For 15 years, Greg Mortenson has built schools for children in remote, war-torn regions of Pakistan and Afganistan. Anthony Mason reports.
Some say it may have been out of style for a while, but it's now clear that the mustache has made a comeback, as Bill Geist discovered at a recent awards ceremony in St. Louis.
Katie Couric spoke with former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright about her new book, her famous pins and the exhibit dedicated to them.
Rita Braver reports from the frontlines at Duke University who are offering new alternatives to help people in the deadly battle against obesity.
Dean Reynolds takes us on a trip to the nation's lowest rate of obesity, Colorado and find out why everyone's so healthy.
It's hard to stay thin when all around us are fried, sugary, salty treats advertised wherever we turn. Serena Altschul takes a look at the addictiveness of food.
Nancy Giles offers her take on the first step on the road to recovery from obesity, although admitting it doesn't mean you're doing anything about it.
It's hard to stay thin when all around us are fried, sugary, salty treats advertised wherever we turn. Serena Altschul takes a look at the addictiveness of food.
For two decades, Mo'Nique has been talking about being a plus-size woman in a thin world. She shares how she came up with her message of being big and proud of it.
Correspondent Tracy Smith talks with Valerie Bertinelli about her recent weight loss and her next major goal.
Mo'Nique has established herself as a big and proud woman. Backstage at her BET show, she sent a message about what fuels her show and an invitation to the Sunday Morning audience.
Big doesn't necessarily mean unhealthy. Just look at Japan's Sumo wrestlers, who prove you don't need to eat a high fat diet to bulk up. See more this Sunday Morning.
72 years after famed aviatrix Amelia Earhart disappeared while flying over the Pacific, Kimberly Dozier retraces her fateful journey in search of what really happened.
Bill Geist travels to Virginia City, Nevada to join thousands of fans looking for a good camel race.
Bill Geist traveled to Franklin, Pa. in search of some of the nation's finest stone skippers. Some have natural talent and others study the physics of skipping.
She's definitely not Joan Cleaver, but Russ Mitchell finds the softer side of "Curb Your Enthusiasm" actress and comedienne Suzy Essman.
CBS News' Byron Pitts spent many agonizing years overcoming his illiteracy and in this report he travels from Pittsburgh to Baltimore to meet those who are also faced with this disability.
Daniel Sieberg takes a look at the new generation of office chairs that are threatening to usurp the supremacy of the Aeron chair, which has held the title for 15 years.
In a series of special reports on Afghanistan, 8 years later David Martin looks at the road we traveled since we began this war.
Some 300 militants stormed a remote American outpost in Nuristan. CBS News' Mandy Clark has the latest.
Up and down the coast of Maine, folks are uncovering more and more about the romantic lives of lobsters, whose numbers are flourishing. Writer Trevor Corson and scientist Diane Cowan discuss the passionate crustaceans.
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