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guilt visit guilt.com today for up to 70% off designer brands, it house the designers like your heart racing thing. i'd inside a prices new every day, hurry. there'll be gone in a flash designer sales that up to 70% or so of guilt.com today welcome to all you watching us here in the united states, canada, and all around the world in kim bruin hoover at this is cnn newsroom, college commencement it's this weekend are taking place at many american universities in the wake of anti-war protests. >> will look at preparations as well as the debate over where exactly first amendment meant protection ends. plus hope hicks, longtime aide to donald trump, takes the stand in his hush money trial. here, how she describes the trump white house response when the store for his first emerged and a remarkable discovery about an orangutan using medical plants out there in the wild. i'll speak to the lead author of this new report about what we're you learn from it live fromage landsat.
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this is cnn newsroom with kin group after weeks of escalating protests across the us over the war in gaza, with police going onto campuses to make mass arrests and rip apart encampments universities are ramping up security measures as they prepare for graduation ceremonies. many beginning this weekend a small group of pro-palestinian protesters stage to walk out during graduation ceremonies at the university of utah on thursday. otherwise, commencement for the nearly 9,000 graduates appeared to go off without a hitch. the university of southern california announced it will hold a family graduate celebration on may 9, more than a week since canceling the main in graduation ceremony over safety concerns columbia university has been the epicenter of the protests and its president says, the past two weeks have been among the most difficult periods in the school's history. in a new video message to students on friday, she condemned some of the protestors for going too
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far. here she is university made a sincere and good offer, but it was not accepted a group of protesters crossed a new line with the occupation of hamilton hall it was a violent act that put our students at risk the white house is again responding to the college protests education secretary miguel cardona sent a letter to college and university presence on friday condemning quote, of horned incidents of antisemitism on campus. >> you also pointed to several federal resources that could help ease the tension. jen solvent takes a closer look at one universities are doing to prepare for graduation, how it's impacting students and faculty across the country college graduation ceremonies beginning this weekend, days of unrest and escalating confrontations over the israel-hamas war in gaza. >> the university of south florida hosting their commencement ceremonies with heightened security days ahead
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of graduation, police seen here throwing would appear to be tear gas. >> you haven't given a lawful order to disperse in a resting pro-palestinian protesters, who authorities say unlawfully created an encampment on campus. >> some students are outraged by the police's actions. >> they unleashed hundreds of riot police on us to incapacitate us with chemicals, toklas to the ground, indiana university also holding graduate creation this weekend, the important personal milestone reached against the backdrop of police barricades guests entering through metal detectors. >> one staff member says, she's boycotting the ceremony that i've decided that i'm not going to walk and graduation. i can't do ohio state university hosting graduations sunday, many students glad to see their ceremonies continuing as planned. >> the students should be the priority out in a university columbia university in new york, the epicenter of the pro-palestinian movement on college campuses, the new york police department will be patrolling campus there were at
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least may 17 days after their graduation ceremonies apologies, like university of southern california though, had canceled its main graduation altogether it's a repeat of canceled ceremonies for the class of 2024 high school graduations were likely canceled in 2020 due to covid on gen. sullivan reporting in the the first amendment grants the right to free speech and peaceful assembly. but colleges are struggling on how to balance those rights with the need to protect students and property. there's no issue when protests are calm and students they're just chanting slogans or waving signs. but things get murkier when violence breaks out and campaigns are built, and students occupied buildings, especially on private property. us president joe biden spoke out thursday about finding the right balance between free speech and law and order. curious this isn't a moment for politics smaller for clarity. so let me be clear peaceful protest in america violent
