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tv   CBS News Roundup  CBS  June 7, 2024 3:12am-4:31am PDT

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including phony sound effects played on mobile loudspeakers that made it seem like american troops were on the move. >> what was the mission of the ghost army? >> the mission of the ghost army was to drive the germans crazy. >> reporter: see muir newsen baum is one of the unit's last surviving members, recruited like many others directly out of art school in new york city. >> nice jeep. >> yeah, that was a real one. >> i appreciate that clarification. >> reporter: in france, he set up fake jeeps, tanks, and planes, never sure the ruse would work. >> but we had some incidents where we blew up a tank, and it started losing air, and the big cannons started to go like this. >> so you were exposed? >> well, they didn't see it because it was at night. but they would have. that would have been the end. >> reporter: of course by
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drawing the enemy's attention, they were basically asking to be shot at, and they often were. at the national world war ii museum in new orleans, curator chase tomlin showed us evidence of those german attacks. >> so this is a piece of shrapnel saved by one of the ghost army veterans. and for me, it just is a symbol of the fact that these guys are near the front lines enough that enemy artillery is going off around them. flying pieces of potentially fatal metal are whizzing by your head. >> reporter: what that shrapnel aso proves, of course, is that this war of deception worked. >> so the ghost army, the fak tanks, the fake equipment is going this way. >> right. >> meanwhile, the real stuff is going like this. > that's pretty much it, yep. >> reporter: with only about 1,100 men, tomlin says, the ghost army could simulate the presence of 30,000, and the military now estimates the lives of up to 30,000 real-life american soldiers were saved by those diversions. >> when you think about the
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courage involved here, it's almost like you've got a fake gun in your shirt, you know, but it's actually your finger. >> yep. >> and at any moment, someone could realize it's only his finger. >> that's one of the takeaways here is, you know, you're knowingly putting yourself in danger. you're intentionally drawing enemy artillery fire. it's dangerous. it's dangerous work, and a lot of them just kind of dealt with it, said "this is what we're here for". >> reporter: for seymour newsen baum, those dangers were obvious the moment he landed on omaha beach about two weeks after d-day. >> what did the beach look like? >> well, it was kind of bedlam. it was all messed up. there were still bodies floating in the bay. >> wow. >> reporter: his work would remain a military secret for another half century. >> when people asked you what did you do in the military, what did you tell them? >> i blew up tanks, and they let it go at that. >> reporter: but the ghost army
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was never forgotten. and now the national world war ii museum has a traveling exhibit displaying some of the inflatables that fooled the germans. >> mr. seymour nussenbaum. [ applause ] >> reporter: plus, earlier this year, the remaining veterans of the ghost army received one of america's highest honors, the congressional gold medal. >> look, the guys in the back are holding the tank. >> it's like a symbol for the ghost army now. >> reporter: on this 80th anniversary of d-day, at 101 years old now himself, seymour nussenbaum has earned both clarity and perspective on his unit's success. >> why do you think it worked? >> because we were good. but, you know, that's not the important thing that happened to me in my life. >> what was the most important thing that happened to you in your life? >> meeting my wife, having
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about a small chair, but it's got a big impact. the kind of chair that gives mobility -- >> faster. >> reporter: -- to children with disabilities. meet jackson. he's a 4-year-old boy from covington, louisiana. he has dystonia. it's a condition that affects his muscles. and he has a developmental delay. he doesn't walk or speak. >> when they offered you this wheelchair, was he mobile at all at that time? >> uh-uh. >> reporter: elizabeth and brian are jackson's parents. they say after eight months in that chair, jackson has been able to sit up on his own, and now he's moving around independently and has been the bridge from not walking to now using a walker. >> okay. so give us the report card. how would you grade it? >> it's an a-plus. it's helped his development. >> reporter: now meet the man at the front of this creation. know am platt. he's an architect in new orleans who heads up an organization called make good.
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they focus on assistive technology, the kinds of devices people can't find in the commercial workplace or can't afford. platt came across the design for the chair on an israeli website that lists open-source information for developers like him. >> we can go beyond what's commercially available. we can really create almost anything. >> reporter: but what he's created has turned out to be way more than noam platt ever imagined when i first het him in new orleans. >> i didn't quite expect the magnitude of outpouring after the story. >> reporter: and that's where viewers like you come in. since our story aired, more than $40,000 in donations rolled in. and, of course, platt knew immediately what he wanted to roll out because he had also heard from nearly 60 families who saw jackson's joy in our report and wanted to see it on their kids' faces. plus, something even more priceless happened.
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volunteers who saw the story said they wanted to help build these life-changing chairs. so platt put some to work. and with his team at tulane university, they built all these chairs, about 25, in just the last five months. look at little ellie's elation. the smile on theo's face. >> you can do it! come on! >> reporter: and just imagine what little mckenna might be thinking. >> each of those chairs, they cost $200 to make. we're actually working on bringing that price down to about $50. >> reporter: and by this point in the update, you can't be surprised that platt didn't stop there. when an injury prevented seth from playing guitar with his dad, platt pulled a few strings and created this custom guitar pick. and this innovation put the drums within reach for cole, who has cerebral palsy and really wanted to play like his favorite ban, the thanfu fighters.
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>> it's very inspiring to people. it shows them they actually have the power to change their environments, to provide more independence for themselves, and to really affect change in their communities for relatively modest amount of work. >> always nice to see good news >> always nice to see good news from the files of (♪♪) when life spells heartburn... how do you spell relief? r-o-l-a-i-d-s rolaids' dual-active formula begins to neutralize acid on contact. r-o-l-a-i-d-s spells relief. when it comes to your wellness routine, the details are the difference. dove men body wash, with plant based moisturizers in harmony with our bodies for healthier feeling skin. all these details add up to something greater. new dove men plant powered body wash. “the darkness of bipolar depression made me feel like i was losing interest in the things i love. then i found a chance to let in the lyte.”
