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Army extends maximum recruitment age to 42, allowing older recruits to join

The U.S. Army is expanding its recruiting pool, raising the maximum enlistment age from 35 years old to 42, according to new service regulations reviewed by ABC News.

ABC News

The move isn't without precedent. The service lifted the cap to 42 years old in 2006, during the height of the Iraq War, before lowering it back to 35 a decade later.

Bringing the limit back up puts the Army more in line with the Air Force and Navy regulations, which both cap enlistment at 41. The Marine Corps caps recruits at 28 years old, though older applicants can potentially enlist with special permission.

Jeffrey Greenberg/Universal Images Group via Getty Images - PHOTO: An Army soldier recruiter at the Hyundai Air & Sea Show in Miami, May 28, 2022.

People with autism navigate roadblocks to serving in the military

Two sources familiar with the decision told ABC News the change has been in the works for months and is not tied to the ongoing war with Iran. Instead, it reflects a longer-term effort by the Army to widen the recruiting pipeline amid persistent shortfalls.

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The average age of recruits is going up marginally, going from 21 years old in 2010 to nearly 23 years old last year, service data reviewed by ABC News shows.

Additionally, the Army will now allow enlistments of individuals with only one marijuana-related conviction.

Military officials say recruiting off to strong start in 2025, building on recent trends

The biggest hurdle with recruiting is an increasingly shrinking pool of eligible candidates, according to the Pentagon.

The Pentagon has estimated that only about 23% of young Americans ( between the ages of 17 and 24 years old) are eligible to serve. Much of this is due to academic performance on the military's SAT-style entrance test, obesity and criminal records.

Army extends maximum recruitment age to 42, allowing older recruits to join

The U.S. Army is expanding its recruiting pool, raising the maximum enlistment age from 35 years old to 42, according to ...
Air Canada CEO apologizes for his inability to speak French after plane crash

TORONTO (AP) — The chief executive of Air Canada apologized Thursday for his inability to express himself in French after politicians called for his resignation for his English-only message of condolence afterSunday's deadly crashin New York.

Associated Press

Air Canada CEO Michael Rousseauhas been criticizedfor the four-minute condolence video posted online that included only two French words — "bonjour" and "merci."

"I am deeply saddened that my inability to speak French has diverted attention from the profound grief of the families and the great resilience of Air Canada's employees, who have demonstrated outstanding professionalism despite the events of the past few days," Rousseau said in a statement.

"Despite many lessons over several years, unfortunately, I am still unable to express myself adequately in French. I sincerely apologize for this, but I am continuing my efforts to improve."

Quebec's premier called on the airline executive to resign on Wednesday. Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said it showed a lack of compassion and judgment and said he look forward to hearing more from Air Canada's board of directors.

Antoine Forest, one of thetwo pilots killedin the crash at LaGuardia Airport, was a French-speaking Quebecer. Forest and Mackenzie Gunther died when the Air Canada Jazz flight they were landing at LaGuardia collided with a fire truck on the runway Sunday evening.

Canada's largest airline is headquartered in Montreal, Quebec, where French is the primary language. Rousseau has been criticized for not speaking French previously. He delivered his condolence video message in English, with French subtitles.

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Carney noted that Canada is a bilingual country with two official languages.

Quebec's identity has been contentious since the 1760s when the British completed their takeover of what was then called New France. Quebec is about 80% French-speaking.

Quebec Premier François Legault noted that when Rousseau was appointed president of the airline in February 2021, he promised to learn French.

The Office of the Commissioner of Official Languages has received hundreds of complaints about Rousseau's video.

"Back in November 2021, less than a year after he was appointed CEO of Air Canada, one of his first major speeches in his role triggered a strong controversy among Francophones, as the speech was almost exclusively in English," said Daniel Béland, a political science professor at McGill University in Montreal.

"At the time, in response to that controversy, Rousseau apologized and pledged to learn French. He did later take French lessons but, as the new controversy suggests, it was probably not very successful to say the least."

Jason Kenney, a former Conservative Cabinet minister, said he would rather the CEO of Canada's flagship carrier focus his scarce time on safety and reliability than language training.

