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a passenger plane, 150 on board smashing into a crowded city just shy of the airport in nigeria. the impact left a scene of destruction, the plane shattering into pieces. authorities on the ground there say no one survived, and the toll on the ground given the fact that this plane plowed through apartment buildings and stores is hard to know tonight, crowds rushing in to help amid the smoke and burning debris. so we begin here tonight with abc's bazi kanani with the scene playing out in lagos, nigeria. >> reporter: it was carrying 150 people. no survivors and it's not yet clear how many casualties there will be on the ground. thousands rushed to see what happened in this neighborhood in sub-saharan africa's largest city holding up cell phone cameras to record the tragedy. the horrific images, billowing black smoke, scattered fragments of a plane, bodies. the jet en route from the capital city of abuja to lagos was just about to land, a boeing md-83 flown by private local carrier dana airlines. witnesses said it was flying unusually low making a lot of noise before it tore through at least two buildings coming to a stop inside an apartment complex. the cause of the crash is not known, but officials say they did recover the cockpit recorder. a man sent us pictures of the disaster in the neighborhood but a man said he was too sad to interview. "i got to the scene, and it's beyond what i can talk about," he said. "i'm in tears while writing this." and in a moment here we ask about those forecasts that predict no rain until july. but first the extreme weather team with pictures tonight. here's abc's clayton sandell. >> reporter: new mexico's biggest wildfire on record grew another 14,000 acres since saturday. now up to 355 square miles. >> underneath that. >> reporter: but 18 days after lightning sparked this blaze, there is progress. starting tomorrow evacuated residents can go home, although smoke will still make for unhealthy breathing. across the west fires are being driven by a triple punch of fighting a 50,000 acre blaze along the utah nevada border. the strategy for dealing with wild pyres put them out immediately. a policy that experts say has backfired. because we suppressed fire in the west, we now have old stands of timber and those are potentially catastrophicic wild fires the. >> now fires that aren't threatening homes are surrounded and allowed to burn out. >> this bart of new mexico has burned bfr. that's helping slow this blaze. firefighters say it will still be weeks before they get the upper hand. clayton san dell, abc news denver. >> our thanks to clayton tonight. i want to bring in meteorologist ginger vee seven states in the west and temperatures not going anywhere. phoenix, still 103, vegas at 100 and look as this cold front approaches. this is really the instigator for the fire danger. the cold front comes in, you get up to 50-mile-per-hour wind gusts that blows that fire around and ups that danger level. >> what i read about those forecasts, no rain till july. how do we know it already? >> it's tough to do a three-week forecast. something i wouldn't put my name on necessarily but june typically and historically has been very dry for albuquerque is what i'm using as the space but even all of new mexico, really august is when they have their wettest month. >> so possibly not until august, ginger, thanks for covering this tonight. in the meantime, we move on to florida where the man accused of murder in the death of trayvon martin is just tonight back behind bars. george zimmerman forced to turn himself in right there after a judge accused him of lying about how much money he really has. using code words with his wife on the telephone. abc's matt gutman is there tonight. matt? >> reporter: good evening, david. we've learned that zimmerman emerged from hiding late last night, made his way back to florida and just a few hours ago he was picked up by authorities in a secret meeting along the interstate and brought here. could spend the next two years here in isolation. in cuffs again tonight, after six weeks as a free man, george zimmerman surrendered today. he was booked. mug shots taken and could spend up to two years awaiting trial in isolation in a bathroom-sized cell the sheriff's office says for his own protection. his bond was revoked last week in a fiery court hearing. >> i quite frankly from the state position will flat out call it what it is, the defendant's wife lied to this court. she stated she had no money. when in fact, the records show that she did. >> reporter: at the time of his april 20th bond hearing he had access to $135,000 in cash. but told the court he was broke. the couple had been holding coded phone conversations while zimmerman was jailed in mid-april. all of them recorded. for instance, say prosecutors, the couple talked about the sum total of $155 in their accounts. they really meant $155,000. zimmerman