5 Stories You May Have Missed This Weekend

Survivor recounts Mali hotel attack; "Toy Story" turns 20.

— -- 1. American Survivor of Mali Hotel Attack: 'I Just Knew I Was Dead'

2. Cops ID Suspect in Tulane Med Student Shooting: 'We're Going to Find You'

New Orleans police identified the suspected gunman in the shooting of a Tulane University medical student today, and the mayor issued a stern warning: "We're going to find you."

The man caught on a surveillance camera dragging a woman down a street Friday morning and then pointing a gun at Peter Gold, 25, when he intervened has been identified as Euric Cain, 21, police said today.

The "enraged" gunman then shot Gold in the stomach, police said, in a terrifying moment caught on camera.

3. This Iowa Man Plowed a Quarter-Acre Sign for Bernie Sanders

"I was on my tractor one day and thought, 'Well, I'll just try this,'" Mike Pattavina told ABC News about the sign plowed into his soybean field. "It worked out pretty good."

The 68-year-old farmer said the "B" alone is 60 feet tall.

4. Tossed Apple Core Prompts White House Lockdown

The incident occurred at approximately 4:34 p.m., according to spokeswoman Nicole Mainor, who said the Secret Service questioned the woman before sending her on her way.

Officers initially didn't know what the object was that the woman threw over the fence, which is what prompted the lockdown. It lasted less than 10 minutes before the fence line areas were reopened to the public.

5. 'Toy Story' Turns 20: How It Changed Animated Films Forever

When "Toy Story" premiered 20 years ago today, everybody involved knew it was something special. However, nobody could have predicted just how successful the film would become, including the two teams behind it: Pixar (then owned by Apple) and Disney (the parent company of ABC News).

"I don't think either side thought "Toy Story" would turn out as well as it has. The technology is brilliant, the casting is inspired, and I think the story will touch a nerve," former Disney CEO Michael Eisner told Fortune magazine in 1995.

"Believe me, when we first agreed to work together, we never thought their first movie would be our 1995 holiday feature, or that they could go public on the strength of it," the former Disney leader added.