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mammals. tracy smith will be reporting our cover story. >> reporter: they're idolized, netishized, idealized, stylized. >> men love to stair at breasts. i have to say i don't find this revolutionary science. >> reporter: they might also be lethal. >> they are the most vulnerable organ to cancer in a woman's body. >> reporter: later on sunday morning, the art and science of breasts. hey, my eyes are up here. >> osgood: a bird's eye view is what seth doane will be offering from one of the world's most extraordinary cities. >> reporter: 18 million tourists visit venice each year taking in its historic beauty, but one of the biggest draws of all might surprise you. pigeons. thousands of them. of all of the things you've done in venice, where does this rank? >> the top. >> reporter: later on sunday morning, the pigeons of saint mark's square. >> osgood: after the storm a really terrible one, a community is left to mourn its dead, comfort its injured and honor its heroes. you never know how the heroes will emerge or what will become of them once the storm has passed. here's lee cowan in joplin. >> reporter: from the twisted wreckage of this beer cooler to find 25 survivors in one of the worst tornadoes a record, joplin, missouri. >> i saw the entire front wall just lift up in the air. >> reporter: gone? >> gone. and that was the last thing i remember seeing. >> reporter: reuben carter, the gas station attendant had helped save them all. a story of survival has as many twists and turns as the tornado itself later on sunday morning. >> where to go from here, you know. >> osgood: here's a trick question for you. who is alex trebek? the trick, of course, is that in trebek's tv world, the question comes after the answer not before. this morning susan spencer explains it all. >> the answer is for 28 years he has hosted one of the most popular quiz shows on television. >> and the correct response is, who is alex trebek. >> reporter: who indeed. we'll find out later on sunday morning. >> osgood: rita braver previews a controversial new home for a distinguished collection of art. mo rocca catches up with olympic medalist sean johnson. steve hartman watches young rocket scientists in texas and more. first the headlines for this sunday morning the 13th of may, mother's day 2012. students at boston university held a candlelight vigil last night for three classmates killed in a car accident in new zealand where they were studying. at least five other b.u. students were injured in the crash. republican presidential candidate mitt romney was in virginia yesterday where he gave a commencement address at liberty university. romney praised the virtues of faith and family before an audience of evangelical christians. the biggest applause came when he declared that, quote, marriage is a relationship between one man and one woman. a former taliban official turned peace negotiator was gunned down on the streets of kabul this morning. his death is seen as a blow to bringing political resolution to the war in afghanistan. u.s. drone strikes on saturday killed at least 11 suspected al qaeda militants in southern lebanon. the attacks come a week after the u.s. thwarted an al-qaeda plot to arm suicide bombers with an explosive designed to bring down airplanes. today's weather will be sunny out west but a soggy mother's day for most of the country. the week ahead promises to be hot and stormy in the south and warm and sunny everywhere. just like mom. next, mother and child. the tie that binds. >> alex, i'll take your mom for $400. >> alex, i'll take your mom for $[ male announcer ] citi turns 200 this year. so why exactly should that be of any interest to you? well, in that time there've been some good days. and some difficult ones. but, through it all, we've persevered, supporting some of the biggest ideas in modern history. like the transatlantic cable that connected continents. and the panama canal that made our world a smaller place. we supported the marshall plan that helped europe regain its strength. and pioneered the atm, so you can get cash when you want it. it's been our privilege to back ideas like these, and the leaders behind them. so why should our anniversary matter to you? because for 200 years, we've been helping people and their ideas move from ambition to achievement. and the next great idea could be yours. ♪ [ male announcer ] for our families... our neighbors... and our communities... america's beverage companies have created a wide range of new choices. developing smaller portion sizes and more low- & no-calorie beverages... adding clear calorie labels so you know exactly what you're choosing... and in schools, replacing full-calorie soft drinks with lower-calorie options. with more choices and fewer calories, america's beverage companies are delivering. >> osgood: in virtually every language in every corner of the world, the first sound a baby makes that can be called a word is mama. in ancient latin mama became a word for breast, our first source of nurture, comfort and love. for all humankind a source of imagery and medical challenge across the centuries. our cover story is reported now by tracy smith. ♪ >> reporter: there are few images in the christian world more universal and more sacred than this. the madonna doing what any mother would do: feeding her new born child at her breast. since the earliest forms of human expression, the breast has been front and center. how long have breasts been on artists' minds and subjects of their works? >> well if we look at the venus, it's actually 25,000 b.c.. >> reporter: beth rosenberg teaches art history at new york's school of visual art. >> we see breasts through art history because they're about the world. they're about life. >> reporter: more specifically, they're uniquely designed to feed human babies. >> human infants are different from a lot of other mammals in that we don't have kind of a snout. if we had really flat ma'am reglands and a fat infant trying to suck at all, it would be like kissing a mirror. it doesn't work very well. >> reporter: science journalist florence williams who wrote the book on breasts say that researchers are still scratching their heads over them. >> turns out it's a contentious debate about why breasts evolved because breasts as apart from the mammary glands are very unique in the animal kingdom. other primates only have breasts while they're breastfeeding. >> reporter: since human breasts typically show up long before they're needed for nursing, williams says there's disagreement over whether they evolved for food or sex. >> there's been many decades of scholarship arguing that breasts evolved as sexual signals. and then the feminist scholars came along in the 1970 and '80s and said, wait a minute. maybe they're something to do with how breasts actually work. that might help women or infants survive. maybe the interest in breasts on the part of men came later. ♪ it's just a little... >> reporter: it's a lot more than interest. dolly parton was famous for attributes other than her acting ability. as was rachael welch. and who could forget hally barry in that bathing suit? >> magnificent view. >> reporter: the bigger than life images inevitably left some women feeling inadequate. >> most women really don't like their breasts. there's always something wrong. >> reporter: few people understand this more than mary katherine langhammer, a veteran bra fitter at houston's top drawer lake ray. >> they're too big, too little. they want the opposite of what they have its no secret that women have been trying to improve on nature for generations. >> there are bras that you can put all sorts of things in. you know, wire, tissue, metal. there were even bras that you could blow up with