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tv   CBS News Roundup  CBS  May 30, 2024 3:12am-4:31am PDT

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point, the first black woman on the united states supreme court. >> reporter: add to that, the first black vice president and secretary of defense. but some voters here say he should be much more focused on the economy. >> he's got worry about dollars and sense. >> that's really it, yeah. everything is changing. you go into a supermarket, right, the prices are going up. but the salary is not going up with everything else. >> reporter: ed o'keefe, cbs news, philadelphia. before jackie robinson broke the racial barrier in major league baseball, blackball players had their own segregated teams in the negro leagues. now those leagues, the players, and their achievements are for the first time being recognized by mlb, which is now rewriting its record books. jericka duncan reports. >> bob takes his cut. >> reporter: major league baseball has a new all-time batting champ, josh gibson, who spent 14 years playing in the negro leagues.
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gibson, a legendary catcher who played for the homestead grays and pittsburgh crawfords is now mlb's leader in batting average and slugging percentage, surpassing baseball icons ty cobb and babe ruth. >> he may have been the greatest power hitter and hitter for average in mlb history. >> reporter: john thorne shared the committee that integrated statistics into mlb's official records. the committee looked at more than 2300 players from the negro leagues during 1920 to 1948 in an effort to, quote, correct a long overdue oversight. >> the most interesting part of this is to remove these seven negro leagues from the shadow land of baseball history and to put them on an equal footing with their white peers. >> reporter: until jackie robinson broke the mlb's color barrier in 1947, he played in the negro leagues.
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his departure led to other star players like satchel page and larry dolby following suit, eventually causing the league's demise. is this move bigger than baseball? >> this move is bigger than baseball. it opens up the eyes to what america was and now what america can be. it makes baseball a better version of itself. >> reporte this charmin ultra soft smooth tear is soooo soft and soo smooth. charmin ultra soft smooth tear
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recreational marijuana is legal in 24 states, and a new survey now shows daily marijuana users outnumber daily drinkers. nikki battiste has the story for "eye on america". >> reporter: behind this cloud of marijuana smoke is a new kind of office for gen zers. >> here we spoke because it enhances our work. that's our secret sauce. >> reporter: work n roll is a shared work space in new york city where for as little as $15, you can toke while you type. this downtown loft space is capitalizing on a trend among today's young workers. forget after-work happy hour at a favorite watering hole. weed is the new way to go. >> i think this is like the mecca of the cannabis industry. >> reporter: matthew everett, golda, and ella sudak, all in their mid-20s are like the 69% of people their age who say they prefer marijuana to alcohol, according to a cannabis research
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firm. >> i transitioned over into cannabis because i saw that there is limitless possibilities with the flavors, and i found like hey, i don't have a hangover the next day too. >> reporter: were any of you big alcohol drinkers? >> i was. >> i was, yeah. >> reporter: marijuana sales among gen z women in particular have more than doubled since the pandemic lockdown in 2020. at work n roll, alcohol is prohibited, but it's perfectly fine to bring your own cannabis. or even have it delivered. >> cannabis to your door? >> cannabis to your door. >> reporter: no stigma, no criminality, no problem. >> it's alarming. >> reporter: the alarm, says addiction psychiatrist collin reeve comes from the scientific evidence. one recent study associates schizophrenia with excessive cannabis use among some young people, especially young people, at an age when their brains are still maturing. >> legalized age for cannabis should be around 33 years old. when people are outside the window of developing
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schizophrenia and bipolar disorder and a lot of other things. or certainly after 26 once the prefrontal cortex is done developing. it's still a drug. >> reporter: potency is the key. the average level of thc, the main ingredient in marijuana that triggers a high, jumped from 4% in 1995 to more than 15% in 2021, a four fold increase. but for these friends, those numbers don't tell the whole story. >> over time, as i started educating my parents more, they started to understand that cannabis was less destructive to my lifestyle than alcohol. and i even got them to try cannabis. >> reporter: and how did that go? >> they enjoyed it. my mom, she had cancer, and it helped to alleviate some of her symptoms. and for my dad's part, he thought it was pretty fun. >> reporter: do you ever miss alcohol? >> i never thought about it, being here, honestly. >> i don't miss it. >> reporter: this next generation is giving new meaning generation is giving new meaning to the
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it looks and sounds like the year 1255. the challenge here is to build as they would have in that era. long before electricity, using tools fashioned by blacksmiths. and laying stones by hand. >> it's a mixture of sand and lime and water. this is like all glue that we use to stick all of our stones together. >> and this will last? >> and this will last thousands and thousands and thousands of years, no problem. this is what the romance and the greeks used. >> reporter: ben wallace was restoring old buildings when he visited this castle called getalong as a tourist and applied for a job. how is it to have been a stonemason as a career and exist this place exists? >> the dream, really. the possibility to work as they did back in the medieval times, to take the time as well to do things properly. >> reporter: they are taking time. this project started 27 years ago and is still expanding into
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a medieval village. why build a castle? >> i was thinking too modest. i don't talk about castle. >> reporter: a cathedral would have been even more complicated? >> a little more. >> reporter: co-founder marlin maarten worked with the unemployed and liked the idea of creating jobs in rural france. today the project is sustained through ticket sales to 300,000 visitors a year. >> i want that people stay here and let their imagination go. >> reporter: the castle is here because of this quarry, where they extract sandstone for the walls. >> i select in this slate how many stones i want cut out of it. >> reporter: in a modern quarry, it's huge trucks and heavy equipment. what's used here is an iron wedge. and sledgehammer. >> it's a lovely job. >> reporter: lovely? what makes it lovely.
