tv CBS Overnight News CBS April 17, 2017 3:00am-4:01am EDT
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tumor and radiation, shawn began his long road to recovery. and golf. >> after i had surgery, i said you know what? i'm going to work as hard as i can in therapy to get back to where i want to be to be a golfer again. >> he had a putting green at the rehab center and telling the people there that his intention to play again. >> golf is my sanity. once i come out, it takes everything away. >> reporter: shawn's game had approved as had his healthy, long term prognosis very good and broke 80 for the first time since surgery but still to battling side effects >> i had a t shot and asked them where did the ball go >> golf is tough enough. but to play with double vision is exceptionally difficult >> shawn has been playing golf, not seeing one ball but two,
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learn the signs at autismspeaks.org. president trump said last week that he still wants to repeal and replace the affordable care act. before moving on to other priorities. but with republican members of congress still struggling to craft a new health care law, mr. trump will have to decide whether to leave the law in its current state or try to hasten its demise. chip reed has more. >> the best thing we can do politically speaking is let obamacare explode. it is exploding right now. >> reporter: that is what president trump said after house republicans scrapped their health care bill last month. but larry leavitt says the president is wrong. he says the obamacare exchanges are teetering in some states,
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including tennessee, north carolina, georgia, nebraska and arizona. >> but by and large, the insurance market is stable under the affordable care act. >> reporter: he concedes, though, that that could easily change, and the power is in the president's hands. >> there are several big steps the trump administration could take to cause the affordable care act to collapse. >> reporter: they could end cost-sharing payments to insurance companies or stop ads encouraging people to sign up for obamacare. >> if this were stable, he wouldn't be able to destroy it. >> reporter: analyst bob lashelfski has a different take. he says obamacare is already in such bad shape, it's unsustainable. >> this is holding on by the skin of its teeth in many marketplaces. >> reporter: the white house he says doesn't have the luxury of waiting to see what happens. >> they have to decide right now if they're going to stabilize this market or contribute to its blowing up. because they can do both right now. >> reporter: they really could,
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they could make it blow up. >> they could. >> reporter: both men say that could be catastrophic. >> we could see millions of people losing insurance. >> reporter: there is only one way out. >> the republicans have to deal with this. they won the election. so the notion that they're just going to sit back and let it explode and millions of people are going to get hurt is not acceptable. they can't walk away from this. >> reporter: but the president says he may have no choice but to walk away from it. in a recent interview with the wall street journal he said if congress follows through on its threat to stop payments to insurance companies, obamacare will die immediately. chip reed, cbs news, washington. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. no. have a little fun together, or a lot. k-y yours and mine. two sensations that work together, so you can play together. yeah, i just saved a whole lot of money by swhuh.ing to geico. we should take a closer look at geico...
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employees has finally forced the government to limit overtime. but the ceiling on overtime is so high, 100 hours per month, critics say it still won't protect workers. here's adrianna diaz. >> reporter: the trains are still packed at midnight, as many commuters head home. the japanese work some of the most grueling hours in the world. but all those overtime hours are killing workers. in fact, death by overwork is so common here, it has a name. kuroshi. this man was a manager at a cement factory, he committed suicide in 2010, after working 109 hours of overtime one month. the government ruled he'd been worked to death. >> translator: i blame myself, his father told us. if he'd been honest with us, i would have told him to quit. years later, his father can hardly bring himself to sort through his son's belongings. in 2015 there were more than 2100 suicides related to work.
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according to the first-ever government survey. 96 died of a heart attack or stroke and nearly a quarter of companies said employees work more than 80 hours of overtime a month. one company, densu cuts the lights at 10:00 p.m. to encourage workers to go home after matsori takahashi killed herself and left a punishing tweet. perhaps death is a much happier option, she wrote. >> translator: as long as the japanese have this warped idea of what's virtuous, his father says, we'll have more karoshi victims. adrianna diaz, cbs news, tokyo. still ahead, 70 years after he broke baseball's color-barrier, jackie robinson is honored with a new statue at dodger stadium.
