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Target CEO Brian Cornell announces that the company, citing profitability concerns, is closing all of its 133 Canadian stores, and letting go of more than 17,000 employees. CTV's Ashley Rowe reports.
Tommy Caldwell and Kevin Jorgeson, who made history free-climbing El Capitan in Yosemite National Park, hold a news conference.
The family moved the service to a funeral home across the street.
Saying that they don't agree with its message, an outdoor advertising company refunds the money and removes a controversial billboard erected along Alabama interstate. WVTM's Sarah Killian reports.
Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed says he made the right decision in firing former Fire Chief for distributing book attacking homosexuals. WXIA's Blayne Alexander reports.
The protesters blocked lanes of Interstate 93 heading into Boston at two points.
There is a loophole in the rules that govern Wall Street brokers and financial firms that provide retirement investment advice that can drain away thousands, or even tens of thousands, of dollars of hard-earned savings from a single retirement account. Today, a coalition of senior, union and consumer groups launched a new website—SaveOurRetirement.org—to mobilize support to close the “Retirement Advice Loophole” through a new rule the U.S. Department of Labor is trying to adopt.
WFLA's Melissa Beckman reports on how low fuel prices and a healthy economy are contributing to booming RV sales.
"Birdman" and "Grand Budapest Hotel" are big contenders, with each earning nine Academy Award nominations. NBC's Mark Barger reports.
"Fixing this is an idea that we should all be able to unite behind," the attorney general said in a speech Thursday.