another b, bankruptcy. why it s now bye-bye. travel trouble. why flying is shaping up to be a real nightmare this summer. reporter: i m elise preston at l.a.x. fewer flights and higher prices could make it a miserable summer. and later, the rebound of the themed restaurants with a look to the past, los angeles eateries serve up dinner and a show. this is a first. i wasn t expecting the little people to come on the table and come to life. this is the cbs weekend news, from new york with jericka duncan. good evening. jericka is off. i m meg oliver. new details are emerging tonight about the daring evacuation of nearly 100 u.s. diplomatic personnel and their families from sudan s capital, khartoum. it was carried out by u.s. special forces as two top generals and their soldiers battle for control of the country. the violence has paralyzed the nation s airports and claimed more than 400 lives. thousands of americans, many of them dual citizens, remain caught in
16-year-old ralph yarl rang the door bell of the wrong house. he s recovering from a gunshot to the head. he was supposed to stay outside and his brothers were supposed to run outside, get in the car. and they come home and that was what was supposed to happen. and why he was standing there, his brothers didn t run outside, but he got a couple of bullets in his body. reporter: legal experts say homeowner andrew lester may claim self-defense under missouri s stand your ground law. about 30 states have stand your ground laws. florida was first in 2005, a law made famous by the trayvon martin shooting in 2012. but those laws don t provide blanket protection for shooting anyone who comes at you. and one study linked stand your ground laws with an up to 11% monthly increase in gun homicides. it s a volatile, violent mix. armed americans already on edge and a minor mishap later, gunshots.