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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  May 16, 2018 3:12am-4:01am PDT

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you don't have enough money to last the next 20 years, so you want to move away from that. or the second part is maybe you've done well or you've had lots of success in life but you want that next level, that next level of income, abundance, and joy. your neighbors or friends have gotten it, you want it. and i want to tell you, there is nothing different between super successful, wealthy, happy people than those that aren't, other than the habits that they do on a daily basis. and larry, that's why i wrote this book, to finally give people the unfair advantages, the habits that can allow them to live life on that next level. - my guest has been dean graziosi. if you have a desire for more success in your life and you wanna know a good idea? call and get millionaire success habits and the live event tickets before they're gone. do it now, you'll thank me for bringing him to you. (gentle music)
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>> he would tell you security. and he is trying to manage that on many fronts right now. israel involved in two areas nearby. gaza and west bank. they're now also engaging iran militarily. in significant ways iechl asked netanyahu about this whether he believes his military is, overcommitted. he told us "israel has been here
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before." biana. thank you, jeff. we'll see you back here tomorrow night. aut and journalist tom wolfe died that a hospital here in new york. his agent says the cause was an infect. he was 88 years old. here is vladamir duthier. >> these are the men who had the right stuff. >> perhaps the three most famous word tom wolfe ever wrote to describe astronauts for his 1979 book that went on to become a box office hit. tom wolfe began his career in newspapers. then moved to mag zbleend where he helped pioneer the journalism movement by blending traditional fact based reporting with a first person literary style. as he explained to jeff glor in 2016. >> it drove me crazy. i couldn't -- in the right stuff about the astronauts, i wasn't on board. a lot of conversations. i missed. >> my name is peter fallow.
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>> his first novel, a best-seller became a movie. bonfire of the vanities. satire about an ambitious wall streeter touched on class, race, wealth in 1980s new york city. wolfe called his technique a paid voyeurism. >> when i wrote it, i desighed to have a party scene. i had been to a number of parties like that. next time i was invited to such a thing. i just shut up. just listened. >> it wasn't wolfe's word that were catchy. a true dandy in his light colored three piece suits. the virginia native wrote 17 books. near the end of his life had no intention of slowing down. is this the last book? >> actually, i, to be honest, i have only five more planned. the kingdom of speech was his last book. it wasn't just writers who credited him with changing their lives. even astronaut, scott kelly, spent all most a year in the international space station. as a teenager he was inspired by
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the right stuff. >> literary lion whose words impacted so many. >> exactly what i wrote on my sheet. little very lion. indeed. indeed. >> vlad. ♪ sweat. water break. uh-huh. nobody drinks, 'till this guy sweats. gotta see some sweat. degree advanced protection works up to 125 degrees. but be careful, it won't let you down.
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prepare for your demise, do your worst, doctor. i will. but first, a little presentation. hijacking earth's geothermal energy supply. phase 1. choosing the right drill bit. as long as evil villains reveal their plans, you can count on geico saving folks money. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. your hair is so soft! did you use head and shoulders two in one? i did mom. wanna try it? yes. it intensely moisturizes your hair and scalp and keeps you flake free. manolo? look at my soft hair. i should be in the shot now too. try head and shoulders two in one.