a straw to make your breast look bigger. >> reporter: but permanent breast enlargement was a medical puzzle until a eureka moment 50 years ago in a texas hospital. >> there was a doctor in houston, texas, who was holding one of these new silicone blood bag. blood used to be contained in glass. he was holding a warm bag of blood. he said, my, that feels good. it feels like a breast. >> reporter: enter a divorced mother of six who went to her doctors to have tattoos removed from her chest. when they pitched her the idea of experimental implants, she said yes but only if they threw in an ear tuck. the doctors agreed. in 1962, timmy jeanne became silicon breast implant recipient number one. across the road from a houston tank farm, timmy jeanne's house still stands. >> come on. we're going in the house. >> reporter: timmy jeanne is still standing too. and half a century later, the original silicone implants are still inside her. so how did they sell you on it? what did they tell you about it? >> i don't know. i think about that. i think i was just so comfortable with the doctors. i might even have had a crush on one or two of them. >> reporter: when the bandages came off, timmy jeanne was a cup size larger. but it was nothing she wanted to flaunt. you didn't show them off. >> no. >> reporter: why not? >> i was too timid, i think. >> reporter: so those whistles and those cat calls you didn't like that. >> no, i did like it. oh, yeah. i really liked it but i didn't want it to go anywhere. i just wasn't used to all that attention. >> reporter: are you still happy with how they look? >> oh, yeah. most of the time now i go braless. >> reporter: 50 years on, the implants have hardened. one has a tear. but lindsey says she's still a satisfied customer. so have you had any health problems that you could say had to do with the implants? >> no. i've had not any health problems. >> reporter: not all implant patients have done as well as timmy jeanne lindsey. the fda says that as many as one in five silicone implant recipients needs to have them replace within ten years. and even if we don't invite trouble, our breasts go looking for it. >> the breasts are the most visible part of what women define as being female. and they are the most vulnerable organ to cancer in a woman's body. >> i've been in practice for over 20 years taking care of women with breast cancer. >> reporter: this doctor, a breast cancer specialist at philadelphia's medical center, says breast cancer cases have doubled since the 1940s. yes, we're getting better at finding it but there's more to it than that. breasts soak up toxins. there are a lot more toxins out there now. >> hormones in beef and dairy products. preservatives in fragrances that can have hormonal effects. these are things that never use to be out in the environment. now they're out there everywhere and our breasts are picking them up. our breasts are like sponges. they pick up what's out there and they hold on to it. >> reporter: and, dr. white says, women who who haven't carried a baby to term have what are considered immature breasts and are more vul nernl to those toxins. >> when breast gland tissue is immature, it is very suggest i believe. it's ready to fool around with any host of things that might look like, smell like, taste like hormones that could potentially stimulate extra breast cell growth which could be unhealthy growth including the start of a cancer. >> reporter: of course, having a child or three is no guarantee against cancer either. two years ago marissa white found something on her own mammogram. >> as soon as i saw the films myself, i knew it was a cancer there. >> reporter: you looked at the films yourself. >> oh, yeah, yeah. >> reporter: was there a thought that went through your head when you saw that ma lig nancy, when you knew? >> grandchildren. i have three kids, aand i want to see those grandchildren. >> reporter: now back at work and cancer free, this doctor is a stronger voice than ever for breast cancer prevention. >> we have to pay attention to this. we have about 1.3 million cases today worldwide. we expect that to double by the year 2040. the breasts are telling us we have a problem out there. we have to listen. we can't ignore it. there's too much at stake. >> reporter: for all of our reference and fascination through the centuries, the breast is still in many ways a mystery. but that too is changing. for her part, timmy jeanne lindsey, the texas great grandmother, says she'll donate her silicone implants... some day. >> don't want no autopsy. but they can take them. >> reporter: they can take the implants. >> but i'd like to tell you, i plan to live to be 100. i don't know what i'll be looking like but i'm going to make it. i'm going to try. >> osgood: next, when hailstones fall. sometimes investing opportunities are hard to spot. you have to dig a little. fidelity's etf market tracker shows you the big picture on how different asset classes are performing, and it lets you go in for a closer look at areas within a class or sector that may be bucking a larger trend. i'm stephen hett of fidelity investments. the etf market tracker is one more innovative reason serious investors are choosing fidelity. get 200 free trades today and explore your next investing idea. my name is sunshine and i have three beautiful girls. i like taking advil® for a headache. it nips it in the bud. and i can be that mommy that i want to be. ♪ [ male announcer ] take action. take advil®. [ son ] mom, computer's broke! where's i.t. mom? she quit. [ male announcer ] even with technology -- it's all you. that's why you've got us. get up to $200 dollars off select computers. staples that was easy. >> osgood: and now a page from our sunday morning almanac. may 13, 1930, 82 years ago today. the day death fell out of the texas sky. for that was the day a sudden hailstorm killed a 39-year-old texas farmer named j.k. clack. he was working in his field near lubbock. it was the first confirmed hailstone death in u.s. history. the first but by no means the last. hailstones look the lives of a colorado infant in 1979, and a 19-year-old texas man in 2000. while the fictional hailstorm hammered tokyo with deadly effect in the 2004 climate change disaster film "the day after tomorrow." the physics of hailstones tell us why they're so dangerous. the folks at noaa, the national orbianic and atmospheric administration, calculate that a hailstone the size of a baseball would be the equivalent of a real baseball dropped from a height of 30,000 feet. hitting the ground at up to 120 miles per hour. >> we've heard that baseball- sized hail.... >> baseball- to golf-ball sized hail falling. >> osgood: n.o.a.a.assures us that most hailstones are less than two inchs in diameter, there are exceptions. the biggest u.s. hailstone on record fell in 2010 in south dakota weighing in at one pound, 15 ounces with a diameter of eight inches. although hailstones are killed only a handful of americans, they injure roughly two dozen people across the country every year. and cost a billion dollars worth of damage to drops and... to crops and property. reasons enough to keep a solid roof over your head whenever the severe storm warnings start to fly. ahead, a movable feast of art. ♪ a refrigerator has never been hacked. an online virus has never attacked a corkboard. ♪ give your customers the added feeling of security a printed statement or receipt provides... ...with mail. it's good for your business. ♪ and even better for your customers. ♪ for safe and secure ways to stay connected, visit usps.com/mail [ female announcer ] with depression, simple pleasures can simply hurt. the sadness, anxiety, the loss of interest. the aches and pains and fatigue. depression hurts. cymbalta can help with many symptoms