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>> imagine that this simple block is going to represent the beautiful stone in the castle with beautiful geometrical shapes. >> my job is really to grow medicinal gardens. >> reporter: resident herbalist emma blondie nurtures plants not just for food, but medicine, using medieval documents as a guide. >> i'm just grinding like this until i have a very find powder. >> reporter: paint recipes from the middle ages have been unearthed too. >> it's mixed with some white of the egg, some cherry tree gum, yes, i know. >> reporter: claire pio's pallet for wall designs comes from what's found on castle grounds. >> we have different clays, charcoals, ochres. >> reporter: in this bold effort to build a castle from scratch, they're following a design that dates back to france's king
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fell phillip ii, and 800 years later it's fostering a new generation of specialist artisans. when notre dame burned in paris, workers came from the castle to help and share expertise. what's the bigger value to this project? >> it's very green. we take the nature, trees, sand, stone, and we do a medieval castle that we can imagine to take the same materials to do a house. it's a modern adventure. >> reporter: it's a modern adventure building skills and realizing a dream by looking back to the design and ways of another time.
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more than six decades after her death, there is new drama swirling around marilyn monroe and the only home she'd ever owned. carter evans has more. >> reporter: one of the most
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famous stars in hollywood history is dead at 36. >> reporter: marilyn monroe's death in 1962 shocked and saddened the world, and many considered the brentwood home where she died one of the last links to her legacy. >> we have a lot of history here that needs to be preserved. >> reporter: jeff zaranom is on a mission to save l.a. landmarks. >> this is the place you want to see the hollywood sign from. >> reporter: and he knows where all of hidden gems are, like marilyn monroe's handprints. this is about as close as most people will ever get. >> she also has a walk of fame star. >> reporter: all only a few miles from the spanish home she loved. the home is hidden from the street from outside, and it's been more than 60 years since monroe has died here. the house has changed hands several times over the years. but this is the first time its owner wants to tear it all down. the l.a. city council is supposed to vote later this summer to determine if the $8 million property should be labeled as a landmark. but the hope's owners don't like
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the spotlight, and they're suing the city for the right to raze it, saying the tourist attraction is a nuisance to the neighborhood. >> we want the see protection honoring marilyn monroe in the place she lived and loved. >> reporter: adrien fein is president of the conservancy which works to preserve cu culturally significant strug chers like the angel flight railway. one possibility with marilyn's house? turkey, relocate it in a place where it makes sense. >> reporter: the starline bus we're on already makes stops at some of l.a.'s more visible favorite homes. recognize this one? this is the house, you believe it? there are homes like this that you grew up watching all over this town? >> all over the place. >> reporter: ut since you can't see marilyn's home from the street, he thinks moving it might just be the best solution. but then you've got find a site
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for it. all this left us hungry for a visit to one of hollywood's most recognizable real estate. mmm! pink's has been in the same spot for 84 years. >> our family likes to call ourselves the little hot dog stand that could. >> reporter: it's so iconic, the city of los angeles renamed the intersection here pink's square. so while the fate of marilyn's home is unclear -- thinking building is going nowhere. >> reporter: this building is here permanent, for sure. >> reporter: to be relished by fans for years to come. carter evans, cbs news, hollywood. and that's the "cbs news roundup." reporting from the cbs broadcast center in new york, i'm shanelle kaul.
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hello and thank you so much for watching. i'm shanelle kaul in new york, and here are some of the stories we're tracking on cbs news roundup. jurors in donald trump's hush money trial spent their first day deliberating a case. we'll tell you what they asked for. a lucky break for one of america's leading golfers, and an even luckier break for the pilot of a small plane in trouble over a busy highway. jurors in the historic criminal trial against former president donald trump spent their first day deliberating on wednesday. they ended the afternoon with no verdict, but they will be back again on thursday as cbs' michael george explains, the jury has already been requesting more information from the judge. >> reporter: former president donald trump offered some parting thoughts outside the courtroom after the first day of jury deliberations. >> it's a disgrace. this thing ought to be ended immediately. the judge ought to end it. >> reporter: the 12 manhattan jurors, seven men and five
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women, spent about five hours deliberating. no cell phones allowed, but they have access to a laptop containing all the evidence. >> it's a pretty extraordinary experience, because you have people from all walks of life, all kinds of different diverse backgrounds who are now charged with making this very important decision. they're also, quite frankly, very aware that the world is watching them. >> reporter: before beginning deliberations, judge juan merchan gave jurors strict instructions to set aside any opinions and biases in reaching their verdict. he laid out the 34 counts trump faces and showed the documents related to the payments of adult film star stormy daniels, 11 invoices from trump's next lawyer michael cohen, 11 checks, nine of them signed by trump, and 12 entries in the trump organization's ledger. the presumptive republican presidential nominee is charged with falsifying business records in order to hide a sexual encounter from the public just before the 2016 elections.
