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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  May 4, 2018 3:12am-4:00am PDT

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saying what they're saying.
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>> charlie rose has not responded to our request for comment but in an e-mail he told the post "your story is unfair and inaccurate." cbs news said today that it ut help investigate sexual harassment and misconduct complaints. obviously, jeff, as uncomfortable as this story is to tell it's important we investigate it and treat it the way he would any other story. a cbs news report about a rare eye cancer affecting groups of people in alabama and north carolina is getting reaction around the world tonight. hundreds say they or someone they know has been diagnosed with ocular melanoma. >> we've had people reach out to us from ireland and south africa, australia, all over the united states, offering support, asking questions. >> reporter: that reaction coming after ashley mccrary and three others auburn university graduates told us of developing a rare eye cancer called ocular
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melanoma. >> it's like ju you had just had the breath knocked out of you. >> three had to have an eye removed. >> that was very hard for me. growing up, the one thing that i liked about myself was my eyes. >> reporter: the rare cancer typically occurred in just 6 out of every 1 million people. sought groups found in auburn and in huntersville, north carolina are extremely unusual. doctors like carol shields at will's eye hospital in philadelphia are trying to find the cause. >> we need to really carefully go through, you know, exactly where they live, what foods they like, how close were they to a nuclear reactor, how much time did they spend outside. a whole toxin exposure. >> and since our first report others are coming forward. >> it's such a rare cancer you that don't meet someone that has this cancer. >> reporter: people like 230-year-old kayla allman of tennessee, diagnosed and treated last year.
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>> do sto see people going thro that was sad. and wref no idea why we're going through it. >> they're getting so many calls in philadelphia they had to create a dedicated phone line to answer all the calls which jeff, they're getting not only from patients they told us today but from doctors around the country calling in who had people come to them. >> scary and fascinating report to start. we're glad you're following up on it. >> the lesson is get an eye exam every year and get your eyes dilated. need to have them checked even if your vision is great. >> good advice. coming up how a new inve (alex trebek) $8,000. over $8,000. now, why is this number so important? because $8,508 is the average cost of a funeral. if you've already planned how to help cover your final expenses, like this one, great.
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a judge ruled today that prosecutors may collect dna, fingerprints and body photographs of the suspected golden state killer. 72-year-old joseph deangelo is accused of a string of murders and rapes committed decades ago. a dna match on a genealogy website led to his arrest, which now has investigators re-examining other cold cases. here's carter evans. >> reporter: it was an unconventional approach that landed joseph deangelo in court decades after his alleged spree of murders and rapes. investigators entered evidence from the golden state killer's cases into a genealogical data
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base and through links with several distant relatives they were able to track down deangelo. now that same technology could help solve some of california's most notorious cold cases including the infamous zodiac killer murders sflp it will break it wide open. >> reporter: jim jacks has spent most of his career on the zodiac task force hundreding the man who 50 years ago terrified northern california. the zodiac killer boasted about killing as many as 37 people and taunted police by sending them cryptic letters. if they're able to find a relative of the person who licked that stamp, how big a deal is that? >> it's real big. it's a great place for an investigation to really start. >> reporter: detectives are now trying to recover dna from saliva on the stamps from those very letters and using genealogy sites gives them a potent new weapon. says dna expert mopty miller. >> anytime we can't identify the criminal if we could identify
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some of the criminal's relatives that might give us a very good leg up on self-crimes. >> reporter: and it's giving new hope for cracking cases that had lodge gone gold and seemed like they might never be solved. >> so this has a lot of potential. >> absolutely. the potential is great. >> reporter: now, detectives plan to enter the dna results from the zodiac letters into the same data base that helped track down the alleged golden state killer. if they're successful finally bring some closure for the family
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well, we couldn't have said it better ourselves. try new dove men+ care stain defense for anti stain and anti mark protection police in connecticut found a body today in the ruins of a barn that exploded and burned to the ground last night. officers were called to the property by a whom said she'd been held there for days. they found a man barricaded possibly the woman's husband. police negotiated with him for hours. then they say they blew the place up. nine officers were hurt. their injured are not life-threatening. in a reversal the house chap-lane will keep his job. republican house speaker paul ryan had forced father patrick
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conroy to resign last giving no reason but gett
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this is anniversary day for the cbs evening news. 70 years ago this evening may 3rd, 1948 the cbs tv news debuted. a 15-minute black-and-white broadcast on a fledgling network of three east coast stations. by 1951 the program renamed "douglas edwards with the news" spanned the country. >> good evening, everybody, coast to coast. >> in 1963 with walter cron krooit anchoring the program expanded to half an hour and got a new title, "the cbs evening news." color came in 1966, stereo in 1988, high dev in 2008. the "cbs evening news" of 2018 will continue in a moment.