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yesterday, major league baseball celebrated jackie robinson day. robinson of course was the first black man to play in the majors, ending six decades of racial segregation. on saturday, robinson was honored with a statue on the 70th anniversary of his debut with the brooklyn dodgers. >> reporter: more than 20 years after his death, jackie robinson is still drawing crowds of baseball fans. now standing just outside the gates of dodger stadium in los angeles is an over 6 foot,
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700-pound bronze statue to the baseball great. >> he's one of my heroes. >> reporter: he heralded the piece, "stealing home." the point of no return. honoring robinson's impact on and off the field. >> i wanted to capture the focus, the courage, the precise timing that's required at that point in time. and i think those qualities were also present in breaking the color line. >> reporter: jackie robinson was the first african-american player to sign with a major league baseball team, making his debut on april 15, 1947 at first base for the brooklyn dodgers. >> we don't have any really outstanding players. >> reporter: his mlb career included a world series championship in 1955. seven years later, he was inducted into the baseball hall of fame. >> i want to thank all of the people throughout this country who were so wonderful during those trying days. >> reporter: those trying days
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were laced with racism and segregation. robbenson -- robyn his career significant little influenced other black athletes like magic johnson. >> i couldn't be an owner of the dodgers without jackie breaking the color-barrier. >> reporter: a piece of history is now in the hands of thousands of fans. >> i'm just proud to say that jackie robinson is one of ours. >> reporter: former announcer vince scully described why the entire league uses april 15 to honor him. >> he gave them equality. and he gave them opportunity. >> reporter: cbs news, los angeles. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back.
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no antibiotics ever. nasa has taken a big step in the long search for life beyond earth. scientists say the moons orbiting jupiter and saturn could have an environment that supports life. jan crawford has more from the hubble telescope command center in maryland. >> reporter: so in this room, this is where the engineers and scientists monitor the hubble telescope. and the telescope and spacecraft are helping us learn more about the oceans on the moons of jupiter and saturn. and this could influence our search for life beyond our planet. this animation shows nasa's cassini spacecraft. diving through a plume and ice. instruments detected a significant amount of hydrogen. nasa announced its findings during a news conference.
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>> it's coming from a hydrotherm hydrothermal vent. >> reporter: here on earth, it serves as food sources for microbes. >> these warm oases of if you will harbor all sorts of life. perhaps that's exactly what's going on around these hydrothermal vents. at the floor of the oceans on insolitus. >> we know that insolitus has almost all the ingredients you would need to support life as we know it. >> reporter: scientists also believe jupiter's moon, europa has a sea of water beneath its frozen crust. on thursday, researchers announced that the hubble telescope has spotted towering plumes of water erupting from cracks in europa's cracks. >> we're pushing the frontiers,
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looking in a way that we never thought possible before for environments in our solar system which may harbor life. >> reporter: to do that, they need new tools. nasa will retire the cassini spacecraft this year. nearly 20 years after it launched. >> four years for this moment! >> reporter: nasa engineers have already prototyped new technology, including a rover that could drill through ice and send samples back to the surface. >> we might find anything from microbes to maybe something more fully developed. >> reporter: now thursday's discovery is just a first step. nasa is set to launch the europa clipper, which will go to jupiter in the early 2020s. and it will map its moons tell us more about potential life on europa. that's overnight news on this monday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back a little
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later for the morning news and cbs this morning. from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm elaine quijano. this is the "cbs overnight news." welcome to the overnight news. i'm elaine quijano. president trump's national security adviser says the u.s. and china are working on a range of options in response to north korea's failed missile launch early sunday local time. vice president pence called the misfire a provocation and told american troops it was a reminder of the risks they face on the korean peninsula. more now from the capital, pyongyang. >> reporter: north korea has successfully launched at least five ballistic missiles this year, including four of them back in march. but their latest attempt was a
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failure. on sunday morning, what the u.s. believes was a medium range ballistic missile launched near sinpo exploded about five seconds after it left the ground. it's an embarrassing failure for north korea's leader, kim jong un, who staged a massive military parade saturday. it was intended to show strength, as an american military strike group headed toward the peninsula. today vice president mike pence landed in south korea for a ten day tour of asia. >> under president trump's leadership, our resolve has never been stronger. our commitment to this historic alliance with the courageous people of south korea has never been stronger. and with your help and with god's help, freedom will ever prevail on this peninsula. >> reporter: in pyongyang, our government-guided tour of the north korean capital continued with barely any mention of the
