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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  May 10, 2019 3:12am-4:00am PDT

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>> i know in the eyes of the world this is a very big step. however, this is in our opinion the church organized the church to report to the church. >> reporter: pope francis's decree will be used as a framework for u.s. bishops to establish their own measure when's they meet next month. while welcoming the tightening of procedures, survivors have been critical that this does not mandate transparency to the public. it also does not address penalties, jeff, such as the defrocking of convicted priests. >> all right, seth doane, thank you. up next, what we have learned about the person who stockpiled all those guns at an l.a. mansion.
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>> i mean, it was piled up. several parts of the rooms. weapons were laid out on the ine . parts of the rooms. they were just all over, on top of various boxes, in sinks and stuff like that. >> reporter: reportedly tipped off by a neighbor's complaint, lapd arrested this man, 57-year-old girard saenz, who lived in the 8,000-square-foot home. the weapons arsenal was so massive lapd needed a moving truck to remove it. >> thousands of weapons of all makes, models, and calibers. some range from back to the civil war. >> reporter: saenz, a licensed contractor, owns several homes with real estate mogul cynthia beck, who had three children with gordon getty, son of oil tycoon john paul getty jr. the mansion sits in an affluent part of los angeles less than a mile away from where jay-z and beyonce live. >> you never know what goes on behind these gates. it's a lot of weapons. >> reporter: officials say it's unclear if girard saenz will
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ultimately face any firearms charges. he is out of jail on bond. atf agents are now tracing each gun and rifle to see if they were previously used in any crimes, jeff. >> mola, thank you very much. up next here, winter strikes back, breaking records in minnesota.
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facebook's co-founder is calling on the government to break up the company. in a "new york times" op-ed chris hughes says ceo mark zuckerberg has sacrificed security and civility for clicks. with instagram and whatsapp in facebook's network hughes calls it a powerful monopoly and zuckerberg's power unprecedented and un-american. facebook is rejecting hughes' break-up call saying accountability can only be achieved with new rules for the internet. chris hughes will talk about this tomorrow on "cbs this morning." amazon founder jeff bezos said his company blue origin will send a spaceship to the moon in the first commercial moon landing. he showed off the model of a vehicle called "blue moon." bezos said it could carry four rovers. after that he hopes it will take people to the moon around the year 2024. the u.s. coast guard today rescued more than 40 people aboard a whale-watching boat in
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puget sound in washington state. the 60-foot catamaran was taking on water and the crew intentionally grounded it on an island. everybody got off safely and no one was hurt. the calendar shows it is spring, but a wintry snowstorm is breaking records in the upper midwest. dluthd, minnesota was blanketed by 10.6 inches every the last two days. that makes this the snowiest may on record. up next, a brutal trip with one beautiful goal.
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or if i'm not working, you know, just roll. it's perfect for me. i'm busy philipps, and i'm fearless to face anything. this year is the 100th anniversary of grand canyon national park. 6 million visit each year, but fuhrer than 5% actually hike into the canyon. so we took a trip down to spend time with a couple of men who finished a far bigger journey. >> i think what's interesting about these parks is the idea of how we hand them forward to the next generation. >> reporter: more people have walked on the moon than have walked the entire length of the grand canyon, 750 miles, the vast majority without trails. i just find the number so remarkable, that that few people have walked the entire rim. >> well, it's a hostile place, and water is the key. >> sun beating down.
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i feel like i'm in a swedish sauna. >> reporter: it took photographer pete mcbride and writer kevin fedarko 71 excruciating days. so whose idea was it to walk? >> no. >> reporter: okay. >> it was an incredibly bad idea, and it's entirely his fault. you want to explain that? >> i was probably a little, you know -- i came in with some attitude like it'll be hiking. and i just underestimated the physicality of it. >> ooh. >> it's our 57th day. kevin turned his arm into a bleeding, stuck mess. >> i will say that my thumb feels somewhat numb. >> reporter: the monumental physical accomplishment was to serve a larger purpose. a comprehensive book and documentary highlighting the canyon's challenges. >> wow. >> this is the crown jewel of the entire system. this is the park that matters the most, not because it's the first or the largest or the most
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visited but because it's the most recognized. >> the layers at the top are younger than the layers at the bottom. >> reporter: each step down along the grand canyon's paths catapults you more than 50,000 years back in time. >> so the canyon really does function like a kind of a time machine. the clock starts at the rim, 250 million years into the past. and by the time you get to the bottom you're 1.8 billion years into the past. >> reporter: but it's the future they're worried about. there are proposals to build a tram to the bottom of the canyon, along with entertainment complexes. already hundreds of helicopter flights go in and out every day. >> that's the challenge, is this whole tug of war between access and conservation. >> reporter: never mind competition for vast quantities of natural resources. uranium being the main one. all potentially infringing on a rare, remaining protected place. >> we're living in a world for
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better or for worse where we're all surrounded by screens and more noise and more chaos on some level. and these places enable us to kind of come back and connect with friends, family, silence, see the sky again. all these things that sometimes we're losing connection with. >> we think of these spaces like grand canyon as sacrosanct and inviolable because they're national parks. and the truth is that they're not. they're not protected for eternity. what they wrerk is that each succeeding generation of americans has to decide whether or not it's willing to renew the commitment that's necessary to preserve these places for another generation. >> we'll be right back.