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trump has denied the encounter took place. before their day ended, the jurors sent a note to the judge asking to hear the judge's jury instructions read become to them, as well as testimony from two key witnesses. specifically, they want to hear what former "national enquirer" publisher david pecker and michael cohen said about a trump tower meeting in august 2015. pecker says they came to an agreement with trump himself about a scheme to kill negative stories about him. the judge indicated those passages will be read to the jury thursday. michael george, cbs news, new york. the world's number-one ranked golfer, scottie scheffler, is in the clear after a kentucky prosecutor dropped all charges tied to his arrest at the pga championship in louisville, two weeks ago. as cbs' janet shamlian reports, the prosecutor agreed with scheffler that the incident was a big misunderstanding. defending masters champion scottie scheffler vindicated. >> mr. scheffler's indication characterization that this was,
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quote, a big misunderstanding, close quote, is corroborated by the evidence. >> guys, guys. >> reporter: scheffler was booked on charges of felony assault of a police officer and three other criminal counts earlier this month. as the 27-year-old attempted to drive into louisville's valhalla golf club amid heavy traffic following heavy traffic. a fatal accident. >> why does it matter if security guard if somebody is telling you to stop? >> yes, i should stop. i got a little impatient because i'm quite late for my tee time. >> reporter: his attorney confirmed this is scheffler talking to police after the arrest. the golfer saying he did not know the man was an officer, and calling him overaggressive. detective ryan gillis alleged scheffler ignored instructions and continued driving, dragging the officer to the ground. but there is no footage. louisville police say gillis never turned it on, a policy violation. scheffler's attorney says neither side will pursue legal action related to the arrest. >> scottie scheffler doesn't want the taxpayers of louisville to have to pay him a dime.
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he wishes to move forward from this case. >> reporter: scheffler reacted on social media, saying he holds no ill will towards that officer, that he wants to put the incident behind him, and hopes the officer will do the same. janet shamlian, cbs news, atlanta. turning now to the israel-hamas war. israel's military says it has seized control of a strategic corridor of land running along gaza's border with egypt. meanwhile, cbs news has learned u.s.-made bombs were used in an israeli air strike which killed 45 people and wounded hundreds more in rafah on sunday. it's a strike israel has called a tragic mishap and says it is now investigating the incident. the biden administration, meantime, is under increasing pressure to reassess its military support for israel. cbs' imtiaz tyab has more from east jerusalem. >> reporter: the attack triggered global outrage. horrifying scenes of bodies
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burned and mutilated beyond recognition. the scale of the devastation caused by the israeli air strike on the displacement camp also raised questions about the type of weapons used. images gathered from the blast site show the remnants of what three independent weapons experts told cbs news is that an american-made gbu-39 warhead with a payload of 17 kilos. all three agreed the distinctive shape of the gbu-39, especially its tail, helped them identify the remains. and that the clearly identifiable serial number or cage code on this specific munition traced it to a california-based weapons manufacturer. israeli officials said the strike targeted senior hamas commanders and confirmed two munitions also weighing 17 kilos were used. >> absent a complete investigation, i can't verify any of this. >> reporter: eyewitnesses say israel is now widening its
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offensive in rafah. tanks have moved into the heart of the city for the first time. and of the over one million displaced from there in the last few weeks, some are making their own shelters out of spent shells, which are littered across gaza, and many are u.s.-made, including hisham al asi. "everything is destroyed because of israeli and american weapons," he says, because of america's support for israel. and as fighting continues to intensify across rafah, israel announced three of its soldiers had been killed in an attack. israel's national security adviser said the war in gaza could last through the end of the year. imtiaz tyab, cbs news, east jerusalem. the united states is calling on north korea to stop what it describes as unlawful and destabilizing acts after pyongyang fired what appeared to be around ten short-range missiles. the suspected missiles were fired from an area near north korea's capital and flew about
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220 miles eastward before plunging into the sea. it was a very rough landing for the pilot of a small plane in south carolina on wednesday. it's making an emergency landing right in front of the middle of traffic on a busy state highway. according to the faa, the pilot ditched his plane after reporting engine trouble. incredibly, the plane landed safely, and there were no injuries. well, don't go away. there is plenty more just ahead on "cbs news roundup" after the break. when it comes to your wellness routine, the details are the difference. dove men body wash, with plant based moisturizers in harmony with our bodies for healthier feeling skin. all these details add up to something greater. new dove men plant powered body wash. everybody wants super straight, super white teeth.
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there's been a rare apology from the leader of the roman catholic church. pope francis, who has been widely credited for embracing the lgbtq community, admits to using a crude word to describe gay life. it happened during a private meeting with 250 bishops at the vatican, and has sparked an uproar among lgbtq supporters. chris livesay has more on this controversy. >> reporter: it was a shocking phrase, both for its vulgarity and the man it reportedly came from. pope francis, according to italian media in a closed door meeting with italian bishops said seminaries had too many gay men referring to gay men as a slur. something he discussed in a historic interview last month with norah o'donnell. >> you have said who am i to judge homosexuality is not a crime. >> no. it's a human fact.