of depression. tell your doctor right away if your depression worsens, you have unusual changes in behavior or thoughts of suicide. antidepressants can increase these in children, teens, and young adults. cymbalta is not approved for children under 18. people taking maois or thioridazine or with uncontrolled glaucoma should not take cymbalta. taking it with nsaid pain relievers, aspirin, or blood thinners may increase bleeding risk. severe liver problems, some fatal, were reported. signs include abdominal pain and yellowing skin or eyes. tell your doctor about all your medicines, including those for migraine and while on cymbalta, call right away if you have high fever, confusion and stiff muscles or serious allergic skin reactions like blisters, peeling rash, hives, or mouth sores to address possible life-threatening conditions. talk about your alcohol use, liver disease and before you reduce or stop cymbalta. dizziness or fainting may occur upon standing. simple pleasures shouldn't hurt. talk to your doctor about cymbalta. depression hurts. cymbalta can help. depression hurts. kiwi. soy milk. impulse buy. gift horse. king crab. rhubarb pie. lettuce shower. made by bees. toucan sam. that's not cheese. grass fed. curry. gingersnaps. soup can tower. 5% cash back. right now, get 5% cash back at grocery stores. it pays to discover. >> osgood: priceless paintings are commonplace. and the collection of the late dr. albert barnes, a collection that returns to public view later this month. for art lovers though, there is a divisive question. was the barnes' collection moved to a new location against his will. rita braver guides us through the controversy. >> the greatest collection in the world is the greatest renoir in the world. >> reporter: and there's van gogh, picasso, and many or major artists. incredibly beautiful and important works like cezanne's master piece the card players. how much do you think this would be worth? >> my lips are sealed. >> reporter: those barnes' foundation director is hesitant to put a number on it, the collection has been valued at more than $25 billion. so it's moved into a gleaming new $150 million building in downtown philadelphia should be cause for universal celebration. instead it is a move mired in controversy. going back to the man who amassed the collection beginning at the turn of the 20th century. philadelphia doctoral better barnes. brilliant and eccentric, he made a fortune in pharmaceuticals and started buying what was then considered modern art. it was not well received when he showed it in philadelphia in 1923. according to veteran civil rights activist julian bond whose family had close ties to bond's. >> the reviewers pooh poohed it and the art establishment in philadelphia pooh poohed this kind of art. he built this enmity against them. he was an onerous kind of person. >> reporter: so barnes directed a building to house the house next door to his home in marion just outside of philadelphia. the barnes foundation was rarely open to the general public. he said its main purpose was to conduct classes and art appreciation. >> in the foundations courses artists are linked up with life itself. >> reporter: barnes made very specific prigss for what would happen to the collection after his death. giving lincoln university, the historically black college where julian bond's father hora to nate most ofhe trustees to run the foundation. >> i think it was partly because barnes wanted to put his finger in the eye of people in philadelphia. "take that." i'm going to put these black people in charge of it and see how you like that. >> reporter: barnes died in a car crash in 1951 leaving $10 million to support foundation but by the 1990s the instance st. louis was going broke and began a series of legal battles, including one waged by the foundation trustees who wanted to raise money by sending the art on tour in violation of barnes''s wishes. as sunday morning reported in 1993. >> they claim the building was deer tear i don't remember ating, the paintings were in danger. the court agree and the will was broken. >> reporter: there were battles with neighbors in marion too over traffic congestion when the barnes allowed more visitors. there started to be talk of moving the collection to philadelphia. to derek gillman, a supporter of the move, it was simply a case of a small, insular institution not being able to attract major funding. >> it was this sense of, you know, we'll put our arms around ourselves and stay hugging ourselves. it doesn't work. it doesn't work. >> reporter: for the 2009 documentary called "the art of the steal" claims that philadelphia political and philanthropic leaders have long plotted to get control of the priceless collection. >> everybody involved in this had their own interest. the only person whose interest had no champion was alert barnes. everyone had abandoned him. >> reporter: ten years ago lincoln university ceded control of the foundation's board, thus allowing the move to go forward. >> they let philadelphia money, philadelphia politics, squeeze them out of it. >> reporter: so, love the idea or hate it, the collection was finally moved just weeks ago, including this enormous mural custom painted by matisse to fit the alcoves above the window at the original barnes. >> we actually measured the painting, carried the measurements over and built this building around it. >> reporter: in fact the gallerys barnes built are replicated exactly in the new space. with the art works displayed just as barnes arranged them. >> here you have this van gogh over in the corner. why is it here amidst all of this? >> barnes created these insulations very distinctive wall compositions called ensembles. he's creating harmonys among the works. >> reporter: chief curator judith says barnes deliberately enter pringled his collection of pottery and pennsylvania dutch chested with the paintings finding similarities in color and form. all this art work is punctuated with these iron pieces, metal pieces. did he explain why he loved that so much? >> he did. he says that the forms of the metal work echo or underscore forms in the paintings themselves. >> reporter: perhaps proving that barnes has a sense of humor he placed this bare bottom been wire next to a similarly shaped piece of metal work and above an ample chair. despite the faithful nez to barnes' ensembles there are still plenty of people who believe the art should never have been moved from its original space. >> it is a crime. after all it was albert barnes' art. he owned it. he could decide what to do with it. >> reporter: but with the new building set to open next weekend, the foundation's director insists that bringing the collection to philadelphia is true to barnes's desire to educate. now more people can see the art more often. >> instead of coming once every 40 years, you can come four times a year. you don't have to rush it at all. you can say, i think i'll see these six cezannes and then i'll come back next week. >> osgood: next, a balancing act for gymnast sean johnson. >> perfect. >> all right. >> osgood: and later, the oft of jeopardy. ,,,,,,,,,,,, >> osgood: american gymnast sean johnson was a golden girl at the 2008 olympics. she hopes to repeat that performance at this summer's games in london. here's mo rocca. >> reporter: what does it feel like when you're flying through the air? >> it feels like i'm invincible. it makes you feel like superman. i guess it's like an adrenaline rush. >> reporter: it's obvious that sean johnson loves gymnastics. a sport she's very good at. >> time kind of slows down. you can let go out of the bar, film, take time to register where the bar is and catch it again. it's amazing. it's what i live for. >> reporter: at the 2008 olympic games in beijing she stuck