A popular Oregon volunteer track coach admits she made a mistake going to the high school prom with a member of the team, but Melissa Bowerman insists nothing inappropriate happened -- just some dancing and ping-pong. CBS News correspondent Michelle Miller reports.
The mother of the child who was put into a laundromat washing machine has come forward and said that it was the babysitter and the sitter's friend who appear in the video.
Obama administration officials are being accused of telling Hollywood filmmakers too much about the raid that killed Osama bin Laden. CBS News correspondent Chip Reid reports.
Ignacio "Nacho" Figueras has become the face of polo, on and off the field. Figueras speaks to the "CBS This Morning" co-hosts about his sport, modeling for Ralph Lauren and his effort to make polo mainstream.
Facebook is facing a lawsuit by some of its investors, who are also suing Morgan Stanley, the investment bank behind Facebook's IPO. CBS News business and economics correspondent Rebecca Jarvis reports.
Senior citizens today are more likely to get sexually transmitted diseases, and a new website is trying to get their attention with an eyebrow-raising public service announcement. Lee Woodruff reports.
U.S. officials are urging Pakistan to release a doctor who helped the CIA find Osama bin Laden. Dr. Shakil Afridi was sentenced to 33 years in prison for conspiring against Pakistan. Erica Hill reports.
Filmmaker and mountaineer David Breashears speaks to the "CBS This morning" co-hosts about his experience on Mount Everest when four climbers died, reportedly due to overcrowding, and the dangers of climbing the world's highest peak.
A back-up of climbers on Mount Everest is being blamed for four deaths. Clarissa Ward reports on new safety concerns about overcrowding in an area dubbed the "death zone" on Mount Everest.
The Navy is investigating a fire aboard one of its nuclear attack submarines, the USS Miami, while docked at the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard, in Kittery, Maine. WBZ's Bree Sison reports.
A new medial study is raising questions about an over-the-counter supplement: calcium. Cardiologist Dr. Suzanne Steinbaum speaks to the "CBS This Morning" co-hosts about the apparent link between calcium supplements and heart disease.
A movie being made about the raid that killed Osama Bin Laden is raising concerns about the release of information from the secret operation. Rachel Smolkin, White House Editor for POLITICO, speaks with UTTM anchor Terrell Brown about recently released documents that show the government shared special details about the raid with Hollywood filmmakers.
The director of the Secret Service spoke publicly for the first time about the prostitution scandal in Cartagena, Colombia, that cost nine agents their jobs. Nancy Cordes reports on the contentious Senate hearing.
Matthew Gray Gubler visits Marc Fantini, Steffan Fantini, and Scott Gordon and talks about what it takes to compose for the episode "Heathridge Manor." Criminal Minds, Wednesdays 9/8c on CBS!
Every year, the Library of Congress designates 25 sound recordings and preserves the best available copy for future generations. Scott Pelley reports one of the inductees this year includes a seven-disc set from CBS News producer Fred Friendly of radio broadcasts narrated by Edward R. Murrow from FDR's inauguration in 1933 to the end of World War II in 1945.
Bad weather has limited the number of chances for climbers to reach the summit of Mount Everest. With only a few days left in the climbing season, a traffic jam has formed as climbers rush to reach the top. Brian Rooney reports on a bottleneck in an area known as the "death zone."
Monsignor William Lynn - the highest-ranking Catholic Church official ever charged in the child abuse scandal - testified that a Cardinal ordered him to cover up sexual abuse of children by priests. Elaine Quijano reports.