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missile failure. but they have brought us to a water park and we're apparently also going to a flower show. many people in north korea will never know what happened, as missile failures usually are not acknowledged by the government. >> i'm sorry, i can't believe it. >> reporter: you can't believe it? >> i will watch tv later. >> reporter: do you think it will be on tv later? >> i don't think it's true. >> reporter: launching a missile is less provocative than had north korea conducted another nuclear test. a white house official says had they done that the u.s. would have taken, quote, other actions. elaine? >> ben tracy in pyongyang north korea for us. thank you. president trump spent the holiday weekend with his family at mar-a-lago resort. errol barnett has the latest from west palm beach. >> reporter: president trump and first lady melania trump spent sunday morning with family members at the same south florida church where they were married. and while the commander in chief did tweet everyone a happy
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easter, he also responded to nationwide demonstrations, calling for the release of his tax returns. he cited his electoral majority and wrote, someone should look into who paid for the small organized rallies yesterday. the election is over. mr. trump also explained why he's walking back a pledge to label china a currency manipulator. why would i? when they are working with us on the north korean problem. >> i think there's an international consensus now, including the chinese and the chinese leadership, that this is a situation that just can't continue. >> reporter: national security adviser h.r. mcmaster underscored the importance of china in dealing with a nuclear-armed north korea. >> we're working together with our allies and partners and with the chinese leadership to develop a range of options. >> need a much stronger state department. >> reporter: senator jack reed
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the ranks democrat on the armed services committee, supports the president's softer tone on china and wants more diplomacy. >> so if china can be brought to the point where they are putting pressure, constantly on north korea, there is an opportunity, i think, to try to freeze their systems and then roll them back. >> reporter: now on monday, the annual white house easter egg roll will be attended by more than 21,000 invited guests, which is smaller than usual. but trump officials say this is in order to provide a less-crowded, more thoughtful experience for attending children. elaine? >> errol barnett, thanks. there are more than 2 billion christians around the world, about half of whom are catholic. today on easter sunday, christians of all denominations celebrate the resurrection of jesus according to scripture. here's tony dokoupil. >> reporter: on christianity's holiest day, pope francis lamented the suffering in the
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world. condemning the latest vile attack on civilians in syria, but he also promised divine assistance, an unseen hand helping all migrants share bread and hope on their journey. in england, queen elizabeth traveled to mass in a jaunty hat, while theresa may said a word for those who aren't worshipping at all. >> we must do more to stand up for the people of all religions. >> reporter: a week after 45 people died in murderous attacks, easter services were held under tight security. and in greece, worshippers welcomed easter with firecrackers and floating lanterns. here in the u.s., there were festive celebrations, including an easter egg hunt at the portland zoo and a major marshmallow drop near detroit. >> i want to get a whole bunch of marshmallows.
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>> reporter: here in new york city, thousands marched up fifth avenue in their sunday best. americans are expected to spend $18 billion on this holiday, that would be a record. >> happy easter! >> tony, thanks. a referendum to give turkey's president a tremendous increase in power appears to have narrowly passed today. opposition parties are already disputing the result and calling for a recount. turkey is a key nato ally in the fight against terrorism in syria and iraq. holly williams is in istanbul. >> reporter: the constitutional changes would weaken turkey's courts and lawmakers and place enormous authority in the hands of just one man, president erdogan. he's already been turkey's most powerful man now for 14 years. erdogan argued that the constitution needed to change to a presidential system to guarantee stability. and that resonated with voters in a country that's been rocked by a series of deadly bombings.
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over the last two years, as well as an attempted military coup last july that came close to ousting the president from power. on the other hand, president erdogan's critics say the constitutional changes remove checks and balances on his power and smooth the path for him to become a dictator. many of those who oppose erdogan here in turkey say he's trying to impose his own conservative, islamic views. while many think it should be a western-style democracy. that coup sparked a mass purge with erdogan's authorities arresting not the renegade military officers behind it but anyone it perceived as an enemy, which includes around 55,000 people so far, including judges, university professors and doctors. the referendum has been marred by reports of campaigners for a no-vote being threatened and harassed. government leaders have equated voting "no" with supporting terrorism during the campaign.
