tv CBS Overnight News CBS July 28, 2017 3:10am-4:00am EDT
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at girlup.org. >> announcer: this is the cbs overnight news. of now that the battle over repeal and replacing obamacare republicans are calling it a fraud. >> we're struggling to find a replacement for affordable care act. >> g.o.p. leaders honing in on a notion that's been dubbed. >> skinny >> skinny repeal. >> skinny repeal. >> reporter: skinny repeal would eliminate just a couple key parts of obamacare, like the individual and employer insurance mandates. the congressional budget office predicts that such a package might add 16 million americans
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to the ranks of the uninsured. but it's hard to know for sure because g.o.p. leaders who want to vote tomorrow are still crafting the plan. >> the skinny bill doesn't work for any state. >> reporter: late this afternoon, three key republicans slammed the slimmed down bill. >> not only do we not replace obamacare, we politically own the collapse of health care. >> reporter: still, g.o.p. leaders see this as their best shot to pass something that they could then try to meld with the bill house republicans passed in may. skeptical g.o.p. moderates, like alaska's lisa murkowski, are getting the hard sell. >> i did have a conversation with the-- with the secretary. >> reporter: interior secretary ryan zinke warned her that a no vote could jeopardize funding for other alaska projects. did he threaten you? >> you know, i don't think it's appropriate to-- to use-- thank you-- to use words like that. i think the-- the reality is it
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was a difficult conversation. >> reporter: amid all that drama, the senate did come together this evening to pass new sanctions punishing russia for meddling in the u.s. election. now, there's been some confusion about where exactly the president stands on those sanctions, but, anthony, they've got more than enough votes up here to over-ride a presidential veto. >> mason: nancy cordes at the capitol. thank you, nancy. a dutch company that makes carnival rides put out an urgent call today to fairs and festivals around the world-- stop using a ride similar to the one that fell apart last night at the ohio state fair, until investigators find out how it happened. one person was killed. seven are in the hospital. adriana diaz reports from columbus. >> reporter: the horrifying moment was caught on camera. >> people were crying, and there was just chaos. >> reporter: 15-year-old julian bellinger recorded the cell phone video while waiting in
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line for the pendulum-like ride called the fire ball. >> i seen the cart drop, and then i seen one person, like, fly and that's when i turned my head. >> reporter: 18-year-old tyler jarel was killed after flying 50 feet. he had just enlisted in the marines. seven others were injured. >> oh, my god! >> reporter: brittney and kiley neal saw it up close. they were next in line to board. >> their shoes came flying off, and i thought i saw somebody's arm or leg flying in the sky. >> people knew they were-- they knew they were going to die and you saw their face before they knew they were going to hit death. >> reporter: the fire ball, which spins 13 times a minute, was assembled on site at the fairgrounds. in the last two days, it passed at least three safety inspections conducted by the state and a private contractor.