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it has been six months since the camp fire raced through northern california. the deadliest and most destructive fire in california state history. 85 people were killed. it caused more than $11 billion in damage. half a year later jonathan vigliotti has gone back to paradise to check on some of the youngest survivors. >> reporter: on the surface children from paradise elementary school appear perfectly fine. you're a strong little girl. >> yeah. >> reporter: but shortly into our interview with 8-year-old ellie wrobel and her mom kylie, six months of trauma flooded through. why are you crying? >> because it's sad.
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>> what's sad? >> we're talking about everything that happened to us. >> reporter: ellie and her mother's home was among those reduced to ash by the camp fire. they've been on the move ever since, recently settling down in a donated rv. you are strong, but it's when you see -- it's when you see your mom said that you feel it the most. >> when my mom's sad, i can -- i can feel how she feels and she makes me feel bad. >> reporter: more than 18,000 buildings were lost in the fire, including paradise elementary. >> good morning. >> reporter: at the temporary school a few towns south children silently battle their fears so their parents can worry a little less. >> all of them have had a turn of feeling sad and needing to talk to somebody. >> reporter: katy schrum is ellie's second grade teacher. she says 40% of students in the district moved away after the fire.
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she developed a questionnaire to help get children talking. when was the last time every kid in this class was happy? >> i think it was a couple of weeks ago. >> reporter: despite the upheaval students are improving and time is healing. that resilience took center stage at a recent recital whe ellie and her classmates sang about a few of their favorite things. ♪ xbox and legos and bikes painted red ♪ >> reporter: in six months these kids' world has changed. their courage is a lesson in strength for us all. ♪ when our town burned simply remember my favorite things ♪ ♪ and then i don't feel so bad >> reporter: jonathan vigliotti, cbs news, paradise, california. >> that is the "overnight news"
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for this friday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back later for the morning news and "cbs this morning." from the broadcast center in new york city i'm jeff glor. >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." the "overnight news." i'm mola lenghi. president trump's friendly relationship with north korea's dictator kim jong un is now being tested. the north continued its recent round of weapons tests, firing two more short-range missiles out to see. just hours later the justice department revealed that it has seized north korea's second largest cargo ship. the administration says it was violeting international sanctions. david martin has more. >> reporter: the u.s. tracked three short-range ballistic missiles lifting off near pyongyang and splashing down off the east coast of north korea. the missiles do not represent a
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new threat and president trump said they would not ruin his good relations with kim jong un. >> they were smaller missiles, short-range missiles. nobody's happy about it but we're taking a good look and we'll see. we'll see. the relationship continues, but we'll see what happens. >> it's an honor to be with chairman kim. >> reporter: after two summit meetings and months without any missile launches, this was the second time in five days the north had fired off missiles. kim is sending a signal that is loud and clear to cbs news consultant robert carlin. >> that he's unhappy. that he doesn't think the americans and the south koreans are paying attention. and he thinks this might do it, this might get their attention. >> reporter: in a speech last month kim gave the u.s. until the end of the year to uld be no trdsummit.
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the president explained the impasse after the failure of the second summit. >> basically, they wanted the sanctions lifted. in their entirety. and we couldn't do that.they we large portion of the areas that we wanted but we couldn't give up all of the sanctions for that. >> reporter: sanctions are meant to deprive kim of the money and equipment needed to build nuclear weapons. and today the justice department announced it has actually seized a north korean freighter caught violating the embargo against selling coal on the world market. both leaders boast about how well they get along, but their countries remain fundamentally opposed to each other and it's starting to show. president trump said he's very surprised that his son, donald jr., was issued a subpoena to testify before the republican-led senate intelligence committee. apparently, some of his previous testimony had been called into question. nancy cordes reports. is good p.
