From the Arts for Autism concert to a Hello Kitty-themed bullet train, "Sunday Morning" takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead
"There was no preparation for it. I can't imagine any American's heart not going out to these families," Sen. Bob Corker told "Face the Nation"
CBS News Political Correspondent Ed O'Keefe sits down with a focus group of Arizona voters to see how immigration issues may impact their decisions in the November elections.
In this special two-part report, "Sunday Morning" senior contributor Ted Koppel goes inside San Quentin State Prison in California, to which inmates are now applying to get in, due to its innovative programs, from college courses to a prison newspaper and the wildly popular podcast, "Ear Hustle," produced by the inmates themselves. "The Q," as it's known, is now providing hope – even to those sentenced 50 years to life – that there will be life beyond prison.
Essayist and novelist Roger Rosenblatt looks at the remarkably strong effect felt across the political spectrum from President Trump's policy to take away the children of migrants crossing America's southern border, in some cases sequestering them hundreds of miles away from their parents.
Today, more than 40 percent of companies offer a cool summer perk: giving their staff Fridays off. And it's not just out of the goodness of their hearts - companies find that the gift of time and an improved work/life balance builds loyalty and makes employees more committed to their organization. Conor Knighton reports on how some workers are spending their Summer Fridays far from work. (Originally broadcast July 30, 2017.
It's the last session for Matchday 2 for Groups G and H
It was a painful loss for movie fans when actress and screenwriter Carrie Fisher and her mother, Oscar-nominated actress Debbie Reynolds, passed away within hours of one another in December 2016. But no one would have felt the pain more acutely than Todd Fisher, who writes about his sister and mother in his new memoir, "My Girls." Tracy Smith sits down with Fisher to discuss a lifetime in the orbit of two irrepressible Hollywood stars.
The author says the Trump admin's policy raised the nation's temperature more steeply than other issues because it reduced innocent children to crying in the dark
A summer perk of three-day weekends is becoming more important to employees - and to companies that value them
On June 24, 1771, E.I. du Pont, an emigrant whose Delaware gunpowder factory was forerunner of the innovative chemical company, was born in Paris. Jane Pauley reports.
No matter what you order from San Diego school cafeteria worker Debra Davis, "Auntie Debra" doles out a heaping helping of hospitality every lunch hour. And she's just starting; after serving food all day, she drives her beat-up, '76 Chevy Malibu looking for hungry homeless people to feed, all at her own expense. Steve Hartman reports.
Music pioneer, fashion icon, gender-bending rebel … David Bowie was all of those things. And what he was is the subject of a record-breaking exhibit currently at the Brooklyn Museum in New York, entitled "David Bowie Is." Serena Altschul pays a visit, and also talks with Bowie's longtime producer Tony Visconti.
"Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free …" stated the poem by Emma Lazarus about America's promise. New York City's Tenement Museum has recreated the apartments of immigrant families who lived in the very same building on the Lower East Side decades ago for a new exhibit, "Under One Roof." Correspondent Martha Teichner joins members of the families revisiting their childhood home at 103 Orchard Street.
A teen from California stepped up to help a blind and deaf man who was alone on an Alaska Airlines flight by signing into his hand and helping him communicate
On June 24, 1771, E.I. du Pont, an emigrant whose gunpowder factory was forerunner of the innovative chemical company, was born in Paris
An exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum is a tribute to an artist who changed so often, yet always stayed true to himself
An exhibit recreates the apartments in which immigrant families lived in a Lower East Side building, representing generations of emigration to the U.S.
Some Saudi women got behind the wheel this weekend the second it became legal for them to drive. But as Holly Williams reports, there is still a long road to quality, as under this country's male guardianship system, Saudi women still need a man's permission to travel overseas or get married.
A new memoir by a loving brother and son recounts a lifetime in the orbit of two irrepressible Hollywood stars
Cummings joined us to discuss family separation at the border, President Trump's immigration policy and more
Corker joined us to discuss the family separation issue, immigration reform and President Trump's trade practices