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the effort to go green has a growing number of people taking to the woods and fields, foraging for edible fruits and plants. but how do you know what's safe to eat? well, in england, there's a class for that. ian lee has more. >> so we need to be able to recognize the difference between the edible one and the deadly one. >> reporter: that's just one of the important lessons to learn when foraging for food. >> pick the leaves that look nice. >> reporter: at this overgrown cemetery in east london, manager kenneth greenway teaches city slickers to hunt for herbs. >> they want to learn more. they want to learn how to identify plants more comfortably. they want to learn recipe ideas. >> reporter: greenway started the courses after noticing more folks getting out after the pandemic. >> there are a lot more people spending time in parks, thinking about plants, wondering what they can do with them, and it's created an interest in foraging. >> reporter: he identifies wild garlic and even stinging nettle. >> then you can add a neutral oil so it looks kind of like nutella, and then sugar to
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taste. >> reporter: which then can be thrown into anything from a springtime salad to toppings on a pizza. >> he's told us all about where we can find things and how to eat it safely because that's what i was mainly worried about, wasn't it? i was actually terrified before i came and now i feel much happier. >> reporter: cemeteries provide a place where nature can run wild in an urban setting with edible plants popping up among the gravestones. >> it makes you feel part of nature and you can use nature, but wisely. >> reporter: learning t o live i was like shaking you know, i was so scared. when i first reached out to jacoby and meyers. i didn't know if i had a case or not. as soon as i got a hold of my attorney, she was very, very nice, very kind.
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because of jacoby and meyers, i don't have that pressure to worry about a medical bill or things like that. if i know of any accident, i'm like, call jacoby and meyers, they'll help you.
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hey, flex. considering there's a heatwave, it's kinda chilly in here. oh, that's because i'm pre-cooling the house with the ac before 4 pm. then i'll turn our thermostat to a comfortable 78 or higher that way i could stay cool later. ooh, what about me? you're never cool. oh. [giggles] what's a dollar worth these days? steve hartman found one answer "on the road". >> reporter: inside buck father, an outdoor sporting stoor in baton rouge, louisiana, we met a great american success story. >> because it's about you. >> reporter: at 42, owner matt and his partners have built and
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sold several outdoor companies worth hundreds of millions. but matt says he's never felt richer than he did the day he got the dollar. >> i haven't had that much faith in humanity in a very long time. >> reporter: he says it all began about a month ago. it was early morning, and the fire alarm was going off inside his condo complex. so matt shot out of bed and raced down the stairs, only to discover there was no fire. but he's awake now. so even though he was wearing mismatched clothes and all disheveled, matt decided to go out for a cup of coffee. and as he was about to enter the shop, he remembered he hadn't done his morning prayer. so as the security camera shows, matt stepped to the corner of the patio. >> and i start to slowly open my eyes, and there's a kid coming at me about my height. >> reporter: and with his fist
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clenched. so matt prepared for battle. >> and he goes -- and reveals a dollar bill. and i go, what? >> if you're homeless, here's a dollar. >> reporter: this is 9-year-old kelvin ellis jr. >> i always want to help a homeless person, and i finally had the opportunity. >> reporter: kelvin says he had just gotten the dollar for good grades. it was the only money he had to his name. matt was so touched, he invited kelvin in for a snack, connected with the boy's father, who was next door, and promised to stay in touch. >> what's up, dude? >> reporter: as a reward for his kindness, matt gave kelvin a shopping spree. 40 seconds to pick out whatever he wanted in the store, including a new bike. kelvin says it was great but definitely not what he wanted to get for his dollar. >> what were you hoping would come from that? >> joy.
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>> joy? >> because i helped someone. give something away, you feel like you've gotten a lot of things from it. >> if you give, you're actually going to goet more out of that. i couldn't grasp that as a kid. and if we can spread that around, everything changes. >> reporter: a dollar so well spent. >> cheers to friends forever. >> reporter: steve hartman, on the road. >> amen. >> reporter: in baton rouge, louisiana. and that's today's "cbs news roundup." reporting from new york city, i'm shanelle kaul. ♪ hello and thanks so much for watching. i'm shanelle kaul in new york, and here are some of the stories we're tracking on "cbs news
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roundup." in hunter biden's federal trial, the jury hears from the widow of hunter's brother about their drug use and the handgun at the center of this case. solemn commemorations in normandy, france, on the 80th anniversary of the d-day invasion. and donald trump is back on the campaign trail for the first time since his hush money convictions. president biden's own daughter-in-law, hallie biden, described to jurors on thursday in hunter biden's federal gun trial the moment she discovered his revolver. cbs's scott macfarlane was inside the courtroom as she revealed what she did with that gun after finding it. >> reporter: a star witness in a potentially pivotal piece of video evidence at the trial of president biden's son, hunter. hallie biden, the widow of hunter's brother, beau, says this surveillance video shows her throwing away her brother-in-law's gun in a delaware grocery store parking lot on october 23rd, 2018, just
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11 days after hunter biden bought the gun and just after hallie biden said she found it in hunter biden's car along with drug residue and drug paraphernalia. hallie testified, i didn't want him to hurt himself or the kids to find it and hurt themselves. i was panicking. prosecutors are trying to prove hunter biden was addicted or using drugs at the time he bought the gun, lying on this federal gun application. >> prosecutors will tell you the physical evidence doesn't lie, and this is about as powerful physical evidence as you can get linking his possession of that gun to his use of illegal drugs. >> reporter: hallie biden also described taking up a romantic relationship with her brother-in-law about a year after her late husband, beau biden's 2015 death. telling the jury it was also hunter biden who introduced her to using crack cocaine, calling her drug use a terrible experience. i'm embarrassed and ashamed. prosecutors showed hallie biden the gun and images of the satchel in which she found and discarded it. but hunter biden's attorney,
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abbe lowell, tried to show hal by biden didn't actually know what he was doing the week he bought the gun. "you don't know if he was drinking, using, or either of the above?" lowell asked. "i don't know," she responded. hunter biden faces the prospect of a prison term if convicted of these three federal charges. in an interview earlier today, president biden ruled out a future pardon for his son. scott macfarlane, cbs news, wilmington, delaware. president biden is in france where he took part in ceremonies for the 80th anniversary of the d-day landings. overshadowing those events, russia's war in ukraine. and because of that, russia was the only ally nation not invited. during a speech, biden warned that democracy is now more at risk than at any point since world war ii. cbs's elaine cobbe is in normandy with more. >> reporter: president biden and the first lady bowed their heads in front of a wreath at the american cemetery overlooking omaha beach, where more than 9,000 u.s. soldiers are buried.