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>> reporter: he is infuriated conservative catholics for allowing priests to bless those in same-sex relationships. >> last year you decided to allow catholic priests to bless same-sex couples. that's a big change. why? >> translator: no, what i allowed is not to bless the union. that can be done because that is not the sacrament. i cannot. the lord made it that way. but to bless each person, yes. the blessing is for everyone. >> reporter: robert mickens is a vatican effort and former seminarian who decided to leave partly because of his sexual orientation. >> pope francis has been very open and welcoming toward gay catholics. the problem pope francis has, kind of the mental split is with those who want to be priests. the church is there is a place for everybody, except in the priesthood. women and gays need not apply.
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>> reporter: for its part, the vatican says pope francis, quote, expresses his apologies and emphasized the pope did not intend to offend anyone or to make a homophobic remark. >> that was chris livesay at the vatican. closer to home, three black men are looking for more than an apology from american airlines. they're suing the carrier, alleging company employees removed them from a flight along with other black men over a complaint about body odor. they eventually were allowed back on the flight. but for them, that was too little, too late. kris van cleave has more. >> the only ones getting taken off the plane. look at us. >> reporter: this video at the center of a newly filed lawsuit against american airlines appears to show a number of black men after they've been removed from a flight allegedly due to a complaint about offensive body odor. the lawsuit claims as flight 832 from phoenix to new york was finishing boarding in january, american employees removed eight black men from the plane.
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they were not traveling together, weren't seated next to each other, did not know each other, and appeared to be the only black men on the flight. according to the suit filed early this morning. >> as i got my things and walked the front of the plane, i made a left to the jet bridge, i noticed that there was seven other black men. and that kind of was like okay, what's happening here? >> reporter: for plaintiffs emanuel gene joseph and xavier, flight 832 was a connection. they had taken a flight from los angeles earlier without issue. >> it was just black men. soy started freaking out. i pulled out my phone to record everything. >> reporter: at any point did somebody from american say to any of you that you had an offensive odor? >> no. >> reporter: the lawsuit claims over the course of about an hour the men were kept in the jetway, and then moved to the gate area where they were told they would be rebooked on another flight to new york later that day and alleges an american employee indicated the complaint about
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offensive body odor had come from a white male flight attendant. a gate agent seen in the video at one point seems to agree, race was a factor in the men getting pulled off the flight. >> just because of the color of my skin. okay. okay. >> reporter: but when another flight to new york couldn't be found, they were put back on the same plane. >> had to go back on the plane with everybody looking at us, you know. for me, very uncomfortable. everybody staring at me. the other black people on the plane were just taken off. >> i knew that as soon as i get on that plane, a sea of white faces were going to be look at me and blaming me for their late flight of an hour. >> reporter: their lawyer says american declined to give her client any answers about what happened in phoenix. >> it's almost inconceivable to come up with an explanation for that other than the color of their skin, particularly since they didn't know each other and weren't sitting near each other. it seems fairly apparent that
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race was part of this dynamic. >> reporter: the lawsuit sites other recent incidents where passengers have alleged being discriminated against by american in a 2017 naacp travel advisory urging members not to fly the airline. it was lifted about eight months later. >> we were discriminated against. the entire situation was racist. >> reporter: do you think if you were anything other than a black man, this would not have happened? >> if i was a white person, it probably wouldn't happen. >> i think they would have walked past like the other white passengers there were there. >> reporter: cbs legal analyst rikki klieman. >> the plaintiffs may have no interest in money and they may have a sincere interest in making a public statement about racial discrimination by a major airline. >> reporter: is this kind of case a tough one to win at trial? >> the question at trial really is about what are the protocols of american airlines. and they better have some, and
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they better have done something with these particular employees in terms of discipline after this action. >> reporter: american airlines tells cbs news it takes all claims of discrimination very seriously and says in a statement, "our teams are currently investigating the matter as the claims do not reflect our core values or our purpose of caring for people. the lawsuit seeks unspecified damages. >> that was kris van cleave reporting. overseas, five years after a fire devastated the historic notre dame cathedral in paris, restoration work continues around the clock. elaine cobb is there. >> reporter: as the blaze engulfed notre dame, the iconic spire and the roof made of wood and metal were lost. astonishingly, though, some of the famous ornaments from the church survived the fire. among them, the 40-foot-high decorative metal cross that sat atop the lead roof of the choir at the back of the cathedral.
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as the flames consumed the roof, the cross, which weighs more than 3300 pounds, fell on to the stone vaults of the choir. so while the metal was damaged, the cross did not melt. >> the cross fell really early in the fire. so we were lucky because the cross didn't burn a lot. and she fell just. it's a miracle. >> reporter: vincent comb is in charge of the restoration of the metal and lead roofs of the cathedral. the cross was taken to this iron works in normandy for the complex and delicate repairs. architect axel was involved in checking it could be repaired to the original 19th century d design. >> we were really happy to discover we would be able to use it and forge it again, and work with the metal that was here, because the cross was designed.
