lus we're live in paris where french voters prepare to decide on their next president. and marjorie taylor greene becomes the first member of congress to testify under oath about the january 6th insurrection, but it turns out she doesn't remember much about that day. russia's military now confirms its objective in ukraine is to take full control of the black seacoast and establish a land bridge between russia and crimea. ukraine's president warns if that happens russia's aggression will spread to other countries. mariupol says evacuation will attempt to get under way today. an estimated 100,000 civilians still remain in the city. and we've been telling you about ukrainian soldiers and civilians who have been holed up in mariupol's steel factory. >> translator: we all really want to return home. we want to return to our lives, to see our parents, relatives and so on. we really miss them. >> ukrainian troops in a small town outside of kyiv are being honored for halting russia's initial assault on the capital. russian shelling left extensive damage as ukraine's orthodox christians celebrate easter this weekend. ukraine's president says he was hopeful about prevailing against russia. >> translator: the 58th day of our defense is coming to an end. it ends on good friday, one of the most sorrowful days of the year for christians. the day when death seems to have won, but we hope for a resurrection. we believe in the victory of life over death, and we pray that death loses. >> britain's ministry of defense says russia has made no major gains in the past 24 hours and its air and sea forces haven't established control in either domain as russian troops continue to face heavy fighting in mariupol despite russian claims the city has been liberated. all right, we want to focus now on the humanitarian crisis in ukraine continues to unfold. the number of refugees fleeing ukraine to surpass 5 million. most are going to poland. have a look. this family fled to serbia after their hometown of mariupol became the target of nearly constant bombardment. much of the city flattened, burned or just gone. we've learned of a humanitarian corridor that may be open today. however, ukraine's prime minister says in the past russia hasn't stopped bombing enough for ukrainians to escape. >> reporter: there are many civilians, women and children protecting and still fighting against russian army, but they're still there. we are speaking to our partners, and we try to say create human corridors. let all these people, civilians, even protectors, military people to go from there because now they are bombing this territory, absolutely destroying everything, every building, even the shelters where people are hiding they are bombarding. this is the biggest human titarn catastrophe. >> we have correspondents across the region covering the conflict from every angle. our matt rivers in lviv along with scott mcclain. and ed lavandera. we begin with scott mcclain live this hour in lviv. the revelation russia wants to take control of the black seacoast and establish that land bridge between crimea, what are we learning about this and the implications for the region? >> these were comments made by the russian military commander yesterday to russian state media, and essentially as you mentioned he said that the russian goal of this phase two operation, which began two owe three days ago is to control the entire eastern part of ukraine, the donbas region and also the southern coast all the way to moldova. of course ukrainian troops continue to hold out a small piece of mariupol, refusing to leave right now. that commander says that being able to control the entire south coast of the country would link russia up with moldova and specifically with a separatist region of moldova where russian troops have been stationed since the 1990s. president zelenskyy in his address last night acknowledged the russian view on this, which they think russian speakers in that area are being mistreated. but zelenskyy said putin would do much better to focus on the russian speakers in his own country who don't have freedom of expression, don't have freedom to dissent and oftentimes live in poverty. the maldoven foreign minister also summoned the russian ambassador yesterday to discuss these comments saying moldova is neutral country and its borders need to be protected by all countries including the russians who have long agreed to respect its borders. >> the battle for mariupol and those still trapped there, what's the latest? >> reporter: yeah, so, this is a city that has been under siege since the outset of the war. so you've had people sheltering underground for almost two months now in many cases. there are still tens of thousands of people trapped. ukrainians refused to budge. they're holding out. their stationed at the steel plant there where local officials say there's also some 1,000 women and children sheltering underground as well. there is a humanitarian corridor as you mentioned earlier being organized from the western part of mariupol aa long way from that steel plant which russians are restricting access to anyways that's supposed to start organizing around now and going to start moving hopefully within the next hour or so. we're also seeing new video from inside that steel plant shot by the regiment, part of the uyan military in that area. they went underground and you can see how deep these bunkers are and you can see the conditions people are living in, very dark, very primitive conditions. the soldiers there brought supplies and