bill: a plot to get to. shannon: this vehicle that bill mentioned has now made it to the floor of the ocean and we talk about these banging noises. they say they are in the area where they were heard. although other people say sometimes the sounds echo from very great distances. so it is tough to say. this is part of the last ditch effort to rescue these passengers in the final hours. bill: great question coming up. the vessel went missing sunday with a dive to the titanic. the search has grown roughly twice the size of the state of connecticut at this point. martha: the experts say the sub may have drifted. it depends on what its navigational ability is at this point whether it has battery and technology to control it in any direction. they also say it may have attached or hooked onto part of the wreckage. there are many pieces of the stern, the bow of the titanic and all sorts of pieces that fell off during that wreck. that s one of the problems in trying to find
court. jericka: record temperatures in texas as much of the state remains under heat warnings. it s been summer for too long we have already had too much of it and not to break insight. jericka: new details, investigators say dna evidence connect the man accused of murdering four students at the university of idaho to the crime scene. chicken meat grown in a lab has been cleared to sell in the u.s. supporters hope it catches on saying it could help fight climate change. jericka: on this first day of summer, how to protect your skin from the sun s dangerous rays. what you need to know. use sunscreen to protect yourself and get checked. cbs news, come on down. back state of the price right with the story of the end of an era for the legendary show. on the last one to host the price is right, i feel pretty good about that. jericka: good evening to our viewers in the west, thank you for joining us on this wednesday night. i m jericka duncan in for nora. we beg
good day, i m chris jansing live at msnbc headquarters in new york city. what were those mysterious noises coming from the under the waves? could they be proof that the crew of the submersible titan still was alive nearly 80 hours after the five of them went missing. those are just two of the questions we re hoping the coast guard will answer when they hold a press conference expected to start just minutes from now. once they start we will bring it to you live. and unfolding right now, a massive explosion at a school in the heart of paris. at least 16 injured, 7 people seriously. the search is on for more victims. we ll have the latest on that ahead. plus, india s prime minister puts on a show doing yoga on the lawn of the u.n. in new york. just hours before president biden will test his political flexibility as he hosts the leader accused of waging war on democracy in his own country. but we start with that coast guard update, let s go live and take a listen. fi
hello, and thank you so much for being here. it is 10:00 eastern. i m ana cabrera reporting from new york, and this morning underwater sounds detected in the desperate search for the missing titan submersible. with more assets rushing to the search zone with time running out, the five on board believed to only have one day of oxygen left. the latest on that urgent race against the clock. plus, powell in the hot seat, the fed chair appearing before a house committee this hour. what s his next move with fears of a recession still looming? and later, new reaction from the attorney general to that plea deal for the president s son hunter biden. i would leave this matter in the hands of the united states attorney who want appointed by the previous president. this hour how that deal could impact the 2024 landscape with the gop front runner under indictment himself. let s begin with the underwater noises in that urgent search for the missing titan submersible and the five pe
the noises were heard by a canadian p-3. and that was this morning and some yesterday. reporter: the noise described as banging sounds at regular intervals in the department and homeland security briefing are now described as less specific than that. but still, the focus of the search. we need to have hope, right? i can t tell you what the noises are. what i can tell you, and i think this is the most important point. we re searching where the noises are. reporter: the sounds picked up by buoys like this one dropped from planes. and then listening for any sounds of life from the titan submersible. this team has multiple sensors. they re in the area. they re sending data back expeditiously to the best in the world. reporter: it takes about a day for ships from st. john s, the closest land, to the titanic wreck site to arrive to the search area. it is enormous. two times the size of connecticut. a grid pattern presented by the coast guard indicates the size of the