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believe it or not for the second time in a month some one was sucked out of a jetliner in
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midair. this time it was co-pilot. crew members pulled him inside. but the harrowing ordeal wasn't over. more now from kris van cleave. >> cell phone video appears to show cracks spreading across the cockpit windshield of a chinese airliner while in flight. moments later the window would shatter. the captain said his first officer was partially sucked out and had to be pulled back in. he suffered injuries to the face and waist. the airlines airbus a 319 at 30,000 feet when it happened. passenger oxygen masks deployed. the captain diverted the plane to the closest airport. this passenger said he heard a bang. and the plane dropped sharply, four, five second. the lights when out. he said there was chaos in the cabin before the flight crew told the 119 passengers on board not to panic. the plane landed safely despite the captain not being able to talk to air traffic control because of the news from the broken window. beside the first officer, a flight atent and was injured. last month an engine failure on
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this southwest jet sent debris into a window. passenger, jennifer reardan partially sucked out of the air craft and later died. cockpit windshield have multiple layers if one cracks typically the whole thing doesn't shatter out like that. the last time anyone can rim were something like this in 1990 due to a maintenance mistake. the captain was partially sucked out. both pilots survived. >> lucky pilot and passengers. chris, thank you. >> ♪ cleaning floors with a mop and bucket is a hassle, meaning you probably don't clean as often as you'd like. for a quick and convenient clean, try swiffer wetjet. there's no heavy bucket, or mop to wring out, because the absorb and lock technology traps dirt and liquid inside the pad. it's safe to use on all finished surfaces tile, laminate and hardwood. and it prevents streaks and hazing better than a micro fiber strip mop, giving you a thorough clean the first time. for a convenient clean, try swiffer wetjet with a money back guarantee. brand power. helping you buy better.
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four days before the royal wedding and the story has taken another turn. meghan markle's father has changed his mind a number of times about whether he will attend after causing an uproar when he posed for paparazzi pictures. there is a late development. >> reporter: in the latest twist to the royal wedding, meghan markle's father now tells tmz he will not be able to walk his daughter down the aisle on saturday. because he is having major surgery after suffering a heart attack last week. earlier today, thomas markel sr. told tmz he would try to fly to england despite his health to be there for megan. after he told the celebrity site he was not attend the wedding at all because of the fallout of selling photos of himself. >> it was an unbelievable amount of stress. >> in an interview on good morning britain, megan's estranged half sister, said she
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advised her father to stage photos, showing him preparing for the wedding. brushing up on britain and getting measured. to counter images he found unflattering. >> my father has really suffered at the hand of the media. they presented him in most horrible ways. >> royal correspondent, roya nikka it is thought that he turned down offers from kensington palace. >> do you know how they are feeling right now? >> i spoke to some one close to them last night. who said they were both devastated. >> prince harry long blamed the paparazzi for the death of his mother princess diana in a 1997 car crash. >> the people that chased her into the tunnel were the same people that were taking photographs of her while she was still dying in the back seat of the car. >> kensington palace released a statement, saying prince harry and megan are asking for understanding and respect to be shown to mr. markle. he is reportedly going into surgery tomorrow morning.
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that's just three days before the wedding here at when you humble yourself under the mighty hand of god, in due time he will exalt you. hi, i'm joel osteen. i'm excited about being with you every week. i hope you'll tune in. you'll be inspired, you'll be encouraged. i'm looking forward to seeing you right here. you are fully loaded and completely equipped for the race that's been designed for you.
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president trump paid tribute to america's fallen law enforcement officers at a memorial service in washington. he honored their sacrifice, and that of their families. among them, a young boy in indiana. keeping vigil by his dad's police car, brings comfort to 5-year-old dakota pits. terre haute police officer rob pitts killed in a shootout earlier this month. when it was time for dakota to return to school this week, he had a special request. he asked his mother if an officer could take him to school on his first day back. police answered the call. turning out in force. forming an honor guard for dakota as he arrived. his father's shield around his neck. about 70 officers in all. >> i was super duper surprised and i loved it. >> we wanted to give you this. >> they made him an honorary member of his father's special
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response some people. >> the people at school make me feel great. >> father and son were close. so close that he wrote a message to his dad hoping he would see it from heaven. >> he wrote, dear dad, i love you and miss you so much. >> he has been following in his father's footsteps. receiving challenge coins for his own acts of kindness. and hopes to don a uniform of his own one day. >> i don't want to be a hero. but i want to be a police officer. >> that is the "overnight news" for this wednesday. for some of you the news continues. for others, check back with us a little later for the morning news and of course, "cbs this morning" from the broadcast center in new york city.