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protest is not protected. peaceful protest is it's against the law when violence occurs and joining us now is dr. jack hansen lecture in american history at the university of roe hampton, london. thank you so much for being here with us. so for a free-speech, absolutist, the constitution, i mean, it seems pretty clear will, will bring up the graphic here. of course, just highlight parts of it there, there should be no law abridging seeing the freedom of speech or the right of the people peaceably to assemble. >> so that balance that the president just talked about. >> it's been so elusive, i guess in this situation because the the legal precedents seemed to create a bit of a whiplash going back and forth here, right? >> yes. thank you for having me. i think we would probably all benefit from that. been really clear. lines here. but the situation is that is a little bit more complicated so public universities obviously
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are bound by the first amendment and it's protections, but private institutions such as columbia are not when it comes to protecting free speech. the first amendment is very clear that it protects all speech no matter how grotesque are offensive are inaccurate be protection for the freedom of assembly does have that caveat that this assembly needs to be peaceful but this creates a subjective judgment so my idea of what constitutes a peaceful assembly might differ to yours, which might defer to a police officer, which might defer to a university administrator. so the lack of clarity comes from the fact that the lord means that people have to make the subjective judgment of what counts as peaceful on as you hinted that there be caselaw on student's speech has swung around a bit like an ideological pendulum as the car has changed over the decades. >> yeah, that's exactly right. and the notion of time, place,
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and manner is important, which makes encampment's especially we problematic, i guess, right yes the idea of whether a set in, for example, counts as a peaceful protest. >> many people would say that it does, but then when it starts to disrupt the normal functioning of an institution or appear intimidated to others many people would say that crosses the line. but then that creates the second question of what is the appropriate response if that line is crossed yeah. >> and then when it comes to there have been accusations of anti-semitic. chance and so on, so forth. you said that free speeches is guaranteed no matter how heinous, but there's also that notion of if it might incite violence, for instance, and you've given some examples of precedence, which kind of create even more confusion, right yes. >> so free speech we've got to remember private institutions
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aren't held to the same standard, has publicly funded ones. but there's case law that shows us that for free speech, as absolute, for example, a george mason university in the 1990s lost a case where that's after it, a discipline students for taking part in blackface that i've event that was considered protected expression under the first amendment menchu doesn't matter how offensive or grow it is. but then it seemed to incite violence than that is a different question again, yeah. >> now, speaking of violence, the police in several jurisdictions have been accused of heavy-handed tactics against the protesters, but it's worth noting that 50, 40 years ago, i think today in fact, national guardsmen shot and killed four students at an anti-war protest at kent state university. now thankfully, we haven't seen anything remotely like that during these protests so things have changed for the better though, maybe not have gone far
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enough yes. >> i think we are watching it that where we are right now, we haven't seen an incident like candidate and i think nobody wants to see that. but i think we could be somewhat close to something like that happening. we know that a police officer discharge their firearm at columbia. we should say that the why pd said it's occurred accident accidentally but if somebody had been struck by that bullet, regardless of it being discharged, accidentally, we could have been in a really such serious situation so as we see, colleges continue to call in the place where it needs to be a conscious first to avoid a situation like can stay from happening again because there is nothing that will ensure that that could not happen again. >> we're talking about the police response there, but it's one thing to let's say, break up protests and encampments. but then the punishment is another there
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doesn't seem to be any consistency. there for either some students are charged, some not some will face academic sanction, maybe get expelled without any clear set of rules. so students may not know precisely what risk exactly they're taking yes, i think that is another big issue, especially if we could look at this and said universities and fast in their disciplinary policies but essentially having the police to come in and do that the police should be enforcing the law, but not the university's on rules and regulations then, like you said, a thing for what many protesters would probably want is consistency and how these rules and how the law is applied. >> whereas it already seems to be that they're very different outcomes for different students at different universities, which questions the fairness of the process? >> yeah, exactly. it leaves administrators, students, everybody in a tough spot here. a lot of confusion around this will have to leave it there,