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elaine? >> holly, thanks. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. because your carpet never stops working there's resolve carpet care. with five times more benefits than vacuuming alone... it lifts more dirt, pet hair and removes odours. while softening every fibre because your carpet never stops working, resolve carpet care with five times benefits i'm joy bauer, and as a nutritionist i know probiotics can often help. try digestive advantage. it's tougher than your stomach's harsh environment, so it survives a hundred times better than the leading probiotic.
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on easter and during holy week, much of the world's attention focussed on vatican city, one of the holiest sites in christianity. the vatican draws interest from more than just the faithful. students of history and lovers of art marvel at the masterpieces behind its walls. we go inside with a very enlightened tour guide. >> reporter: vatican city is the smallest, independent state in the world. an enclave tucked inside of rome. just 110 acres an area with fewer than 1,000 residents. but it draws more than 6 million visitors each year. to the monumental st. peter's
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square and the magnificent vatican museums. and at its heart, one of the holiest sites in the world, st. peter's basilica. >> when the new pope's elected, he would leave the sistine chapel, say a prayer and walk out here and go to the central, and you see the beautiful mosaic up there. that's the words of jesus. you are peter, and upon this rock i will build my church. >> reporter: new york's cardinal timothy dolan. was a 22-year-old seminarian when he first visited st. peter's. >> there are certain images, especially in the mind of a catholic that represent something awesome, and st. peter's would be one of those. to see this close up, you talk about something that would shake you. it was just great. >> i try to imagine the different people who would walk through here. the saints, all the great figures who once walked through the square.
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>> reporter: st. peter is at the center of it all, spiritually, architecturally and literally. >> the site of st. peter's basilica, st. peter's square, it's all centered around the tomb of st. peter, 144 meters under that golden globe of michelangelo's. >> reporter: he was first crucified upside down, martyred by the roman emperor nero in 64 a.d. >> he said i'm not worthy to die the same way the master was, crucify me upside down. >> he had to be buried immediately. they stuck peter in the trench, covered him with dirt and that was the end of the man they called "the prince of the apostles." this is where the whole story begins. >> reporter: the basilica is a
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marvel, it's the work of 12 architects and a roster of renaissance masters, serving 20 popes over the course of 120 years. what's miraculous says elizabeth lebb is that it all came together so beautifully. >> imagine the dome hovering above peter's tomb, directly below. and when the pope steps in the footsteps of peter the fisherman, he is the pontifax maximus, they explained the papacy in the domestic. >> reporter: it would be the crowning glory of michelangelo. and toward the front of the basilica, the much younger michelangelo's break through
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work, sculpted from a single piece of marble, the pieta. >> pieta is the for pointant for our so michelangelo has the pieta, the sorrowful mother mary holding the body of jesus as it was taken down from the cross. imagine how heavy that is. she is an extraordinarily strong woman, right? there's a tenderness there, a compassion, a pieta. you can almost see a surrender. >> reporter: only a few years later, michelangelo would paint the ceiling of the sistine chapel where they gather to elect the new pope. and just one of the treasures of the vatican museums. the decision in 1780 to open the museums to the general public
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regardless of religion was revolutionary. >> there is a painting of the man who opened that museum, pope pious the vi, giving a tour. to king gustav iii of sweden, who they are religiously on the opposite end of the spectrum. you see this painting of the two of them walking side by side, standing under the statues. that's what the museum, it's a platform of dialog. >> reporter: you don't have to be catholic, you don't have to be christian to look at the tapestries of risen christ and marvel. >> 1780, they open it to everybody, i mean everybody. you semen with big turbans, assuming they're muslim. >> reporter: today the vaticans museums comprise the largest collections in the world. three and a half-miles of museum and the first of its magnitude to have a woman as director, barbara yata. when you found out you'd been appointed the director of the
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museums, what was your reaction? >> astonishment, absolutely. >> reporter: caring for these treasures as equal parts art and science. >> a huge part of the museum is conservation and restoration. almost 100 people in seven different conservatory labs are working permanently in the museum. >> reporter: on projects like the restoration of this oil painting by rafael, in the hall of constantine. >> as a restorer, you have to be humble. you have to accept that what you're working on is much greater, is much more important than the work you do. >> reporter: overseeing this restoration, professor arnold nesselrath. >> reporter: what is the genius of rafael? >> what he does with the light. how he translates the light into painting. this is, i think, the masterpiece in this room. it's the last we have of rafael when he died at the age of 37.