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an average of nearly 1,300 children are hurt on mobile amusement rides like the fire ball every year, according to a report. governor john kasich says all rides here will be closed until they're deemed safe. >> what you can do is you can inspect, and you can re-inspect, and you can, in this case, have a third party inspect, but if we're looking for guarantees in life, they don't exist. >> reporter: but for 13-year-old kiley, there is one guarantee. do you want to come back to the state fair or ride anymore? >> no, never again. >> reporter: we asked the governor if they're changing the way they inspect rides here and he said no. as for the injured, three people remain in critical condition. anthony. >> mason: adriana diaz in columbus. as the trump presidency dominates the news each day, we hear very little from the trump business empire. julianna goldman and investigative producer laura strickler found out, that's just how the trump organization wants it. >> reporter: throughout his business career, donald trump placed a premium on fame. >> my life has been, tim, a
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very, very open book. >> reporter: but president trump's business organization wants to stay on the down-low. cbs news has obtained a new confidentiality agreement rolled out after the election. the trump organization is requiring employees at all levels to sign it, or else they will lose their jobs. employees must agree to keep secret any information they learn about anyone in the trump family and extended family, including their present, former, and future spouses, children, parents, in-laws. >> i have reviewed confidentiality agreements in international family-run hospitality organizations, and yet i have never seen a loyalty code to a family like this. >> reporter: debra soltis has specialized in employment law for more than 25 years. >> this confidentiality agreement looks more like what you would expect to sign if you were a nanny to angelina jolie and brad pitt's children, where
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you were being brought into the home and exposed to private information. >> reporter: specifically off limits, all political, legal, social, religious, health-related affairs, activities, views, and/or opinions of any member of the trump family. all photographs, movies, sketches, videos, sound or image recordings, or likenesses of any member of the trump family. the agreement lasts forever and is retroactive. soltis says the agreement could discourage would-be whistleblowers, because even though the company code of conduct requires employees to be truthful in any government inquiry, the confidentiality agreement has a clause saying if an employee is required by law to disclose confidential information, they have to notify the trump organization. >> what if an employee had information that was relevant and that the public had every right to know? under this agreement, they could not share it. they couldn't raise their hand and say, "i know something.
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i've seen something." and that is deeply troubling. >> reporter: in a statement, the trump organization told us it's used confidentiality agreements for many years. a spokesperson said, "this is no different than any other company in the hospitality industry and beyond. to suggest otherwise is not only disingenuous, but downright absurd." anthony. >> mason: julianna goldman, thank you, julianna. coming up next a woman is allegedly murdered by her husband on a family cruise. >> mason: it started as a family cruise to alaska, and ended in death. plan . go? ♪ ♪ i'm goin' up the country, baby don't you wanna go? ♪ geico motorcycle, great rates for great rides.
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>> mason: it started as a family cruise to alaska, and ended in death. a husband and father of three is accused of murdering his wife in their cabin. jamie yuccas is in anchorage. >> reporter: exactly how and why kristy manzanares was killed aboard the "emerald princess" still remains a mystery. passenger chris ceman: >> the little girls from that room came running out calling for help, that her parents had been in a fight. she was pretty desperate. >> reporter: one eyewitness told authority they say saw kristy lying on the floor covered in blood, and husband kenneth soaked with blood, dragging his wife by the ankles toward the room's balcony. he confronted kenneth, who replied, "she would not stop laughing at me." as manzanares was arrested, he told an f.b.i. officer, "my life is over." friends say kenneth and kristy
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manzanares were celebrating their anniversary with their three daughters and other family members. acting u.s. attorney in anchorage, bryan schroder. how rare is this kind of thing for you guys? >> i don't remember the last time we had a murder on a cruise ship in alaska. >> reporter: the "emerald princess" spans the length of three football fields and has 19 decks. ironically, at the time of the incident, a murder mystery dinner took place. passenger tom stites: >> some of the people that were in the murder mystery, you know, thought they were just playing, you know, a hoax on them. >> reporter: the nearly 3,500 passengers were stranded aboard the ship for almost eight hours in the port of juneau. >> the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. because this scent lasts up to 12 weeks, which is longer than any relationship i've ever been in. freshness for weeks! not all fish oil supplements provide the same omega-3 power. introducing megared advanced triple absorption...
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it lifts more dirt and pet hair versus vacuuming alone. resolve carpet care with five times benefits >> mason: austin, texas, is considering pulling the police department's entire fleet of ford explorer s.u.v.s off the road. more than 120 are already out of service. here's kris van cleave. >> i had a headache and then i can't breathe. i'm like [ bleep ] man. >> reporter: sergeant zachary lahood is one of 18 austin police officers that have now been treated for carbon monoxide exposure -- >> i feel like i'm going to throw up. >> reporter: -- after driving their ford explorer cruisers. >> i don't remember if i hit a curb, or if my head just hit the window and it woke me up, but i remember swerving to miss a head-on collision. >> reporter: he is now suing ford. >> that's when i realized, man, i need to get help. something is wrong. i had no idea it was c.o. poisoning. >> reporter: austin police believe exhaust that contains potentially deadly carbon monoxide is seeping into the police cruisers.