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hi, everyone. welcome. i'm demarco more gachblt the government of israel is feeling the heat after the deadly response to monday's palestinian appropriate tests. more than 60 people were shot and killed. more injured. israeli soldiers opened fire on rock throwing demonstrators. governments around the world are condemning the crackdown. pwill discuss it friday.uncil holly williams is in gaza. >> reporter: they're no strangers to bloodshed in war torn gaza. and today, they buried their dead yet again. several of them were children, according to palestinian officials.
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in gaza's hospitals are the survivors. >> the numbers are staggering. all of these men, are, are, working age. >> the doctor is a british trained plastic surgeon who treats trauma victims. >> will he walk again? >> he will walk with a limp. >> for the rest of his life. >> yeah. >> reporter: while many palestinian protesters on monday were peaceful. we saw some hurling rocks and burning tires. israel accused others of throwing grenades and pipe bombs. and released this video it says, showed palestinias attempting to breach the border fence. >> israel claims at least 24 of those it killed were terrorists. the u.s. like israel, blames the violence on hamas. the militant group that controls the gaza strip. no country in this chamber would act with more restraint than israel has. >> but others including some u.s. allies and united nations
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officials have criticized israel for what they say was a disproportionate use of force. president trump's summit with north korean leader kim jong-un is now in doubt. the north postponed the talks with south korea to take place today. and they threat tuned cancel the summit over the joint u.s. south korea military drills. >> reporter: just five days ago, president trump soaked up praise at a rally in indiana, confident his summit with kim jong-un was right on track. >> for all of us for the world, hopefully, something very good is going to happen. >> reporter: now north korea is threatening to back out. over combined south korean and u.s. military drills, similar to this one, from last year. today the north canceled a high stakes meeting with south korea set for tomorrow.
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and warned, the united states will also have to undertake careful deliberations about the fate of the planned north korea u.s. summit. in light of this provocative military ruckus jointly conducted with south korean authorities. state department spokeswoman heather nowart. >> they're exercises legal, planned well, well in add mans. >> when president trump accepted kim's invitation to meet in march. cia director now secretary of state mike pompeo was under the impression kim would not object to the drills. >> he is allowed to continue, us to continue our exercises on the peninsula. something fought over for decades. >> the south korean national security adviser was told the same. >> he understands that routine joint military exercises with korea and the united states must continue. >> last week, president trump acknowledged the summit could always fall through. >> everything can be scuttled. everything can be scuttled.
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>> getting dangerous by the day. new fissures are pumping molten lava from the ground and headed toward a power plant. toxic gasses are filling the air. a real threat the whole thing may erupt. david begnaud is there. >> on a ridge on a ladder the vantage is better. boy is it quite a show. we are watching lava bursts through the fissures, cracks in the earth. the people who live here had their bags packed. they're ready to evacuate. in fact they're sleeping at night with gas masks right beside the bed in case the wind shifts direction. and toxic fumes start blowing this way. newly released video shows how violent and dangerous kiauea's fissures remain. there are 19 active fissures. officials say the lava flowing is slowing but shows no sign of stopping. moving southward toward the ocean and growing ever closer to
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a primary evacuation route. >> it is a little over a mile from highway 137. >> reporter: this what the inside of the kilauea volcano looked like monday of last week. filled with bubbling lava. this is how it looked just five days later. the lava drained away and was no longer visible from above. >> we thing the lava column is continuing to drop. we don't actually know if has reached the water table. or gone below the water table. >> scientists say falling boulders could create blockage and massive steam explosions. tourism officials say the big island lost more than $5 million due to canceled reservations. ann gornick watching the lava bursts from her meditation retreat where business is down 10%. off awe people have canceled. >> what are they saying? >> they think it's not safe. even though the reservation is for september.