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>> reporter: president trump said he was surprised to learn that his oldest child was being ordered to testify again. >> my son testified for hours and hours. my son was totally exonerated by mueller. >> reporter: his namesake, 41-year-old donald trump jr., has been subpoenaed by the senate intelligence committee, which is run by north carolina republican richard burr. >> mr. chairman, what happens if don jr. doesn't comply with his subpoena? >> reporter: the move infuriated some of burr's gop colleagues. >> was there collusion? the answer is no. >> reporter: house minority leader kevin mccarthy. >> what does it say that a republican-led committee subpoenaed the president's son? >> i believe it's time to move on. i think they have it wrong. >> reporter: but democrats have long argued that trump jr. got it wrong when he testified before closed doors in 2017. >> his answers to questions, and i watched him, were smartalecy,
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untruthful and misleading. >> reporter: trump jr., for instance told the senate judiciary committee that he was only peripherally aware of negotiations over a trump tower moscow deal. his father's former lawyer, michael cohen, told a different story. >> who were the family members that you briefed on the trump tower moscow project? >> don trump jr. and ivanka trump. >> do you recall how many of these briefings there might have been? >> approximately ten in total. >> so nancy, have we gotten any indication that donald trump jr. is going to show up? >> reporter: it's very possible he could plead the fifth, jeff. we still don't know. and his father wouldn't say today. we do know that the president has advised close associates, white house officials not to comply with congressional subpoenas. and the house speaker said today that if that trend continues the house is prepared to hold more officials in contempt of
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congress. pope francis issued a new vatican law. it orders all catholic priests and nuns around the world to report all incidents of clergy sexual abuse. these reports will go to the diocese, not the police. seth doane has the story from italy. >> reporter: pope francis's sweeping new law makes it mandatory for priests and nuns to report sexual abuse and its cover-up. the decree sets out procedures and timelines for investigations, including those against bishops, and requires every diocese in the world to establish an office to deal with abuse allegations. it mandates diocese develop simple ways for victims to report, seeks to protect whistleblowers, and puts the onus on the vaktd to respovatic respond quickly. >> this is a very strong message that disclosure is the order of the day and not silence. >> reporter: the new law does not mandate reporting to police
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or prosecutors, though it does say local churches must adhere to the reporting laws in their countries. there are loopholes. abuse revealed during confession, for instance, would remain secret. >> the church is incapable of policing itself. >> reporter: shaun dougherty is a survivor whom cbs news has followed for months. >> i know in the eyes of the world this is a very big step. however, this is in our opinion the church organized the church to report to the church. >> reporter: pope francis's decree will be used as a framework for u.s. bishops to establish their own measures when they meet last month. while welcoming the tightening of procedures, survivors have been critical that this does not mandate transparency to the public. it also does andres penalties, jeff, such as the defrocking of convicted priests. world champion boston red sox paid a visit to the white house. actually, only about half the team showed up.
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the rest, including manager alex cora, had their own reasons for skipping the photo op. ben tracy reports. the cbs overnight news will be right back. me feel sluggish.ve
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>> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." climate change is taking a toll on one of the most popular winter destinations in the world, switzerland. the glaciers in the swiss alps are melting at an increasing rate. and as far as skiing, well, you used to be able to ski mount korvac right through the summer. not anymore. in fact, the entire country is getting less snow. but the swiss are not taking this lying down. brook silva braga paid a visit to see what's in the works. >> reporter: up on the roof of an industrial plant outside zurich, switzerland up the scaffolding and a ladder, we found rows of circular vents,
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the first commercial-scale facility bringing back what we all put up in the sky. >> this is capturing co2 directly from air. >> just here out in the air. it's grabbing the co2 from the air. >> yes. >> collecting it. >> exactly. >> reporter: louisa charles represents climeworks, one of the handful of start-ups neutralizing carbon dioxide by removing it and reusing it. >> we on the one hand have a source of energy. >> reporter: the source is waste heat from a garbage incineration plant just below. >> inside we have a felt material which is highly selective so it captures only co2. >> reporter: to make it a business they needed buyers for the carbon dioxide, and they found their first one just a few hundred yards away. a greenhouse looking for fertilizer. >> there's a big cherry tomato. >> taste it. >> that's pretty good. >> reporter: and down the road professor marcus friedel has
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started using climeworks carbon to make fuel. >> in this reactor we have hydrogen and carbon dioxide going in, and out comes methane and -- >> reporter: the methane comes out of the gas pump at rapperswell university of applied science and into a small fleet of cars. >> what would happen if i put methane in my car? >> it wouldn't go well. you don't have a methane car? >> not yet. can i get one? >> yes. it's about 20 car models you can buy. >> really? >> on methane. >> reporter: friedel says the beauty of methane as opposed to, say, an electric car is the gas is easily stored. an electric battery relying on solar power in the swiss winter would be hard to charge. >> do you feel this is part of the solution to climate change? >> yes. i'm very convinced that this is part of the solution for climate change. >> reporter: for that climeworks will need more customers, and they got a on the day we
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visited last week. this truck was delivering captured co2 to coca-cola at a picturesque bottling plant in the alps near swiss carbonated water vouser, the first bought welled captured carbon. >> these are some of the first bottles. >> these are the first bottles. >> and of course it tastes the same. >> the normal co2 that's just coming from the air. >> reporter: patric bit weiller, coke's sustainability manager in switzerland, convinced the bosses it was worth playing clime works $600 a ton for co2, for almost nothing. >> yeah, it's more expensive. but to change something and to support such a confidence, yeah, you have to invite a little more. >> but even with all the co2 in all those bottles is less than a drop in the climate bucket. the plant here uses 600 tons of co2 a year. humanity omits 37 billion tons.