her landings. and struck gold. on the balance beam plus three silver medals. now at age 20, young by life's standards, not so young for a gymnast, she's hoping to compete in this summer's london games. a lot of the kids in here are ten. are you kind of like the old lady of this gym? >> pretty much. i'm the grandma. i've been through it. they're like, oh, she's so old. how can she still do it? >> reporter: and johnson still does it every morning in her hometown of west des moines iowa under the watchful eye of her long-time coach liang chow. you describe this as kind of a second home. >> definitely. it's not my first home. i almost spend more time here than i do at my actual home. >> reporter: if sean feels at home at the gym.... >> i kind of always net like if i wasn't here, i didn't get to see her that day. >> reporter:... that may be because her mom terry johnson has spent so much time here. four hours a day six days a week for eight years while sean was growing up. >> we weren't talking. we weren't hanging out. just having her here, i felt connected. i felt like, okay, you know, my mom is still here. i still get to see her. >> reporter: and mother and daughter agree on whose idea this whole gymnastics thing was. >> when i would come home and she'd be like are you sure you want to do it? are you sure you don't want to try soccer? i'd like be like, no, i love it. i love the hard work. i want you there to support me. >> she has huge feet. >> reporter: parents terry and doug brought their only child to gymnastics studio because they had trouble keeping up with her. there she is. only 17 months. >> running, as you see. >> she never stopped. >> she loved just pulling stuff out of the cabinets. that's her best toys. >> reporter: when did you start coming to this gym? >> i started going to trials when i was like six years old. >> reporter: in 1998 sean and terry met coach chow, a former gymnast from china who came to iowa to study english. >> did you notice a certain spark or something pretty early? >> no, i don't notice any spark. as any coach tells you at six years old she'll be a olympian, that's a cliche. that's not the truth. >> reporter: how hard is it to do what sean johnson does? >> gymnastics isn't something that you can just learn. >> reporter: but this correspondent could try. >> nice. that was good. nice. >> reporter: sean took it to it naturally. talent plus a fierce will propelled her. by 2008 johnson was the reigning world champion when she arrived in beijing. far from home and yet.... >> i was on the beam in the beijing olympics. the farthest point in the arena away from my parents on the other end. i could hear distinctively my mom and dad screaming for me. >> reporter: she was expected to win gold in the individual all around competition. but going into her final event she was a distant 8th. >> i figured it out about 10 seconds before i started my floor routine that my chances of gold were gone. i told myself, you know, if you can't actually get the gold medal, i want to go out there and prove to the 50,000 people in the arena that i deserved it. >> reporter: was it liberating in a sense? >> definitely. i remember that routine that moment i had zero pressure. i was just wanting to go out there and have fun and do the best routine of my life. >> announcer: a phenomenal routine. what a champion. >> reporter: she managed to win silver which johnson says taught her something invaluable. >> my worth isn't determined by a color of a medal. >> reporter: getting a silver is getting a silver. it's not "not getting a gold." >> one of the first questions i was asked was how does it feel to lose? and i said, you know, if that's what people think, then we have it all wrong. i didn't lose anything. i won a silver medal. >> reporter: after beijing, sean took a two-year break from gymnastics. slowing down for her meant competing in dancing with the stars. she took top honors. and there were other accolades. >> you've been honored with four medals and a butter sculpture. >> yeah (laughing). in 2008 i was made out of butter. in iowa that is a very big deal. every year they normally sculpt a cow out of butter. >> reporter: but the sport she loves so much kept calling her back and the mother who loves her daughter so much has mixed feelings about that. >> secretly i hoped she was done. i'm sorry. i shouldn't say that. i really thought that after the olympics, we would just kind of go back home and things would just go back to normal. >> reporter: but sean johnson doesn't have time for normal. at least not right now. can you even guess what you'll be doing in 0 years? >> no. i don't know what i'm doing tomorrow let alone in 20 years. i have no idea. i hope to finish college. have a family. be living a normal life. i don't know. >> osgood: next, memorable people. and wild things. ur head? do you need a lamp to see? and does it leave your bedmate be? don't you wish there was a light that wouldn't keep them up all night? if so, you'll be happy to know, our newest nook now comes with glow. introducing nook simple touch with glowlight, the only e-reader made for bedtime reading. find your nook at your neighborhood barnes & noble. sometimes life can be well, a little uncomfortable. but when it's hard or hurts to go to the bathroom, there's dulcolax stool softener. dulcolax stool softener doesn't make you go, it just makes it easier to go. dulcolax stool softener. make yourself comfortable. [ male announcer ] how could switchgrass in argentina, change engineering in dubai, aluminum production in south africa, and the aerospace industry in the u.s.? at t. rowe price, we understand the connections of a complex, global economy. it's just one reason 75% of our mutual funds beat their 10-year lipper average. t. rowe price. invest with confidence. request a prospectus or summary prospectus with investment information, risks, fees and expenses to read and consider carefully before investing. >> osgood: it happened this week, the loss of three men who shaped our times. former deputy attorney general nicholas catzenbach died this past tuesday. in 1963 he stared down alabama's governor george wallace who was trying to block the court-ordered admission of two black students to the university of alabama. >> as governor of the state of alabama, i do hereby denounce and forbid this illegal and unwarranted action by the central government. >> governor, i'm not interested in a show. i don't know what the purpose of this show is. i am interested in the orders of these courts being enforced. that is my own responsibility here. >> osgood: the students were registered later that same day. nicholas was 90. author maurice sendak was 83 according to the records but in reality he was a life-long champion of childhood. not the sweet and light version found in most children's books but a darker and stranger version that allowed young readers to confront their fears. >> a private boat for max and he sailed off through night and day and in and out of for almost over a year to where the wild things are. >> osgood: where the wild things are was maurice sendak's 1963 breakthrough book. a vivid introduction to his combination of imaginative story telling and wild and woolly illustrations. hairdresser individualal sass and died wednesday at his home in los angeles. born dirt poor in london he worked his way up to become one of the most trend setting stylists of his time. he had one overriding ambition. >> i wanted everybody to have good hair. not just the people that could have it set once a week and combed out during the week so they could go to the ritz for lunch. it wasn't just the rich ladies' pleasure. >> osgood: vidal sasoon was 84. >> do you think you were going to make it? >> no, i actually thought i would do. >> no, i actually