you start off with cultures. then you feed it elements of the air, and it grows and grows and grows, just like that yogurt culture. you dry that, and you get to a protein-rich flour. reporter: and that can be processed to mimic chicken, seafood, and beef. we can grow enough material to make a steak in a matter of hours. reporter: the concept for air protein came from nasa in the 60s, as a way to recycle the co2 astronauts exhale and turn it into food. dyson developed the technology ht clate change. findust today produces more than greenhouse gasses than the entire transportation sector. what s going to happen when we have ten billion people? bon appetit. really good. reporter: for now, we ll have to take dyson s word for it. she says only a small circle of people, including investors, have tried it. when are we going to get to the point where outsiders like me can try it? very soon. not yet, but very soon. reporter: so, air chicken is still in the beginning phase o
you heard us shouting the questions about chief of stat john kelly at the end, president trump not answering them. a few weeks ago he was asked whether kellie was on his way out, he kind of dodged that question. so you and i will be very busy today trying to drill down on that angle. kristen, thank you. garrett, first confirmation hearing of the new congress comes next month. walk us through what we expect and the reaction you are hearing from some of not critical senate judiciary committee members dao. reporter: it elements seems impossible to get this confirmation made. this will be a fascinating fight. we re expecting to see lindsey graham take over as chairman. that committee is the most
of life in prison. if he were charged with murder locally, the maximum enis tense coutense sentence could be death. i suppose if you are charged with if you are given a death sentence in the federal system, it elements to a life sentence anyway. but in any event, that is way down the road. this is a multijurisdiction investigation with police, state police, pittsburgh police, atf, fbi. this will be everybody involved to try to get to the bottom of this. so the investigation points in two different directions trying to backtrack to see what led up to this, what was going on in rob bowers life, and then very, very difficult emotionally hard forensically difficult crime scene reconstruction at the synagogue scene because they have to document where they
democratic society. we are interested in columnway would like to make it free of race it elements. the central issue was columbia expanding into black neighborhoods and destroying them to build more of columbia. also columbia was involved in secret research for war strategies. we felt it was our duty to stop it. the war research was symbolic of the war itself. the expansion to harlem we called institutional racism. on april 23rd there was a rally called and all of the students showed up. and it ournd tout to be a huge crowd. strike. [ chanting ]. we became kind of like a spontaneous mob and we wound up
we ll watch this for a heavy hateful potential in the forecast in this region, guys. it s interesting, the european model has it taking one track. the americans have it another way. i guess we just have to wait and see. we have to wait and see, yeah. the northeast preparing for this right now. pedram, i know you re going to stay on top of the story for us. we appreciate it. now u.s. and russian officials are preparing for military talks about air strikes in syria possibly as early as thursday. john kerry and the russian foreign minister spoke at the u.n. about the need to avoid unintended incidents between russia s air force and the u.s.-led coalition. meantime, u.s. officials tell cnn russia hit elements of the free syrian army in its first day of air strikes. those are the forces fighting against syrian president bashar al assad, russia s ally. one group said russian air strikes killed 28 people including women and children.