Air Canada CEO apologizes for his inability to speak French after plane crash

TORONTO (AP) — The chief executive of Air Canada apologized Thursday for his inability to express himself in French after...
After slight midweek relief, major US airports seeing security lines rise again ahead of weekend traveler rush

Airports across the country are bracing for another crush of weekend travelers as Congress keeps haggling over how to end thepartial government shutdownthat has driven mounting TSA staff shortages and the longest security wait times ever – and wait times already were ticking up at major travel hubs Thursday morning.

CNN Security lines wind through New York's LaGuardia Airport on Wednesday. The airport is one of many that have been crippled by TSA worker shortages. - Spencer Platt/Getty Images

No significant progresshas been made on a dealto fund the Department of Homeland Security, which includes the Transportation Security Administration, as lawmakers are set to leave Friday for a two-week recess. A new push for a deal is underway as airport officials warn of dire fallout if the crisis continues.

Without a funding solution, overwhelmed airports will go into the busy weekend travel days with spring break travel also in full swing and only a fraction of their security screening capabilities. TSA workers have been quitting or calling out in droves after going six weeks without pay.

Scrambling to address traveler frustrations, airports have redirected employees from other departments, alerted travelers to arrive hours earlier than planned and brought in outside security personnel. It is unclear whether the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents deployed to airports this week to help manage the chaos have made a significant dent.

Houston's George Bush Intercontinental Airport – where wait times swelled tofour hoursagain early Thursday – has seensome of the most severe impacts, along with travel hubs in New York and Atlanta.

Passengers wait in a security checkpoint line at George Bush Intercontinental Airport, Wednesday, March 25, 2026, in Houston. - David J. Phillip/AP Travelers line up at a TSA checkpoint on Wednesday, March 25, 2026 at LaGuardia Airport in New York. (AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura) - Yuki Iwamura/AP

"We worry conditions will only get worse at airports across the US until Congress ends this shutdown," Jim Szczesniak, director of aviation for the Houston Airport System, said in a recorded statement Wednesday.

While passenger volumes in Houston declined somewhat Wednesday, the city's airports are expected to handle a significant number of travelers Thursday and Friday, in part because an energy conference there is concluding, and the city is hostingthree NCAA men's basketball tournament games, the city's airport systemsaid.

At New York'sLaGuardia Airporton Thursday morning, the wait time in one general security line was nearly two hours, CNN's Leigh Waldman reported from the site. The line doubled back on itself, filling the hall, video showed, and the TSA PreCheck line took just over 40 minutes to clear.

The PreCheck line Thursday morning at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport stretched out the door, CNN employee Jonathan Hawkins, traveling through the airport, said. To accommodate the mass of passengers, the line snakes through baggage claim and around the terminal.

"Atmosphere is largely good-natured. People seem to have arrived expecting a long wait," Hawkins said.

It took Hawkins about an hour to get to where the TSA PreCheck line normally starts, and 45 more minutes to get through security.

ICE increases its airport presence

It's difficult to measure how the presence of ICE agents has directly impacted travelers in the four days sinceICE agents arrived at 14 airportsat President Donald Trump's request.

They have been seen directing snaking security lines and passing out water bottles to tired travelers.

ICE agents have also started verifying travelers' IDs in some airports, DHS confirmed Wednesday. Agents were spotted training to check boarding passes and IDs at Atlanta's airport and John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York.

ICE agents check IDs at a security checkpoint in Atlanta Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport on Thursday. - Megan Varner/Getty Images

ICE agents have also been guarding entrances and exits, helping with logistics and doing crowd control after "receiving standard TSA training curriculum," TSA said.

The White House press secretary said Wednesday the ICE deployment has been "yielding results."

"Wait times have improved since ICE arrived, and they are doing everything in their power to help their fellow federal service members," Karoline Leavitt said.

The middle of the week, however, is typically the slowest time for air travel, and Leavitt seemed to acknowledge there was room for improvement.

"We have seen wait times decrease – not as much as we'd like," she said.