thought i would do. >> osgood: ahead, the hero,,,,,, when i take a picture of this check, it goes straight to the bank. oh. oh look the lion is out! no mommy no! don't worry honey, it only works on checks. deposit checks from your smartphone with chase quickdeposit. just snap a picture, hit send and done. take a step forward and chase what matters. >> osgood: almost a year after the storm the people of joplin, missouri, are still struggling to recover from the tornado that devastated their town, left 160 people dead. of all the heroic stories of survival from that day, there is one you likely have not heard. it's the story lee cowan found upon his return to joplin. >> reporter: on the wind swept plains of missouri, a place all too familiar with funnel clouds and warning sirens, there are year-old wounds that still look fresh. the joplin tornado, a rare f-5, with winds in excess of 200 miles an hour, was everything meteorologists feared, maybe worse. it's mile-wide scar is still evident right through the center of town. while the clean-up is almost complete, it's the stain of two terrifying minutes in this place that may never be washed away. do you still think about it? >> the tornado? almost every day. >> reporter: reuben carter was working at a fast strip gas station in joplin. with a degree in psychology running the cash register was supposed to be temporary. a paycheck while he hunted for the job he was trained for as a mental health counselor, but that job was hard to find. >> i did get kind of frustrated. i was like why am i still here? why can't i find a place to work that uses my skills? and then when the tornado hit, that gave me a reason as to why i was still there. >> reporter: that reason, he now figures, was to take care of others. his cerebral palsy always made him a bit slow on his feet but not on that day. when the sirens went off he jumped in action. >> this space is where i had everybody crouch down initially. >> reporter: locking the doors to the store and ordering his customers to the back wall. outside conditions were deteriorating fast. >> the rain started getting so bad we couldn't even drive. >> reporter: cory waterman was listening to a baseball game on the car radio with his friends. he saw the clouds start to spin. he desperately looked for a place to hide. >> reuben thankfully came and let us in. >> reporter: by then the power had gone out. but there was just enough light for a cell phone to capture reuben counting heads, unlocking the door for everyone that he could. >> there's no way i'm going to leave somebody out in the middle of that. i just won't do that. >> reporter: behind reuben's welcoming flashlight were the last people he let in. stacey labar, who had just finished photographing joplin's high school graduation and was headed home to kansas city. >> i would have driven right into the storm because that was on the way home. i probably wouldn't be here. >> reporter: she got in with just seconds to spare. >> we could hear the building start to break apart. we could hear the wall actually, you know, vibrating, moving back and forth. we could hear pieces of the roofing being torn off. there were cars being blown side ways across the parking lot. at that point it was just like, okay, everybody get in the cooler now. (screaming and crashing). >> we just rushed in that cooler. you know, i don't think we had time to think. >> are you okay? (crying and screaming) >> i grabbed it like this to pull it shut. as i was doing that i looked out to the front of the store. that's when i saw the whole front of the store take off. >> reporter: just that far away. >> literally i saw the wall take off. >> reporter: straight up? >> straight up into the air. >> reporter: how could you even close the door? >> because i had to. (screaming and crashing). >> reporter: inside, 25 souls held on for their lives. it was more terrifying than the wind. strangers drawn together like family. >> are you okay? >> i love you. >> reporter: in that moment they were. did you think you were going to make it? >> no. >> reporter: you didn't? >> no, no, i actually thought i was going to die. >> reporter: so did cory and stacey. >> i think i just anticipated, when is it going to happen? let's just.... >> yeah, yeah. >> let's just get it over with. >> reporter: like helpless sardines in a tin can, they waited. when did you know it was over? >> when we couldn't hear anything. anymore like the wind, the noise. you know, no more debris. >> the structure of the building may not be safe to move. >> reporter: reuben's plan had worked. the cooler had somehow held up even though everything around it didn't. survivor isaac duncan returned later with his cell phone. >> we climbed right here. that's what we saw. >> reporter: nothing was recognizable. the gas station itself was mangled, twisted, a twisted mess. >> it looked like a bomb went off. >> every single building that you could see for miles was destroyed. >> reporter: stacey started taking pictures. first inside the cooler. and then outside. where she began to wander in a days. >> i walked up the street. just kind of took pictures of things because it helped me focus. some old guy said, hey, do you need a ride? and i was like, yes, please. he took me to low's. that's where i stayed. >> reporter: still in her camera were the pictures of that high school graduation that she had taken just hours earlier. some of those in cap and gown never made it home that day. do you look at your pictures from that day? >> sometimes. not all the time. >> reporter: is that hard? >> um-hum. >> reporter: or does that help? >> no, it's hard. >> reporter: so why do you look at them? >> i don't know. >> reporter: cory has had a hard time too. >> there's such a massive scale to what happened. we're like, i don't know, it's forever like ingrained in me now. >> reporter: when they returnd with us to the rebuilt gas station.... >> scary? >> yeah, scary. >> reporter:... the cooler was as haunting as ever. >> feels weird being back in there. >> reporter: are you okay? >> well, you know, when i went back to kansas city, i would wake up and i felt so guilty. >> reporter: for surviving? >> yeah. because everybody here lost everything. i was home in my town with, you know, houses and trees and stuff. >> reporter: but for reuben, the tornado seemed to give him a renewed sense of purpose. >> reuben carter. >> reporter: he finally landed that job as a mental health counselor. ironically the storm created a greater need for mental assistance. >> i've got a client change of status that i need to work on here. >> reporter: his new boss said reuben was the perfect fit. >> i think he has a good warmth about him. >> reporter: he's a natural at it. >> yes, definitely. he's a natural. >> i will do that. >> reporter: reuben even started applying to doctoral programs. it all looked as if there was a silver lining in those storm clouds after all. >> like a fresh start. like a reboot of my life. it ought started the day of the tornado. >> reporter: but in the two months since we met reuben, we found out his reboot hasn't worked. he lost that counseling job, the one he had worked so hard to find. he's been diagnosed with post traumatic stress disorder. >> where to go from here. >> reporter: it's debilitating. >> i couldn't move. i couldn't get out of bed. i was just like, you know, what am i going to do? >> reporter: just like joplin's landscape, reuben is still scarred too. >> it's not just, you know, instantaneous thing like, oh, i've dealt with this and i'm fine now and i will have no problems for, you know, from now on. >> reporter: what he clings to now is the family of strangers who he says are the only ones who really understand what cheating death feels like. >> stay out of trouble. >> i'll try. >> you