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but really appreciate your analysis, dr. jack hudson. thank you so much. >> thank you all eyes are on cairo right now for talks that could see hostages released and a ceasefire in gaza if things go well, william burns, the director of the cia, is already in the egyptian capital and negotiators for hamas expected to arrive later today. >> in fact, i think they have arrived. hamas said, it's sending its delegation with what they described as, quote, a positive spirit and israeli source tells cnn that mediators are speaking optimistically about the possibility of reaching a deal but that same-store says, there's no sign that the group has changed its extreme positions and it's really officials have briefed the white house about evacuating civilians from rafat. that's according to two sources familiar with the talks. israel says its going ahead with plans for the ground offensive despite ceasefire and hostage talks, israel also briefed humanity terrion aid groups about evacuation plans
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according to a source familiar with the matter, more than 1 million people have taken shelter in rafah. senior white house official tells cnn that israel is setting up tents in southern gaza away from raffa as temporary shelters for civilians. but that official says, there aren't enough tense for the number of people who are in rafah meanwhile, the un warns ground offensive could lead to a slaughter of civilians the hundreds of thousands of people who are there are would be at imminent risk of death if there is an assault. >> so we are looking at if this happens both a what the emergency relief coordinator has warned about could be a slaughter of civilians, but also at the same time incredible blow to the humanitarian operation in the entire strip daily life for some parents and volunteers in
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gaza as a constant effort to protect children from the cruel violence of this conflict. >> cnn's paula hancocks has our report. we just want to warn you. it does contain graphics images that may be disturbing grandmother kisses her young grandchildren this small bodies chat, just one body bag four-year-old kareem and his two year-old sister, mona, were killed on tuesday by an israeli airstrike there it says they are innocent. the baby's went to bed last night and never woke up. our hearts are broken forever. the doctors tried to save mona, but could not. the children's parents were seriously injured in the same strike but raffa was not home for these children the grandmother says the family were displaced more so pull times by the israeli military, ending up in a tent on the southern border alongside hundreds of thousands of others who have nowhere else to go speaking of the israeli
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military, she says, this is all they want. this is their goal. >> the idf referred to a previous statement when asked about this strike saying they are operating to dismantle hamas, adding quote, remaining in an active combat zone has inherent risks but despite months of threatening a major ground offensive and refer the military has not told civilians to evacuate for many here, there is no other option at the start of this week and raffa 22 people were killed in an israeli airstrike including at least one infant and a toddler. i definitely a one-year-old, killed is carried in that uncle's army he says, this is who they are targeting. >> this is the safe raffa. they talk about it is the area the israeli military has pushed civilians towards for months. an area well over 1 million palestinians are best police surviving in food, water, shelter are scarce. >> diseases rising but amid such misery, some adults are
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trying to remind children of their pre bvs life just seven months ago where they could play and learn safely this volunteer teacher says the children's mental state is distressed. they have no stability. they're distracted and they lose focus. so we work twice as hard to try and grab their attention and help them learn ahmed says he's happy he can play and study here. he says, we lost our schools. we lost everything attend school may not see much but even this pretense of normality for these children will be lost if they're forced to move. yet again, paula hancocks, cnn epidemic after the break, emotional testimony from a close four more aid to donald trump, hope hicks, on the stand on day 11 of trump's hush money trial, plus a weaker-than-expected jobs report and rising unemployment
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why investors are cheering the latest economic data. and we'll explain that next. and heavy rain it has millions under flood watches here in the what the latest on what's ahead ongoing flooding across parts of south texas and more rainfall on the way. forecast right after this sometimes the lows of bipolar depression feel darkest before dawn with cap later, there's a chance to let in the light kept lighter is proven to deliver significant relief across bipolar depression unlike san mega since the only treat bipolar one gets lighter treats both bipolar one and t2 depression. >> and in clinical trials, movement disorders in weight gain. we're not common, call your doctor about i'd sudden mood changes. >> behaviors, or suicidal thoughts, antidepressants be increased these risks and young adults, elderly dementia patients have increased risk of death or stroke, report fever confusion, stiff, or uncontrollable muscle movements which may be life-threatening or permanent. these aren't all the serious side effects kept can help you let in the light,