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Many factors, including the number of travelers and available security checkpoints, impact wait times. ICE agents arrived at airports Monday during peak travel times. About 2.6 million people passed through TSA on Monday compared to 2.2 million on Tuesday,data from the agencyshows.

ICE agents are not trained to do specialized security screening tasks, such as operating X-ray machines, White House border czar Tom Homan said Sunday. Instead, they take on simpler tasks, ideally freeing up more TSA employees to perform critical screening work.

A surge of spring breakers

The middle of this week – again, typically the slowest time for air travel – offered some reprieve, security wait times had returned to normal in several airports by Wednesday, with some exceptions.

Bush airport reported a two-hour wait Wednesday afternoon, down from more than four hours earlier in the week. The airport can operate only about half of its 37 TSA checkpoints because of staff shortages, Szczesniak said.

"So that's 100% spring break loads going through the airport being processed through less than 50% of our TSA lanes," he said. "That is not sustainable."

Nearly 40% of the Houston airport's TSA officers called out of work Tuesday, DHS reported. The airport has redirected employees from unrelated departments to handle crowds.

Wait times at Bush airport in Houston were as long as four hours earlier this week. - Antranik Tavitian/Reuters A Department of Homeland Security officer directs passengers at Houston's Bush airport on Wednesday. - Antranik Tavitian/Reuters

"We've reassigned hundreds of employees from across our organization, from finance to IT to maintenance and more, to help manage lines and assist travelers," Szczesniak said.

Several airports have tried to mitigate long waits by asking flyers to arrive far ahead of typically recommended times.

Airports in New York and New Jersey have brought in civilian security and police officers from the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which oversees the region's major airports, the agency said. Still, those additional personnel may not operate security screening checkpoints and are only assisting with crowd control.

TSA agents near two missed paychecks

While travelers may feel inconvenienced by the delays, many unpaid TSA workers' lives have been overturned. They have reported empty fridges, eviction notices and overdrawn bank accounts.

"Officers are reportedly sleeping in their cars at airports to save gas money, selling their blood and plasma, and taking on second and third jobs to make ends meet, all while expected to perform at the highest level when in uniform to protect the traveling public," TSA Administrator Ha Nguyen McNeill said during a House Oversight hearing on Wednesday.

Tatiana Finlay, a TSA union member, told CNN, "At this point, it has come to the point of, like, having to skip meals because I have to make sure that my kids are fed."

Many TSA employeeslive paycheck-to-paycheck, making an average $35,000 a year, according to the American Federation of Government Employees union. If Congress cannot reach a deal by Friday, workers will miss a second full paycheck.

More than 480 TSA officers have quit since the partial shutdown began, and more than 3,000 called out on Tuesday, according to DHS. Some people who do want to come to work are struggling to get there.

A TSA officer rests at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport on Monday as the passenger security line winds up and down the sidewalk behind him. - Megan Varner/Getty Images

"Just yesterday, I watched an officer receive a gas card from one of our partners," said Szczesniak, of the Houston Airport System. "They had tears in their eyes knowing that they could fill up their tank to get home and come back to work to help keep these lines moving."

Airport officials are providing meals to TSA workers as well as collaborating with the Houston Food Bank and other nonprofits, he said Wednesday.

TSA union workers have said the assistance of ICE agents – who are getting a paycheck – is far from a solution. Finlay called it "unacceptable."

"That's like giving a person dying of pneumonia a teaspoon of cough syrup," said Everett Kelly, the AFGE's national president. "It doesn't address the problem and it's not gonna work."

CNN's Ed Lavandera, Ryan Young, Holly Yan, Aaron Cooper, Alexandra Skores, David Williams and Toni Odejimi contributed to this report.