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and it's also the idea of what we lost and it makes us understand why the whole of rome was sad when they heard on good friday in 1520 that he died. >> reporter: how did he die? >> contemporaries say from too much love. >> reporter: too much love? he just had too much sex? >> that's the impression that his biographers give to posterity. >> reporter: he just exhausted himself? >> that's what they say. >> reporter: he really lived life to the fullest, for at least a short time. have you ever discovered something that really surprised you? >> well, we discovered the beams that came from the new world. >> reporter: that's right. beams. >> which the work men who applied the plaster had fallen into the plaster. when they went and took the plaster and smashed it through the wall and smoothed it over, beams remained in there.
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>> reporter: wow, that's nice to know americans played such a vital part in the creation of this. and today americans pay for much of the restoration through the vatican's patrons of the arts program. >> these works of art belong to the whole world. we only hold them as a custodian, as a steward. they belong to everybody. >> reporter: on the day we were in the basilica with cardinal dolan, it was beautifully illuminated for the feast of the chair of peter. >> you look up and see that magnificent encrusted with bronze and iron chair. the chair represents unity and teaching, and so the successor of peter, the pope, his chair there. >> all the threads in the rose of the vatican lead back to the presence of peter. we are perhaps the most beautiful outgrowth and offshoot in art and architecture that comes from that seed that was planted 2,000 years ago. ♪ >> reporter: geographically,
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of chocolate eggs. many of them are cracked open in seconds but take a lot of artistry and time to make. seth doane takes us inside a major chocolate factory in italy. >> reporter: watch out, santa, this is the easter bunny's version of the north pole. in italy they're churning out chocolate eggs by the thousands of dozens. >> we work 24 hour a day. >> reporter: 24 hours a day on eggs? >> we have about 15,000 eggs per day. >> reporter: francois is the director of this chocolate factory, best known for its little baci. but leading up to easter it's all about eggs. though the joy of easter morning wears a little thin month after month. you're thinking about easter back in october? >> yes, because we need to produce a lot. we produce around 4 million
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easter eggs in this factory. what is a surprise. >> reporter: they're known for their chocolate. but the surprise gift in this plastic container is a vital ingredient. >> we ensure that all easter eggs contain at least one surprise. >> reporter: so cameras monitor to make sure each egg gets one. >> we want customers to be happy. >> reporter: chocolate easter eggs are a big deal in italy. a good enough gift for a pope. perugina exports their eggs to america and around the world. oh, wow. but, these artisanal collections are so fragile they cannot be shipped. they sell for up to $45 apiece. >> we do lots of different sizes of age, dark chocolate, white
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chocolate, dark chocolate. >> reporter: there's great attention to detail here. some are shaded with coats of chocolate and cocoa butter. after two and a half decades of doing this, most of it comes naturally. >> 25 years i have to change presents inside. >> reporter: a little orange pab packet holds this year's surprise gift. there goes the surprises. but sometimes it is they who are surprised by the special requests. what are the craziest things people have asked you to put inside a chocolate egg? >> a shoe. >> reporter: a shoe? yes, a shoe. once, it was a diamond. they had to be pretty careful with that egg. from the artisanal to the abstract. this is opera legend maria callas in the warhol style. the "cbs overnight news" will be right back.
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nasa has taken a big step in the long search for life beyond earth. scientists say the moons orbiting jupiter and saturn could have an environment that supports life. jan crawford has more from the hubble telescope command center in maryland. >> reporter: so, in this room, i mean, this is where the engineers and the scientists monitor the hubble telescope and the telescope and cassini spacecraft are helping us learn more about the oceans on saturn and these latest discoveries could influence our search for life beyond our planet. this animation shows nasa's cassini spacecraft. instruments aboard the spacecraft detected a significant amount of hydrogen. nasa announced its findings during an online news conference.
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captioning funded by cbs it's monday, april 17th, 2017. this is the "cbs morning news." we will defeat any attack, and we will meet any use of conventional or nuclear weapons with an overwhelming and effective response. >> new this morning a warning shot from the vice president to north korea after a failed missile test rattles nerves around the world. >> i'm going to try to kill as many people as i can over here. >> and breaking overnight, cleveland police are still searching for a suspected killer accused of posting a video of a 74-year-old man's murder on faceok
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