amassed all that cash just days after launching a website to help raise money to pay his expenses. all of it potentially damaging to his case. >> it's a credibility question with mr. zimmerman, and now that credibility has been attacked or tarnished, and now he's going to have to rehabilitate it. >> reporter: we could hear recordings of them tomorrow and you can be sure the jury will hear them, as well. now, that's bad news for zimmerman. his defense hinges upon the jury believing his version of events the night of the shooting. david? >> matt gutman tonight, matt, thanks very much. to the race for president. it's "your voice, your vote." and what could be a game changer in the race for president. the newest polls showing it is essentially tied and job numbers hardly what the white house is hoping for. and so now the president must argue his strategy to create them is still the better one. mitt romney arguing it is time for someone new and all eyes this week will be on the battle of ground of wisconsin where one vote tuesday could foreshadow what's to come. here's david kerley tonight. >> reporter: this occupation of the state capital last year has turned tuesday's recall election into a test of how far a leader hoping to reform the system can go in fighting special interests. republican governor scott walker angered teachers and state workers when he was able to strip away their bargaining rights to balance the state budget. >> we took on the powerful special interests. i'll continue to stand with the hardworking taxpayers of this state. >> reporter: since then, $60 million have poured into the recall campaign, most of it from outside the state. independent conservative groups supporting walker and unions backing the democrat tom barrett who this morning tried to make the money the issue. >> you've got a sitting governor, the only governor in this country who has a legal fund, all this outside money. this is wisconsin values versus outside influence. >> reporter: but plenty of outsiders have shown up including former president bill clinton who says wisconsin's choice is the one america faces too. >> people who want to work together to solve problems and people who want to divide and conquer. >> reporter: and that is reference to something that walker told one of his supporters right after he was elected governor, that his strategy was to divide and conquer. if the polls are right, david, he may actually keep his job on tuesday. >> all right, david kerley, with the race everyone is watching this week. david, thank you. now to what could be a medical breakthrough in the fight against breast cancer. a new drug cocktail that works as one doctor puts it like a heat-seeking missile that heads straight for the cancer. here's john schifrin. >> reporter: this is a big step for 28-year-old bridget spencer, exercising, feeling better than ever trying to put the last seven years behind her. just a week after graduating from college, she was diagnosed with stage 4 breast cancer. >> i had had 7 surgeries, 32 rounds of radiation, and i had been on 14 different drugs. >> reporter: but the cancer grew through the chemo spreading to her liver, lung and bones. desperate she turned to a clinical trial. instead of standard chemotherapy and herceptin, she got a powerful cocktail, t-dm1. >> it's a heat-seeking missile with a toxic payload and travels all over the body until it meets the cancer cell and then lets off a massively toxic dose to kill off the cancer without damaging the rest of the body. >> reporter: in just three months, bridget's tumor started shrinking and something even more remarkable happened. >> this drug has bought me more time to be 28 years old. >> reporter: today studies showed that of a thousand women who took the cocktail, about half of them saw their cancer stabilized and had fewer side effects than standard chemo. >> there is as much reason to be excited about this drug as any drug we've looked at in breast cancer. this is, i have to say, a dream drug. >> reporter: bridget spencer is still trying to get her cancer under control, but she is hopeful this kind of targeted therapy will one day mean a cure. >> every day i get up and go to work and dream about celebrating my 30th birthday and one day living in a world that we're free of breast cancer. >> reporter: and to be clear, researchers say this new drug is not a cure for stage 4 breast cancer. the doctors say the results are better for women with less advanced forms of breast cancer. david, bridget, though, is hopeful and hopes to one day have a baby. >> john, thanks so much. overseas this evening and to syria where president assad has gone on television saying he had nothing to do with the massacre of children and families saying that not even a "monster" could do that. the world saw those image, more than a hundred, nearly half killed in the attack and many, many blamed foreign-backed terrorists and defended his fierce