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each climeworks scrubber removes about one ton a week. >> i looked it up and i think my flight over here was like half a ton. so it would take three days of one of these just to offset my flight to get here. that's a depressing number. >> that's why we need more of them. >> reporter: but before you dismiss carbon removal, and you wouldn't be alone, consider this. >> these intergovernmental climate projections are counting on some of this working? >> oh, yeah. >> reporter: "national geographic" journalist andrew rebkin has been following the climate story for decades. >> my journey on climate started in 1985. >> reporter: he's watched as years of failures to cut emissions forced governments into mathematical contortions to prove it was still possible to hit their co2 targets and limit warming. >> so this concept emerged of negative emissions, like something that actually -- it's a takeback. >> the only way to make the math
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work. >> only way. >> reporter: this family of ideas is known as geoengineering. it could mean carbon removal like climeworks is doing, planting millions of trees, which of course consume co2. even dumping iron into the ocean to jumpstart its natural co2 absorption. but even if we bring co2 emissions to zero, temperatures could stay dangerously high for decades. and so harvard professor david keith has another idea. >> deliberately reflecting away some sunlight. >> dim the sum a little bit. >> dim the sun just a tiny little bit. >> reporter: we already know volcanic ash does something similar bup blocking out the sun on purpose? >> take one last look at the sun, springfield. >> reporter: it's the kind of thing the evil mr. burns would do on "the simpsons." and yet spraying aerosols into the stratdsphere and reflecting back some sunlight is also
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probably the cheapest, surest way to lower the average global temperature. there is a catch. >> you don't really care about global average temperatures. you care about where there's a heat wave or whether your crops have enough water. >> reporter: also involved in carbon removal through his company carbon engineering, he's spent decades studying what would happen if we dimmed the sun but has run into massive resistant to even the smaller real world tests. much of the opposition comes from environmentalists. >> people who spent decades trying to fight for emissions cuts are terrified that if we let this topic out in the open that l. people will use solar geosharing as an excuse to keep emitting. they'd say yeah, we've got the problem solve. that is completely wrong. >> your perspective is we need to do both. >> we absolutely have to walk sxhu gum at the same time. >> that's the argument from climeworks too. which is trying to scale up their capacity and bring town
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their governments. and they're working to not only recycle co2 in soda, in fuel, which issing carbon neutral, but at this site in iceland actually bury it. making it carbon negative. >> if we're not examining all of these avenues, we'll always have that sense, i guarantee, 10 or 20 years from now of whoa, why didn't we pay more attention to
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let's say you have to get to the other side of the world and you're in a rush. well, singapore airlines can get you from newark liberty international airport to downtown singapore nonstop in just 19 hours. it is the longest commercial flight in the world. kris van cleave was on board for the inaugural flight. ♪ come fly with me ♪ let's fly, let's fly away >> reporter: with the mentality of a marathon runner dwayne brown showed up to the gate. >> do your friends think you're crazy? >> yes. they said dwayne, are you nuts? are you nuts? >> reporter: what he is is an aviation fanatic at the starting line, along with 160 other passengers, for the latest launch of the world's longest nonstop flight. new york to singapore. >> let's celebrate this with a big round of applause.
