
Cardinal Dolan says choosing new pope will be "more difficult this time"
The eyes of the globe are on the Vatican as the conclave to elect the next pope is about to begin, and New York's Timothy Cardinal Dolan says this time will be more difficult.
Watch CBS News
Mary Calvi serves as anchor for CBS2 News This Morning, CBS2 News At Noon, and anchor for Inside Edition Weekend.
Calvi, a 14-time New York Emmy award-winning journalist, has covered a vast amount of breaking news stories during her career, including 9/11. She received praise for extensive coverage of the Miracle on the Hudson, as well as news-breaking exclusive interviews inside maximum-security prison, most notably with serial killer Joel Rifkin. She's traveled to Israel and Rome for live special coverage.
Calvi is also an author. Her second novel, "If A Poem Could Live And Breathe: A Novel of Teddy Roosevelt's First Love," is based on love letters from the Gilded Age to and from Roosevelt and his first love, Alice Lee. Many of these letters have never been published and were long believed destroyed. Her in-depth research for her debut book, "Dear George, Dear Mary: A Novel Of George Washington's First Love," is the basis of a Smithsonian Channel documentary.
Calvi graduated magna cum laude from the S.I. Newhouse School at Syracuse University with a degree in journalism. A native of Westchester County, Calvi lives in her hometown with her husband and their three children.
The eyes of the globe are on the Vatican as the conclave to elect the next pope is about to begin, and New York's Timothy Cardinal Dolan says this time will be more difficult.
Timothy Cardinal Dolan, the archbishop of New York, is responding to an AI-generated image of President Trump dressed as the pope.
Get ready for boxing and books with the CBS New York Book Club's latest Readers' Choice. Author Harold Rogers' debut novel "Tropicália" packs a punch.
It is with profound sadness that we share news of the passing of our beloved Elise Dione Finch Henriques.
The author got her inspiration for the book in New York City, so Mary stopped by the place where it came to life.
Books are back in a big way, and so are book clubs. That's one reason we decided to start our own.
Lynne Schilling-Rivera lost her adoptive parents to health conditions, and that's when she began a search.
This year, in advance of the busiest part of the storm season, a stop-gap measure is being implemented.
The Coast Guard monitors sites like Sailo and Boatsetter, checking the validity of advertised vessels.
Austen was never properly recognized through the lens of who she really was until years after death.
The floating museum began as an Essex first class aircraft carrier, commissioned in 1943.
Although it didn't officially begin until the 1980s, its roots go back much further.
In fact, 1 in 50 people will suffer from alopecia in their lifetime.
"A lot of people who look like me usually don't feel comfortable in a gallery setting," Traore said.