crackdown on his opponents. u.s. defense secretary leon panetta has made an historic visit tonight to vietnam. he's the first to return to the deepwater port a key u.s. base during america's long war there. the visit underscored a major shift in u.s. military resources to the asia-pacific region partly to keep china in check. and in london this evening, there is a celebration under way marking queen elizabeth's 60th year on the throne. we watched today as the royal family boarded a barge for an extraordinary celebration of pomp and pageantry and abc's lama hasan is right there in london tonight. >> reporter: we're standing in front of the tower bridge where this massive armada of boats ends its journey and it's been terrific day all day today despite the rain and the gloomy weather. a flotilla this massive hasn't been seen on the thames in 350 years, 1,000 vessels honoring the queen, her family by her side. the royal barge was decorated with thousands of flowers picked from one of her gardens, and it was a party. as the music played, there was a little bit of boogying, royal style. but this being london, it rained, and as the heavens opened, even the queen couldn't help but smile and wave to her well wishers. more than 1 million people lined the river banks to catch a glimpse. >> it's been stump fun being right on the thames and seeing everybody celebrating her amazing reign. >> reporter: and there was spontaneous renditions of "god save the queen ♪ ♪ god save the queen >> reporter: an historic day and a once-in-a-lifetime event. and the big jubilee bash doesn't end here. there are two more days of spectacular events organized including a star-studded concert in front of the queen's home at buckingham palace. david? >> lama hasan in london right there tonight, thank you. we know the "gma" team on the way. "good morning america" will broadcast live from london tomorrow and tuesday and then tuesday night, a two-hour special "concert for the queen: a diamond jubilee celebration with katie couric." it starts at 9:00 p.m. eastern. our coverage begins first thing in the morning on "good morning america." still ahead tonight on "world news" this sunday, we remember a television icon, richard dawson, how could we ever forget this? >> survey says -- [ cheers and applause ] >> but more than those words, all of those kisses, and when we heard the number of kisses today, we couldn't believe it. in a moment, we look back. . looking for a better place to put your cash? here's one you may not have thought of -- fidelity. now you don't have to go to a bank to get the things you want from a bank, like no-fee atms, all over the world. free checkwriting and mobile deposits. now depositing a check is as easy as taking a picture. free online bill payments. a highly acclaimed credit card with 2% cash back into your fidelity account. open a fidelity cash management account today and discover another reason serious investors are choosing fidelity. those surprising little still make you take notice. there are a million reasons why. but your erectile dysfunction that could be a question of blood flow. cialis for daily use helps you be ready anytime the moment's right. you can be more confident in your ability to be ready. and the same cialis is the only daily ed tablet approved to treat ed and symptoms of bph, like needing to go frequently or urgently. tell your doctor about all your medical conditions and medications, and ask if your heart is healthy enough for sexual activity. do not take cialis if you take nitrates for chest pain, as this may cause an unsafe drop in blood pressure. do not drink alcohol in excess with cialis. side effects may include headache, upset stomach, delayed backache or muscle ache. to avoid long-term injury, seek immediate medical help for an erection lasting more than four hours. if you have any sudden decrease or loss in hearing or vision, or if you have any allergic reactions such as rash, hives, swelling of the lips, tongue or throat, or difficulty breathing or swallowing, stop taking cialis and get medical help right away. ask your doctor about cialis for daily use and a 30-tablet free trial. they claim to be complete. only centrum goes beyond. providing more than just the essential nutrients, so i'm at my best. centrum. always your most complete. did i ever think i would have heart disease. she just didn't fit the profile of a heart event victim. she's healthy, she eats properly. i was pushing my two kids in a stroller when i had my heart event. i've been on a bayer aspirin regimen ever since. 