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the city has now installed carbon monoxide detectors in all 439 of its explorers. in california, a police officer appeared to pass out behind the wheel of his explorer and slammed into a tree. since that crash, departments across the country have installed carbon monoxide detectors in their cruisers, including the kansas highway patrol, where one-third of the explorers patrolling the state turnpike have registered high levels of carbon monoxide. >> it is concerning to us. >> reporter: lieutenant john lehnherr: >> we want to make sure that we're confident that we're giving our people equipment that they can get home safe at the end of the day. >> reporter: federal regulators say they are investigating the problem, but have offered no updates in over a year. the national association of police organizations sought answers in march but said ford never responded. but the auto maker has known about the issue since at least 2012. in a statement, ford said safety is its top priority, and it has a team working with law enforcement and federal regulators to try to solve problems as they're reported.
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idea of a moose and squirrel and a squirrel, and i thought, gee, that's a real cock-eyed idea. but after the second martini, i thought it was great. >> oh, that wolf! >> mason: june foray also played tweety bird's owner, granny. >> how sweet. >> reporter: dudley do-right's girlfriend, nell. >> why must your horse go with and when little ricky got a christmas tree? >> wilma! >> mason: and here's some tv trivia: foray was the original betty rubble in the pilot for "the flintstones." >> where's barney. >> he's trying on his gear. >> let's play house. >> reporter: foray lent her voice to the chatty kathy doll, and when the "twilight zone" did a dark takeoff, she was talkie tina.
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>> i could even hate you. >> mason: june foray, the first lady of voice actors, died yesterday in los angeles. she was 99. >> i love everything i do, because there's a little bit of me in all of them. that's the "cbs evening news." for some of you the news continues for others check back for the morning news. i'm anthony mason. thanks for watching.
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this is the cbs overnight news. the festivities >> reporter: the fire ball, which spins 13 times a minute, was assembled on site at the fairgrounds. >> reporter: the horrifying moment was caught on camera. >> people were crying, and there was just chaos. >> reporter: 15-year-old julian bellinger recorded the cell phone video while waiting in line for the pendulum-like ride called the fire ball. >> i seen the cart drop, and then i seen one person, like, fly and that's when i turned my head.
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>> reporter: 18-year-old tyler jarel was killed after flying 50 feet. he had just enlisted in the marines. seven others were injured. >> oh, my god! >> reporter: brittney and kiley neal saw it up close. they were next in line to board. >> their shoes came flying off, and i thought i saw somebody's arm or leg flying in the sky. >> people knew they were-- they knew they were going to die and you saw their face before they knew they were going to hit death. >> reporter: the fire ball, which spins 13 times a minute, was assembled on site at the fairgrounds. in the last two days, it passed at least three safety inspections conducted by the state and a private contractor. an average of nearly 1,300 children are hurt on mobile amusement rides like the fire ball every year, according to a report. governor john kasich says all rides here will be closed until they're deemed safe. >> what you can do is you can inspect, and you can re-inspect, and you can, in this case, have
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a third party inspect, but if we're looking for guarantees in life, they don't exist. >> reporter: but for 13-year-old kiley, there is one guarantee. do you want to come back to the state fair or ride anymore? >> no, never again. >> reporter: we asked the governor if they're changing the way they inspect rides here and he said no. as for the injured, three people remain in critical condition. anthony. >> mason: adriana diaz in war in the white house turned personal. scaramucci lashing out accusing leaking of secrets. that's a small part of it. >> for the first time deputy attorney general sessions reacts publicly days of criticism over his decision to recuse himself from the russian investigation.