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we end tonight on a high note. hundreds of feet in the sky with john blackstone's riveting look at one of the most famous bridges on the planet. >> reporter: the daredevils dangling some 700 feet up the golden gate bridge may not be daredevils at all. >> first tum you go over you've got a death grip on this rope. you can see it in the new guys. >> you don't do this for fun? >> no, i do not. i grew up in iowa so i did not grow up around mountains. nick clark and jason nauman are a team of ernlgsz examining every inch of the iconic towers, the most detailed are look since the bridge opened in 1937. >> for the most part we're looking for corrosion, especially on the rivet heads and the seams between the steel plates. >> reporter: in years past the
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towers were checked using only binoculars even after earthquakes but bridge officials decided to take a closer look as new federal regulations require inspections of 18,000 bridges across the country. what kind of shape is the golden gate bridge in? >> you know, for a bridge that's over 80 years old she looks pretty good. >> the golden gate is bridged. >> reporter: were when the bridge was built with 70,000 tons of steel, those were daredevils, using none of the safety equipment that is standard today. >> we have one line that supports us, and then we have a second line that's a backup. >> reporter: this still doesn't look like much of a backup from that height. >> it's not a very big rope. 11 millimeters. son even half an inch on this rope. but incredibly strong. these ropes are rated for upwards of 7,000 pounds each. >> reporter: thousands of visitors a day come to the bridge to take in the view, but those with the best view may be just hanging out. john blackstone, cbs news, san francisco. that is the "overnight news" for this friday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back later for the morning news and cbs this
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morning. from the broadcast center in new york city i'm jeff glor. this is the "cbs overnight news." and welcome to the overnight news. i'm don dahler. president trump's new lawyer has some new explanations for some of the controversy swirling around the white house. first rudy giuliani dropped a bombshell, that the president did repay his lawyer for the hush money payout to stormy daniels. then giuliani came up with a new reason why the president fired fbi director james comey. major garrett sorts it all out. >> he didn't know the details of this until we knew the details of it, which is a couple weeks ago. maybe not even a couple. maybe ten days ago. >> reporter: that was president trump's new personal lawyer, rudy giuliani, describing what the president knew about a $130,000 payment to adult film actress stormy daniels to gain
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her silence days before the election about an alleged affair with mr. trump. that payment was arranged by mr. trump's self-described fixer michael cohen. the night before also on fox giuliani said mr. trump personally repaid cohen for the deal. >> funneled through a law firm and the president repaid it. >> reporter: today cohen ignored reporters' questions. >> have a good day, guys. >> reporter: giuliani's revelation contradicts what the president said on air force one april 5th. >> did you know about the $130,000 payment to stormy daniels? >> no. >> then why did michael cohen make it if there was no truth to her allegations? >> you have to ask michael cohen. michael is my attorney. you'll have to ask michael. >> do you know where he got the money to make that payment? >> i don't know. >> reporter: in a series of tweets this morning the president struck a decidedly different tone, saying the non-disclosure agreement with daniels was common for celebrities and was used to
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"stop the false and extortionist accusations made by her about an affair." michael avenatti is the lawyer representing daniels. >> it's an outrage frankly that the president of the united states would stand on air force one on videotape and blatantly lie to the american people. the president and his advisers are making this up as they go along. they realize they're in a heapload of trouble. >> reporter: two federal officials tell cbs news there are no wiretaps, there are no transcripts, there are no phone recordings of any of michael cohen's telephone conversations. including any he may have had with the president. now, we do know from investigators in a general sense there is a monitoring of some of cohen's communications, including his e-mail. earlier today i talked to giuliani and he described the federal treatment of cohen as heavy-handed. he also said he is calling on the justice department, jeff, to close the entire russia investigation down. we're learning more about the deadly crash of a national
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guard cargo plane that went down shortly after takeoff from savannah, georgia. turns out the plane had just been serviced and was on its final flight. david martin has more. >> reporter: military aircraft are falling out of the sky. yesterday's crash that killed nine members of the puerto rico national guard involved a c-130 cargo plane that was more than 50 years old and on its way to be retired that an aircraft bone yard. last year 15 marines and one sailor were killed when another c-130 experienced what the commandant of the marine corps called a mechanical problem and fell from 20,000 feet. >> so last year we had a horrible year. we had a horrible year. >> reporter: wrecked aircraft litter the landscape. an analysis of accident data obtained by "military times" found a nearly 40% increase in accidents since 2013, when congressional spending limits known as sequestration went into effect. and by one estimate cost the pentagon $147 billion over five
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years. the accident rates for the navy's f-18 superhornet more than doubled. but most of those were relatively minor, happening during routine flight deck or runway operations. >> we've got to stop doing stuff on the ground that causes us to lose otherwise perfectly good airplanes. >> reporter: no one was killed but the aircraft has to be taken out of service tore repairs, setting off a chain reaction. >> that's reducing the number of airplanes we have. we want to be able to fly more are. if we fly more we should become more skilled and should have fewer class as. >> reporter: class as, the fatal accidents, often involve pilot error. the 2015 crash of a marine helicopter in california was blamed on faulty insulation of a oil filter cover. but the investigation said the two pilots, both of whom died, ignored a warning light that should have prompted them to land immediately. >> the military says it needs more flying hours, more spare parts, and newer aircraft.
