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Kirk Johnson is trying to bring Iraqi refugees who helped Americans in Iraq to the U.S. "The people on my list have been tortured, they’ve been raped, they’ve lost body limbs….been thrown out of a moving vehicle," Johnson tells correspondent Scott Pelley in our lead story. "And all of this because they helped us. They came every single day to try to pitch in, in our efforts there."  Johnson helps find lawyers, gather documentation and other necessities to navigate the system for these former interpreters, office workers and others on whom the U.S. depended in the Iraq war and who are now being targeted as collaborators. Johnson’s task is a difficult one, as U.S. officials carefully screen applicants for terrorist connections.

 

Watch Pelley's reporter's notebook

 

 

Next up we take you to the far side of the world for a sweet slice of paradise. Bob Simon visits a mountaintop in Indonesia where only a few humans have ever set foot, many new species are being discovered and a 60 Minutes camera is the first to catch the mating dance of two rare birds: the black sickle bill bird of paradise and the golden-fronted bowerbird. Simon and his guide, Bruce Beehler of Conservation International, encounter more rare and exotic creatures in the Foja Mountains, including the wattled smoky honeyeater, a bird recently discovered by Beehler and others, the pigmy possum and Berlepsch’s six-wired bird of paradise. Beehler hopes that by cataloging the flora and fauna, he can protect the Fojas from incursions by man that would jeopardize the beauty of this Garden of Eden.

 

Watch the bowerbird's dance.

 

 

Few rock ‘n’ roll acts can stay popular for 26 years, let alone still fill stadiums. Jon Bon Jovi and his band are an exception reports correspondent Steve Kroft in our third piece. After years of success and seven platinum albums, this rocker still wants to rock. "You’d think why would I beat myself up like that after 25 years? Because you want to be the best," Bon Jovi says. He seems to have a charmed life that includes marrying his childhood sweetheart, four children, living in several homes and loving every minute. Says a smiling Bon Jovi, "I haven’t had a bad day since the doctor slapped me on the ass."

 

Watch an excerpt.

 

 

These stories, and Andy Rooney’s tools of the trade, on Sunday's 60 Minutes, May 18, at 7 p.m. ET/PT.

 

 
 
 


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