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>> this may sound like a, crisis unfolding in slow motion, here is context. only 5% of the big island is affected by this. so, hawaiian officials are telling people please don't cancel your vacations. be aware of what is going on. don't be scared. one of the giants of modern american literature has passed away. tom wolfe, he was 88. and in his dapper suits, was a pioneer of what came to be known as new journalism. his books "the right stuff" the electric kool-aid acid test and bonfire of the vanities set a standa few matched. >> these are the men who had the right stuff. right stuff. >> perhaps the three most famous word tom wolfe ever wrote to describe astronauts for his 1979 book that went on to become a box office hit. tom wolfe began his career in newspapers. then moved on to magazines where he helped pioneer the journalism movement by blending traditional
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fact based reporting with a first person literary style. as he explained to jeff glor in 2016. >> it drove me crazy. i couldn't -- in the right stuff about the astronauts, i wasn't on board. a lot of conversations. i missed. >> my name is peter fallow. >> his first novel, a best-seller became a movie. bonfire of the vanities. satire about an ambitious wall streeter touched on class, race, wealth in 1980s new york city. wolfe called his technique a paid voyeurism. >> when i wrote it, i desighed to have a party scene. i had been to a number of parties like that. next time i was invited to such a thing. i just shut up. just listened. >> it wasn't wolfe's word that
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were catchy. a true dandy in his light colored three piece suits. these birds once affected by oil are heading back home. thanks to dawn, rescue workers only trust dawn, because it's tough on grease yet gentle. i am home, i am home, i am home
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meghan markle's carriage ride has hit a bump into the road. her mother will be at the wedding. her brother and half sister weren't invited. now there are questions who will be walking the bride down the aisle. miss markel's dad is in the paparazzi scandal and may skip the nupt nuials. >> reporter: the kind of news can devastate any bride. meghan markle hoped her father would be by her side here in windsor saturday. now he might not make it at all. do you know how prince harry and meghan markle are feeling right
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now? >> yeah, i spoke to some one very close to them last night who said they were both devastated. more than anything above wanting her father to be there, megan is concern of the moment is for her father's health. >> reporter: the royal correspondent says megan's father was feeling the pressure of the paparazzi. >> i think he felt naively he might be able to take control of the situation. if he collaborated with photographers could present an image he was comfortable with. that hasn't turned out to be the case. >> he reportedly told tmz he staged photos of him brushing of on british history and being measured presumably for wedding attire to counter images previously published. >> photographers purposely looked for, the most unflattering photographs. >> in an interview on good morning britain. megan's estranged half sister said the idea to polish his image was hers. >> when he called me panicking on the freeway because he is in a dangerous situation being followed by seven or eight cars, you know how, i think, there
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have been examples in history, of how dangerous that can be. >> prince harry has long blamed the paparazzi for the death of his mother princess diana in a 1997 car krarchcrash. what do you think he makes of this? >> he will be mortified and deeply hurt. because, he will feel that, that, he is not protecting megan's family. >> kensington palace released a statement. saying this is a deeply personal moment for miss markel in the days before her wedding. she and prince harry asked for understanding and respect to be extend to mr. markel in this difficult situation. >> aside from it, few americans are big fans of british aristocracy. on the other side of the pond the people are rock stars. lee cowen paid a visit to perhaps the biggest royal fan of them all. >> reporter: it is pretty hard to miss. nestled in the rolling hills of county durham, northeastern
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england. a conspicuous union jack fluttering in the wind. as if the farmhouse below was buckingham palace itself. it a's the home of anita atkinson. 61-year-old grandmother of three. though not born into royalty has become the uk's queen of royal memorabilia. >> every day i think about the queen which is really sad isn't it? >> do you really? >> yeah. >> a patriotic pack rat. isn't a nook or cranny in her house that isn't home to a british bobble. commemorative tins jam the bookshelves. her bed sheets bright enough to wake the dead. there are enough collectible teacups for all of the tea in china. >> is it fair to say that this is pretty much an obsession for you? >> yes. it is a complete obsession. it is. >> it's not all she thinks about. she does have a job after all. editor of the local newspaper. the gazette.