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but it also has to recommits own procedures to avoid these needless accidents. we've got an update now on a story that has affected all of us in the cbs news family. a published report says the allegations of sexual misconduct against our former colleague charlie rose are more extensive than previously known. bianna golodryga reports. >> reporter: cbs news management, the "washington post" reports, was told about rose's behavior toward women on three different occasions, going back to 1986. today's allegations in the post gloipg and indecent exposure and initiating an inappropriate conversation while rose was at programs including cbs's night watch, "60 minutes ii" and "60 minutes" as well as cbs this morning. in one case the post exciteding rose began taking a 24-year-old employee to expensive lunches and suggested other job
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opportunities. it was brought to the attention of the morning show's executive rurs ryan kadro, who said in a statement he was not told about any inappropriate spokesperson. a cbs news spokesperson said kadro determine td was a job interview. in response cbs news said "we cannot corroborate or confirm many of the situations described." jeff thager, executive producer of smnts presidents and former cbs news chairman who hired rose two sefrpt times, said he was once of the best interviewers in the country, period. i if i knew there was this darker side he never would have been hired. amy briton co-authored the investigation. >> the women told us they feared retaliation for speaking out against charlie. >> reporter: cbs news says there were no formal complaints against rose before he was fired. in a statement today president david rhodes said management has
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been working to create a safe environment for its staff. the journalism we hear here is important but nothing is more important than the people who do it. this morning gayle king reacted to the post report on the air. ? you cannot ignore what these women are saying. that's also part of my anguish here, to know women were hurt and they're saying the things they're saying. >> charlie rose has not responded to a comment but in an e-mail he told the post your story is unfair and inaccurate. cbs news said today that it has retained flouts law firm to help investigate sexual harassment and complaints. good b bianna golodryga, new york. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. you wouldn't accept an incomplete job
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>> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." palo alto, california may soon become the first city in the nation to allow emergency blood deliveries by drone. right now that's against the law, but the faa is reviewing 150 different drone ploefzs and plans to allow ten of them to move forward next month. mireya villarreal has the details. >> reporter: this could be the future of health care. drones delivering blood in emergencies. at the stanford blood center in the heart of silicon valley dr. ta pham's team collects about 200 pints of blood each day. most of that supply is stored at the hospital.