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earlier, he was joined by french president emmanuel macron, who bestowed the legion of honor, france's highest award, on 11 u.s. world war ii veterans. >> in memory of those who fought here, died here, literally saved the world here, let us be worthy of their sacrifice. >> reporter: the president marks the 80 years since the d-day invasion by saying the u.s. and its allies will not walk away from ukraine as it continues to defend itself against russia. >> we're living in a time when democracy is more at risk across the world than at any point since the end of world war ii, since these beaches were stormed. >> reporter: before the ceremony, the president met with some of the men who survived world war ii. all of them pushing 100 years old or even older. onofrio zicari from syracuse, new york, was 21 years old when he landed here. >> we landed, and we had to
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crawl on the beach really. i looked over, and there was this g.i. he was sitting on his helmet, and he was holding his guts. the war brings nothing but misery, nothing but misery. >> reporter: with each passing year, fewer and fewer veterans remain to tell the world what happened that day. elaine cobbe, cbs news, normandy, france. one of donald trump's most outspoken allies, steve bannon, was ordered by a federal judge to report to prison by july 1st to serve a four-month sentence. bannon was found to be in contempt of congress in 2022 after failing to cooperate with the house january 6th committee. bannon says he'll fight to appeal his conviction all the way to the supreme court. and bannon's former boss, donald trump, appeared in the battleground state of arizona, firing up supporters at his first campaign event since he was convicted on 34 felony counts in the hush money case. cbs's caitlin huey-burns was there.
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>> reporter: donald trump took aim at immigration in the battleground border state key to his chances of winning the presidency. >> joe biden wants an invasion. i want a deportation. >> reporter: cbs news polling shows trump leading biden here with immigration among the top issues of concern. >> they assume that because we're immigrants, we are for criminality and for open borders. no. we have families. we believe in, you know, in america, in a safe border. >> reporter: just this week, state republicans approved a november ballot measure that would allow local police to arrest undocumented migrants crossing the border, a measure aimed at driving voter turnout. >> my workforce is largely an immigrant workforce, and they're not criminals. >> reporter: citrus farmer selwyn justice says he's worried that policy could hurt business. >> somebody might just show up and come into your -- come into your place of business and tell everybody they need to stop working and demonstrate documentation.
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>> reporter: trump lost arizona by about 10,000 votes four years ago, and it has been ground zero for false claims about the election. just last month, trump was named an unindicted co-conspirator in an election interference case where several of his allies were charged. and as for his own conviction, trump this week pledged retribution. >> when this election is over, based on what they've done, i would have every right to go after them. >> reporter: and the race to be trump's running mate is also heating up. several contenders have officially received formal vetting documents, and some of the top prospective pejts include north dakota governor doug burgum along with senators tim scott, marco rubio, and j.d. vance, who was traveling with trump today. caitlin huey-burns, cbs news, phoenix. israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu says he will personally make the case to congress defending his nation's ongoing war against hamas.
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netanyahu was invited to address the joint session on july 24th. both republican and democratic leaders say it was a bipartisan invitation. prosecutors say the man charged in the gilgo beach serial killings on long island, new york, kept a detailed instruction book to document his crimes. rex heuermann appeared in court on thursday charged with killing two more women for a total of six suspected murders. don't go away. there's plenty more just ahead on "cbs news roundup" after the break. [♪♪] how you feel can be affected by the bacteria in your gut. try new align probiotic bloating relief plus food digestion. it contains a probiotic to help relieve occasional bloating, plus vitamin b12 to aid digestion. try align probiotic. it ain't my dad's razor, dad. ay watch it! it's from gillettelabs. this green bar releases trapped hairs from my face... gamechanga! ...while the flexdisc contours to it. so the five blades
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if you know, you know it's pantene. ♪♪ ♪ welcome back to "cbs news roundup." i'm shanelle kaul. as we mark the 80th anniversary of d-day, we're also hearing from a group of u.s. veterans who say they cannot get their
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desperately needed medical benefits. the vets say they were exposed to radiation in a top-secret cold war program, so secret the military still will not acknowledge it. dave savini reports for "eye on america." >> reporter: it was the mid-1980s. mark eli was in his 20s, a physically fit air force technician inspecting secretly obtained soviet jets. their engines roaring inside hidden hangars called hush houses. >> when you're in that moment, everything is shaking. your hands are shaking and your braining is shaking. >> reporter: the work was part of a classified mission in the nevada desert 140 miles outside of las vegas at the tonopah test range, sometimes referred to as area 52. the mission was so under wraps, eli had to sign this nondisclosure agreement. >> upholding the national interest was more important than my own life. >> reporter: that's not just talk. >> the loss of my health --
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>> reporter: eli, now 63 and living in naperville, illinois, is confronting life-threatening consequences. >> it scarred my lungs. i got cysts on my liver. >> reporter: from the radiation he said he was exposed to there. >> i starte have lipomas, tumors inside of my body. my lining in my bladder was shed. >> reporter: for decades, the u.s. government conducted nuclear bomb tests near area 52. according to a federal environmental assessment from 1975, those tests scattered toxic and radioactive materials nearby. >> so someone made a decision that your lives and the risk was worth it for our country. >> yes. >> reporter: all these years later, his service records include many assignments but not the mission inside tonopah test range, which means he can't prove he was ever there. >> cover-up? >> right. that's right. there's this slogan people say. deny, deny until you die.
