Four boys rescued from Thai cave in what appears to be a successful operation
CBS News foreign correspondent Ben Tracy reports from Chiang Rai, Thailand, where divers rescued four of the 12 boys who have been stuck inside a cave for two weeks.
CBS News foreign correspondent Ben Tracy reports from Chiang Rai, Thailand, where divers rescued four of the 12 boys who have been stuck inside a cave for two weeks.
Susan Cain, author of the bestseller "QUIET: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can't Stop Talking," is leading a "Quiet Revolution." She talked with Faith Salie about the myths surrounding those who are quiet, compared to outgoing extroverts who appear to have all the advantages in today's "culture of personality."
This week on "Face the Nation," moderator Margaret Brennan interviews Sen. Chris Coons, Sen. Joni Ernst, and U.S. Ambassador to NATO Kay Bailey Hutchison. Plus, CBS News foreign correspondent Ben Tracy joins us with the breaking news that four out of the 12 boys were rescued from Thai cave.
Correspondent Lee Cowan follows Louie Anderson into the makeup trailer, where the comedian is transformed into Christine Baskets, family matriarch of the FX series "Baskets." Anderson talks about how his own mother, Ora Zella Anderson, inspired his Emmy-winning performance, and with series star Zach Galifianakis.
Forty-nine-year-old Foo Fighters frontman Dave Grohl will go to any extreme, and won't let a little thing like a broken leg and dislocated ankle - suffered during a stage fall in Sweden - get in the way. The former drummer of the grunge band Nirvana talks with correspondent Anthony Mason about reentering music following the suicide of Nirvana frontman Kurt Cobain. Mason also talks with Grohl's Foo Fighters bandmates about keeping rock's flame burning.
"I would just caution the president as we move forward with any discussions with Russia. Obviously Russia is not our friend," Iowa Republican warns
"I would just caution the president as we move forward with any discussions with Russia. Obviously Russia is not our friend," Ernst warned on Sunday
The former drummer of Nirvana on how he raised himself from the dark period following the suicide of Kurt Cobain
From the first official royal trip abroad of the recently-married Duke and Duchess of Sussex, to France's Bastille Day, "Sunday Morning" takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead. Lee Cowan reports.
We leave you this Sunday Morning in the vast and colorful Painted Hills not far from Mitchell, Oregon. Videographer: Mike Griffith.
Comedian and Emmy-winning actor Louie Anderson talks about the influence his late mother has had on his comedy act, his new book, "Hey Mom: Stories for My Mother, But You Can Read Them Too," and the role he plays on the Zach Galifianakis series "Baskets." Lee Cowan watches Anderson transform into family matriarch Christine Baskets.
The swim coach of Seguin High School in Arlington, Texas, says you can't overstate the underachievement of his school's swim team; he measures success by his athletes not getting disqualified. So when Gerald Hodges – a pretty-good athlete who couldn't swim – joined up, it was because he couldn't bear not being good at something. Steve Hartman talked with Hodges about how he was able to measure success in the final lap.
Ohio's Cuyahoga Valley used to be home to hundreds of family farms, before the land was turned into a national park. Today, farms are thriving here again. The park developed a plan to lease its farm properties to entrepreneurs, and now it's where locals come to fill up on baskets of produce at the farmers' market, and where restaurants like Cleveland's Spice Kitchen source their farm-to-table menus. Conor Knighton reports.
Actor Michael J. Fox is known to millions for the "Back to the Future" films and the TV series "Family Ties" and "Spin City." But for the past two decades it's been his battle with Parkinson's disease, and his search for a cure, that may have generated the most attention. Looking back, he tells anchor Jane Pauley that sharing his battle publicly and joining with others to raise money has been "one of the great gifts of my life." He has launched an online study to help researchers develop new therapies for the disease. Читать дальше...
"Sunday Morning" contributor Luke Burbank talks about his nascent "Decline 2 Recline" movement, aimed at preserving the personal space of passengers who sit behind fliers intent upon tipping their seats back, to the chagrin of anyone with legs.
Emmy-winning actor, who says his neurodegenerative disorder "sucks," has set up an online study to help researchers develop vastly-improved therapies
Tenant farmers work the land at Cuyahoga Valley National Park in Ohio
The comedian channels his late mother for his Emmy-winning performance as the family matriarch of "Baskets"
A dangerous diving operation is under way right now in Chiang Rai province, Thailand, to rescue 12 boys and their soccer coach from a flooded maze of caves where they've been trapped for two weeks. The head of the rescue operation says today is "D-Day." Ben Tracy has the latest on the team of 18 expert divers now guiding the boys and their coach to safety.
"My concern is that President Trump unilaterally gave away doing military exercises with our vital allies, South Korea and Japan, without consulting with them," Coons said
Author Susan Cain ("Quiet") says a culture that has long favored the charisma and likability of extroverts should not leave people who are quiet and reflective on the sidelines
Alive during the bloodiest battle on U.S. soil, these sentinels offer park visitors a tangible connection to the Civil War
Ernst said she would caution President Trump against working with Russia to oust Iranian forces from Syria
For three days in July, 1863, two great armies collided on the fields at Gettysburg. It remains the bloodiest battle in U.S. history. And improbably, 155 years later, there are still living witnesses to that moment in time: The trees. Across 6,000 acres of Gettysburg National Military Park, rangers have documented at least a dozen "witness trees" that were alive during the battle – some scarred by bullets and cannonballs – that uniquely bring America's bloody past into the present. Mark Strassmann reports.