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but sometimes there's a need for more. >> you can't plan for emergencies. and that's where time becomes even more krushell. >> reporter: right now they use a courier service, but the process can be slow. >> it depends on the time of day, courier availability, traffi traffi traffic conditions, anywhere from 30 to 60 minutes. >> and with a drone? >> 10 minutes or less. >> that's a big difference. >> it's a huge difference. >> reporter: andrea is the ceo of drone company matter net. he showed us how it works. the blood would be placed in a security box and automatically loaded into the drone before taking off on a preprogrammed route. at the hospital doctors use a qr code on their phone to lob and correct the package. several of the projects the faa is now considering deal with health care. drone delivery company zipline, which is involved in eight different xloepzs, says their drones can fly over 100 miles to
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shuttle medical supplies to rural community. under current federal law drones must say in the operator's final sight but next month the faa would waive those for pilot projects opening up the possibility for commercial drone use in the u.s. regulators still have to tackle the safety. aloe alto resident katie talbot would lives near their proposed route is concerned. >> i think they know they would run into a lot of resistance. from the neighborhood. if they tried to fly over them with a lot of blood. >> reporter: matter net says the route will be over open space and says success here could ease some of the public's concerns. >> we believe strong in being the first adopter of this technology because there's a very tangible and benefit there. >> right now we're talking about drones delivering blood but think of it more generally as
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drones delivering medical supplies and when you do that there's a whole world out there we can change. >> proving the sky is not the limit. mireya villarreal, palo alto, californ california. also in california a farm near the town of la moore will play host to the founders cup surf competition. yes, you got that right. they'll be surfing on a farm about 100 miles from the sea. believe it or not there's a sea that creates good surfing waves. its creator invited carter evans, lungy man, out for a r50id. ride. >> reporter: it's just another day at work for 11-time champion surfer kelly slater. at first glance this could be any one of slater's favorite waves around the world. from australia's gold coast to south africa's turbulent indian ocean shores to the famed north
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shore of oahu. but today slater's riding the surf of la moore, california more than 100 miles inland from the nearest coastline, smack dab in the middle of the state's agricultural heartland. >> if this same exact reef and wave was in the ocean, i know it would be really, really prouded every day. >> every wave is the wave of the day out here. >> reporter: it's all possible thanks to a decade-long quest by slater and his team to build a machine that can produce seven feet tall professional grade artificial waves at the push of a button. the key component is this 100 ton mechanism that looks like a locomotive right riding alongside this half-mile-long pool. >> basically, it's a foil that pushes through the water. all the energy transported into a swell. >> because the hydrofile saxes are adjustable this wave
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introduces something new to surfing. predictability. >> giving everyone the equal opportunity to demonstrate what their talents and skills are. >> they're exactly the same zplsh almost exactly the same. >> while a man add kichb -- surfing editor justin houseman says it loses the essence of the sporpt p. >> as much as you're riding waist is the important part the fact you're doing it in the ocean and you learn how to survive that ocean and you learn how to read that hoegs that's what makes surfing fun. >> reporter: whether or not recreational surfers take to it, slater's wave seems tailor made for this weekend. this weekend it will host its first official surf he league event. sophie goldschmidt is the ceo of surf league which bought the technology two years ago. the league plans to build more
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of these facilities all over the world. >> you see this technology drawing other people in, perhaps you know a kid from iowa wants to be a surfer. in a few years he can because there's one of these nearby. >> exactly. now it makes dreams a reality. >> but is that a vision, to allow more people to experience? >> i have no problem with more people experiencing it. i don't necessarily want my favorite waves around the world to get more crowded but if these are crowded that's fine. >> how long have you been surfing? >> about 25 years. >> reporter: on this day i was the one crowding his new favorite wave. >> surfers ready? >> surf yez are ready. >> reporter: and despite my experience i was nervous to surf kelly slater's personal wave. seconds latest the massive hydrofoil was slighting through 15 million gallons of water and it was time to take the plunge. >> i do know what everyone feels. that's why i enjoy so much when
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people come here and get mefshs and blow their first wave. i tell like it. afterward i have to tell them i did the same thing. they're like no, really? yeah. >> you tackled some of the most dangerous waves in the world and yet you still have nerves on this one? >> yeah, it's weerds. it doesn't make sense. >> reporter: neither does building a surf break in the middle of a farmer's field. >> there you go. we're moving. later. >> that didn't slop kelly slater from making it a reality. carter evans, la moore, california. >> and you can watch the world surf league's founder's cup competition. i don't think carter's going to be competing. th olay ultra moisture body wash
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spring planting season is finally upon us and for some people that means it's time to get out to the cemetery. tony dokoupil tells us why. >> reporter: every great summer garden really begins in the winter. >> johnny jump-up. >> reporter: with a ritual of seeds and shovels. but these gardners, voonlts at the w50dlands, a 54-acre oasis in west philadelphia, have an extra challenge each year. >> joe is on hand today to help people find their grade. is there anybody that has not found their grade?