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it's kind of true here. >> and the only reason why it's becoming known now is because of all the illnesses? >> it was because of all the illnesses. >> reporter: dave crete says he also worked at the same site as a military police officer. he has breathing issues, including chronic bronchitis and even had to have a tumor removed from his back. >> fire! >> reporter: he spent the last eight years tracking down hundreds of other veterans who worked where he did. >> so you've seen bladder cancer, liver cancer, colon cancer, kidney cancer, tumors, lymphomas, blood diseases. >> all kinds of cancers. >> reporter: the federal government's 1975 environmental assessment acknowledged toxic chemicals in the area but said stopping work ran against the national interests, and the costs are small and reasonable for the benefits received. >> what does it do to you to see all these other men and women suffering? >> how many people they hurt.
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>> reporter: $25.7 billion worth of federal assistance has helped other government workers, mainly employees of the department of energy. >> go on down to where it gets to the one-third. >> reporter: who were stationed in the same area and are now sick. but these benefits don't apply to air force veterans like crete and eli. >> it makes me incredibly mad, and it hurts me too because they're supposed to have my back. i had theirs, and i want them to have mine. >> reporter: a betrayal, he says, by the very government he served. for "eye on america," i'm dave savini in chicago. a new investigation now shows there may be danger in your kitchen pantry. "consumer reports" found what the group calls concerning levels of lead in some veggie puff snacks designed for young kids. the brands behind the snacks say they are safe, but experts say no amount of lead is safe for children. anna werner has more. >> reporter: mom of two macarena
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rizzo says her 15-month-old daughter has eaten a lot of puffed veggie snacks from brand lesser evil. >> something close to homemade, and i found that they have or supposedly have good ingredients. so that's why i picked them. >> reporter: but "consumer reports" says its testing found those snacks and another veggie puff product from company serenity kids, both made with cassava root, had concerning amounts of lead. one product had more lead per serving than any of the 80 baby foods cr has tested since 2017. >> very like disappointed because i thought i was making a good choice or like a smart choice, and it seems like it's not. >> reporter: cr food policy director brian ronholm. >> these kava va-based puffs, these baby snacks, tested pretty high compared to a lot of other products we've tested. so they're all causes for concern for parents because of these high levels of lead. >> reporter: in a statement, lesser evil said all its
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products adhere to current regulatory requirements, that food safety is a top priority, and the company's testing complies with california proposition 65 and federal standards. serenity kids also told us its products test well below california's prop 65 limits and that although cassava root is more susceptible to lead because it's grown in the ground, the company works with its suppliers to find foods with the lowest achievable levels of cntaminants. in contrast, "consumer reports" also tested sorghum-based puffs from company once upon a farm and found those products had very low levels of lead, some of the lowest lead levels of all the baby food cr has ever tests. cr's takeaway from its testing? >> ultimately parents and consumers deserve better. they need more meaningful action from these companies to limit their exposure to lead. >> reporter: and this mom says of her daughter's snack -- >> most likely i'm not going to give it to her anymore. >> reporter: there are currently
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no mandatory required standards from the fda on lead limits in food, so what's a parent to do? well, cr recommends you limit your kids' intake of these types of snacks and have a wide variety of foods available for children. also it points out these levels are a fraction of the levels of some apple cinnamon products, pouchs that were recalled last year. >> well, good to know. >> well, good to know. that was anna i thought i was sleeping ok... but i was waking up so tired. then i tried new zzzquil sleep nasal strips. their four—point lift design opens my nose for maximum air flow. so, i breathe better. and we both sleep better. and stay married. talenti mango sorbetto is made with a hundred percent real fruit. -with alphonso mangoes. -yeah, i know. -oh? -right? -mmm-hmm. talenti. raise the jar. we all need fiber for our digestive health, but less than 10% of us get enough each day. good thing metamucil gummies are an easy way to get prebiotic, plant-based fiber.
