This week on "Face the Nation," host John Dickerson interviews Rep. Adam Schiff, Sen. Ben Sasse and former Sec. Robert Gates regarding the firing of FBI Director James Comey, Russia investigation and foreign policy.
Sen. Ben Sasse, R-Nebraska, says he is unsure of why FBI Director James Comey was fired. "I'm not sure how this president makes lots of decisions," the Senator concedes.
"We need to talk honestly about our institutions that need to be restored and need to have the ability for people in five and eight and ten years to trust these institutions," said Sen. Ben Sasse, R-Nebraska
Rep. Adam Schiff, D-California says he was deeply disturbed by the President's dismissal of FBI Director Comey, calling it "a threat to our system of checks and balances."
The top democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, Rep. Adam Schiff believes Attorney General Sessions' meetings with candidates for FBI Director underline a need for a special prosecutor.
What began as a way to be closer with her parents and to cope with their illness grew into something bigger. For two years, as Howie and Laurel Borowick each fought stage IV cancer side-by-side, photographer Nancy Borowick documented their close bond. She talked with correspondent Anthony Mason about the pain and love she experienced and witnessed, and about her moving new book, "The Family Imprint," which chronicles her parents' lives and deaths.
Jane Pauley presents a Mother's Day look at the data on maternity leave, including how the United States stacks up to other developed countries with regards to guaranteed paid maternity leave for new mothers.
"Sunday Morning" contributor Faith Salie remembers her mother, and the valuable lessons about motherhood that she realized only after becoming a mom herself.
The actress who built a career playing a ditzy blonde is now all about kid's brains. Goldie Hawn spent years working with psychologists to create MindUP, a 15-lesson plan to help kids be more mindful, to calm the stressors of modern-day youth. It's currently being practiced by about two million students in nine countries. Lee Cowan caught up with the actress, who is now back on screen for the first time in 15 years, playing the mother of Amy Schumer in the comedy, "Snatched."
We leave you this Mother's Day morning at Arizona's Music Mountains, where mares and their foals run free. Videographer: Carl Mrozek
The "Snatched" actress who built a career playing a ditzy blonde is now all about kid's brains, promoting a program to help kids deal with stress
"War Paint," the new Broadway musical about cosmetic icons Elizabeth Arden and Helena Rubinstein, earned four Tony nominations, including for its stars, Christine Ebersole and Patti LuPone. Richard Schlesinger interviews the actresses, along with biographer Lindy Woodhead and the show's writer, Doug Wright, for the behind-the-scenes story of the competitive beauty magnates.
In what he calls the strangest story of his career, correspondent Steve Hartman meets up with an old colleague, veteran investigative reporter Brad Brown, who had a bizarre tale to tell, involving Brown's mother, Janet, and the apparent message that showed up on his iPhone three days after she died.
"As a tribute to Mom I write letters to my kids on Mothers Day," John Dickerson says, "to be opened when I'm gone and they're older and the contents make more sense."
Chances are, if you're Johnny Mathis, you've been revealing your feelings in song for a long time, having recorded his first #1 hit back in 1957. The singer, who has a new album of the "Great New American Songbook," produced by Babyface, talks with a misty Nancy Giles about his wonderful, wonderful six-decade career.
For avid scrapbookers, creating books means passing down memories to their children - a record of their lives. Correspondent Jennifer Mayerle reports on a handcrafted tradition that has preserved history for families and communities for generations, and is also a treasure trove for scholars.
Comedian Jim Gaffigan has all the more reason to appreciate Mother's Day this year, as his wife, the mother of their five children, recovers from surgery to remove a brain tumor.
On May 14, 1850, Joel Houghton received a patent for a hand-cranked device that promised to simplify washing dishes. Jane Pauley reports.
In this web extra, the Tony-nominated stars of the Broadway musical "War Paint," Christine Ebersole and Patti LuPone, talk with correspondent Richard Schlesinger about their real-life characters, cosmetic icons Elizabeth Arden and Helena Rubinstein, and about the high theatrics of the business magnates' lives.
The legendary singer talks about his controversial 1982 magazine interview in which he stated that homosexuality was "a way of life that I've grown accustomed to." He tells Nancy Giles why he wasn't concerned about the potential impact on his career, despite receiving death threats. "It bothered me that it bothered people!" he laughed.
Europol spokesman warned that more people may be hit by the virus Monday when they return to work and switch on their computers
It was one of the most notorious cases in Texas history -- an ambush in a mansion that killed two and wounded two others -- and to this day, no one has been held accountable. Correspondent Maureen Maher investigates.
Nine candidates in the running to replace James Comey; Youth detention center connects teens with dogs