Entertainment
CBS News Radio to shut down after nearly a century of broadcasting
CBS News announced Friday that CBS News Radio will be shutting down this spring after nearly 100 years of broadcasting. The company cited “challenging economic realities” and a shift in radio programming strategies as reasons behind the decision.
About 700 affiliated stations nationwide carry CBS News Radio programming, which will end on May 22. All jobs on the radio team will be eliminated, the company said.
“We understand how difficult this news is for our staff and their colleagues, who have worked side by side with us to cover some of the most significant stories of our time,” CBS News President Tom Cibrowski and Editor-in-Chief Bari Weiss said in a statement.
They also paid tribute to the historic role of CBS News Radio in covering major events worldwide since the dawn of the broadcasting era.
“For nearly 100 years, CBS News Radio has delivered original reporting to the nation — from Edward R. Murrow’s World War II reports in London to today’s daily White House updates,” they said. “Our signature broadcast, ‘World News Roundup,’ remains the longest-running newscast in the country. CBS News Radio served as the foundation for everything we have built since 1927.”
Murrow became a household name as millions of Americans tuned in for news of the war, and he later became a mainstay on CBS News television broadcasts. But radio declined in the TV era, and in recent years social media and podcasts further cut into the audience.
“This is another part of the landscape that has fallen off into the sea,” Michael Harrison, publisher of Talkers, a trade publication for radio talk shows, told The Associated Press. “It’s a shame. It’s a loss for the country and for the industry.”
Layoffs also took place across other parts of CBS News on Friday; a total number of job cuts was not announced.
“It’s no secret that the news business is changing radically, and that we need to change along with it,” Cibrowski and Weiss said in an email to staff.
CBS is owned by Paramount Skydance, which took ownership last year.
Entertainment
AS-level Business Studies paper allegedly leaked online
KARACHI: The AS-level Business Studies paper of Cambridge International Education (CIE) was reportedly leaked online, raising concerns over the exam security.
The incident comes days after CIE admitted that an Advanced Subsidiary (AS) Mathematics Paper 1 was leaked, saying the question paper was “shared prematurely against our regulations.”
The Business Studies paper, scheduled to be held today, was reportedly leaked and circulated online last night.
One of three examination papers circulating on social media platforms last night was the Business Studies, code “9609 Paper 1”.
In a statement issued on April 30, the CIE said: “We can confirm that Cambridge International AS Level Mathematics Paper 12 (9709), taken in our Africa, Europe, Middle East, Pakistan and South Asia regions, was shared prematurely against our regulations.”
The examination board said it was promptly and thoroughly investigating the incident to understand the extent of the leak and determine next steps regarding the compromised paper.
The CIE had said its priority remained ensuring students were not disadvantaged by the incident while continuing all possible measures to protect examination integrity and maintain confidence in awarded grades.
Entertainment
Oprah’s Book Club: Author Douglas Stuart reads “John of John” excerpt
Entertainment
Pakistan ‘hopeful’ efforts will lead to early resolution of US-Iran conflict: DPM Dar
- End to Mideast war need of region, wider world: Dar.
- DPM Dar hopes Islamabad Talks to conclude “soon”.
- Dar says objective is “dignified” end to Mideast conflict.
Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar on Tuesday expressed hope that Pakistan’s efforts to mediate an end to the US-Iran conflict will succeed at the earliest, calling it a necessity for the region and the wider world.
“Whatever has happened so far, it has already dented a global GDP to a great degree,” he told foreign ambassadors and diplomatic corps in Islamabad, saying the end to the conflict in the Middle East was Pakistan’s “goal and aim” as facilitator and mediator.
DPM Dar said that Islamabad was actively working to engage the US and Iran to negotiate a peaceful settlement to their disputes, adding that the country has consistently supported stability and restraint in the Middle East.
DPM Dar noted Islamabad’s global diplomatic outreach for a resolution to the conflict, saying he has discussed the matter with around 120 counterparts worldwide since the start of the war.
The interactions, he said, reflected Pakistan’s seriousness in its efforts to get the US and Iran to reach a truce and put an end to the conflict.
Pakistan emerged as a key mediator between Washington and Tehran after hostilities began on February 28, following US-Israel strikes on Iran.
After six weeks of war, Pakistan brokered a two-week ceasefire on April 8, and later hosted direct talks between the two sides in its federal capital.
In his address, DPM Dar said that the Islamabad Talks, held between April 10 and 11, reached an “advanced level”.
“We still hope that it [Islamabad Talks] will eventually and hopefully very soon conclude,” he added.
Recalling Islamabad’s peace efforts, DPM Dar said that Pakistan has continuously engaged Iran and the US to negotiate for a lasting truce since brokering the ceasefire.
He added that Islamabad managed to bring the US and Iran to the table for direct talks for the first time in 47 years.
DPM Dar said that the country’s mediation efforts had been acknowledged internationally, and that Pakistan remained in constant contact with global stakeholders as part of its responsibilities in promoting peace.
The entire consultative process was aimed at ending the conflict in the Middle East, DPM Dar said, adding that Pakistan continued to act as a bridge between the two sides.
“[The] objective is common… that this conflict ends in a dignified manner. It should be a win-win,” he said.
However, DPM Dar stressed that Islamabad could not get into details of its efforts as a mediator and facilitator due to the sensitive nature of the matter.
His remarks come hours after Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said that talks with the US were making progress with Pakistan’s “gracious effort”, reiterating that there was no military solution to the crisis.
The Iranian foreign minister’s statement followed renewed attacks by Washington and Tehran in the Gulf on Monday as they wrestled for control over the Strait of Hormuz with duelling maritime blockades.
US President Donald Trump launched a new effort to get stranded tankers and other ships through the strait, provoking a promised show of force from Iran, which has threatened to respond to any escalation with new attacks on its neighbours hosting US bases.
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