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of protein hope hicks, one of donald trump's closest aides was the star witness friday in the former president's hush money trial, as cnn's paula reid reports, hicks was noticeably uncomfortable at times hope hicks, one of trump's former closest advisers, took the stand and the new york hush money trial. i'm really nervous. she revealed to the court, as she began her testimony, she did have some warm words for her former boss praising his ability to message. he deserves the credit for the different messages that the campaign focused on. in terms of the agenda that he put forth. but she never looked at him during most of her testimony instead, focusing directly on the lawyers asking her questions. she testified at length about the impact of the access hollywood tape on the 2016
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trump campaign and how it was a crisis she was the first person in the campaign to learn of the tape what she was contacted by a reporter. i was concerned she said she also witnessed trump's reaction to the story. asked if he was upset. she said, yes. yeah, he was. she also told the jury about conversations she had with former trump fixer michael cohen and trump when reports of karen mcdougal and stormy daniel's first surfaced in early november 2016, saying trump wanted to make sure that there was a denial of any kind of relationship in a significant moment for prosecutors guild, trump communicated directly to her about the payment to daniels. i only know about one instance, sometime in the middle of february, mr. trump told me about it and trump was relieved that the story did not come out before the election. it was mr. trump's opinion that it was better to be dealing with it now and that it would have been bad at to have had that story
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come out before the election, hicks appeared nervous throughout her appearance on the stand and after that key exchange as defense attorneys were starting their cross-examination, hicks broke down in tears. sorry about that. she said as she returned to the stand and when trump's attorneys have the chance to question in her, they got her to confirm that he was worried about his wife, melania is reaction to some of the stories president trump read values mrs. trump's opinion and she doesn't weigh in all the time. but when she does, it's really meaningful to him now the big question is who will take the stand on monday next week is actually the first full four day week of court that we've had since this trial got underway. but prosecutors are keeping a tightlipped on who they plan to call next. at when they plan to call the man at the center of this alleged conspiracy, michael cohen, paula reid, cnn, new york and cnn's special coverage of the trump hush money trial resumes
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on monday at 9:00 a.m. in new york fets two in the afternoon in london more than 11 million people are still under flood watches this weekend after days of torrential rain, southeast texas will get a break today, but heavy rain moves into other parts of the state and there's a possible snowstorm, having two mountains out west. cnn's chad myers has the latest give me i were talking about southern texas really not that far north of houston. and this is what it looks like here. water everywhere, rivers out of their banks. in fact, 12 spots in major flood stage and more to come because the water is still going up. well, in fact, it's still raining, but look at the things here. we've seen the past five days, purple that's between ten and 15 inches of rain in the past month or so more than two feet in that many locations, they're more rainfall coming down right now, mainly in the hill country for tonight and into tomorrow. but still very heavy rainfall even at this hour. and then another batch of rainfall comes
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through even across is 30 five cross austin, san antonio, and then the hill country back here in the red. that's where the heaviest rainfall will likely be taking a look at a little bit farther west than that well, talking about tornadoes on thursday big time tornadoes in the sky on the ground, storm chasers catching amazing picture, although there were some injuries certainly when you see the debris like that, you know that that is something that humans put there that got hit 216 tornado reports over the past few days. so a very busy beginning of may and end of april, more severe weather for today, especially west texas again, same places that have seen most of the tornadoes and they're fairly easy to spot because they're kind of all out there in fairly dry air compared to the air and mississippi when you get a 20 mississippi, you just can't see it. it's wrapped and rain. well, the ones out there in west texas, western oklahoma, kansas, you can see them a little bit. they're called low precipitations or at least