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it's hurt but but the president of the united states is a strong leader. >> reporter: fearing mr. trump might fire sessions or special counsel robert mueller, who is handling the investigation, south carolina republican lindsey graham issued a blunt warning. >> if jeff sessions is fired, there will be holy hell to pay. any effort to go after mueller could be the beginning of the end of the trump presidency, unless mueller did something wrong. >> reporter: republicans also told the president not to fire sessions during the august recess, when a successor could potentially sidestep senate confirmation. nebraska senator ben sasse: >> if you're thinking of making a recess appointment to push out the attorney general, forget about it. the presidency isn't a bull, and this country isn't a china shop. >> you know, i go to washington, and i see all these politicians. >> reporter: the president has also drawn criticism for his speech to the boy scouts earlier this week, creating an uproar by the political nature of his talk. today, the organization issued a written apology, "to those in
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our scouting family who were offended by the political rhetoric that was inserted into the jamboree." at the white house, in-fighting escalated. last night, newly appointed communications director anthony scaramucci implicated reince preibus, the chief of staff, as the source of leaked classified information about his finances, though it now appears that information is publicly available. but in an interview with "the new yorker" published late today, scaramucci said, "reince is an expliative, paranoid schizophrenic, a paranoic." scaramucci also went after white house chief strategist steve bannon with language more fit for the outhouse than the white house. "i'm not steve bannon. i'm not trying to suck my own expletive. i'm not trying to build my own brand on the expletive strength of the president." we spoke to scaramucci a few moments ago, and he described the interview as a rookie mistake, an unforced error of
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on-the-record candor. his sentiments will come as no surprise to priebus or bannon, longtime rivals who opposed his hiring. about that "the new yorker" interview, the white house had no comment. north korea's continued testing of nuclear devices and missiles has the pentagon very concerned. experts say the u.s. mainland is not in danger ye but alaska and hawaii could soon find themselves in the nuclear cross hairs and some lawmakers in hawaii are taking the threat seriously. >> we're in a bunker under about a hundred feet of rock. these old military tunnels are now used for storage but one lawmaker in hawaii would like to change that. see, this could be an ideal place to ride out a nuclear attack, if only there were enough time to get here. >> every time north korea fires a missile the regime gets one step closer to reaching the hawaiian islands.
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>> in the last two years 56 missile launches. that's a wake up call. >> he says it would take less than 0 minutes for a nuclear missile to reach hon honolulu they want people to prepare for. >> first we're responsible for the security of our people. >> in the event of nuclear emergency wanss key government pishls to have a safe place to operate here beneath diamond head where there's a little network of tunnels the military has used for more than a century. >> this is something the public doesn't get to see. >> lute general showed us the labyrinth of concrete tunnels and bunkers and says there's no plans to use them for shelter. >> this was not really designed for people. was designed for equipment, materials and weapons. >> back in the 50s the
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government turned these old ammunition rooms into civil defense hub and today the emergency operation center runs 24/7 in an underground bunker near by. migi in charge of the state's emergency management agency says don't expect those 50s era civil defense drills. >> first you duck and then you cover. >> emergency officials believe the majority of the population would survive the initial explosion what they need to be prepared for is the nuclear fall out and to stay inside for up to two weeks. >> we focus on shelter in place. to figure out ahead of time where you are, where your family is and what is the best type of shelter to get to on that time of day. >> a lot of people are concerned about the impact a nuclear attack could have on tourism. the economy relies heavily on 9 million visitor that's come here
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the justice department decision to withhold federal grants for so called sanctuaries cities is sparking outreach. government wants to know alienation deportation to arrest but want a lawsuit. saying won't comply. >> this was an arrest at the front door of denver's courthouse. illegal immigrant was wrestled to the ground and since deported. show downs like these say is a risk to public safety. mayor asked ice to stop making
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arrests at the city courthouse. >> we want people to trust the judicial system and need them to show up. >> like schools, churches and hospitalities he wants the courthouse designated as a special location to prevent immigranted from going there. his request was refused. undocumented immigranted are avoiding the courthouse. nine cases of domestic violence were dropped when victims told authorities they were afraid to come to the courthouse for fear of being arrested by ice. >> when witness are not showing up, we can't pursue those who commit crimes how's that make us more safe. >> by not turning over criminal aliens in a safe, secure
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environment they're putting my officers and the community at risk. >> he says denver is not alerting the agency when it has a violator in custody. >> you guys from ice. >> yes, sir. >> so ice agents check public records for court appearance and agents must go to the courthouse or homes or workplaces at much higher risk to them self or the community. >> they're beaten up, cut in fights, scuffles. >> you feel these things the are basically avoidable. >> absolutely are avoidable. >> denver started a program aimed at protecting undocumented immigrants with lesser you violations, with minor traffic offenses can send in their plea by mail so they can avoid going to the court house that's important says this man. >> it made me feel my life was crashing down. >> he asked us not to use his name.