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you will notice she bang out her stories on a union jack computer. right next to her union jack telephone which perhaps not surprisingly, rings with god save the queen. >> hello? >> she didn't collect it all herself. much of it was given to her. some by complete strangers who heard of her royal passion. and eventually, the only place left to put it all, was up in anita's attic. >> right up here there is another 3 and a half thousand items in the loft. >> 3,500? >> pencil from the coronation. a bell's whiskey, hasn't got any whiskey. >> did you drink the whiskey? >> i don't drink alcohol. i'm silly enough. >> anita's ever patient husband worried her collection might one day come crashing through the ceiling. so he cleaned out an old dairy barn so she could make it her own personal museum.
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she couldn't wait to show it to us. but only after she changed into something, well a bit more british. >> welcome to royal teas. >> i'm really severely underdressed. >> inside. carefully arranged to the rafters, are some 3,000 pieces of everything. ♪ ♪ >> is there anything you won't collect? >> no. i'll collect anything. there is a box of tissues from 1977. >> there is a cup and saucer from 1817. >> memorializing the death of princess char let of wales. bobby pins from queen elizabeth's 1953 coronation. this is rarer. a mug celebrating the last royal wedding with one whopping mistake. >> when he has arrived from china, it had harry on it. instead of william. it says there, will and kate. it's not, it's harry and kate.
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>> it's not the largest collection of royal memorabilia. but it used to be. at least according to guinness world record back in 2003. >> right next to the largest chamber pot collection. the largest. i don't know whether you can say this. the largest condom collection. in there. to have a guinness world record you got to be mad >> everybody in the guinness book of world records is a little mad. you think you are a little mad? >> maybe a little bit. >> when word spread of this curiously british barn, people started coming around to see it. and anita never intended it to be public. but last year she opened her doors, even offering those who book ahead, afternoon tea. her loyalty to the royals, extends much more than just kitsch. in 2011 camped out four days outside westminster abbey to got a front row seat to the wedding of prince william and kate middleton. years earlier, she found herself at an event at st. james'
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palace. where, to her surprise, she actually met the queen mother. >> i did the curtsy. she said how very nice it is to meet you, anita. i thought, queen mother is calling me by my first name. and then, it just suddenly struck me that beth my grandfathers were coal miners. and my dad was a bus driver. i thought here i am talking to the queen mother like she is my best friend. who do you think you are? >> never forget it. >> one of the best days of my life. >> it takes a pretty major life event to keep anita away from royal pomp and circumstance. in 1981 when prince charles married lady diana, anita missed it. instead she was home, expecting her first child, ruth. who was due the very same day. turns out, ruth may once again keep anita from this saturday's royal wedding to. >> she is expecting her third
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baby. it is due on the date of harry and megan's wedding. >> you can't go to the royal wedding. >> i can't go to the royal wedding. >> i can't. i can't. that's two royal weddings i missed because of my daughter rooutd. >> instead, anita atkinson will celebrate in her own way. driving through the countryside in her ever so british mini
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bagpipes are really from scotland. but they will be all over saturday's royal wedding. and he tried his hand at playing the thing. >> reporter: every spring when scotland thaws. and roars back to life. another seasonal tune-up begins. may marks the start of bagpiping season. yes, bagpipers hibernate too. the city of glasgow's police band is practicing for a summer of competition. and the famous castle will soon host hundreds of kilted pipers for the annual military parade. the bagpipe and kilt were both instruments of war. dating back centuries. the kilt was used as a uniform and pipers haunting routinely
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play troops into battle until after world war i when more than 500 pipers were killed. >> an unusual battle cry. >> in tim dating otherwise never would have done it. >> piper craig monroe says that intimidating sound comes from air. compressed through three pipes. today, bagpipes appear in everything. from weddings. and funerals. to tribute bands like the red hot chili pipers in which monroe plays. >> when he is not playing the bagpipes, monroe is making them. blocks of hatans kneeian blackwd are shaped and drills. and adding decorative details by hand before assembling and testing. >> yea. ha-ha.
