maine, one ticket sold here claims it all. explaining the unexplained, a new pentagon report shows hundreds more ufo sightings. and later, we settle up to explore the yellowstone effect, tv cowboys inspiring real life cutters, a sport from the wild west. there you go. this is the cbs weekend n news from chicago with adriana diaz. good evening, we begin tonight with the growing political firestorm over president joe biden s handling of classified information, and today a new disclosure. more classified papers were discovered at mr. biden s delaware home from his time as vice president. so far we know of roughly 20 classified records that have been uncovered in two locations. this week s revelations first reported by cbs news come as the president approaches a difficult re-election bid and as the white house struggles to contain the damage. cbs s christina ruffini tonight at the white house has the latest. christina. reporter: good evening, adriana, you broke the
tens of millions of birds have died or been slaughtered. egg industry research scientist says high demand around the holidays also raised prices. what needs to happen to get egg prices back to what they were? what needs to happen is to recover from the avian flu and to prevent new cases. reporter: experts say it could take a few months for new chickens to be raised to replace those lost. even bakeries are struggling to find enough eggs. we don t drop an egg because that s a lot of cost. every egg counts. reporter: and it s not just eggs. meat, poultry, and fish prices rose 4.5% in a year due to inflation and higher production costs. and butter is costing americans about 31% more. michael george, cbs news, new york. a mega winner in maine, one winning ticket for the $1.3 billion jackpot was purchased at this gas station in the town of lebanon. 44 miles south of portland. no word yet on the winner. and what was once
reporter: johnny was sent to portugal. there zoologists determined he belonged near the gulf. after three years of paperwork, a portuguese airline who shared this video brought johnny to florida in november. since then marine staff prepared him for today. at first he didn t seem that excited. he hasn t been on sand probably in three or four years, and so we were just trying to be encouraging. moved him close to the water. let him get acclimated to the temperature change. reporter: with a little help this determined reptile that beat the odds and survived his long journey to much colder waters, took his first few paddles back into the gulf. with a transmitter on his back, researchers will track his movements and compare them to the same species of turtle. they re such an endangered species it is so important every egg counts. every time you return an animal where it belongs that is a good thing. that does warm your heart. taylor vincent, abc news.