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so it's a very important piece of notre dame. >> reporter: earlier this month, the cross was raised again at the workshop to allow the artisans complete the finishing touches, including the lead coverings and gold leaf and the symbolic dragon eating its own tail. >> we have a lot of affection for this dragon. we put it on the paris roof. so we have a lot of animals. we have dragon. also dragon on the roof. >> reporter: for philippe jobst, in charge of the restoration project, it was an emotional moment. >> it is one of the beautiful moments of the restoration of notre dame because all the woodwork had disappeared. and we still have the cross. so it's not easy. >> reporter: the cross has now been restored to its former been restored to its former splendor, and is back where it “the darkness of bipolar depression made me feel like i was losing interest in the things i love. then i found a chance to let in the lyte.” discover caplyta.
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>> it's very important to me, because growing up i never had anything to myself, you know. i was taken away from my parents when i was 3 months. >> reporter: while berry takes orders, she is getting her life in order with the help of pivot. the oklahoma city nonprofit provides young people with a little house to live in as they start their journey into adulthood. >> i'm very appreciative of what i have right now, what i was provided with because i didn't have anything when i first got here. i didn't have any clothes. i didn't have any food. i didn't have anything, really. >> reporter: many of the residents were homeless, like berry, or aged out of the foster care system at 18. the little house project started four years ago with three cozy cottages. but as the need grew, the program expanded. now pivot has 26 little houses on over 12 acres of land, built with the help of private donations, along with state and federal grants. residents initially pay $100 a month for a home of around 300 square feet, with a living
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space, a kitchen, and a bathroom. tenants can't have overnight guests and have to keep the place clean. pivot's ceo jennifer goodrich says the goal is to get residents ready for the real world in two years by helping them find jobs, get counseling, and plan for a better tomorrow. >> it's essential, because if you don't know where you're going, you can't get there, right. we give them voice and choice. what do you want it to be. but a lot of times they're not aware of what are the steps to get down that path. >> reporter: government data shows nearly 4,000 people sleep on oklahoma streets every day. almost 300 of them are between 18 and 24 years old. carter batcher was 16 when he went into foster care, then bounced around shelters when he turned 18. he was the first person to enter pivot's little house program. >> it was like the whole world was on my shoulders, and finally somebody kind of lifted it a little bit and i could breathe easier, and i wouldn't have to
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worry where i was going to sleep that night or if someone was going steal my stuff. i could just go to sleep peacefully for the first time in what felt like years. >> reporter: berry is learning the basics, and building a big future from her little home. >> i think this is an opportunity that i don't think anybody should pass up. >> reporter: i'm omar villafranca in oklahoma city. . there is a lot more ahead on the "cbs news roundup." liz neeley: you know, you've probably heard it said that some people have to hit rock bottom before they really come to the
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lord and give him their life. and that's what happened. i probably had a lot of anxiety at that point about my future, but as i began to study the word and a lot of dr. stanley's teachings and sermons, i began to realize that, through the love of jesus, god saved me for a purpose.
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for many families, summer is the time for making memories with the children. steve hartman has some fond memories of his own, that he finally got to revisit "on the
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road." >> reporter: it's a summer vacation tradition as old as overpacking. you loads the kids in the car and head off down the road with a set plan for where you're going and when you'll get there. and that's when your children look out those darn windows. in back seats across the country this summer, they'll be begging. can we go there? or how about there? and although parents can obviously say no, you need to be aware, your children may never forgive you. for example, when i was about 8 or 9, we were driving through gatlinburg, tennessee when i spotted hillbilly golf, a mini golf course where you got ride a funicular to the first hole. my parents sped past, and i never forgot. so i reached out on facebook, looking for other stories of other parents who never stopped at other places. and i got a lot of comisery. >> dutch wonderland. you knew you would have fun, but
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we just right past it. >> it's called the crater of diamonds, and i could never understand why my dad would not let us dig for diamonds. >> dinosaur world. it was a giant dinosaur. how could you not stop for a giant dinosaur? >> reporter: some live a lifetime and never see beyond the glossy brochure of her wishful thinking. but not me. i recently returned to gatlinburg and got a surprise my younger self could have never imagined. >> this is worth the wait! >> reporter: it turns out hillbilly golf is still in business. >> it's just like i remember it too! ♪ >> reporter: so finally, i rode up and saw for the first time the course of my dreams. built right into the side of a mountain. and even though i'm not a great putter, not by a short shot, i can tell you after 18 holes of excitement and excuses -- >> well, that's a maintenance
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issue. >> reporter: i sincerely believe my parents did me a favor. delayed gratification beats instant every time. >> it's great. >> reporter: and saying no helps kids grow. which is why when i got home and showed my kids pictures from the trip -- >> will you take us to hillbilly golf? >> reporter: i decided to give them something to look forward to, in 50 years. steve hartman, "on the road" in gatlinburg, tennessee. and that's today's "cbs news roundup." reporting from the cbs broadcast center in new york city, i'm shanelle kaul.