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now i need to sit down. lightheaded. >> bagpipe business has been booming. and mun rope traonroe traces ti heart, igniting interest in all things scottish. >> never take our freedom! >> let's see. how much we are talking about here. >> when kilt maker, robert mathisen says his business expanded too. >> are we done yet? >> no. there is still more. >> the traditional kilt made using eight yards of fabric. >> keep going. keep going. >> today's style is only slightly different from kilts used on ancient battle fields. >> in those days one piece of cloth. a bag around the waist over the shoulder. they would sleep in the kilt as well. turn into a sleeping bag if you like. >> each kilt comes in 25 distinct tartans, plaids, representing different clans. today, thousand of patterns are
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produced in factories around scotland. demand comes from all over the world. >> wasn't cool do wear the kilt when i was learning the bagpipes. >> made fun of? >> absolutely. nowadays it has become very cool. >> why has it become fashionable again? >> i think people are more conscious of their own identity. >> so interested, kilts crop up on red carpets. and runways. i think i have the legs for a kilt. >> even on sunday morning television all. tau do you wear underwear or not? >> if you are renting from us, you wear underwear? >> it is a personal preference. >> what do you think the future is? >> do away with trousers altogether. >> so everybody walking on the streeten a kilt? >> why not? good for business. ha-ha. ♪ ♪ >> quick programming note. cbs news will carry the royal wedding festivities as they happen.
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saturday at 4:00 a.m. the cbs "overnight news" will be right back.
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this is the new $4 value menu at denny's. and the fried cheese melt is back, baby. mozzarella sticks inside a grilled cheese sandwich. we're now accepting nominations for the greatest idea ever!
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the fried cheese melt is back, as part of the $4 value menu. president trump's decision to move the embassy from tel aviv to jerusalem sparked violent protests that left dozens dead and thousand more injured. those images can make you think all of the holy land is up in flames. but that's not so. jeff glor got a chance to pay a visit to one holy site that may hold the key to peace in the region. the church of the holy seplicur is one of the holiest sites in cristian team. the faithful leave it is where,
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jesus christ was crucified, buried and rose from the dead. each year millions journaly through the hallways to kneel at his tomb. >> it brings up a lot of tears. just so profound to experience where he was. and what he did. >> wow. >> while christians come to pray. the key to the church is entrusted to a muslim. >> in a daily ritual, he walks through the narrow alley ways of jerusalem. follows in the footsteps of his ancestors. pass the key from generation to generation for more than 850 years. >> my father give me the key when i was 8 years old. i am now 55. >> the family became custodians of the key in 1187 when muslims seized control of jump up. >> not just for our family. we met with a group that
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included travelers from las vegas, indiana, pittsburgh and new york. >> i want to beep here sue find out about shared values and houpt d how the differences are not such big differences a awe who die we forget that some times? >> our pride gets in the way. we revert to -- to the worst within us. >> of in a region often overflowing with tension. >> good night. everybody. >> this custom of muslims and christians working together has become onele of cooperation. >> jerusalem it is not just for the christians, it its for christians, for the muslims and for the jewish. we are here to live together. and we are praying to peace. >> that's the "overnight news" for wednesday. for some of you the news continues. kp check back later for the news. from the broadcast center. i'm demarco
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captioning funded by cbs it's wednesday, may 16th, 2018. this is the "cbs morning news." the much anticipated summit between president trump and north korean dictator kim jong-un is in jeopardy. >> the wind is ridiculous. i don't know what is happening right now. >> wicked weather. several people are killed as a powerful storm ripped through the northeast. >> i saw two women come out full of blood, hair singed. >> and a deadly explosion at a southern california mic

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