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the d-day invasion was not only the beginning of the end of world war ii but also of the holocaust. natalie morales has one woman's story of survival. ♪ >> report >> that's a cattle car, and all of these jews were herded in and taken away. it's a circle of death. >> reporter: weaving her story of persecution and perseverance, holocaust survivor trudie strobel hand stitched her dark memories. >> he tore my doll away from me, and as you can see my mother, she was so afraid. and she says, don't cry, trudy, don't cry. >> reporter: trudy was just 4 when a nazi stole her precious doll. it was a gift from her father, basilia laboon, who was taken away for the crime of being jewish. >> it is incredible to even verbalize all of this abuse that
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was given to us. i was just fearful, always fear. and the most fear i had that they would take me away from my mama. ♪ >> reporter: trudy and mother masha were packed into a cattle car in russia. [ speaking in a global language ] >> that's all you heard. "dirty jew". >> reporter: for more than 6 hung miles, they walked and then rode to a labor camp in poland. >> i imagine the suffering along that walk and seeing people who, if they couldn't make it, they would be shot. >> yeah. there were people falling down. they couldn't move anymore. they couldn't walk anymore. i somehow still feel like i carry all of us on my shoulders. >> reporter: trudy began sewing tapestries in midlife when the horrors she witnessed came flooding back. unable to eat or speak, she chose a needle and thread to express what was in her mind.
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a lifesaving skill she learned while quietly crouched at her mother's side. masha was a seamstress forced to sew clothes for the nazi regime. >> the bodies are ready to be burned. there was no respect because the jew was something to trample on, you see. just like a cockroach. >> reporter: the sewing became healing as trudy slowly stitched her life back together while honori honoring jewish history. >> i'm just amazed at the detail, the faces, albert einstein, sigmund freud. >> i didn't know i could do faces, dearest. >> you can do it. >> reporter: she only shared her works with family and close friends, but that changed eight years ago when she met jody savin and her daughter, maya. >> the walls, the floors, everything is filled with these enormous tapestries, beautiful
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and historic. but the most shocking ones are testimonies of what she went through in the camps. >> reporter: as part of her bat mitzvah studies, maya asked to meet a holocaust survivor. savin, an author and filmmaker, and her daughter were in awe of her art and powerful story of survival. >> for me looking at trudy's art, it feels like she is holding up a lens to her life. it was like this completely eye-opening experience, this like visceral holocaust education, genocide education that i'd never had before. >> trudy was allowed to stay by her mother's side, which is very unusual because she learned at a very young age to be silent and invisible. >> oh, yes. i never said a word. oh, no. >> reporter: maya formed a friendship with trudy, convincing her that her work needed to be shown and even found the first sponsor to put the tapestries on display. trudy has since traveled the country sharing her story.
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>> an american soldier comes to the door. "you're free." and my mama said, trudelah, we're going to america. >> reporter: that moment of arriving in new york harbor is forever etched into her memory. >> the captain said, statue of liberty. oh, you cannot imagine. peopling crying, we were all so happy. >> reporter: in 1951, trudy and her mother settled in chicago and began a new life. >> i was 13. i went to a restaurant kitchen and immediately got work. i had to mop the floors, and i had to peel potatoes. i think of that time. i'm still the best potato peeler there is. >> reporter: at 18, she married hans strobel and raised two sons. when i visited her home, i was surprised to see even family photos were intricate
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tapestries. >> that is my husband and i. i made myself too pretty. >> you look beautiful. you do look like that. >> reporter: savin recently wrote trudy's biography and is working on a documentary to preserve her story for future generations. >> how are you not angry? how are you not bitter? >> we cannot keep hatred because then we stay hateful all the time. and if we all do this on earth, you know we would never have a war. we'd all get
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the surviving veterans of world war ii are all about 100 years old or older. the v.a. says about 100 pass away each day. some who stormed the beaches of normandy 80 years ago still have a story to tell. here's tony dokoupil. >> we landed, and we had to
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crawl on the beach really. i looked over, and there's this g.i. he was sitting on his helmet, and he was holding his guts. i'll never forget it. >> wow. >> and he kept saying, oh, i'm going home. i'm going home. i'm going home. >> and your experience is multiplied by thousands of soldiers. >> all on the beach as far as the eye can see. and a lot of talking, screaming, medics. "mom, dad, jesus christ." some say, why am i here? why am i here? >> most of the soldiers here did survive, did go home, but the 9,000 in the american cemetery in normandy did not. >> yes. >> and you were there to help start that cemetery. >> the guys were picking up the bodies, putting them on this jeep or whatever it was. and the priest says, you lay my boys flat. you don't put them on top of one
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another. >> what do you hope people remember? >> what war brings. nothing but misery. nothing but misery. >> do you feel like the world has learned its lesson? >> no way. too much conflict between people, different cultures, different whatnot. i can't predict the future, but i won't be here. >> and we end this half hour with the words of president franklin d. roosevelt, who addressed the nation that fateful day from the white house. >> my fellow americans, i ask you to join with me in prayer. lead us to the saving of our country, and with our sister nations into a world unity that will spell a sure peace, a peace that will let all men live in
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freedom, reaping the just rewards of their honest toil. thy will be done, almighty god. amen. ♪ ♪ hello and thanks so much for watching. i'm shanelle kaul in new york, and here are some of the stories