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After slight midweek relief, major US airports seeing security lines rise again ahead of weekend traveler rush

Airports across the country are bracing for another crush of weekend travelers as Congress keeps haggling over how to end...
Savannah Guthrie Sobs in Interview Wondering If Her Fame Led to Her Mother's Kidnapping: 'If It Is Me, I'm So Sorry'

The first half of Savannah Guthrie's sit down with Hoda Kotb aired on Today on Thursday, March 26

People

NEED TO KNOW

  • "We don't know anything... [but] to think that I brought this to her bedside, that it's because of me?" Guthrie wondered in her first interview since her mother's disappearance

  • The second half of Guthrie's conversation with Kotb will air on Friday, March 27

Savannah Guthrieis opening up about her family's ordeal in the wake of her mother Nancy's disappearance.

In her first interview since her mom went missing on Feb. 1, theTodayhost, 54, sat down withHoda Kotbfor a two-part conversation, the first half of which aired on Thursday, March 26.

Savannah Guthrie on 'Today'Credit: NBC/Today

"What Savannah has shown in these past 54 days is the most remarkable grace I have ever witnessed," Kotb said as she introduced the interview. Their conversation began with Guthrie detailing how she first found out the news that her mother disappeared. As she and her siblings pieced together what might have happened, she admitted she questioned whether her fame led to her mother being targeted.

"I think my brother, my siblings are so amazing, my brother, he spent his career in the military and worked in intelligence and is a fighter pilot and just brilliant and he saw very clearly right away what this was. And even on the phone when I called him, he knew. He said, 'I think she's been kidnapped for ransom.' And I said, 'What?!'" Guthrie told Kotb.

Savannah Guthrie and Hoda Kotb.Credit: NBC / TODAY

"It sounds so — how dumb could I be — but I said, 'Do you think because of me?' He said, 'I'm sorry, sweetie, but yeah, maybe,'" Savannah recalled of the conversation she had with her brother, Camron.

"I hope not. I mean, we still don't know. Honestly, we don't know anything. We don't know anything. So I don't know that it's because she's my mom and somebody thought, 'Oh, that lady has money we could make a quick buck,'" Guthrie said. "That would make sense, but that's probably… which is too much to bear. To think that I brought this to her bedside, that it's because of me? Can I just say, I'm so sorry, Mommy. I'm sorry to my sister and my brother and my kids and my nephew and Tommy, my brother-in-law. I'm just so sorry. I'm so sorry. If it is me, I'm so sorry."

Guthrie'sTodaycolleagues rallied around her after the interview aired. "The fact that our dear friend would blame herself..." said Craig Melvin, sitting at the desk.

"Oh, that was the hardest part," Carson Daly said in agreement.

"That was the hardest part. That she would blame herself for any of this when it was some sicko or sickos out there who would kidnap a woman in the middle of the night," added Melvin.

When Kotb initially announced the interview on air on Wednesday, March 25, she described the conversation to her colleagues as "really emotional."

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"We're gonna have the whole thing for you [Thursday] and Friday, but first, we did want to bring you one of the moments from the interview where Savannah shared a message to anybody who may have information about Nancy," Kotb added.

In a preview clip from the conversation, Guthrie said to Kotb through tears: "Someone needs to do the right thing. We are in agony. We are in agony. It is unbearable."

On March 5, PEOPLE reported thatGuthrie plans to return toTodayin an official capacity. While no date was set at that time, PEOPLE can confirm that information will be coming soon.

Three weeks ago, on March 5,Guthrie visited theTodayshow set in New York Cityfor the first time since returning from Arizona. PEOPLE confirmed that she shared an emotional reunion with the entire staff and crew. She thanked them all for their prayers and support and for "caring about my mom as much as I do."

Savannah Guthrie and mother Nancy Guthrie .Credit: Savannah Guthrie/Instagram

The search for Nancy is now in its eighth week. The 84-year-old was last seen on Jan. 31, after her family dropped her off at her home in Tucson. When she failed to show up for a virtual church service the next day, the Pima County Sheriff's Department (PCSD) launched an urgent search for Nancy.

Investigators believe that Nancy was kidnapped overnight, citingsurveillance footageof a masked man at her front door.

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

Guthrie and her family continue to plead with the public for their help bringing their mom home.

Anyone with information about Nancy's disappearance is asked to please contact 1-800-CALL-FBI (1-800-225-5324) or the Pima County Sheriff's Department 520-351-4900.