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hello and thank you so much for watching. i'm shanelle kaul in new york, and here are some of the stories we're tracking on "cbs news roundup." jurors in donald trump's hush money trial spent their first day deliberating the case. we'll tell you what they asked for. a lucky break for one of america's leading golfers, and an even luckier break for the pilot of a small plane in trouble over a busy highway. jurors in the historic criminal trial against former president donald trump spent their first day deliberating on wednesday. they ended the afternoon with no verdict, but they will be back again on thursday as cbs' michael george explains, the jury has already been requesting more information from the judge. >> reporter: former president donald trump offered some parting thoughts outside the courtroom after the first day of jury deliberations. >> it's a disgrace. this thing ought to be ended immediately. the judge ought to end it. >> reporter: the 12 manhattan jurors, seven men and five
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women, spent about five hours deliberating. no cell phones allowed, but they have access to a laptop containing all the evidence. >> it's a pretty extraordinary experience, because you have people from all walks of life, all kinds of different diverse backgrounds who are now charged with making this very important decision. they're also, quite frankly, very aware that the world is watching them. >> reporter: before beginning deliberations, judge juan merchan gave jurors strict instructions to set aside any opinions and bias in reaching their verdict. he laid out the 34 counts trump faces and showed the documents related to the payments of adult film star stormy daniels, 11 invoices from trump's ex-lawyer michael cohen, 11 checks, 9 of them signed by trump, and 12 entries in the trump organization's ledger. the presumptive presidential nominee is charged with hiding business records in order to hide a sexual encounter from the
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public just before the 2016 elections. trump has denied the encounter took place. before their day ended, the jurors sent a note to the judge asking to hear the judge's jury instructions read become to them, as well as testimony from two key witnesses. pspecifically, they want to hea what former "national enquirer" publisher david pecker and michael cohen said about a trump tower meeting in august 2015. pecker says they came to an agreement with trump himself about a scheme to kill negative stories about him. the judge indicated those passages will be read to the jury thursday. mchael george, cbs news, new york. the world's number-one ranked golfer, scottie scheffler, is in the clear after a kentucky prosecutor dropped all charges tied to his arrest at the pga championship in louisville, two weeks ago. as cbs' janet shamlian reports, the prosecutor agreed with scheffler that the incident was a big misunderstanding. defending masters champion scottie scheffler vindicated. >> mr. scheffler's characterization that this was, quote, a big misunderstanding,
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close quote, is corroborated by the evidence. >> guys, guys. >> reporter: scheffler was booked on charges of felony assault of a police officer and three other criminal counts earlier this month. as the 27-year-old attempted to drive into louisville's valhalla golf club amid heavy traffic following heavy traffic. >> why does it matter if if he is a security guard or a police officer if somebody is telling you to stop? >> yes, you're right. i should stop. i did get a little impatient because i'm quite late for my tee time. >> reporter: his attorney confirmed this is scheffler talking to police after the arrest. the golfer saying he did not know the man was an officer, and calling him overaggressive. detective ryan gillis alleged scheffler ignored instructions and continued driving, dragging the officer to the ground. but there is no footage. louisville police say gillis never turned it on, a policy violation. scheffler's attorney says neither side will pursue legal action related to the arrest. >> scottie scheffler doesn't want the taxpayers of louisville to pay him a dime. he wishes to move forward from
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this case. >> reporter: scheffler reacted on social media, saying he holds no ill will towards that officer, that he wants to put the incident behind him, and hopes the officer will do the same. janet shamlian, cbs news, atlanta. turning now to the israel-hamas war. israel's military says it has seized control of a strategic corridor of land running along gaza's border with egypt. meanwhile, cbs news has learned u.s.-made bombs were used in an israeli air strike which killed 45 people and wounded hundreds more in rafah on sunday. it's a strike israel has called a tragic mishap and says it is now investigating the incident. the biden administration, meantime, is under increasing pressure to reassess its military support for israel. cbs' imtiaz tyab has more from east jerusalem. >> reporter: the attack triggered global outrage. horrifying scenes of bodies burned and mutilated beyond
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recognition. the scale of the devastation caused by the israeli air strike on the displacement camp also raised questions about the type of weapons used. images gathered from the blast site show the remnants of what three independent weapons experts told cbs news is that an american-made gbu-39 warhead with a payload of 17 kilos. all three agreed the distinctive shape of the gbu-39, especially its tail, helped them identify the remains. and that the clearly identifiable serial number or cage code on this specific munition traced it to a california-based weapons manufacturer. israeli officials said the strike targeted senior hamas commanders and confirmed two munitions also weighing 17 kilos were used. >> absent a complete investigation, i can't verify any of this. >> reporter: eyewitnesses say israel is now widening its
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offensive in rafah. tanks have moved into the heart of the city for the first time. and of the over one million displaced from there in the last few weeks, some are making their own shelters out of spent shells, which are littered across gaza, and many are u.s.-made, including hisham imad al asi. "everything is destroyed because of israeli and american weapons," he says, "because of america's support for israel." and as fighting continues to intensify across rafah, israel announced three of its soldiers had been killed in an attack. israel's national security adviser said the war in gaza could last through to the end of the year. imtiaz tyab, cbs news, east jerusalem. the united states is calling on north korea to stop what it describes as unlawful and destabilizing acts after pyongyang fired what appeared to be around ten short-range missiles. the suspected missiles were fired from an area near north korea's capital and flew about
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220 miles eastward before plunging into the sea. it was a very rough landing for the pilot of a small plane in south carolina on wednesday. it's making an emergency landing right in front of the middle of traffic on a busy state highway. according to the faa, the pilot ditched his plane after reporting engine trouble. incredibly, the plane landed safely, and there were no injuries. well, don't go away. there is plenty more just ahead on "cbs news roundup" after the break.