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we're tracking on "cbs news roundup." in hunter biden's federal trial, the jury hears from the widow of hunter's brother about their drug use and the handgun at the center of this case. solemn commemorations in normandy, france, on the 80th anniversary of the d-day invasion. and donald trump is back on the campaign trail for the first time since his hush money convictions. president biden's own daughter-in-law, hallie biden, described to jurors on thursday in hunter biden's federal gun trial the moment she discovered his revolver. cbs's scott macfarlane was inside the courtroom as she revealed what she did with that gun after finding it. >> reporter: a star witness and a potentially pivotal piece of video evidence at the trial of president biden's son, hunter. hallie biden, the widow of hunter's brother, beau, testified this surveillance video shows her throwing away her brother-in-law's gun in a delaware grocery store parking lot on october 23rd, 2018, just 11 days after hunter biden
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bought the gun and just after hallie biden said she found it in hunter biden's car along with drug residue and drug paraphernalia. hallie testified, "i didn't want him to hurt himself or the kids to find it and hurt themselves. i was panicking." prosecutors are trying to prove hunter biden was addicted or using drugs at the time he bought the gun, lying on this federal gun application. >> prosecutors will tell you the physical evidence doesn't lie, and this is about as powerful physical evidence as you can get linking his possession of that gun to his use of illegal drugs. >> reporter: hallie biden also described taking up a romantic relationship with her brother-in-law about a year after her late husband, beau biden's 2015 death, telling the jury it was also hunter biden who introduced her to using crack cocaine, calling her drug use a terrible experience. "i'm embarrassed and ashamed." prosecutors showed hallie biden the gun and images of the satchel in which she found and discarded it. but hunter biden's attorney, abbe lowell, tried to show
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hallie biden didn't actually know what hunter was doing the week he bought the gun. "you don't know if he was drinking, using, or either of the above?" lowell asked. "i don't know," she responded. hunter biden faces the prospect of a prison term if convicted of these three federal charges. in an interview earlier today, president biden ruled out a future pardon for his son. scott macfarlane, cbs news, wilmington, delaware. president biden is in france where he took part in ceremonies for the 80th anniversary of the d-day landings. overshadowing those events, russia's war in ukraine. and because of that, russia was the only ally nation not invited. during a speech, biden warned that democracy is now more at risk than at any point since world war ii. cbs's elaine cobbe is in normandy with more. >> reporter: president biden and the first lady bowed their heads in front of a wreath at the american cemetery overlooking omaha beach, where more than 9,000 u.s. soldiers are buried.
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earlier, he was joined by french president emmanuel macron, who bestowed the legion of honor, france's highest award, on 11 u.s. world war ii veterans. >> in memory of those who fought here, died here, literally saved the world here, let us be worthy of their sacrifice. >> reporter: the president marks the 80 years since the d-day invasion by saying the u.s. and its allies will not walk away from ukraine as it continues to defend itself against russia. >> we're living in a time when democracy is more at risk across the world than at any point since the end of world war ii, since these beaches were stormed. >> reporter: before the ceremony, the president met with some of the men who survived world war ii. all of them pushing 100 years old or even older. onofri zicari from syracuse, new york, was 21 years old when he landed here. >> we landed, and we had to
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crawl on the beach really. i looked over, and there was this g.i. he was sitting on his helmet, and he was holding his guts. the war brings nothing but misery, nothing but misery. >> reporter: with each passing year, fewer and fewer veterans remain to tell the world what happened that day. elaine cobbe, cbs news, normandy, france. one of donald trump's most outspoken allies, steve bannon, was ordered by a federal judge to report to prison by july 1st to serve a four-month sentence. bannon was found to be in contempt of congress in 2022 after failing to cooperate with the house january 6th committee. bannon says he'll fight to appeal his conviction all the way to the supreme court. and bannon's former boss, donald trump, appeared in the battleground state of arizona, firing up supporters at his first campaign event since he was convicted on 34 felony counts in the hush money case. cbs's caitlin huey-burns was there. >> reporter: donald trump took
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aim at immigration in the battleground border state key to his chances of winning the presidency. >> joe biden wants an invasion. i want a deportation. >> reporter: cbs news polling shows trump leading biden here with immigration among the top issues of concern. >> they assume that because we're immigrants, we are for criminality and for open borders. no. we have families. we believe in, you know, in america, in a safe border. >> reporter: just this week, state republicans approved a november ballot measure that would allow local police to arrest undocumented migrants crossing the border, a measure aimed at driving voter turnout. >> my workforce is largely an immigrant workforce, and they're not criminals. >> reporter: citrus farmer selwyn justice says he's worried that policy could hurt business. >> somebody might just show up and come into your -- come into your place of business and tell everybody they need to stop working and demonstrate documentation.
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>> reporter: trump lost arizona by about 10,000 votes four years ago, and it has been ground zero for false claims about the election. just last month, trump was named an unindicted co-conspirator in an election interference case where several of his allies were charged. and as for his own conviction, trump this week pledged retribution. >> when this election is over, based on what they've done, i would have every right to go after them. >> reporter: and the race to be trump's running mate is also heating up. several contenders have officially received formal vetting documents, and some of the top prospects include north dakota governor doug burgum along with senators tim scott, marco rubio, and j.d. vance, who was traveling with trump today. caitlin huey-burns, cbs news, phoenix. israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu says he will personally make the case to congress defending his nation's ongoing war against hamas. netanyahu was invited to address
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the joint session on july 24th. both republican and democratic leaders say it was a bipartisan invitation. prosecutors say the man charged in the gilgo beach serial killings on long island, new york, kept a detailed instruction book to document his crimes. rex heuermann appeared in court on thursday charged with killing two more women for a total of six suspected murders. don't go away. there's plenty more just ahead on "cbs news roundup" after the break.