stay out of trouble. >> oh, i will. >> reporter: like so many in this storm-battered town, he's a miracle survivor still fighting to survive. >> i still have a lot of things that i feel like i need to do. i'm not done yet. i'm going to keep going. and do the best i can. >> osgood: ahead, venice's losing battle with pigeons. ,,,,,,,,,, >> osgood: on a special sunday morning next week, we'll be visiting islands. as an appetizer this morning, we're visiting venice, a city built on more than 100 islands and which suffers from a chronic problem and i'm not talking about the water. seth doane now with a bird's eye view. >> reporter: venice is home to vivaldi. master pieces of renaissance art and architecture. and at its center, a spectacle that defies definition. feeding and photographing thousands of pigeons. of all of the things you've done in venice, where does this rank? >> the top. >> reporter: tourists flock to the magnificent piazza san marco to pose with pigeons. >> if you are not feeding the pigeons, you were not in venice. >> reporter: katharine hepburn marveled at the birds in the 1955 movie "summertime." sir laurence olivier fed them while touring europe. even this 1875 water color shows pigeons have seemingly always had a place here. the odd appeal seems to cut across cultures. and confuse reporters. >> this is really awful. i just don't get it. >> reporter: all of this feeding... what are you feeding them? >> just pretzels from the restaurant. >> reporter:... has caused a population boom. >> pigeons are disgusting. they're flying rats. >> reporter: still author john berent who just published a book on blue jays was inspired to write about pigeons in his novel set in venice. >> i saw some trappers with a net trapping pigeons and carting them off to kill them. and i went to see the commissioner of animals. he was very forth coming. he said usually we deny that we trap and kill these pigeons but since you saw it i can't very well deny it. yes, we do. we have 120,000 pigeons who live in venice. and they are disgusting. >> reporter: pigeons outnumber venetians 2 to 1. the bird droppings corrode the historic architecture and spread disease. but cracking down on the pigeon problem has be fuddled many city administrators. this man is the latest. "a system was installed to emit very high pitch sounds that terrorize the birds," he told us. we're thinking of forced sterilization. but the easiest thing is to just stop feeding them. today venice has ban the sale of feed in the square. but it's hard to stop tourists from sharing their lunch. and it's easy to find folks still selling feed in plain sight. "this happens everywhere," he told us. it's like having random people walking around the square selling dope or cocaine. here they're selling pigeon food. at one point licenses to legally sell feed meant big money for the city and vendors who traded them on the black market for half a million dollars. but not anymore. why have city governments in venice for so long had such a difficult time cracking down on the pigeon problem? >> the fact that it amuses tourists. tourists are a major source of income for venice. they didn't want to upset the balance. >> everyday she goes can i go feed the birds again. >> this man's 11-year-old bought feed from a guy ostensibly selling roses. your daughter seems to love this. >> my daughter loves it because it's really parts... participation. she gets a chance to do stuff rather than look at old churches and walk around with us. >> reporter: the pigeons are so famous that fake ones even made an appearance at a contemporary art show. but whether seen as art or amusement, perhaps it's the lens of venice through which everything seems just a little more beautiful. >> in new york they're like nasty birds. here everybody loves them. >> it was probably your first room but you got kicked out of quickly. >> osgood: next testing wits with alex trebek. that would be the delivery room. >> osgood: and later, rocket science for real. with prostate cancer... i needed a coach. our doctor was great, but with so many tough decisions i felt lost. unitedhealthcare offered us a specially trained rn who helped us weigh and understand all our options. for me cancer was as scary as a fastball is to some of these kids. but my coach had hit that pitch before. turning data into useful answers. we're 78,000 people looking out for 70 million americans. that's health in numbers. unitedhealthcare. they claim to be complete. only centrum goes beyond. providing more than just the essential nutrients, so i'm at my best. centrum. always your most complete. that bringing you better technology helps make you a better investor. with our revolutionary new e-trade 360 dashboard you see exactly where your money is and what it's doing live. our e-trade pro platform offers powerful functionality that's still so usable you'll actually use it. and our mobile apps are the ultimate in wherever whenever investing. no matter what kind of investor you are, you'll find the technology to help you become a better one at e-trade. ♪ jeopardy theme >> it's sunday morning on cbs and here again is charles osgood. >> osgood: what is the jeopardy theme is the proper response to the phrase, it's the music that opens a long- running tv quiz show, just as who is alex trebek is the proper response to the phrase, he's the subject now of our sunday profile by "48 hours" susan spencer. >> reporter: what could possibly get washington's power elite out of bed on a saturday at the crack of dawn? >> this is jeopardy. >> reporter: a quiz show. that's what. a quiz show that's become an american institution. impressing even former white house press secretary p robert gibbs. >> flying on air force one and marine one, it's just an airplane painted blue and white but this is jeopardy. >> reporter: talk master chris matthews. >> i'm terrible on food, on pop culture. i don't know who these car darnians are. >> reporter: and basketball great kareem abdul jabbar. >> they're going to ask questions about immediate evil. i've seen though. i couldn't do that. >> reporter: they are just a few of the so-called power players featured in special shows airing this week. >> here is the host of jeopardy, alex trebek. ( cheers and applause ) >> reporter: their insecurities handled with grace the man whose firm hand has guided jeopardy for 28 years. >> let's go to work. here comes the categories for the jeopardy round. >> you come across thinking that is easily the smartest guy on the planet. what is intelligent design? dan, back to you. >> reporter: alex trebek does nothing to dispel that idea. >> that word is parqueted. you were almost there, jacob. go again. >> reporter: providing a soothing, supportive presence for nervous contestants whose answers, as we all know by now, must be in the form of a question. >> kelly. >> what is sorry? >> i usually precede it with ooo, sorry. i'm on their side. i want to be perceived as the best friend these contestants have because if i'm not perceived that way, the audience out there, the television viewers, will turn against me. and i don't want you to turn against me. >> good luck. let's go to work right now. >> reporter: unlikely. he's got 6,000 jeopardy episodes under his belt. it's not all a blur by this time? >> no. i get so wrapped up in the game that quite often i don't know what the score is. >> reporter: no matter. he insists the show is not about him. >> airline home countries for $200 please. >> what do you think accounts for his success? >> it's a good show. >> all nippon airways. >> what is japan? >> yes. >> it satisfies one aspect of humanity that is very, very important. >> airlines for $400. airlines for $600. airlines for $800. >> and that is our need at a gut level to compete. >> elaine again. >> what