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wow. anything you can't do? ( ♪♪ ) mugs. ♪ bmo ♪ news roundup." i'm shanelle kaul in new york. president biden and vice president kamala harris were on
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the campaign trail in the battle ground state of pennsylvania. they're making a major push to shore up support among a crucial voting bloc, black voters. cbs' ed o'keefe has more. >> reporter: here in philadelphia, president biden used an event designed to reach black voters to repeatedly call former president trump a liar. >> president trump continues to lie by saying black unemployment was at a record low on his watch. the fact is record low unemployment happened on my watch. we're going keep it going. >> reporter: while the president maintains a wide lead among black voters, trump is cutting into the advantage with that. just in pennsylvania, down from from his 2020 election numbers with black voters, and trump is up from four years ago. in an election poised to be one of the closest ever and decided by just a handful of states, biden can't afford any loss of support. >> because you voted, i was able to keep my commitment to a point, the first black woman on
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the united states supreme court. >> reporter: add to that, the first black vice president and secretary of defense. but some voters here say he should be much more focused on the economy. >> he's got worry about dollars and sense. >> that's really it, yeah. everything is changing. you go into a supermarket, right, the prices are going up. but the salary is not going up with everything else. >> reporter: ed o'keefe, cbs news, philadelphia. before jackie robinson broke the racial barrier in major league baseball, blackball players had their own segregated teams in the negro leagues. now those leagues, the players, and their achievements are for the first time being recognized by mlb, which is now rewriting its record books. jericka duncan reports. >> bob takes his cut. >> reporter: major league baseball has a new all-time batting champ, josh gibson, who spent 14 years playing in the negro leagues. gibson, a legendary catcher who played for the homestead grays
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and pittsburgh crawfords is now mlb's leader in batting average and slugging percentage, surpassing baseball icons ty cobb and babe ruth. >> he may have been the greatest power hitter and hitter for average in mlb history. >> reporter: john thorne shared the committee that integrated statistics into mlb's official records. the committee looked at more than 2300 players from the negro leagues during 1920 to 1948 in an effort to, quote, correct a long overdue oversight. >> the most interesting part of this is to remove these seven negro leagues from the shadow land of baseball history and to put them on an equal footing with their white peers. >> reporter: until jackie robinson broke the mlb's color barrier in 1947, he played in the negro leagues. his departure led to other star
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players like satchel page and larry dobie following suit, eventually causing the league's demise. is this move bigger than baseball? >> this move is bigger than baseball. it opens up the eyes to what america was and now what america can be. it makes baseball a better version of itself. version of itself. >> reporter: jericka duncan, cbs feeling sluggish or weighed down? could be a sign that your digestive system isn't at its best. but a little metamucil everyday can help. metamucil's psyllium fiber gels to trap and remove the waste that weighs you down and also helps lower cholesterol and slows sugar absorption to promote healthy blood sugar levels. so you can feel lighter and more energetic. lighten everyday the metamucil way. feel less sluggish & weighed down after just 14 days. sign up for the 2 week challenge at metamucil.com
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recreational marijuana is legal in 24 states, and a new survey now shows daily marijuana users outnumber daily drinkers. nikki battiste has the story for "eye on america." >> reporter: behind this cloud of marijuana smoke is a new kind of office for gen zers. >> here we spoke because it enhances our work. that's our secret sauce. >> reporter: work n roll is a shared work space in new york city where for as little as $15, you can toke while you type. this downtown loft space is capitalizing on a trend among today's young workers. forget after-work happy hour at a favorite watering hole. weed is the new way to go. >> i think this is like the mecca of the cannabis industry. >> reporter: matthew everett, golda, and ella sudak, all in their mid-20s are like the 69% of people their age who say they prefer marijuana to alcohol, according to a cannabis research firm.
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>> i transitioned over into cannabis because i saw that there is limitless possibilities with the flavors, and i found like hey, i don't have a hangover the next day too. >> reporter: were any of you big alcohol drinkers? >> i was. >> i was, yeah. >> reporter: marijuana sales among gen z women in particular have more than doubled since the pandemic lockdown in 2020. at work n roll, alcohol is prohibited, but it's perfectly fine to bring your own cannabis. or even have it delivered. >> cannabis to your door? >> cannabis to your door. >> reporter: no stigma, no criminality, no problem. >> it's alarming. >> reporter: the alarm, says addiction psychiatrist collin reeve comes from the scientific evidence. one recent study associates schizophrenia with excessive cannabis use among some young people, especially young people, men at an age when their brains are still maturing. >> legalized age for cannabis should be around 33 years old. when people are outside the window of developing schizophrenia and bipolar disorder and a lot of other things.