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>> reporter: a more than 9,500-mile trek connecting two of the world's financial capitals in a mere, get this, 19 or so hours. >> i've been 13 hours. this should be interesting. >> reporter: for donna scarolo and liz seco time is money. they're racing to get to a business meeting and are willing to pay about four grand one way to shave six hours off their trip. >> it makes a huge difference because we're able to get down on the ground earlier than we would have had we taken a non-direct flight. >> reporter: enter this specially designed airbus a-350, made from a composite material and carried by two engines. singapore airlines says it's up to 30% more efficient than the plane it's replace and can stay in the air for over 20 hours. >> could you do this route without this airplane? >> no. we could do it. we couldn't do it economically. and therefore it wouldn't persist. >> reporter: campbell wilson is
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a senior vice president at singapore airlines. >> so we've been intrinsically involved in the whole process of the aircraft's design. it's not to make records. it's to serve a customer need . >> pay attention to the safety video which will -- >> reporter: these days corporate card-carrying business flyers want to get their fast and in comfort. on board there are 67 business class seats that convert into beds. the other 94 are premium economy. so while you can still get stuck in a middle seat it's not as cramped as the coach seat you'd typically have to squeeze into. >> the idea is that we want to get you there in peak condition. >> reporter: chef anthony mcneil is singapore air's food and beverage director. in an effort to combat jet lag the airline is focusing on nutrition, designing a special low sodium, low-carb menu. >> the philosophy that we've taken with this particular flight is smaller portions at more regular intervals. >> why smaller portions more often?
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>> it gives you some excitent but also interaction with the crew and also the interaction of the cuisines offer a much more pleasant flight experience. >> reporter: the airline also delivers in-seat exercise videos for passengers to get the blood flowing. >> raise legs and circle the ankles twice in each direction. >> reporter: hours in and somewhere over russia, i was in need of a good stretch. it takes 13 flight attendants and two sets of pilots to get this show off the ground. there's even a shift change at 30,000 feet, and they can spend their off-duty time here in the crew rest area, off limits to passengers. >> we're going to fly across the north pole. >> reporter: captain ray choudary showed us our flight path, which takes us over the top of the world, offering this arctic aerial tour. >> is it different doing 19 hours than four or seven or eight? >> on a longer flight like this you have to manage your risks.
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your sleep level. your concentration. >> reporter: it's an endurance test for passengers too. i ate, watched a movie, slept, watched another movie, read an entire newspaper, ate again, and we still had ten hours to go. >> are you getting bored yet? >> no. because i'm a mom of three. so having this time to myself is actually kind of nice. >> 16, 17 hours, 18 hours, i cannot wait for the 20-hour flight. >> reporter: to keep everyone refresh refreshed, the cabin comes with 16.7 million combinations of light to simulate different times of day. still, the marathon flight and the 12-hour time change do take their toll. but we made it. even crossing the finish line early. to the delight of donna scarola. >> jet lag? you're tired? >> a little tired.
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dehydrated. i probably need to drink a lot more water. but other than that i'm ready to explore singap e.
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day. well, by now you probably know that the british royal family has a new member and that his name is archie. what comes next for the little guy? imtyaz tyab has the story from windsor castle. >> reporter: the duke and duchess of sussex, harry and meghan, decided really early on in their relationship that they were going to do things differently. and the introduction of their son to the world is no different. it was a beaming prince harry who was cradling his newborn son as he was introduced temperamen. he's really calm and -- >> reporter: in the past we've
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mostly seen royal mothers holding their tightly wrapped little bundles of joy, like here with kate and princess diana. >> diana was very protective about william and harry and had them swaddled in an old-fashioned lace blanket. sow only could see just like the tops of their heads. and when kate appeared with prince george he was equally swaddled. >> reporter: a hard to see infant might have been in keeping with tradition, revealing his name on instagram was not. archie harrison mountbatten windsor, which is far less of a mouthful than most traditional royal names, which tend to be much longer. colleen harris, a former royal press secretary, says it's no surprise the youngest member of the royal family is already unlike most others. >> the first mixed heritage child in the british royal family. and i had i that is significant. it's a whole new chapter for a
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group in british society that are sort of neglected. >> reporter: expect a lot of attention paid to how the new parents choose to raise their first-born. harry's mother, princess diana, tried hard to make sure he and his brother william could experience something of a normal childhood outside the royal bubble, siz tessie ojo, who oversees the diana award charity. >> one of the things she did as a mother is instilled her own values into her sons. i have no doubt whatsoever that those values will be passed on to this baby. >> reporter: now, as we've been learning, harry and meghan have decided to forgo a courtesy title for their newborn son. but this is interesting. when prince charles, his grandfather, becomes king, little archie will become prince archie. that is the "overnight news" for this friday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back with us a
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little later for the morning news and of course "cbs this morning." from the broadcast center in new york, i'm mola lenghi. captioning funded by cbs it's friday, may 10th, 2019. this is the "cbs morning news." tornadoes, damaging winds, and deadly floods leave a trail of destruction across parts of the u.s. roads looked like rivers in texas, and other parts of the south are feeling it too. the u.s. just slapped china with tariffs on $200 bilon

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