In Washington, anger is growing against Pakistan over the jailing of a doctor who helped the CIA find Osama bin Laden. CBS News Congressional correspondent Nancy Cordes reports.
Brian Banks was a star high school football player who was wrongly convicted of raping a young woman. Years later, she confessed that the crime never occurred, and he's been exonerated. Lee Cowan reports.
New York City police have made an arrest in the Etan Patz disappearance. Plus, a convicted California man is exonerated for a rape he didn't commit. All that, and all that matters, in today's Eye Opener.
With more than five months to go in the presidential elections, new polls show Mitt Romney gaining ground on President Obama. CBS News political correspondent Jan Crawford looks at what these polls mean.
Every year billions of dollars in aid is sent to Africa, but there are still widespread abuses of human rights across the continent. UTTM Contributor, Lance Price, discusses why he thinks it might be time to be more subtle when dealing with Africa's leaders.
Twelve years ago, 54 first graders in Greensboro, Ga. were promised that if they made it into college, their tuition would be covered by a health care executive. As Jim Axelrod reports, those students have fulfilled their end of the bargain.
New York Police Commissioner Ray Kelly describes the circumstances surrounding the arrest of Pedro Hernandez for the murder of Etan Patz - the six-year-old boy who vanished without a trace in 1979.
Evidence of wreckage from the Japanese tsunami is making it all the way across the ocean and is now washing up on beaches in Alaska. John Blackstone reports.