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lower precipitation tornadoes back out here, we're seeing some rain and snow for california. i know we're talking that it's spring in the plains, but it is not spring here. there's gonna be a one to two feet, even the higher elevations will pick up three feet of snow in the sierra on top of the snowpack that we had already this year and look at the temperatures for today. portland oldie, 52, 54 for seattle, where clearly it is spring in the east big trough of low pressure in the west, keeping it cold and spots rainy and even snowy kim earliest jobs report shows the us may be cooling off the bureau of labor statistics as employers added 175,000 jobs in april, that's considerably lower than what analysts expected. and a sharp drop from the more than 300,000 jobs gained in march unemployment also ticked up to 3.9%. president biden countered the figures as a win touting the 15 million jobs created during his watch in the record, 27 months of sub-4 percent
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unemployment rate. but he said there is more work to do in vowed to keep fighting for the middle-class us stocks soared in response to the softer than expected jobs report, the dow and the s&p 500 each rose more than 1% and the nasdaq gained 2%, leading economists say the april jobs report is in the goldilocks range, creating enough jobs to keep the labor market humming along. but slowing down enough that the federal reserve might begin cutting interest rates all right, still to come ongoing protests are overshadowing a milestone weekend for many students graduating here in the how universities are handling the unrest. next russia tries to make more gains in ukraine before kyiv gets a boost from a new batch of us military aid every weekday morning, cnn five
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run let's run are those who can't welcome back to all you watching us here in the united states, canada, and around the world, i'm kim bruin hubert. this is cnn newsroom. when i get back to one of our top stories this morning, universities across the us are ramping up security measures as they prepare for graduation ceremonies. many beginning this weekend now it comes after a pro-palestinian protests erupted on campuses in recent weeks with police making mass arrests and ripping apart encampments. us education secretary miguel cardona sent a letter to college and university presidents on friday condemning, abhorrent incidents of antisemitism on campus he also pointed to several federal resources that could help ease the tension. more than 2,100 people have been arrested on us
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college and university campuses since april 18. and that includes the university of florida, which held its graduation ceremony on friday cnn's rafael romo is there it's been a very memorable day here at the university of florida in gainesville earlier today, the colleges of business yes. >> and nursing. you had the recognition ceremonies and now we are in the middle of the university-wide commencement ceremony. >> this event, two together with others over the course of this weekend, are expected to be attended by as many as 50,000 people according to a university spokesperson at least thousand, 500 people from 86 countries, including the florida state, united states, will be graduating, but it's been a tense week. here are the probably not as much as what we we have seen in places like columbia university and ucla nine pro-palestine protesters were arrested monday evening here on campus and moved out
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that calls itself us divestment coalition. publish the list of very specific demands, including the disclosure of the university's investment portfolio last ten years and divesting from what they called funding and partnering with weapons manufacturers implicated in the war in gaza. >> they are also demanding believe that you have president ben sazzy publicly denounce when they called filings and discrimination against pro-palestinian students as well as a call for a ceasefire in gaza. in response to the students actually say university spokesperson promises statement earlier this week, saying the following this is not complicated firstly a florida is not a daycare and we did not treat protesters like children. they knew the rules, they broke the rules and they will face the concept the spokesperson also said that some of the protesters were outside agitators, but according to local media, at least seven of the nine filters service arrested monday her
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current or recent us through this, of course, has become a political issue at the state level. florida governor ron desantis, they republican issued a warning firstly, to protest. let's take a listen people tried to pitch a tent at our universities. >> they're shown the door very quickly on that. we're not putting up with it this is not new york. this is not california we're going to enforce appropriate standards of conduct and simply common during a lawn with a tent and harassing other people that does not pass, that does not fly in the state of florida. >> another us spokesperson told cnn earlier that first older fed the protesters friday but they also warned that if they break university's time, place, and manner rules students stay suspension. >> and if there's any attempt to cause a disruption at commencement or any other events. >> campus police will address it accordingly rafael romo,