is germany. >> elaine. >> what is israel. >> what is spain? >> correct. >> we want to know how good we are. how fast we are. >> airlines for $1,000. >> s.a.s.. >> elaine. >> what is is sweden? >> yes. that's right. ( applause ) >> well done. >> reporter: it's won trebek and the show a slew of emmys quite elite from his high school days in ottawa and those early jobs at the canadian broadcasting corporation. >> the only reason i got into broadcasting was i needed money to pay for my junior and senior years at college. they hired me, those fools. i did everything. i did newscasts. i did sports. i did dramas. >> reporter: but in 1962 he found his true calling. >> the first quiz show i did was a high school quiz show called "reach for the top." >> here's the man with the action, alex trebek. >> reporter: a dozen more less than memorable shows followed. then in 1984 trebek hit his own daily double. >> this is jeopardy. >> they called me up one day and said we're going to syndicate jeopardy. would you like to host it? i said, are you going to pay me? they said yeah. i said okay. >> reporter: i'm your man. >> i'm i don't remember your man. >> and now here is the host of jeopardy, alex trebek. ( applause ) >> reporter: his success and format. >> what is an eraser. >> reporter: has made the answer as question a part of pop culture. >> the answer is, a female opera singer and gangster. (singing jeopardy theme) >> reporter: in tv and the movies. >> what is mexico? >> alex, as you know i was raised in a rural community. i'm proud to take cows for $300. >> reporter: in more than a dozen episodes, saturday night live has had a field day. >> i'll take the rapist for $200. >> that's therapist. that's therapists, not the rapist. >> reporter: trebek seems to love it. >> when you make fun of someone like me in a show such as jeopardy, it means we've arrived. we're part of the american cultural scene. >> reporter: indeed. today there are whole web sites analyzing gem aerd answers. and the show pulls in nearly 10 million viewers a night. safe to say most of them quite sure that they would do much better than those losers on tv. >> this is mildly embarrassing to admit but i once tried to get on jeopardy. i mean, i barely understood the questions. it was terribly hard. >> i believe the jeopardy test is more difficult than being a contestant on the program. >> reporter: that's very kind of you to say. >> it's true. >> reporter: i was devastated. it took weeks to recover. >> you flunked the jeopardy test 15 years ago. and you still can't live it down. >> reporter: i can't get over it. >> get over it. >> reporter: easy for him to take the winning and losing in stride. when he's not on the jeopardy set, he lives a quiet life with wife jeanne and two kids. and he'd rather show off not how smart he is but how handy. >> no matter what happens here that goes wrong, i probably have parts to fix it. so this hardware store was going out of business. >> reporter: this has to be your favorite room in the house. >> one of them. >> reporter: he's a dedicated putterer. when a local hardware store closed, he bought the inventory. >> there are woodruff keys. >> reporter: what's that? >> i don't know. >> reporter: why do you have them? >> because it came with the package. >> reporter: but on the jeopardy set, trebek is master of all he surveys. and jeopardy keeps trying new things to make sure it stays fresh. >> ladies and gentlemen, this is watson. >> reporter: last year having watson. >> the same category, 1200. >> reporter: an i.b.m. computer on the panel. >> now we come to watson. we're looking for brand stoker. and we find who is brand stoker. >> reporter: watson won. they've also changed the rules so contestants play as long as they win. >> ken? ken? ken? ken? >> reporter: that meant 74 times for ken jennings who walked away with $2.5 million. >> save your applause. we won't want to wear you out. >> reporter: at 71 he's coy about retirement vaguely saying only sooner not later but he's eager to answer a related question that audiences always ask. >> will i ever be a player on the show? no, and i'll tell you why. because if i were to be contestant, say in a celebrity tournament, someone else would have to host the show. they might be younger. they might be very good. >> reporter: but they won't be alex trebek. >> thank you, ladies and gentlemen. great to be back. >> osgood: still to come, some mother's day thoughts from nancy giles. the twenty billion dollars bp committed has helped fund economic and environmental recovery. long-term, bp's made a five hundred million dollar commitment to support scientists studying the environment. and the gulf is open for business - the beaches are beautiful, the seafood is delicious. last year, many areas even reported record tourism seasons. the progress continues... but that doesn't mean our job is done. we're still committed to seeing this through. [ female announcer ] letting her home be turned into a training facility? ♪ this olympian's mom has been doing it for years. she's got bounty. in this lab demo, one sheet of new bounty leaves this surface cleaner than two sheets of the leading ordinary brand. bounty has trap and lock technology to soak up big spills and lock them in. let the spills begin. p&g. proud sponsor of the olympic games. dave, i've downloaded a virus. yeah. ♪ dave, where are we on the new laptop? it's so slow! i'm calling dave. [ telephone rings ] [ male announcer ] in a small business, technology is all you. that's why you've got us. at the staples pc savings event, for a limited time get up to $200 off select computers. staples. that was easy. >> osgood: you don't have to be a mom yourself to appreciate what mothers do. and to feel the loss of a mother. here's our contributor nancy giles. >> my mother died almost 14 years ago, so mother's day doesn't exactly make me warm and fuzzy inside. it makes me sad and a little cranky. to me, it's one big showy cards and flowers home appliance sale. yuck. and in the lead-up to mother's day it seems like every cell phone conversation i overhear is someone being snipy to their mother. i'm tempted to lean in and say, you're lucky you still have a mother. but i know how that would go over. so i zip it. but i miss talking to my mom on the phone. and on mother's day i really feel it. i loved talking to her especially when i just wanted to whine. she'd let me wimper and then came that sage mom advice. you work too hard. you do too much. get some rest and stay put. which was exactly what i wanted to hear. mom died of ovarian cancer. she was an artist and a teacher. and one day at the hospital, i surprised her with an old step of hers i had framed. she was thrilled. and an idea was born. a combination exhibit celebration of her life and work. it took a few months to organize everything, but mom was energized. choosing pieces of art to display, full of stories from 50 years worth of portfolios. the gallery opening was overflowing with family, friends, former students, and at the center of it all was my mom drinking it in. she was happy. she died six weeks later. as my good friend sharon told me, you never get over it. you just get through it. and then it's part of who you are. boy, was she right. i'm sure there are lots of other people who feel a little empty like i do. on mother's day where do we fit in? i nurture people. i'm a great aunt and even a great great aunt. i do volunteer work with kids, got the mom mojo working. don't i get a pencil holder at least? actually last year i did get a card from my brother-in-law, one of those old-fashioned swirly scripts mother's day cards. inside were two paw prints. one from my dog george. and a tiny one from bosco, my cat. my very first mother's day card. so however snipy you've been feeling lately