Read the original article onPeople

Savannah Guthrie Sobs in Interview Wondering If Her Fame Led to Her Mother's Kidnapping: 'If It Is Me, I’m So Sorry'

The first half of Savannah Guthrie's sit down with Hoda Kotb aired on Today on Thursday, March 26 NEED TO K...
Trump suggests that Iran let ten oil tankers through Strait of Hormuz

WASHINGTON, March 26 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump suggested ‌on Thursday that Iran let ‌ten oil tankers transit the Strait ​of Hormuz as a goodwill gesture in negotiations, including some Pakistan-flagged vessels.

Reuters

Trump made the ‌comments at ⁠a Cabinet meeting in the White House, elaborating ⁠on what he had previously described as a "present" from Iran.

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"They ​said, to ​show ​you the fact ‌that we're real and solid and we're there, we're going to let you have eight boats of oil, eight boats, ‌eight big boats ​of oil," Trump ​said. "I ​guess they were right, ‌and they were ​real, and ​I think they were Pakistani-flagged... It ended up being ​10 ‌boats."

(Reporting by Steve Holland; Writing ​by Trevor Hunnicutt; Editing ​by Caitlin Webber)

Trump suggests that Iran let ten oil tankers through Strait of Hormuz

WASHINGTON, March 26 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump suggested ‌on Thursday that Iran let ‌ten oil tankers transi...
At 72, Kathie Lee Gifford says aging isn't what she expected. 'The golden years? It's a lie.'

Faith and family are two topics that light up Kathie Lee Gifford.

Yahoo Celebrity An image of Kathie Lee Gifford in front of her name in blue font

"Five grandchildren in three years," the four-time Emmy-winning TV host tells Yahoo. "It's like precious pandemonium."

Her daughter, Cassidy, lives in the Nashville area and has two children. Son Cody lives in Connecticut and has three. Luckily, Gifford has homes near both, so she can log a lot of "Bubbe" time. Gifford goes by the Yiddish word for grandmother — though one granddaughter has shortened it to simply "Bob," which makes her laugh.

"Anytime a child is born is an amazing blessing. I just rejoice," says the former host ofToday With Kathie Lee and HodaandLive With Regis and Kathie Lee. "It's like one of the final miracles left in this world, because it's such a dark place too often."

The same sense of awe carries into her latest creative work: the historical thrillerNero & Paul, How the Gospel of Grace Defeated the Ruler of Rome, out now. The book is the second in theAncient Evil, Living Hopetrilogy she's writing with coauthor Bryan M. Litfin.

The book juxtaposes the contrasting figures of Nero, the Roman emperor who spent his life clawing for power and clinging to it, and Paul, who changed his path, surrendering to faith and purpose as an apostle.

Gifford, who's also producing a movie about Paul with her son, studies rabbinically and says she has built a relationship with God that has nothing to do with "religion."

"I'm the least religious person you've talked to," she says. "I don't like religion. It puts us in chains. Relationship with the living God releases the chains to be who we truly, authentically are in him."

That conviction is what she's leaned on in her toughest moments, including the death of her husband, NFL legend Frank Gifford, in 2015.

"When I found my husband dead on the floor, I could cry tears of absolute joy because I knew where he went and who he was with," she says. "[I] don't fear death. The greatest day in my life will be the day that I go home to Jesus. The best day — and I've had some great ones."

Prayer is a connector she's used with her friend and formerTodaycolleague Savannah Guthrie, whose mother, Nancy, wasabductedon Feb. 1.

"I probably heard the news a lot sooner than most people, and I immediately started praying for Savannah," she says. "[Later], I just started texting her: 'Love you. Praying for you,'" she says. "Just that message over and over again."

It was about a month before she got a reply.

"She said, 'Love you, friend,'" Gifford says. "I was just happy to hear her respond. I didn't need it, but it said something to me about how she is, maybe, in her healing."

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The last time I spoke with Gifford, she had just hadhip replacement surgery, in 2024, which was a challenge. Now 72, she updates that she's had four operations in the last year alone.

