
Fewer people using dating apps
Love-seekers are abandoning dating apps in favor of a more old-fashioned approach. Lilia Luciano reports.
Watch CBS News
Monday through Thursday on CBS Evening News
In the summer of 2010, panic spread across the region when the Deepwater Horizon oil rig exploded in the Gulf.
The Army Corps of Engineers has been cleaning up radioactive contamination near St. Louis since the 1990s, but their efforts are facing criticism.
Uranium produced in St. Louis was used for the secretive Manhattan Project. Leftover waste was dumped around the city.
CBS News spoke to parishioners at Co-Cathedral of the Sacred Heart after the death of Pope Francis.
The head of a Connecticut food bank says hard times have led to former donors turning to their services for help.
A South Carolina facility simulates wildfires to research what makes one house burn and another survive.
A major issue facing U.S. rivers is contamination by sewage and other forms of pollution, but some communities are impacted more than others.
One of every three donated kidneys never gets transplanted. CBS News explores why a growing number are being discarded.
The name wasn't meant to be a political statement, but a symbol of the local community's connection to the environment.
Building costs are comparable to more traditional structures, but developers say building with wood has advantages over steel and concrete.
Nearly 1,000 people were sworn in as U.S. citizens in a naturalization ceremony at Chicago's Wrigley Field this week. Suzanne Le Mignot has the story.
President Trump announced Friday that he will meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska on Aug. 15. Charles Kupchan, senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, takes a close look at whether the meeting could mark a step towards ending the Russia-Ukraine war.
Maui is marking two years since the deadliest wildfire in modern U.S. history that destroyed the historic town of Lahaina. But the fire left behind not only physical scars in the burnt landscape, but mental wounds as well. Jonathan Vigliotti has more.
President Trump is pledging to make the nation's capital safer by calling in extra federal forces to police the streets of Washington, D.C. But recent data, even from the FBI, shows violent crime in the city is going down. Nicole Sganga has the latest.
The Trump administration's crackdown on illegal immigration is facing renewed backlash after an immigration raid at a Home Depot parking lot in Los Angeles called operation "Trojan Horse." Camilo Montoya-Galvez reports on the escalating court battles over the raids.
Republican state lawmakers in Texas on Friday again failed to advance their controversial redistricting plan that would give them more seats in the U.S. House. Democrats fled the state in protest as the fight for control of Congress has spread to other states. Omar Villafranca has more from Dallas.
Bed Bath & Beyond, which shut all its stores more than two years ago after filing for bankruptcy, is back. The company, rebranded as Bed Bath & Beyond Home, opened a brick-and-mortar store in Nashville, Tennessee, on Friday.
One year ago, CBS News spoke to a young family who moved to Isle au Haut, an island community off the coast of Maine that has no businesses except for a general store and a gift shop. Steve Hartman caught up with the Waters, who survived the winter and say they continue to enjoy the island's simple pleasures.
As the Trump administration's immigration crackdown continues, a group of residents in Pasadena, California, has come together to provide information and support to day laborers at their local Home Depot. Adam Yamaguchi has the story.