and however dope ethos cards may seem, take a minute to send one to your mom or mom surrogate or make a call. and moms, i'm sending you a happy mother's day wish right now. airmail, special delivery. >> osgood: ahead, aspiring rocket scientists. dreaming of lift-offs. do you read in bed? do you read out loud or in your head? do you need a lamp to see? and does it leave your bedmate be? don't you wish there was a light that wouldn't keep them up all night? if so, you'll be happy to know, our newest nook now comes with glow. introducing nook simple touch with glowlight, the only e-reader made for bedtime reading. find your nook at your neighborhood barnes & noble. the world needs more energy. where's it going to come from? ♪ that's why right here, in australia, chevron is building one of the biggest natural gas projects in the world. enough power for a city the size of singapore for 50 years. what's it going to do to the planet? natural gas is the cleanest conventional fuel there is. we've got to be smart about this. it's a smart way to go. ♪ here in miniature of course is the saturn 5 rocket long ago that launched the american astronauts to the moon. newer rockets are still lifting off though america has no human launches. as steve hartman shows us, nasa scientists aren't always the ones in control of the countdown. >> reporter: in the middle of the texas desert on the border with mexico sits the tine owe town. this is way it and for some this is the way out. this is the way in and for some this is the way out. if you're a kid looking to escape the poverty and isolation of this town, there's no greater vehicle than the rocket club. it was launched a few years ago by a fire cracker of a science teacher named sheila. >> i wanted to teach the kids, you wanted something so bad, you put your heart into it. >> reporter: her goal isn't really to make future rocket scientists. it's more just to make futures. >> in rocketry, you don't have the instructions of how to build it. that's how life is. it doesn't come with instructions. you have to make it on your own. >> reporter: her teacher knows all about that. born dirt poor in the philippines, sheila came to the u.s. on a temporary work visa, came here because no american teachers would. now she really wants to stay. but to become a permanent resident she has to prove to american immigration officials that she is a person of, quote, exceptional ability. >> they are asking for more documents, more support. and i really do not know what else they would want from me. >> reporter: you're the best air yo space teacher in america. >> thank you. >> reporter: what more could they want. it wasn't me saying that. he got the award. she was recently honored as the aerospace teacher of the year. no surprise to her students. >> she'll teach you things and you'll learn it like this. as long as you pay attention, of course. >> you're blocking the light. >> reporter: she's such a motivating force her kids often get up before sunrise to learn and launch. their passion is to so big, you can probably see it from the moon. during our visit last week they were practicing for this week's big team america rocketry challenge outside washington d.c.. the challenge this year was to make your rocket go as close to 800 feet as possible. and return to earth between 43 and 47 seconds. oh, one other thing. you've got to preserve two raw eggs inside. and to think they do this with equipment that's mostly begged, borrowed and broken. on a budget that's mostly bake sales, barbecues, and a goat auction. what's it going to be like if you show up there in washington and win this thing? >> nobody even knows where we're at. and then you represent the united states. it would be a big thing. >> reporter: the competition was yesterday. in attendance many of the brightest minds from some of the best schools in the country. these kids were really impressed with the field. by which i mean the field. >> it's been a long time. >> reporter: they dressed as old-fashioned aviators and then took to the skies like the barn stormers that they are. their first attempt went about 50 feet to high. by late morning, things started really looking up for these long shots. >> looking good. >> thank you. >> reporter: in the end, out of 100 entrants, they took home a very respectable 11th place finish. sheila couldn't have been any prouder. >> you're going to build another one. >> reporter: as for her dream of becoming a permanent resident of these united states, on that, the teacher would be wise to listen to the students. >> never give up. you can do anything in this world as long as you never give up. >> osgood: a story from correspondent steve hartman. now to bob schieffer in washington for a look at what's ahead on "face the nation." good morning, bob. >> schieffer: it's all about fallout from what the president said on gay marriage, charles. we'll hear from ted olsen, former bush administration solicitor general, massachusetts governor deval patrick, tony perkins of the family research council, and american idol singer clay aken among others. >> osgood: a cast of thousands this morning. thank you, bob schieffer. we'll be watching. and next week here on sunday morning? ports of call. in the middle of nowhere,rentat is always headed somewhere. to give it a sense of direction, at&t created a mobile asset solution to protect and track everything. so every piece of equipment knows where it is, how it's doing or where it goes next. ♪ this is the bell on the cat. [ male announcer ] it's a network of possibilities -- helping you do what you do... even better. ♪ and many allergy medicines. the difference is claritin clear. claritin gives me powerful relief that won't make me drowsy like zyrtec can. in fact, it warns drowsiness may occur right on the label. non-drowsy claritin. live claritin clear. >> this sunday morning moment of nature is sponsored by... >> osgood: we leave you in california where mother sea otters are tending to their pups. >> osgood: i'm charles osgood. we hope you moms everywhere enjoy your special day and that all of you will join us again next sunday morning. until then, i'll see you on the radio. irregular heartbeat put me at 5 times greater risk of a stroke, my first thoughts were about my wife, and my family. i have the most common type of atrial fibrillation, or afib. it's not caused by a heart valve problem. i was taking warfarin, but my doctor put me on pradaxa instead to reduce my risk of stroke. in a clinical trial, pradaxa® (dabigatran etexilate mesylate) reduced stroke risk 35% better than warfarin. and unlike warfarin, with pradaxa, there's no need for regular blood tests. that's really important to me. pradaxa can cause serious, sometimes fatal, bleeding. don't take pradaxa if you have abnormal bleeding and seek immediate medical care for unexpected signs of bleeding, like unusual bruising. pradaxa may increase your bleeding risk if you're 75 or older, have a bleeding condition like stomach ulcers, or take aspirin, nsaids, or blood thinners, or if you have kidney problems, especially if you take certain medicines. tell your doctor about all medicines you take, any planned medical or dental procedures, and don't stop taking pradaxa without your doctor's approval, as stopping may increase your stroke risk. other side effects include indigestion, stomach pain, upset, or burning. pradaxa is progress. having afib not caused by a heart valve problem increases your risk of stroke. ask your doctor if you can reduce your risk with pradaxa. captioning made possible by johnson & johnson, where quality products for the american family have been a tradition for generations captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org ,,,,,,,,

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