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he says in his community frightened people now go out only when necessary, like getting to work. >> a lot of community members feel they need to be in hiding. otherwise that just creates a target on the back. >> you feel hunted? >> yes. >> but says ice they're only doing their best to uphold the law. >> it's not hunting, it's doing our job. >> barry peterson in denver. the newest star on instagram is the tsa that's right the transportation security administration which runs the check points has a big hit. >> reporter: the tsa is not an agency that is used to getting a lot of praise, people try to spend as little time there as possible but they are spending time on their instagram page. if you are not following you're missing out. the tsa can be pretty bossy, shoes off, arms up, liquids,
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small, the tsa can be funny online where its instagram aims to show the agency's human side by showing a mind boggling littany of items people try to bring on planes. >> that's a shrunken voodoo head made from a goat. never know what you will see. >> from fully loaded gas masks. to batter rings and plenty of guns and prop an tanks you needed to have with you on a flight. the tsa has seen it all. this dead body is actually a movie prop and yes it was clear to fly. >> talk about dead heading. >> bob burns runs the instagram his endearing captions have him on the number four spot of most followed ahead of beyonce.
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>> i always expect kanye to come knocking on my door to tell me i don't deserve number four. >> he still might. >> he joined the tsa after 9/11 runs the account from his home office in cincinnati, ohioe and is always on the hunt for educational or super cute. >> the purpose of the instagram account is to show people all of the things we're finding nationwide and educate people on what you can and can't bring. >> if you're in a pinch what to do with a giant main lobster, bob's got you covered. if cringe-worthy puns are not your thing, the tsa is also on twitter where from the command center outside washington they offer up to 1,000 realtime answers to more straight forward questions like can i carry on this face mask. you can't carry it on but you can check it. jennifer oversees social media for tsa.
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>> you don't think of the tsa as a customer service organization. >> our goal was only to be able to help passengers and i think in the end that this program has really helped to soften the public perception of tsa. >> a softer image bob has helped build one like at a time. >> what's the secret to being successful on instagram and being funny. ask. >> tell your friend to share items that can create conversation. >> blogger bob is a father of two and says his inspiration is corny dad humor but admits he feels pressure to be funny and educational with all of these followers but one thing they don't joke about is the guns recovered at check points,. set a record again this year. >> the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. timeout.
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unlikely dinner armed guards watch out, as dinner was laid out in the courtyard. he is serving a 26 year sentence for murder. >> how is it to have all of these folks here tonight? >> [ speaking foreign language ] >> freedom. >> it's as if, do you see a prison here, he asked? do you see a prison around us? no. the fortet of met chaa his 100 dinner guests is a prison in italy home to harden criminals and eight nights a year it hosts dinner where prisoners do the work, designed to raise money for charity, build skills and give inmates chance to interact with those on the outside.
