The little-known story of the Jews who escaped the Nazis during World War II and returned to fight Hitler as part of a secret American military intelligence group trained in espionage and psychological warfare.
A shift in people's attitudes toward and expectations from their jobs; StoryCorps founder Dave Isay; kickers in professional football, including Justin Tucker.
An unprecedented investigation into the seven-decade-old mystery of how the Nazis discovered Anne Frank, her family and four others in hiding in an Amsterdam annex; singer-songwriter Chris Stapleton.
Accidents during training involving military armored vehicles; how record COVID-19 hospitalizations and critical staff shortages threaten the American health system; archaeologists detect 200 unmarked graves at an old school in Canada.
Lesley Stahl travels to France and Great Britain to document the impact of climate change on the great wine regions of the world; Jon Wertheim tours English pubs after the pandemic forces most of them to close for more than a year.
Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba discusses escalating tensions between his country and Russia; neurological symptoms reported by U.S. diplomats stationed in foreign countries and Homeland Security officials in the Trump admin.
Russia's invasion of Ukraine; threats to the U.S. electric grid; Americans unjustly imprisoned abroad; how hedge funds and other financial firms have swallowed up newspapers, closing newsrooms and slashing staff.
The latest from Ukraine; continuing political battles over the 2020 presidential election and how it was administered; Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg; interviewing "Ted Lasso" cast and crew members.
Russia continues its assault on Ukraine; examining the factors behind the increase in residential rental prices; professional basketball player Sue Bird.
The International Medical Corps delivers much needed supplies, training and resources into Ukraine; pressure on Britain to show it can stop the flood of corrupt money from Russian billionaires; artist Laurie Anderson.
The United States mounts a digital defense against Kremlin directed cyberattacks; Volkswagen CEO Herbert Diess; electric vertical takeoff and landing aircraft.
The World Food Programme's efforts to curb the hunger crisis in Ukraine; Iceland's contenders for Eurovision, the world's largest musical event; Peter McIndoe, founder of Birds Aren't Real.
Bellingcat, a team of online data detectives, investigates reports of war crimes in Ukraine; Fred Miller and his family buy a large house in southern Virginia and discover that their own ancestors were once enslaved there.
Hospitals facing drug shortages; Chicago Hope funds blanket scholarships for students to attend in-state colleges for free; opera singer Jonas Kaufmann.
Lesley Stahl travels to France and Great Britain to document the impact of climate change on the great wine regions of the world; Jon Wertheim tours English pubs after the pandemic forces most of them to close for more than a year.
Following the latest massacre, emergency rooms are preparing for the worst. The oldest cattle drive. The gardens of the Roman emperor Caligula have been excavated with some of the most interesting finds.
How US Coast Guard and Louisiana engineering firm contained longest-running oil spill in US history; residential schools of Canada, where more than 150,000 indigenous children sent; people rewarded for heroic, life-saving acts.
How the UK became a laundromat for Russian oligarchs' dirty money; How Daniel Ortega tossed democracy aside to maintain power in Nicaragua; Trevor Noah: The 60 Minutes Interview.
Despite his Alzheimer's, Tony Bennett prepares to perform with Lady Gaga; The making of the Beatles' "Let It Be"; Chris Stapleton on his life and career
Perseverance rover, Ingenuity helicopter, and the search for ancient life on Mars; Robots of the future at Boston Dynamics; Companies racing to develop eVTOL "air taxis".
Former Saudi intelligence official accuses Mohammed bin Salman of multiple murder; Startups, NASA pursuing supersonic commercial flight; How "Ted Lasso" became a television phenomenon.
Mountain gorillas of Rwanda making a comeback; Higher education on a remote ranch at Deep Springs College; Inside Alessandro Michele's Gucci fashion house.
Accidents during training involving military armored vehicles, an island's population is decimated when its one and only industry, cod fishing goes into steep decline and Jacob Smith, blind competitive skier.
Concern grows over the health of the drought-stricken Colorado River, Hope Chicago funds blanket scholarships for students to attend in-state colleges for free and Iceland's contenders for Eurovision 2022.
Bellingcat, a team of online data detectives builds a database of alleged war crimes, an organization committed to seeking justice and changing lives by providing legal education and counsel to inmates and Russian dancer Olga Smirnova.
Threats facing the US electric grid, including cyberattacks and sabotage and Fred Miller and his family buy a large house in southern Virginia and discover that their own ancestors were once enslaved there.
The impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on the mental health of kids, a nonprofit architectural firm called Model of Architecture Serving Society and kickers in professional football, including Justin Tucker.
Holly Williams reports from the U.K. with details on Queen Elizabeth's funeral; Scott Pelley speaks with firefighters who were at the World Trade Center on 9/11.
First lady of Ukraine Olena Zelenska; citizens of the rural community of Grizzly Flats, which was almost wiped out by the Caldor fire, demand answers; South Africa's first Black rugby captain, Siya Kolisi.
Rising tensions between the U.S. and China over Taiwan; the affected coastline of southwestern Florida in the aftermath of Hurricane Ian; the Southern Baptist Convention's newly elected president, Bart Barber.
The families of the victims found in the mass grave behind St. Andrew's Orthodox Church in Bucha, Ukraine; the world's largest offshore wind farm, in Grimsby, England; college football coach Deion Sanders.
Dominion Voting Systems CEO John Poulos; a nonprofit's effort to transform grassland into the largest nature reserve in the lower 48 states; television host and cookbook author Ina Garten.
A key midterm issue that has split the Republican party and the country.; Rep. Mark Finchem (R-Ariz.); scientists search for the next deadly virus in Uganda's Impenetrable Forest; writer David Sedaris.
Examining how social media platforms are amplifying political polarization in America; the influx of asylum-seeking migrants to New York; American preppers discuss why they joined the movement.
A 12-story beachfront condominium collapses; resistance fighters risk their lives to save Jewish artifacts during and after the Holocaust; Sona Jobarteh, the first female virtuoso player of a centuries-old West African instrument called the kora.
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By what name was 60 Minutes (1968) officially released in Spain?