This Morning from CBS News, June 30, 2016
Terror probe
Turkish police have arrested 13 people on suspicion of involvement in the deadly attack on Istanbul's airport as consensus builds that ISIS was behind the carnage. We now have a much clearer idea of how the attack was carried out, and who might have done it.
Battle tactics
Some in the political world are calling 2016, with the rise of Donald Trump as the GOP standard-bearer, a completely new election that challenges the conventions of campaigns in recent political history. But not Priorities USA Action. The pro-Hillary Clinton super PAC thinks it can quash Trump using similar tactics to the ones that worked in 2012.
Brexit impact
The U.K.'s vote last week to leave the European Union has upended financial markets, slammed the British pound, and raised questions about what comes next for the European economy. We look at how experts think the "Brexit" heard round the world is likely to play out in the months and years to come.
Real killers
It's a morbid list, but an important one: health officials are out with the latest ranking of the 10 most common causes of death in the U.S. "We all have to die of something at some point," one expert told CBS News, but "we want to create a society where we live as long as we can." Could this study help?
Drive safe
Leaving town for the July 4th holiday? The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety says Independence Day is the single deadliest day of the year to hit the road. We look at the kind of traffic conditions you can expect for this year's unofficial summer kick-off.
Eat well
Millennials are changing America's food production system. Under pressure from young people, the nation's largest poultry processor is taking steps to improve how chickens are treated, and for many other companies, too, it's clear that humanely raised food is becoming big business.
Ticket bots
New York City has a new plan to crack down on ticket machines that "steal the show." Ticket bots are high-speed computers that purchase high-demand tickets moments after they go on sale. This is illegal in more than a dozen states, but in New York, violators could end up paying with their freedom.
#Notsowhiteanymore?
In an effort to fix its diversity problem, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has announced it's inviting a record 683 new members -- 41 percent minorities and 46 percent females -- to vote for the stars. Some critics warn, however, that the numbers might not bring sweeping changes.
More top news:
U.S.
Big change coming in Pentagon policy on transgender people
Boston publisher changes policy on Hitler's "Mein Kampf"
Grizzly bear kills mountain biker in Glacier National Park
World
Carnage as Taliban bomber hits police recruit convoy
Teen Israeli girl stabbed to death in her bedroom
Nazi-era escape tunnel dug by Jewish prisoners found
Politics
Obama goes on "rant" about Donald Trump
Trump, Sarah Palin to speak at same conference
Longtime aide: Clinton didn't want "anybody" to see private emails
Trump: GOP pledge breakers shouldn't be allowed to run for office
Business
Record-setting car sales, but not because of affordability
Market psychology and Brexit: A recipe for mayhem
Social Security trustees to Congress: Get moving
Health
FDA questions effectiveness of hand sanitizers
Biden pushes cancer researchers to achieve "moonshot"
Science and tech
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