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cnn, gainesville, florida at least four people were injured after a new drone attack on ukraine's second largest city. a local officials, as you crane shot down a number of russian drones in kharkiv overnight before debris crashed down and caused at least three fires. the injured reportedly include a teenager in an alien he nine year-old woman, ukraine's air force chief says russia launched 13 drones and fired for missiles overnight. russian troops have been on the move in recent weeks happening more territory than they have in nearly two years. and that's largely attributed to the absence of us military aid, which was finally approved last week. as clare sebastian reports, russia is fighting to seize all the ground. it can before that aid arrives let's clear, russia is continuing to exploit the narrowing window before ukraine gets fresh us military aid and most of the action taking place on the eastern front. >> this is a time-lapse of the
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year so far i have a data comes from ukrainian monitoring group deepstate. >> you can see over here, i've dmca swallowed up in february, but what's happened since then, even more concerning for ukraine over the past ten weeks, russia has taken more land than in any advanced since july of 2022, a cnn analysis shows now there are no major towns as of yet, but there are worrying signs up here in a tree retina, or russia now appears to have a foothold. >> this is a larger village. it's on higher ground and in the past week, ukraine's commander in chief admitting his army, he said to withdraw west of several more villages including right here in berdychi, russia, making it clear it's ramping up leopard. >> there's no friends to play there to support the necessary pace of our offensives and build up our troop composition for our further actions, we need to increase the volumes and quality of the weapons military technology supplied troops well, this is another key focus up here. >> the town of chasiv yar, just
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west of bakhmut. now for context, it's taken russia a whole year to advance from the western edge of bakhmut to the outskirts of chasiv yard. but here is why it matters. chasiv yar to sets on higher ground the red hair indicates the highest elevation, giving it a direct fireline onto critical ukrainian defensive strongholds because 17 of code down there, that is qfd up here just to the north is chroma toss, the regional capital and vital train link. so this small town potentially decisive for russia in its quest to occupy all of the donetsk region. you can see in this video just how intense the bombardment has been. cnn his geo-located this to the eastern edge of the town. and as the camera pans round, you can see some of the geography here. if we pause there canal is just here. that's a natural barrier. and here are the fortifications now. so phi ukraine says, it's holding on
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april diary to la show barolo they trying to find a weak spot where they can breach are defense. they can't do more occupies will not be able to capture chasiv yar by may 9 or may the ninth is of course, when russia celebrates victory in world war ii and ukraine is concerned, russia wants to make a strategic difference on the battlefield before that. and there are other pushes up here in the kharkiv region and then down in the southeast where ukraine was on the offensive last summer, ukraine though now, solely focused on defense and likely facing more perilous days ahead. because sebastien cnn, london noralyn, caught the attention of scientists with some unexpected behavior. so just ahead, we talked to the lead author of a style but he simeon who self treated an injury and why it's prompting comparisons with humans that's coming up, please stay with us you think, you know the story, but there's more beneath the
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now to a remarkable discovery, scientists say they observed and rantisi in indonesia intentionally treating a wound on his face with a medicinal plant now it's the first time this apparent behavior has been documented. a study in the journal, scientific reports says the animal treated a wound on his face by chewing leaves from a plant, extracting its juice, then repeatedly applying that to the wound. he then covered the wound with the chewed up leaves, which are typically used by humans in traditional medicine according to science to pick paper published on thursday, sciences say the observation provides new insights into the existence of self-medication in our closest relatives they concede it could have been accidental and are studying whether other rang attends repeat the behavior two more on this, we're joined by the study's lead author, isabelle laumer. she's a primatologist and a postdoctoral researcher at the max planck institute of animal behavior. thank you so much for
