Jim Marino remains one of western Canada's premier trainers, with his starters boasting a 21 per cent strike rate this year and more than $500,000 in purses earned each of the last five seasons. But, as harness racing in Alberta continues to face near-term uncertainty due to the continued spread of the coronavirus, Marino has decided to shift his focus to developing his younger pupils for the time being.
as barry pederson will report in our sunday morning cover story. reporter: what if you could add a decade to your life just by changing your diet and making new friends? that s the buzz in longevity circles thanks to research. how close? i see in terms of the choices we make, we can do this today. reporter: answers to an age-old question coming up this sunday morning. osgood: coming home is a story from our mark strassman about one woman s determination and compassion. yeah, i mean, when you get 19 acres of land, you can build your dreamompletely without compromising any part of it. reporter: she has always had an american dream. not just for herself but for hundreds of kids who came to the united states as war refugees. i think a lot of people take being an american for granted. all of us came to this country for a better life, for a fresh start, to live the american dream. congratulations, new citizens. reporter: what it really means to be an american citi
this is the cbs evening news with scott pelley. good evening, scott is off, i m anthony mason. the recession officially ended three years ago but today s jobs report is more proof the recovery is painfully slow. the june unemployment rate was 8.2% unchanged from may but employers added just 80,000 jobs. that s three straight months of disappointing job creation after a four-month stretch where growth was in the hundreds of thousands. it was the main issue today on the presidential campaign trail we have three reports beginning with rebecca jarvis, rebecca, those 80,000 jobs just aren t enough, are they? reporter: they are not, anthony. our economy needs to add at least 125,000 new jobs every month just to keep up with population growth. at this pace it could take four more years for the u.s. job market to fully recovery from the great recession. how does it feel to look at a project like this that is thriving now? it s exciting. it s a relief. it s thrilling. we re h