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[ male announcer ] learn how to protect your heart at i am proheart on facebook. tonight we remember richard dawson, who presided over so many "family feuds." here's t.j. winick. >> reporter: he was first known as the wise-cracking brit -- >> they don't suspect a thing. >> reporter: -- on the popular show "hogan's heroes." but it was ten years later during his ten years as game host when richard dawson became a household name. >> survey says. >> reporter: he became known for his devilish charm, that kissing, all that kissing. his producer figures he must have kissed around 20,000 women on air. dawson insists it all began innocently enough when he was trying to put an especially nervous contestant at ease. >> i said i'm going to do something that my mom would do to me whenever i had a problem of any kind. and i went like this, and i kissed her on the cheek. >> reporter: born colin lionel emm in 1932 he pursued comedy in his native end gland under the stage name dickie dawson. of all those women he kissed on air, gretchen johnson would become his second wife. after their daughter shannon was born, the announcer's days of kissing contestants were history. >> i promised my daughter i would only kiss mom. >> reporter: it was one of his two sons gary who announced on facebook from esophageal cancer saturday, a couple of years ago when asked how he would like to be remembered, that wise-cracking humor was on full display. >> i was kind and a nice person. you wouldn't want to move if you were set next to me on the bus. or maybe you would. >> reporter: t.j. winick, abc news, new york. >> wouldn't want to move if we sat next to him on the bus. and when we come back here on the broadcast, that image so difficult 40 years ago, it is still difficult tonight, the little girl, her clothes burned right off her in vietnam. hear from the woman 40 years later. the woman 40 years later. like somebody had set a bag of hot charcoal on my neck. i was a firefighter for 24 years. but, i have never encountered such a burning sensation until i had the shingles. i remember it well. i was in the back yard doing yard work. i had this irritation going on in my lower neck. i changed shirts because i thought there was something in the collar of the shirt irritating my neck. and i couldn't figure out what was going on. i had no idea it came from chickenpox. i always thought shingles was associated with people... a lot older than myself. i can tell you from experience, it is bad. it's something you never want to encounter. for more of the inside story, visit shinglesinfo.com my name is sunshine and i have three beautiful girls. i like taking advil® for a headache. it nips it in the bud. and i can be that mommy that i want to be. ♪ [ male announcer ] take action. take advil®. ♪ with these new depend real fit briefs,untry and today we are surprising pro football all stars. there's wes, clay and demarcus.what's up guys. now i know you don't need one, but would you try these on for charity and prove just how great the fit is? seriously? no way for charity? let's do it! yup... they're doin it. the best protection now looks, fits and feels just like underwear. let's go drive, use the legs... nice teamwork! they tried on the new depend real fit. get a free sample so you can too. for many, nexium helps relieve heartburn symptoms caused by acid reflux disease. osteoporosis-related bone fractures and low magnesium levels have been seen with nexium. possible side effects include headache, diarrhea, and abdominal pain. other serious stomach conditions may still exist. talk to your doctor about nexium. consider the journey of today's athletes: ♪ their training depends on technology. [ beeping, ticks ] and when their devices are powered by a battery, there are athletes everywhere who trust duracell so whether they're headed for london or the journey has just begun... they rely on copper to go for the gold. duracell. trusted everywhere. it is a photograph so iconic, so powerful, that when you see it, it takes most of us right back, and tonight 40 years after the image was captured, we hear from that little girl grown up. 40 years later her face still not forgotten, a young girl without her clothes screaming, running toward the camera in agony after a napalm attack incinerated her village. her clothes burned right off of her. that girl, kim phuc, just 9 years old in 1972. but it's what happened after that photo was taken few ever knew about. after capturing that image, a 19-year-old ap photographer nick ut would drop everything to help her. >> i said, oh, my god -- you know, i cried a little bit myself. i said "i don't want you to die." >> reporter: he rushed the little girl to the hospital where he was told she was beyond help but demanded they treat her anyway, and she survived those third-degree burns covering half her body, 17 operations and sitting down with kabc's david ono. >> now i'm a mother. i'm a wife. i'm a human being. >> reporter: 40 years later they still talk almost every week. she's married and has her own family now living in canada, and just this weekend we learned of a reunion, that photographer and that little girl he was determined to save. so powerful to see all these years later. our thanks to kabc tonight well, tomorrow morning, a fifth grader will show up with an excuse note that will be tough for his teacher to be upset about. 