world’s largest asset manager, with more than $10 trillion in assets, including many retirement accounts. 

Of course, Fink has a vested interest in Americans boosting their retirement assets, given that his firm collects fees from those accounts. And in his letter, he also promotes a new target-date fund from BlackRock called LifePath Paycheck, which will roll out in April. 

“He’s steering the conversation toward BlackRock — and a lot of people who talk about Social Security reform on Wall Street want to privatize it in some manner and make money,” Boston University economist Laurence Kotlikoff, an expert on Social Security, told CBS MoneyWatch. 

To be sure, Fink also praises public policy success stories for addressing retirement savings, such as Australia’s system, which began in the early 1990s and requires employers to put a portion of a worker’s income into a fund. Today, Australia has the world’s 54th largest population but the 4th largest retirement system, he noted.

“As a nation, we should do everything we can to make retirement investing more automatic for workers,” he noted.


Expert on why more Americans are withdrawing from their 401(k) retirement funds early

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Can boomers fix the problem?

Fink, who was born in 1952, said that his generation has an obligation to help fix the nation’s retirement problems. The financial insecurity facing younger Americans, such as millennials and Gen Z, are creating generations of disillusioned, anxious workers, he noted. 

“They believe my generation — the baby boomers — have focused on their own financial well-being to the detriment of who comes next. And in the case of retirement, they’re right,” Fink wrote. 

He added, “And before my generation fully disappears from positions of corporate and political leadership, we have an obligation to change that.”

Boomer (and older) lawmakers and politicians often don’t see eye-to-eye on how to fix the retirement crisis. But failing to fix the issue damages not only the retirements of individual Americans, but the country’s collective belief in the future of the U.S., Fink noted. 

“We risk becoming a country where people keep their money under the mattress and their dreams bottled up in their bedroom,” he noted.



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Deal to end German rail strikes features a 35-hour work week with an option to work longer


BERLIN (AP) — Train drivers and some crew for Germany’s main railway operator will see their working week reduced from 38 hours to 35 by 2029 without having their pay cut, but will have an option to work longer for more money, the two sides said Tuesday.

The arrangement is central to a deal that state-owned operator Deutsche Bahn reached Monday with the GDL union, which represents many of its drivers and some other workers, after five months of negotiations punctuated by strikes.

Several pay disputes in the German transport sector have coincided recently, and this was the most consistently disruptive. Others have involved local transport workers, ground staff and cabin crew for Lufthansa and airport security staff.

The rail strikes led to most long-distance and many regional trains being canceled, in some cases for days at a time in Europe’s biggest economy.

The main sticking point was GDL’s demand for working hours to be reduced without a pay cut. Some smaller private operators that operate regional services agreed to the demand, but Deutsche Bahn initially balked.

The two sides’ deal foresees standard working hours being reduced to 35 hours in four stages from 2026 to 2029. But employees will be able to choose anything from a 35- to 40-hour week, with those who choose to work longer getting more pay.

The agreement also features a pay rise totaling 420 euros ($455) per month in two stages and a one-time payment of 2,850 euros to compensate for inflation.

Deutsche Bahn personnel chief Martin Seiler described it as “an intelligent compromise” offering the company flexibility and extra capacity “in the difficult labor market environment.” The company had pointed to the difficulty of recruiting more drivers to cover gaps created by a shorter week.

GDL chairman Claus Weselsky said the shorter work week was “urgently necessary” to attract more employees to the railway.



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How jury selection could work in Trump’s “hush money” trial


How jury selection could work in Trump’s “hush money” trial – CBS News

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On Monday, the judge in Donald Trump’s “hush money” case rejected the former president’s bid to delay a trial further, setting a start date of April 15. Notre Dame Law School professor Derek Muller and CBS News chief Washington correspondent Major Garrett join with analysis.

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Eye on America: Small business tries four-day work week


Eye on America: Small business tries four-day work week – CBS News

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In Louisiana, we learn how a devastating drought has greatly diminished the area’s crawfish supply. Then in Ohio, we tour a small business that’s seeing promising results from a four-day work week model. Watch these stories and more on Eye on America with host Michelle Miller.

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Trump election grand jury back at work in federal courthouse


WASHINGTON — The federal grand jury that returned an indictment against former President Donald Trump last week was meeting again Tuesday — an indication that special counsel Jack Smith’s investigation into alleged 2020 election interference is far from over.

Members of the grand jury were seen in the E. Barrett Prettyman Courthouse in the late morning while apparently taking a break before returning to where the grand jury meets. It was not clear whether they were hearing testimony from witnesses. They departed the courthouse around 1:30 p.m. ET.