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♪ thanks for joining "cbs news roundup." i'm shanelle kaul in new york. celebrations continue in france marking the 80th anniversary of the d-day invasion. president biden and other world
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leaders will attend a military parade and take part in a state dinner, all to honor those who made the ultimate sacrifice to free europe from the grip of nazi germany. d-day is described as the beginning of the end of world war ii, but much fighting still needed to be done. in the weeks after, america poured more than 2 million troops into france. that includes a first of its kind, top-secret unit designed not to fight the germans, but to fool them. tony dokoupil explains. >> the german war machine strikes again. >> reporter: after d-day, german spy planes tracked america's every movement across france, plotting counterstrikes they hoped would stop the allied advance. >> planes plus tanks plus infantry. >> reporter: but some of those american tanks spotted from the air were actually 93-pound inflatable dummies. >> did you ever see a tank walking? >> reporter: part of a special
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battalion of fake everything, including phony sound effects played on mobile loudspeakers that made it seem like american troops were on the move. >> what was the mission of the ghost army? >> the mission of the ghost army was to drive the germans crazy. >> reporter: seymour nussenbaum is one of the unit's last surviving members, recruited like many others directly out of art school in new york city. >> nice jeep. >> yeah, that was a real one. >> i appreciate that clarification. >> reporter: in france, he set up fake jeeps, tanks, and planes, never sure the ruse would work. >> but we had some incidents where we blew up a tank, and it started losing air, and the big cannons started to go like this. >> so you were exposed? >> well, they didn't see us because it was at night. but if they would have, that would have been the end of us.
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>> reporter: of course, by drawing the enemy's attention, they were basically asking to be shot at, and they often were. at the national world war ii museum in new orleans, curator chase tomlin showed us evidence of those german attacks. >> so this is a piece of shrapnel saved by one of the ghost army veterans. and for me, it just is a symbol of the fact that these guys are near the front lines enough that enemy artillery is going off around them. flying pieces of potentially fatal metal are whizzing by your head. >> reporter: what that shrapnel also proves, of course, is that this war of deception worked. >> so the ghost army, the fake tanks, the fake equipment is going this way. >> right. >> meanwhile, the real stuff is going like this. >> that's pretty much it, yep. >> reporter: with only about 1,100 men, tomlin says, the ghost army could simulate the presence of 30,000, and the military now estimates the lives of up to 30,000 real-life american soldiers were saved by those diversions. >> when you think about the
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courage involved here, it's almost like you've got a fake gun in your shirt, you know, but it's actually your finger. >> yep. >> and at any moment, someone could realize it's only his finger. >> that's one of the takeaways here is, you know, you're knowingly putting yourself in danger. you're intentionally drawing enemy artillery fire. it's dangerous. it's dangerous work, and a lot of them just kind of dealt with it, said "this is what we're here for." >> reporter: for seymour nussenbaum, those dangers were obvious the moment he landed on omaha beach about two weeks after d-day. >> what did the beach look like? >> well, it was kind of bedlam. it was all messed up. there were still bodies floating in the bay. >> wow. >> reporter: his work would remain a military secret for another half century. >> when people asked you what did you do in the military, what did you tell them? >> i blew up tanks, and they let it go at that. >> reporter: but the ghost army
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was never forgotten. and now the national world war ii museum has a traveling exhibit displaying some of the inflatables that fooled the germans. >> mr. seymour nussenbaum. [ applause ] >> reporter: plus, earlier this year, the remaining veterans of the ghost army received one of america's highest honors, the congressional gold medal. >> look, the guys in the back are holding the tank. >> you know, it's like a symbol for the ghost army now. >> reporter: on this 80th anniversary of d-day, at 101 years old now himself, seymour nussenbaum has earned both clarity and perspective on his unit's success. >> why do you think it worked? >> because we were good. but, you know, that's not the most important thing that happened to me in my life.
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>> what was the most important thing that happened to you in your life? >> meeting my wife, having children, grandchildren, having a good career. what else? >> that was tony dokoupil in france. france. you' “the darkness of bipolar depression made me feel like i was losing interest in the things i love. then i found a chance to let in the lyte.” discover caplyta. unlike some medicines that only treat bipolar i, caplyta is proven to deliver significant symptom relief from both bipolar i & ii depression. and in clinical trials, movement disorders and weight gain were not common. caplyta can cause serious side effects. call your doctor about sudden mood changes, behaviors, or suicidal thoughts right away. anti-depressants may increase these risks in young adults. elderly dementia patients have increased risk of death or stroke. caplyta is not approved for dementia-related psychosis. report fever, confusion, or stiff muscles, which may be life threatening, or uncontrolled muscle movements which may be permanent. common side effects include sleepiness, dizziness, nausea, and dry mouth. these aren't all the side effects.
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about a small chair, but it's got a big impact. the kind of chair that gives mobility -- >> faster. >> reporter: -- to children with disabilities. meet jackson. he's a 4-year-old boy from covington, louisiana. he has dystonia. it's a condition that affects his muscles. and he has a developmental delay. he doesn't walk or speak. >> when they offered you this wheelchair, was he mobile at all at that time? >> uh-uh. >> reporter: elizabeth and brian are jackson's parents. they say after eight months in that chair, jackson has been able to sit up on his own, and now he's moving around independently and has been the bridge from not walking to now using a walker. >> okay. so give us the report card. how would you grade it? >> it's an a-plus. it's helped his development. >> reporter: now meet the man at the front of this creation, noam platt. he's an architect in new orleans who heads up an organization
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called makegood. they focus on assistive technology, the kinds of devices people can't find in the commercial workplace or can't afford. platt came across the design for the chair on an israeli website that lists open-source information for developers like him. >> we can go beyond what's commercially available. we can really create almost anything. >> reporter: but what he's created has turned out to be way more than noam platt ever imagined when i first met him in new orleans. >> i didn't quite expect the magnitude of outpouring after the story. >> reporter: and that's where viewers like you come in. since our story aired, more than $40,000 in donations rolled in. and, of course, platt knew immediately what he wanted to roll out because he had also heard from nearly 60 families who saw jackson's joy in our report and wanted to see it on their kids' faces. plus, something even more priceless happened.