"It just gets harder. Everything gets harder," she says of aging. "The golden years? It's a lie."

One surgery came after Gifford fell on an uneven sidewalk following a morning exercise class. She shrugged it off — "My lip cracked. I didn't break a tooth. I'm good" — until an X‑ray revealed two broken bones.

"You can do all kinds of stuff to your body, but it knows how old you are and where you've been and what you did when you went there," she says. "No keeping secrets from it."

But her mind is sharp, whether she's going deep on biblical topics or recounting the origin story ofhow wine started flowingonToday's fourth hour.

She says she's determined to keep it that way. Instead of asking Siri or Google to look up a fact, she runs through the alphabet until the answer comes. She also credits memorization for boosting her brain.

"It makes my mind work," she says. "It keeps it sharp."

Her late husband was posthumously diagnosed withchronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE)and her father had Lewy body dementia, so she's mindful of hurdles others face.

Gifford herself is unstoppable. She's working on her next book and looking ahead to an upcoming documentary about her life.

If age has gifted her anything, Gifford says it's clarity about what matters. She's been letting go of possessions and investing in things she believes in.

"I've made tons of money in my career, which I never dreamed I'd be able to have," she says. "I've given away, I would say, more than half of it, and been grateful to do it."

Profits from her faith‑based projects, likeNero & Paul, go to theRock, the Road & the Rabbi Foundation.

She laughs that Frank used to get mad at how much she gave. "He stopped doing that when he realized that once I gave something, I got it back a hundredfold," she says. "I said, 'God loves a generous soul.' … You can never out‑give God. I'd rather die giving something away than holding it unto myself and not being able to take it with me anyway."

Today, Cody helps run the businesses while Gifford focuses on the work she feels called to do.

"Some people love their misery," she says. "I'm not one of them. I want the joy. I want thezoe."

At 72, Kathie Lee Gifford says aging isn't what she expected. 'The golden years? It's a lie.'

Faith and family are two topics that light up Kathie Lee Gifford. "Five grandchildren in three years,...
Nearly 500 TSA agents quit as US airport security delays continue

WASHINGTON, March 26 (Reuters) - Nearly 500 airport security officers ‌have quit since the ‌start of a partial government shutdown ​in February as long lines continued to snarl airport traffic around the country, the ‌Homeland Security ⁠Department said Thursday.

Reuters A pair of TSA officers talk as passengers wait in long TSA lines amid a funding standoff that has forced 50,000 airport security officers to go without pay, causign delays at airports, at the George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston, Texas, U.S., March 25, 2026. REUTERS/Antranik Tavitian A Department of Homeland Security officer directs passengers as they wait in long TSA lines amid a funding standoff that has forced 50,000 airport security officers to go without pay, causing delays at airports, at the George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston, Texas, U.S., March 25, 2026. REUTERS/Antranik Tavitian A Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO), a directorate of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), agent looks at a passenger rolling an animal crate as they wait in long TSA lines amid a funding standoff that has forced 50,000 airport security officers to go without pay, causing delays at airports, at the George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston, Texas, U.S., March 25, 2026. REUTERS/Antranik Tavitian Passengers wait in long TSA lines amid a funding standoff that has forced 50,000 airport security officers to go without pay, causing delays at airports, at the George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston, Texas, U.S., March 25, 2026. REUTERS/Antranik Tavitian

Travelers at Houston airport amid funding impasse

The dispute that has forced ⁠50,000 Transportation Security Administration officers to work without pay ​since mid-February ​is ​leading to major ‌strains and the longest lines in the agency's history -- topping four hours in some locations.

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TSA reiterated on Wednesday ‌that the agency ​could be forced ​to close ​smaller airports if ‌staffing issues worsened. More ​than ​11% of TSA officers, or 3,120 officers, did not ​show ‌up for work Wednesday.

(Reporting ​by David Shepardson; Editing ​by Chizu Nomiyama)

Nearly 500 TSA agents quit as US airport security delays continue

WASHINGTON, March 26 (Reuters) - Nearly 500 airport security officers ‌have quit since the ‌start of a partial government...

 

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