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or certainly after 26 once the prefrontal cortex is done developing. it's still a drug. >> reporter: potency is the key. the average level of thc, the main ingredient in marijuana that triggers a high, jumped from 4% in 1995 to more than 15% in 2021, a fourfold increase. but for these friends, those numbers don't tell the whole story. >> over time, as i started educating my parents more, they started to understand that cannabis was less destructive to my lifestyle than alcohol. and i even got them to try cannabis. >> reporter: and how did that go? >> they enjoyed it. my mom, she had cancer, and it helped to alleviate some of her symptoms. and for my dad's part, he thought it was pretty fun. >> reporter: do you ever miss alcohol? >> i never thought about it, being here, honestly. >> i don't miss it. >> reporter: this next generation is giving new meaning to the phrase high and dry. to the phrase high and dry. for "eye on america," i'm nikki
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year 1255. the challenge here is to build as they would have in that era. long before electricity, using tools fashioned by blacksmiths. and laying stones by hand. >> it's a mixture of sand and lime and water. this is like all glue that we use to stick all of our stones together. >> and this will last? >> and this will last thousands and thousands and thousands of years, no problem. this is what the romance and the greeks used. >> reporter: ben wallace was restoring old buildings when he visited this castle called guedelon as a tourist and applied for a job. how is it to have been a stonemason as a career and exist discover this place exists? >> the dream, really. the possibility to work as they did back in the medieval times, to take the time as well to do things properly. >> reporter: they are taking time. this project started 27 years ago and is still expanding into a medieval village.
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why build a castle? >> i was thinking too modest. i don't talk about castle. >> reporter: a cathedral would have been even more complicated? >> a little more. >> reporter: co-founder maryline martin worked with the unemployed and liked the idea of creating jobs in rural france. today the project is sustained through ticket sales to 300,000 visitors a year. >> i want that people stay here and let their imagination go. >> reporter: the castle is here because of this quarry, where they extract sandstone for the walls. >> i can select in this slate how many stones i want to cut out of it. >> reporter: in a modern quarry, it's huge trucks and heavy equipment. what's used here is an iron wedge. and sledgehammer. >> it's a lovely job. >> reporter: lovely? what makes it lovely. >> imagine that this simple block is going to represent the
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beautiful stone in the castle with beautiful geometrical shapes. >> my job is really to grow medicinal gardens. >> reporter: resident herbalist emma blondie nurtures plants not just for food, but medicine, using medieval documents as a guide. >> i'm just grinding like this until i have a very find powder. >> reporter: paint recipes from the middle ages have been unearthed too. >> it's mixed with some white of the egg, some cherry tree gum, yes, i know. >> reporter: claire pio's pallet for wall designs comes from what's found on castle grounds. >> we have different clays, charcoals, ochres. >> reporter: in this bold effort to build a castle from scratch, they're following a design that dates back to france's king phillip ii, and 800 years later it's fostering a new generation
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of specialist artisans. when notre dame burned in paris, workers came from the castle to help and share expertise. what's the bigger value to this project? >> it's very green. we take the nature, trees, sand, stone, and we do a medieval castle that we can imagine to take the same materials to do a house. it's a modern adventure. >> reporter: it's a modern adventure building skills and realizing a dream by looking back to the design and ways of another time. >> that was seth doane, and this is the "cbs news r
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more than six decades after her death, there is new drama swirling around marilyn monroe and the only home she'd ever owned. carter evans has more. >> reporter: one of the most famous stars in hollywood history is dead at 36.
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>> reporter: marilyn monroe's death in 1962 shocked and saddened the world, and many considered the brentwood home where she died one of the last links to her legacy. >> we have a lot of history here that needs to be preserved. >> reporter: jeff zaranom is on a mission to save famous l.a. landmarks. >> this is the place you want to see the hollywood sign from. >> reporter: and he knows where all of hidden gems are, like marilyn monroe's handprints. at the chinese theater. this is about as close as most people will ever get. >> well, she also has a walk of fame star. >> reporter: all just a few miles from the spanish home she owned and loved. the home is hidden from the street from outside, and it's been more than 60 years since monroe has died here. the house has changed hands several times over the years. but this is the first time its owner wants to tear it all down. the l.a. city council is supposed to vote later this summer to determine if the $8 million property should be labeled as a landmark. but the hope's owners don't like
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the spotlight, and they're suing the city for the right to raze it, saying the tourist attraction is a nuisance to the neighborhood. >> we want the see protection meaningful preservation and protection honoring marilyn monroe in the place she lived and loved. >> reporter: adrien fein is president of the conservancy which works to preserve culturally significant structures like the historic angel flight railway and the cinerama dome theater. one possibility with marilyn's house? turkey, relocate it in a place where it makes sense. >> reporter: the starline bus we're on already makes stops at some of l.a.'s more visible famous homes. recognize this one? ♪ sunday, monday, happy days ♪ >> this is the house, can you believe it? >> reporter: there are homes like this that you grew up watching all over the town? >> all over the place. >> reporter: but since you can't see marilyn's home from the street, he thinks moving it might just be the best solution. but then you've got find a site for it. all this left us hungry for a visit to one of hollywood's most
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recognizable pieces of real estate. mmm! pink's has been in the same spot for 84 years. >> our family likes to call ourselves the little hot dog stand that could. >> reporter: it's so iconic, the city of los angeles renamed the intersection here pink's square. so while the fate of marilyn's home is unclear -- thinking this building is going nowhere. >> reporter: this building is here permanent, for sure. >> reporter: to be relished by fans for years to come. carter evans, cbs news, hollywood. and that's the "cbs news roundup." reporting from the cbs broadcast center in new york, i'm shanelle kaul. it's thursday, may 30th, 2024. this is "cbs news mornings." deliberations day two. donald trump's fate now in the hands of the jury as the world watches and waits for a verdict.

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