The four-count indictment accusing Trump of using “unlawful means” to try to stay in power alleged that he carried out his schemes with help of six co-conspirators — four attorneys, a Justice Department official and a political consultant.

Trump has pleaded not guilty to the charges and maintains the probe is part of a Democratic “witch hunt” against him.

While the alleged co-conspirators aren’t named in the indictment, NBC News has been able to identify five of the six based on details in the court filing and transcripts of testimony to the Jan. 6 Committee and other records. The five appear to be former New York City Mayor and longtime Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani; lawyers John Eastman and Kenneth Chesebro, architects of the “fake electors scheme”; attorney Sidney Powell, who helped lead Trump’s post-campaign legal efforts and promoted conspiracy theories; and former Justice Department official Jeffrey Clark, who tried to put the weight of the DOJ behind Trump’s debunked fraud claims.

Attorneys for Giuliani and Eastman have acknowledged their clients appear to be identified as co-conspirators and have denied they did anything illegal.

Representatives for Powell, Clark and Chesebro have not responded to requests for comment.

On Monday, Smith’s team interviewed former New York City Police Commissioner Bernard Kerik in connection with the election probe.

The interview lasted for about five hours, and largely focused on the work Kerik performed investigating voter fraud allegations on behalf of Giuliani, his longtime friend and former boss, Kerik lawyer Timothy Parlatore said Monday.

Meanwhile, a dispute over a protective order in the Trump case that would enable the government to start handing over evidence to the former president’s attorneys seemed stalled Tuesday after Trump’s lawyers indicated they weren’t available on any dates offered by the judge for a hearing on the issue.

U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan had ordered Smith’s office and Trump’s lawyers to pick a date on or before this Friday. The hearing is to debate Trump’s objections to an order that would bar him from publicly disclosing prosecutors’ evidence in the case. Trump’s attorneys argue the order is too broad.

In a joint filing Tuesday, the special counsel’s office said it was available for a hearing on Wednesday, Thursday or Friday.

Trump’s team said Thursday was no good for them. One of Trump’s two lawyers on the case, Todd Blanche, is due in federal court in Florida that day for his client’s arraignment on a superseding indictment in a separate prosecution brought by Smith’s office alleging Trump mishandled national security documents and tried to cover it up.

They asked that the hearing be held on Monday or Tuesday of next week, but did not explain why Wednesday or Friday were not options.



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California man wins $500 in lottery scratch-offs – then went to work not realizing he won another million


It’s not every day Vang Cha plays the lottery, but the last two times, he’s won – and won big. The California resident recently won $1 million, but didn’t realize until hours later when he got home from work. 

Cha says he rarely plays the California Lottery Scratchers games. Then the Sacramento man decided to “give it a shot” with $30 California 200x Scratchers. He won $500, but decided to use that money to try and win some more. 

“I decided to just go all-in and buy an entire book of the $10 games,” he told the California Lottery, saying he didn’t even realize he had a winner among them until later in the day – after a full day of work. “I went to work and scratched probably about 20 of them, went home and scratched the rest.” 

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Vang Cha reached millionaire status recently after taking home the jackpot on a California scratch-off game. 

California Lottery


That’s when he saw it, lucky No. 16 in the final row of the ticket with a big and bold $1 million prize written underneath. 

“I was stunned! I scanned it in the Lottery app to make sure it was true, and it was,” he said. 

But the financial gains may not be over for Cha. He said that he’s planning on investing his winnings and didn’t detail any plans to spend it – other than on some more lottery scratch-offs. 

Lottery officials said that Cha was one of several people to collect a millionaire status in recent days. Two people who played the Set for Life Scratchers are going to split a $20 million prize and several others took home $1 million to $2 million prizes for various scratch-off games. 

The wins come as the Mega Millions jackpot rose yet again to an estimated $1.55 billion – the largest prize in the game’s history. If confirmed, that prize would be the third-largest overall jackpot in U.S. lottery history. The next drawing for the game is Tuesday night. 



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Here Comes the Sun: Author Rose Styron and photographer Ansel Adams’ work


Here Comes the Sun: Author Rose Styron and photographer Ansel Adams’ work – CBS News

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Author Rose Styron sits down with Mo Rocca to discuss her memoir “Beyond This Harbor,” James Lapine’s documentary “In the Company of Rose” and how she learned to read. Then, Conor Knighton visits the de Young Museum in San Francisco to learn more about the exhibit on Ansel Adams’ work. “Here Comes the Sun” is a closer look at some of the people, places and things we bring you every week on “CBS Sunday Morning.”

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