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okay. >> reporter: yes, the woodlands is a mid 19th century cemetery, which means it dates to a time when believe it or not graves were designed to be planters and many americans liked the idea of eternal rest under a bed of roses. >> there would have been flowers virtually everywhere. roses, climbing vines, families basically would come and they would treat their family's lot as a garden space. these are those wild violets. >> reporter: executive director jessica balmer says the grounds once contained more than 300 tombs in the french style as they were known. each one a scene of cultivation. >> it was in the 19th century when gardening became a hobby activity for people. >> reporter: but over the years as families moved away the weeds
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moved in. are that is, until two years ago when balmer put out a modest call for 25 volunteers. she got 75 instead. >> thank you guys for coming. >> reporter: and this year with help from a grant she expanded to 130 self-described grave gardeners. gardeners like literature professor elizabeth womack. >> how did it feel the first time you put your hands in the soil? >> it was thrilling. i mean, something that's really satisfying about taking a shovel and just digging at the grave. >> reporter: this year the woodlands is buzzing again with people. at work and at play. much like it would have been in the mid 1800s, when the cemetery became a popular escape from the noise and pollution of city living. >> this type of cemetery is the earliest form of public park. so this is a place people would come. you actually had to have a ticket to get in the gates on
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the weekend because it was so crowded with -- >> you needed a ticket here? >> you needed a ticket because so many people were coming here. >> reporter: back then the woodlands was considered revolutiona revolutionary. a so-called rural cemetery enclosed by trees on the edge of town instead of urban graveyards crowded by buildings near its center. such cemeteries, like greenwood in brooklyn, are once again attracting crowds and offering a valuable change m perspective. >> i would imagine that a college term paper would seem like small potatoes if you spent your afternoon in a cemetery. >> yeah. try to balance it all for sure. >> reporter: maya arthur is a senior at the university of pennsylvania. and like other woodlands volunteers she finds two to four hours a week for her garden, a commitment that began with mandatory workshops including
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victoryian horticulture so every plant in the woodlands is true to the era. >> it is really cool coming here like after class and like watering and just being like -- kind of like you are put your hands on your hips and you're like i did that. it's really nice. >> this is the path you walk down with your son in. >> oh, yes. >> reporter: for elizabeth womack the most rewarding part of grave gardening isn't really the gardening at all. >> he especially likes that gravestone has tipped over a little bit. he likes to run his cars down it. >> reporter: you see, she often comes here with 3-year-old son whose birth brought joy but also fear. >> i was terrified that something was going to happen to him. and it was crippling. >> reporter: but it turns out when you garden in an old cemetery you tend to more than just flowers. >> what i noticed as i started planting was that it allowed me to confront things that scared me and to nurture this garden
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the nba playoffs continue this weekend, and we've got a sorry of two young basketball champions that steve hartman found on the road. >> and i know you guys get tired. it's little things. >> reporter: at coronado high school in el paso, texas coach peter morales made no qualms about it. back in 2013 he had a favorite on this team. >> mitchell, i need you. >> reporter: then team manager mitchell marcus has a developmental disability. but he surpassed everyone here when it came to love of the game. >> he's just an amaze k person that our basketball team loves to be around. >> reporter: tonight we have a great update on this story. but in case you missed the original it all began five years ago, during the last game of the regular season, when coach morales told his manager to suit up. just wearing a jersey was enough
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for mitchell. but what he didn't know was the coach planned to play him. and so it was. with a minute and a half left coach morales put in his manager. >> and just started hearing "mitchell, mitchell." [ crowd chanting "mitchell" ] >> but here's where the fairy tale fell apart. although his teammates did everything they could to give mitchell the basket, each time he passed the ball he either missed the shot or like on their last possession booted it out of bounds, turning the ball over to the other team with just seconds left. >> he wasn't going to be able to score. but i was hoping that he was happy that he was just put in the game. >> could you have ever imagined what happened next? >> i could not. not at all. >> reporter: what happened next happened on the inbound. the guy with the ball there was a senior at franklin high school, number 22, jonathan montanez. >> i was raised to treat others how you want to be treated. i just thought mitchell deserved his chance, he deserved his
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opportunity. >> reporter: what jonathan did was yell out mitchell's name. then threw the ball right to him. right there. one of the most memorable turnovers of all time. [ cheers and applause ] after this story first aired jonathan and mitchell became friends. they received many accolades. the most significant went to jonathan. and it came from the chancellor of texas tech university, who saw our story and offered jonathan a scholarship. almost certainly the only scholarship ever awarded for a turnover. jonathan will graduate this summer with a degree in kinesiology and our award for outstanding sportsmanship. steve hartman on the road in el paso, texas. that's the overnight news for this friday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back with us a little later for the morning news. and you don't want to miss "cbs this morning." from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm don dahler.
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captioning funded by cbs it's friday, may 4th, 2018. this is the "cbs morning news." a hawaiian volcano erupts, shooting lava into the sky and sending it slowly dangerously close to home, triggering a mandatory evacuation. and president trump concedes he now admits to paying stormy danielss to keep quiet as he denies an affair as he exposes himself to new possible legal peril. good morning from the studio

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