11-year-old tyler sullivan played hooky friday all to meet president obama and the president returned the favor penning an executive excuse note, as we can call it, a presidential pardon, perhaps, for this fifth grader. >> do you want me to write an excuse note? what's your teacher's name? i said ms. jackman. then he writes, "ms. jackman, please excuse tyler, he was with me. barack obama, the president." >> hope it works out for him. tyler who lives outside minneapolis says he plans to show the note but not hand it over to the teacher tomorrow morning. a smart choice. when we come back on the broadcast tonight, an extraordinary moment on the field at this elementary school, the entire school watching and see what happens next. n extraordinary moment on the field at this elementary school, the entire school watching and see what happens next. can oren? could your "i want" become "i can"? talk to your doctor. orencia reduces many ra symptoms like pain, morning stiffness and progression of joint damage. it's helped new ra patients and those not helped enough by other treatments. do not take orencia with another biologic medicine for ra due to an increased risk of serious infection. serious side effects can occur including fatal infections. cases of lymphoma and lung cancer have been reported. tell your doctor if you are prone to or have any infection like an open sore or the flu or a history of copd, a chronic lung disease. orencia may worsen your copd. 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[ female announcer ] eggland's best. the better egg. throughout our entire lives. ♪ one a day women's 50+ is a complete multi-vitamin designed for women's health concerns as we age. ♪ it has more of seven antioxidants to support cell health. that's one a day women's 50+ healthy advantage. and finally tonight here on the broadcast, a race at one elementary school that really moved us. a little boy so determined to stay in the race even when it looked like he couldn't make it any further. >> timers, ready? >> reporter: it was race day at colonial hills elementary school near columbus, ohio. >> go. >> reporter: they were off, and right there at the back of the pack, 11-year-old matt woodruff, determined to run with the rest of the class. >> go, matty. >> reporter: but it wasn't long before matt was trailing a bit. he has cerebral palsy and was told he didn't have to run that race but he could sit it out but matt wanted it. making his way around that track, his proud mom videotaping the whole thing. suddenly matt starts to slow down, starts to struggle. and watch the left corner of your screen right there. that's gym teacher john blaine working toward matt on the field. >> let's go, matt. >> soon some gentle coaching by his side. >> come on, buddy. >> reporter: that gym teacher would stay right there the rest of the race and then something else. his fellow classmates begin to notice, and one by one they start making their way toward matt too. the crowd swelling beside him, and so does their chant. >> all: let's go, matt. let's go. >> reporter: rounding that final bend his entire class in tow, every step of the way and his rally. teachers watching at the end to cheers at the finish line. [ cheers and applause ] >> he did it! afterward, his mother could hardly find him in the midst of all his fans, high-five there and a hug. that is now going viral on the internet, and matt told me today on the phone what that moment was like and that entire class behind him. >> it was tiring, but it really helped when me classmates and my coach and everybody was with me. it was really encouraging. >> reporter: mom who was there taping it all and dad who saw it later, oh, so proud tonight. >> i couldn't have been more proud of my son it was very heartwarming. >> we're proud too. matt told me if he had to race again tomorrow, he would. more than 800,000 people have watched that race on the internet. tomorrow morning "good morning america" first thing in the morning leading the coverage of the queen's jubilee, robin, george and the gang, and diane right here tomorrow night. good night. good night, everyone. george and diane right here tomorrow night. good night. >> good evening, everyone. i'm alan wang. >> and three people are hospitalized and a suspect in custody following a drive-by shooting. just moments ago a policeman on patrol saw this man in a car fire at people on the sidewalk. a car pursuit began and ended when the suspect crashed into another car. at least one victim is hospitalized with a leg wound. >> in vallejo a 57-year-old man was killed and three others injured after a shooting. it happened in crest ranch park in vallejo last night. we are live in vallejo with the latest. allen. >> this is a shooting that has some vallejo locals puzzled. here is why. police don't have a

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