also spoke to kids who are in remarkably good spirits considering what they've been through. here's what one boy said to the camera. >> translator: i hope we can leave here and see the sun because we've sat heir for two months already. i want to see the sun so that when our houses are rebuilt we can live in peace, so we can live in ukraine because this is our native home. >> reporter: seems like a pretty small ask to be able to see the sun after two months living in the dark. squun more note on those humanitarian corridors. you know, i've spoken to people from mariupol who have managed to get out through russia, and they say that the whole area is an information black hole. it is extremely difficult to get any reliable information. oftentimes when people are finally forced out of their shelters because they've run out of food they are seeking help trying to link up with these corridors based purely on rumors, instinct and a lot of luck. >> i want to see the sun, just heart breaking to hear that from that little boy. thanks so much, appreciate it. as we mentioned the city of mariupol is battered, charred and in parts flattened. evacuating the city is often extremely dangerous because of constant russian bombardment. matt rivers spoke to a few families who made it out. >> reporter: the train was designated just for evacuees. if all went to plan it would arrive here to lviv packed with hundreds fleeing more. instead just a handful of families finally found safety including polina and her daughter who fled mariupol. they are furious there are not more who got out. she said so many should have been evacuated but the russians kept shelling. they are not human beings. i don't know who gave birth to them, horrific. horrific an apt word to describe what russia has done to the people of mariupol. collecting dead bodies amongst the city's wreckage a task more commonplace as it is morbid some of the dead have loaded into trucks while others buried in mass graves as seen in satellite imagery. yet for the tens of thousands that survive here they need to get out but cannot. he says humanitarian corridors declared by russia are only on paper. if they wanted to let people leave safely they could, and yet several humanitarian corridors agreed to this week have failed with ukraine accusing russia of repeatedly violating cease-fires. it's meant the number of evacuees has slowed to a trickle and even danger awaits. ukraine's military says this train actually came under fire as it was leaving a station in zaporizhzhia. some of the cars were so badly damaged they had to be left behind and even some here had to be left. these are some of the first moments they felt safe in weeks. we were just thinking about our survival, she says. i don't know how i'm going to tell my son about such terrifying events. she says she'll eventually tell her son about russian military brutality, about the needless destruction of an entire city. and maybe her son will live long enough to return to mariupol one day. others doubt they'll have their chance. she said i want to believe that i will return there. i think we'll need many years to restore the city after what they've done, and i'm not going to be around that long. matt rivers, cnn, lviv, ukraine. we want to speak to someone who's seen the horror of mariupol with her own eyes. tatianna and her husband fled to lviv where she joins us now. thanks so much for being here with us. i just want to start with how you're doing. when you tried to escape mariupol i believe your arm was broken, your husband's jaw as well. how are you both recovering? >> we are in the hospital in the lviv right now, and so we're doing better. my husband is getting ready for the jaw operation, so i guess we are much better than many thousands of our friends who are still in mariupol. >> yeah, i can imagine. now, to that city itself what's happening there i mean we've seen the pictures. it's really horrifying. you experienced that constant bombardment, the lack of electricity, the cold and unfortunately as well witnessing the number of dead families having to bury relatives, neighbors in the yard. i mean, you survived some what 45 days of this. describe this nightmare for us so the world can get a better sense of what those in your city have gone through. >> it was really a nightmare because we were actually wounded while we were in mariupol, and so we were sent to one of the hospitals which was close to the entrance to the city from the direction of luhansk, and it was the place where the russian army tried to come into mariupol, so this district was probably one of the most shelled. after they left then they started shelling wreso it was really horrible. all the people who were in the hospital were put in the corridors because it was very dangerous to be in the rooms with windows. because every time the bomb fell, the windows would break and injure people. so it was really horrible to hear the sound of russian planes because when you hear the plane you don't know where the bomb might fall. and we -- we could feel the impact of the bomb when the whole building was shaking. and then from the window of the hospital you could see the multistory buildings around being destroyed and burning. and who knows how many people were killed and burned in their own apartment. we have the official count of mariupol dead i think the number is four or five times bigger. >> we probably won't know for a while. in addition to all those horrors and feeling the building shaking and feeling as if you're in danger i mean you