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being here with us so take me through this. i mean, how did you first spot what was going on here yes. >> so we observe wide sumatran orangutans is what verbit by limbic research sayyed, since 1994. we do daily observations of the orangutans in the area around 150 sumatran orangutan flip and we spotted rakus, a male sumatran orangutan and he had stained a facial ruined probably he got this wound from a fight with a neighboring mail all right. >> so then the idea that it was actually treating this with a plant. i mean, first of all, the type of plant it he chose, did it actually have any medicinal properties or was it just using it sort of more as a band-aid or because he liked the look of it yes. >> so he was using earlier tentorium, which is quite potent, planned. it has anti-inflammatory properties. it also is lowering fever and
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is also pain relieving. and so he was feeding on the plant first and the plant is rarely eaten. whether rang in the area and t then stopped swallowing at one point. and then repeatedly put the 2d part of plans step on top of his wound repeatedly for seven minutes, and then in the end, even put them are solid plan meta from his mouth put it on top of the wound until it was completely covered. >> and then he talked like a wound cluster i mean, what was your reaction when you realized what was going on? >> i mean, we were very excited about this observation because this observation represents the first evidence for for wound treatment with a, with a medical plant in non-human animal when you first reported
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it, there must have been plenty of skeptics who would say maybe it was a a mistake, maybe it just kinda got stuck there yeah. but we we think that this behavior was intentional so there are several science i mean, he was not just repeating it putting the plan choose ones, but he was doing so repeatedly. and then even put more solid plant matter. and this entire process to really a considerable amount of time so that's why we think that the behavior was intentional so before this, i mean, i've been aware of all sorts of animals, self-medicating in the sense that they, for instance, you know, go out and seek to eat certain types of clay to counteract the effects of poisonous plants. >> but i mean, this seems totally different. i was reading that some chimps had been seeing applying insects to their wounds, suggesting this, this type of behavior is something that has evolved in primates. i mean, all of this is reminiscent of, of dr. jane goodall discovering the chimps
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use tools, which was something that was considered to be something that only humans did this. a piece of the puzzle of how how are human ancestors developed the use of medicine. what do you think we can learn about this from ourselves, about ourselves rather? >> i mean, this, this behavior that we observed and ask the behavior of the chimpanzees that apply insects to their wounds, even though we don't know, they have medical properties in them. so we don't know that this behavior shows how similar we are to our closest relatives mean orangutans we share 97% of our dna with them. and just points towards the similarities. so we are more similar than we are different. and it's also very important to protect these species because they are close to extinction. and so well, that's exactly it because you want to confirm in these
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findings. but given that they are as you say, so, critically endangered, how tough is that challenge with the number's diminishing and they're range diminishing as well seemingly every day yeah it's very important to create more protected forest areas in which durango tense can live undisturbed. and it's this observation also shows how few we still know. i mean, we do observations since 1994 and this was the first time that the epa actually able to observe with mega like that. and so it's very important also young populations of great apes to find out more about their astonishing very human-like behaviors exactly right? >> i've been lucky enough to see gorillas and chimpanzees in the wild. and that is just the obvious it's observation when you see them, they're staring back at you is just how human they seem will have to leave it there, but really exciting to
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hear from you, dr. isabelle laumer. thank you so much. >> all right still ahead here on cnn newsroom. >> all eyes were on caitlin clark friday night with her wnba debut at the indiana fever, cnn sport's andy scholes joins me next to explain why wasn't the outcome she was hoping for stay with us make, your first move with battery power paid by steel right now, say $50 on the hsa 50 battery hedge trimmers real still fine you back their tech allergy relief works fast and lasts a full 24 hours. >> so dave can be deliver dance okay. dave let's be more than our allergies seize the de with zyrtec. >> i have active psoriatic arthritis, but with sky rosie to treat my skin and joints helped me in along with clearer
