here s the real problem, michaela. along with all this military hardware, there s tons of sugar, 10,000 tons of sugar. that has to come off the boat first before they know exactly what kind of ordinance is aboard the ship. they had to use some mechanism to unload the ship, correct? that s right. it took three days. they re claiming the north korean crew disabled some of the winches and cranes they used to unload this heavy-duty hundred dreads of tons of equipment and bags of sugar, so apparently what we re hearing is it s not going to be done by hand. the panamanian president saying at least a week. panamanian authorities begin the lock and laborious process of
credit. and i think that was we go along and we come to understand these are very expensive issues, i mean, obesity costs us $190 billion a year. that is an incredible amount of money, and the other way to look at it is, we use about 1.1 billion gallons, extra of gas lane, owing to obesity. 1% of the gasoline we use is related to obesity. heather: it is just not mon taylor, that it is costing. it also costs us in lost time and also lost productivity. exactly. but the real problem with obesity is childhood obesity. and we have children, we are seeing children now that have type-2 diabetes at age 9 and 10. we ve never seen that in those numbers before. the issues of obesity, even go to the kinds of ambulances that we have. we have the larger ambulances today because of the size of people. the front winches are to use for owe beat people and when i was a
top of that rescue shaft there is a risk of some rock fall lower down, though, he says the good news is that rescue shaft is absolutely solid. so no problems. they ll then have to test a little bit more the rescue capsule, the so-called phoenix capsule and then what they ve got to do can move across some heavy lifting gear, some pulleys over that and want to go show to make sure everything is absolutely right and so he says about a day and a half to put a casing in. he says about two days to put the winches and pulleys in and that takes us to wednesday and that will be the day that the first phoenix capsule goes down and the first miner comes back up, don. all right, cnn s karl penhaul live for us in chile. thank you for that. following a developing story out of washington tate tonight where nearly a dozen young women were hospitalized after overdosing at a party. police are now investigating whether they were targeted for sexual assault.
what he says is that the rescuers have got to first of all encase the first 100 yards or so of that rescue shaft, because at the top of that rescue shaft there is a risk of some rock falling lower down. he said the good news is that rescue shaft is absolutely solid. so no problems. but they ll have to test a little bit more the rescue capsule, the so-called phoenix capsule, and then what they ll do is move across some heavy lifting gear, some winches and some pulleys over that. they want to go slow to make sure everything is absolutely right. and he says about a day and a half to put the casing in. he says about two days to put the winches and pulleys in. that takes us to wednesday. and that will be the day that the first phoenix capsule goes down and the first miner comes back up, don. cnn s carl penhaul live for us in chile tonight. thank you for that, karl.
boats communicate with each other and with the coast guard so that the coast guard can direct them to where the oil is. shep? shepard: molly henneberg on a windy night in new orleans. monthly liberation thanks so much. scientists tell us the oil appears to be sucking the oxygen right out of the gulf just as so many predicted. in essence, suffocating the marine life there. experts have observed animals behaving strangely. in fact, on studio b today we spoke with an environmental reporter who lives and works on the alabama coast for the mobile newspaper. he took this video which shows, as he put it, unusually large number of sharks swimming close to shore and bay fish too. and here is winches here we have microbes eating the oil and they are using oxygen the entire time. they have measured this area of oxygen just a few miles offshore of where i was that stretches from the bottom up 30 feet. and that whole area the oxygen levels are too low for any animals to live. shepard: which w