Today's Friday 10-in-3 (which, by the way, really is IN 3 MINUTES!!), covers McCain's new economic offense (and why the voters may not care), the GOP brand resurgence (and what the Dems are doing about it), and the final word on the Bridge to Nowhere.
An Ohio family is living with a Deer in the house, who was rescued after being abandoned by its mother. Dillie the deer eats almost everything in sight. 19 Action News' Dawn Kendrick reports.
Gregg Mozgala was born with cerebral palsy, he often wore leg braces until he was 12 but, as Serena Altschul reports, dancing has proved to be a most unlikely medicine for this young man.
Bill Geist explores the resurgence of the classic game of ping pong, which is now getting the celebrity treatment.
In Utah, one family's dog went missing for nearly a month. The Australian Sheppard mix, Millie, never left home before, but was found in a storm drain 10 feet underground.
Michelle Miller takes a look at what might just be the golden age of plus-size modeling.
Allen Pizzey reports on the long and winding road that brought Amanda Knox from college student studying abroad in a small Italian town, to convicted murder who will spend the next 26 years in an Italian prison.
With a massive ongoing recession and severe financial hardships for many, organizers have held tea parties in order to protest increasing taxes. KHOU's Brad Woodard reports from Sugarland, Texas.
While the health care debate reaches a fever pitch across the U.S., Nancy Giles notes it might be wise to just listen to what President Obama has to say.
CBS News' Byron Pitts spent many agonizing years overcoming his illiteracy and in this report he travels from Pittsburgh to Baltimore to meet those who are also faced with this disability.
For millions, summer means heading to the beach, feeling the sand between our toes, but there are serious lessons to be learned from all that sand. The Fast Draw's Mitch Butler and Josh Landis explain.
Josh Landis visits the annual Hatch, New Mexico chile festival in an attempt to answer the burning question: who grows the best chile in the land?
At 61-years-old, Tom Thompson says he's kicking it old school, playing as a kicker for the Kangaroo football team at Austin College in Texas. KXII's Maddie Garrett has the full story from the field.
Dogs are more than just pretty faces and Bill Geist proves you're never too old for a little puppy love.
Up and down the coast of Maine, folks are uncovering more and more about the romantic lives of lobsters, whose numbers are flourishing. Writer Trevor Corson and scientist Diane Cowan discuss the passionate crustaceans.
Millions of Americans this summer had an opportunity to take a walk in the park, a National Park. Jim Axelrod gives us a history of famous National Parks that have been a relaxing place for many.
Seth Doane travels to Trinidad, Colorado, where the first private practice for gender reassignment surgery, more commonly called "sex-changes," was begun over forty years ago.
A cat from Dallas was accidentally shipped more than 900 miles, surviving in a box for 2 days without food or water. KTVT's Selena Hernandez has the story.
Tom Petty has kept his fans and made countless new ones over the 30 years he's been in rock and roll and Anthony Mason spends a little time with the musician.
A Texas man has taken care of geese since they were born. He walks them, feeds them and even gets eggs from them, but eating these eggs are like eating his children. KFDM's Jessica Holloway reports
"CBS News RAW": Illusionist and endurance artist David Blane plans to spend 60 hours hanging upside down in Central Park without a net. He faces serious health risks such as hemorrhaging and blindness.
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