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and sandals, light comfy sandals. you never have to touch or ben down to put on the exclusive. he'll stroke guides are put into place. skechers slip and sandals all right. >> look at sports now the dallas mavericks have sent the la clippers packing from the nba playoffs. thank to some heroics from kyrie irving, jones sports, any scholz joins me, nandy, a tale of two halves for the mavericks superstar. take it. yeah, sorry. otherwise, cameo kyrie irving scoring just two points in the first half of game six against the clippers, but the sec nap was certainly a different story. the game was tied entering the third quarter, but that's when kai rages took over he scored 28 points in the second half and kyrie was just doing kyrie things in the fourth look at this crossover than a step back three, and he got fouled that had the whole crowd there and dallas going crazy mad when 114101 to win the series and six games i'll
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be honest, which always physically tired and exhausted in that first plan deepens at a high level. do that to you, but i'm just grateful for my teammates pick me up payment a house on it was 005252. so it was anybody's game and then we came out in the third quarter and i feel like we hit first and the rest was history professor game navs. >> now you paste the thunder in round two and we will have one game seven in the first round. donovan mitchell scoring 50 for the cavs and game six is cleveland tried to close out this series calves out a five-point lead entering the fourth quarter, but paolo bank qarrah, and the magic would ramp up the deepens and outscore cleveland 32, 18 in that final period, magic when one or three to 96 to force a winner-take-all game seven on sunday. caitlin clark, meanwhile, making her wnba debut for the indiana fever last nine front of the first ever sold-out crowd for the dallas wings. and clark did not disappoint her debut, just want them in and hit are first three moments later, the crossover step back three clark, may 5 threes into games. she scored
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21 points thanks the fever though, would lose their preseason over 79 to 76, but clark, happy with the start just a great atmosphere for women's basketball. >> i think it's a good check off to the wnba season. i think the way we play there's some things we could have executed a little better we could have our offense a little bit better. the pace was amazing. that's one bash shell. if you'd like to watch, but overall definitely what i expected now on the eyes, we had a nail-biter and game six between the conducts and predators and nashville scoreless for the first 58 minutes when vancouver finally breaks through pure soder putting home a great no-load pass from brock besser. >> and rookie ardor. she loves was just incredible and the net final seconds diving, stopping, what would've been the tying goal to send it to overtime, it's dead, it connects to conduct survive, and advance. one to nothing next up and all canadian matchup against the edmonton euler's around to finally get your mint juleps and fancy hats ready. it's
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derby de the 150th running of the kentucky derby is tonight fierce. this is the betting favorite right now after winning the florida derby back in march, it's trained by todd pleasure, who's won the derby twice before sierra leon. the second favorite, but it's in the number two posts to spot no horse has won the derby froms since 1978. post time tonight, cam 6507, eastern and it's always fun to just try to look get that all of the horses that are competing, pick one you like, and try to try to have some fun and get that, get a winner. two years ago, ken, i was at the derby and i wasn't picking any winners. so i decided i'm going to pick the longest of long shots to win the derby and it was written at the one odds. >> that was the phone one, listen if you don't show up to work tomorrow, i know why and he shows. thank you so much, really appreciate it oh, the queen of pop is getting ready to end her celebration world tour with a huge finale in rio janeiro. and people they're
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obviously really excited to have a look madonna's roadies completed the final touches for her free show as fans watched and cheered from the famous copacabana beach, local businesses meanwhile, are cashing in on the event solis, lots of madonna memorabilia from shirts, hats, mugs, even cone-shaped bras, which we're not showing up kinda did there it's estimated that 1.5 million people will attend the spectacle. the city estimates it could pump more than $50 million into the economy all right. and before we go, i want to wish a happy star wars date. all the jedi out there hey, lu may the force be with mark hamill, luke skywalker. you see there showed up at the white house on friday, head of star
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wars day to give president joe biden a new nickname. listen to us, why call him, mr. president he said, you can call me joe and i so can i call you joby one can ov he liked that. so that's obviously a reference to the star wars character obi-wan, kenobi. so in the spirit of the day, maybe the fourth be with you? >> all right. that wraps this. our oc and then newsroom. i'm kimberly newer for viewers in north america, cnn this morning as next the rest of the world is african voices changemakers good morrow. >> full story. in one of the world's most diverse ecosystems eigen watson confronts the stark reality of climate change are to fight for
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