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volunteers who saw the story said they wanted to help build these life-changing chairs. so platt put some to work. and with his team at tulane university, they built all these chairs, about 25, in just the last five months. look at little ellie's elation. the smile on theo's face. >> you can do it! come on! >> reporter: and just imagine what little mckenna might be thinking. >> each of those chairs, they cost $200 to make. we're actually working on bringing that price down to about $50. >> reporter: and by this point in the update, you can't be surprised that platt didn't stop there. when an injury prevented seth from playing guitar with his dad, platt pulled a few strings and created this custom guitar pick. and this innovation put the drums within reach for cole, who has cerebral palsy and really wanted to play like his favorite band, the foo fighters.
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>> the work we're doing is not only extremely important, it's very inspiring to people. it shows them they actually have the power to change their environments, to provide more independence for themselves, and to really effect change in their communities for a relatively modest amount of work. >> always nice to see good news from the files of david begnaud. from the files of david begnaud. "cbs news roundup" will be right this delectable knorr ramen noodle recipe will put an end to your drive-thru dinner rituals. throw that knorr bouillon in that tasty combo of delightful carrots and the rich touch of bok choy. make your own knorr taste combo. it's not fast food, but it's so good. sfx: [birds chirping] for nourished, lightweight hair, the right ingredients make all the difference. new herbal essences sulfate free is now packed with plant-based ingredients your hair will love. like pure aloe. and camellia flower oil. and none of the things it won't. hair feels deeply nourished, soft and lightweight.
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the effort to go green has a growing number of people taking to the woods and fields, foraging for edible fruits and plants. but how do you know what's safe to eat? well, in england, there's a class for that. ian lee has more. >> so we need to be able to recognize the difference between the edible one and the deadly one. >> reporter: that's just one of the important lessons to learn when foraging for food. >> pick the leaves that look nice. >> reporter: at this overgrown cemetery in east london, manager kenneth greenway teaches city slickers to hunt for herbs. >> they want to learn more. so they want to learn how to identify plants more comfortably. they want to learn recipe ideas. >> reporter: greenway started the courses after noticing more folks getting out during the pandemic. >> there are a lot more people spending time in parks, thinking about plants, wondering what they can do with them, and it's created an interest in foraging. >> reporter: he identifies wild garlic, rocket, and even stinging nettle. >> then you can add a neutral oil so it looks kind of like nutella, and then sugar to
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taste. >> reporter: which then can be thrown into anything from a springtime salad to toppings on a pizza. >> isn't it gorgeous? >> it's so cool. >> reporter: maddy page brought her mom as a mother's day gift. >> he's told us all about where we can find things and how to eat it safely because that's what i was mainly worried about, wasn't it? i was actually terrified before i came and now i feel much happier. >> reporter: cemeteries provide a place where nature can run wild in an urban setting with edible plants popping up among the gravestones. >> it makes you feel you're really part of nature and you can use nature, but wisely. >> reporter: learning to live off the land amid a concret jungle.
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teacher: trevor? teacher: not quite? plasma. teacher: lights please. teacher: now, states of matter are comprised of relationships between molecules. teacher: molecules' relationships... nicotine's a neurotoxin that can escalate teen anxiety. teacher: saved by the bell! ♪ (ominous music) ♪ what's a dollar worth these days? steve hartman found one answer "on the road." >> reporter: inside buckfeather, an outdoor sporting store in baton rouge, louisiana, we met a great american success story. >> because it's about you.
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>> reporter: at 42, owner matt and his partners have built and sold several outdoor companies worth hundreds of millions. but matt says he's never felt richer than he did the day he got the dollar. >> i haven't had that much faith in humanity in a very long time. >> reporter: he says it all began about a month ago. it was early morning, and the fire alarm was going off inside his condo complex. so matt shot out of bed and raced down the stairs, only to discover there was no fire. but he's awake now. so even though he was wearing mismatched clothes and all disheveled, matt decided to go out for a cup of coffee. and as he was about to enter the shop, he remembered he hadn't done his morning prayer. so as the security camera shows, matt stepped to the corner of the patio. >> and i start to slowly open my eyes, and there's a kid coming at me about my height.
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>> reporter: and with his fist clenched. so matt prepared for battle. >> and he goes -- and reveals a dollar bill. and i go, what? >> if you're homeless, here's a dollar. >> reporter: this is 9-year-old kelvin ellis jr. >> i always wanted to help a homeless person, and i finally had the opportunity. >> reporter: kelvin says he had just gotten the dollar for good grades. it was the only money he had to his name. matt was so touched, he invited kelvin in for a snack, connected with the boy's father, who was next door, and promised to stay in touch. >> what's up, dude? >> reporter: as a reward for his kindness, matt gave kelvin a shopping spree. 40 seconds to pick out whatever he wanted in the store, including a new bike. kelvin says it was great but definitely not what he wanted to get for his dollar. >> what were you hoping would come from that? >> joy. >> joy?
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>> because i helped someone. giving something away, you feel like you've gotten a lot of things from it. >> if you give, you're actually going to get more out of that. i couldn't grasp that as a kid. and if we can spread that around, everything changes. >> reporter: a dollar so well spent. >> cheers to friends forever. >> reporter: steve hartman, on the road. >> amen. >> reporter: in baton rouge, louisiana. and that's today's "cbs news roundup." reporting from new york city, i'm shanelle kaul. it's friday, june 7th, 2024. this is "cbs news mornings." contrasting messages. president biden touts american heroism while warning about the threats to democracy, while his republican rival, donald trump, returns to the campaign trail for the first time as a convicted felon.

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