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it's a whif of freedom he says, he's serving life for murder. that mean it's happiness. in the kitchen these criminals admit to making bad choices in the past are more focused on the future in the next few hours. the pasta was thrown into the pot 20 minutes to ten. this is italy after all. and then was mixed with a delicate parsely sauce. [ speaking foreign language ]. >> lifer is in for aggravated murder. this is where we are so this is where we must grow, he said. it's like a plant, it grows where it's planted. >> she is the warden and says the program provides experiences
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both professional and social. >> it sounds good. does it work? [ speaking foreign language ]. >> absolutely yes, she said. we've been doing these dinners for over 11 years band 30 young men work in restaurants. one owns a restaurant. we've raised over $140,000 for charity with over 14,000 guests. the prison brings in guest chefs to teach the inmates. dinner was served in a former church on the prison grounds. the food got good reviews. but the real draw was the novelty. >> how is it to have dinner in a prison? >> it's very strange. because we don't know if we come and if we come back. ♪ >> joking aside, by the end of dinner curiosity had given way to a connection. ♪ prisoners sang a song they wrote
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about togetherness and for a moment inside this prison, the walls seemed to disappear. i'm seth doan in italy. >> how do you get that assignment? or how about this one. don daylor on a new york beach, the king and his castle. sand castle that is. >> reporter: the commute is a long one over an hour from his home to long island rockaway beach. >> so this is your office. >> this is my office. >> not bad. >> with homemade tools, water, imagination and considerable skill, he turns one of the most common thing in the world into something that's anything but. >> i can't think of another art form more i impermanent. >> even if it falls it could collapse now right behind us. >> you're okay with that.
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>> you got to be. >> the 59-year-old artist has been creating sand castles since he was a small boy. he almost chose a career in architect until he had a sudden realization. >> i don't care what is inside. i like the outside as an object. >> you need an entrance. >> so to do the children who gather and where he works. >> i've had wonderful encounters with people, that's definitely nice. if they weren't here i'd still be here doing this. >> art for art's sake. he learns his living as an artist's assistant will occasionally sell a photograph here or there but money is never the motivation. >> i want to do something and be creative if no one knew about it i would still be building a sand castle. >> summer or winter he's a constant presence on rockaway beach. his creations may disappear but not the beautiful memories given to those lucky enough to see
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sresearchers say they have new evidence that there is water on the moon and lots of it. so how would they know this? january crawford reports from the smithsonian national air and space museum in washington. >> these new findings suggest that the water on the interior of the moon means it's pretty wet and could make it easier for us to fly there and back or even stay a while. >> the surface appears to be very, very fine-grained. >> for decades scientists have thought the moon was a dry, dusty place. >> almost like a powder. >> it may be time to rewrite astronomiomy books this is the picture of the moon's surface by measuring the reflective lights the researchers were able to detect water molecules red and
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yellow is high concentration. here's the lead author of the study. >> some of the deposits on the moon span thousands of square kilometers absolutely enormous. >> it works like this, when the moon was young and volcanoe eruptions, water molecules got trapped in mechanic glass beads em bedded in moon rocks left behind on the surface. a similar process happens when volcanoes erupt on earth able if. on the moon most of the water is locked debedeep below the crust. >> we can bake those water out of those rocks. >> he says the moon's water he could be used for drinking.
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as well as provide oxygen for breathing and hydrogen for rocket fuel. >>e wouldn't have to carry so many basic commodities to the moon which turns out to be one of the most expensive things we can do in space exploration. >> to actually get, say, a leader of water you would have to mine and harvest 100 to 200 cubic feet of material is it economically feasible to do so. >> discovering large amounts of water on the moon probably wouldn't support life as we know it as the conditions are still pretty inhospitable to the kind of organisms we have on earth. >> that's the overnight news on this friday. for some the news continues. for others check back later for the morning news and of course cbs this morning. from the broadcast center in new york city i'm demarco moore.
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. it's friday, july 28th, 2017. this is the "cbs morning news". health care bill fail. >> 49-51 motion is not agreed to. >> overnight the senate rejects the republican plan to repeal obamacare. and a rant from the new white house communications director filled with foul language and threat stirs up the white house. plus bella's boom buzz. a little girl inspires a creation that's helping children around the
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