spoke to the russian soldiers who said they were there to liberate you. i mean itmist must have been sul not just the concept of speaking face-to-face with the enemy but also the response of why they were there in the first place. how do they explain or justify what they were doing to your city? >> they said that they came to liberate us from horrors we had been experiencing for eight years. and when we asked them where did you get that information, they just said that we didn't have enough information about the horrors which were happening in mariupol since 2014. so these people are like zombies. they are hearing all kind of propaganda from all these information sources from russia, and they just don't understand that we had a real good life in mariupol, that our city was prospering and flourishing, that it was developing. and people had a lot of plans, a lot of good things, a lot of dreams. and they just destroyed everything. >> it's just so tragic. and as you say i mean not just for so many people i mean yourself you have nothing to go back to, right? i mean, your house was destroyed, the school you worked at that survived the second world war, that was destroyed as well. i mean, do you think you can go back? >> right now we're not thinking about going back because it's like coming back to the grave because actually mariupol now looks like a mass grave for thousands of people and for dreams of people, for peoples lives. maybe in the future -- well, we still believe mariupol might be a ukrainian city and it might be restored, but it's too painful to think about coming back right now. especially there are a lot of friends and colleagues who are still there and who don't know what is going on with them. we don't know if they're alive. >> i can just hear and feel the emotion in your voice as you think about all of the people who have been lost and the people who are still there. you managed to get out. hopefully we're hearing about a humanitarian corridor that might be opening in less than an hour from now, so hopefully more of those people who need to get out can escape. listen, we really appreciate you sharing your experiences with us, and we wish you the best in your physical recovery and also i mean emotionally after having lost so much. thanks so much for joining us. appreciate it. well, to find out how you can help people in ukraine like we just heard there who may need shelter, food and water, please go to cnn.com/impact. and just thrilled to hear our cnn audience has already donated more than $7.5 million. of course more help is desperately needed. coming up our other top story. french voters prepare to decide who will lead their country it the feks five years. we'll go live to paris on the eve of an election which impact will be felt well bebeyond fran. 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call now for free information and you'll also get this free beneficiary planner. and it's yours free just for calling. so call now for free information. two candidates, two opposing visions about the future of france. incumbent president emmanuel macron and his far right challenger marie le pen wrapped up their final campaign events on friday. it's up to voters stoodecide on sunday who will be their next president. but whoever comes out on top the election is expected to have an impact well beyond france. for more on this jim bitterman joins us from paris. where do we stand right now? >> reporter: right now today is what they call a day of reflection here. basically it's a pause in the campaigning sometimes noisy campaigning that's going on for weeks. and until the vote count is announced officially tomorrow night, sunday night at 8:00, in fact there will be no more talking about the polls and the kinds of things we've seen going on every day. so editors here are resorting to, you know, either summaries of the campaign. a figure this morning say it's a decisive choice for france, and they're talking about the kind of issues the french are voting on, those issues that the french have foremost in their minds, the rising costs of living, for example, the environment, and the war in ukraine. all issues that have come up during the campaign especially in a debate the other night, and kind of evaluating the issues without saying anything about which candidate might be ahead in this day when electioneering is supposed to be off the agendas. >> as i mentioned in the intro the implications of this extend far beyond france's borders. what implications might a le pen victory have or even if emmanuel macron squeaks by with a narrow margin will that change his mandate when it comes to dealing with europe for example? >> well, i think that's exactly what the choice comes down to. basically europe and not europe. marie le pen has said during the campaign she's against the intervention of the european institutions and european laws in france. she wants france to remain sovereign whereas mr. macron has been all along in the five years of his presidency has been pro-european. so from that aspect it will definitely have impact beyond the borders. and there's also this aspect that we in the press have been writing a lot about, this whole rise of the right phenomenon. we've seen places in europe, for example where you have right wing candidates getting elected. and here in fact because the choice is between two right-wing candidates, mr. macron viewed as center right and marie le pen as f far right, a lot of voters are saying, especially a lot of left wing voters are saying it's like a choice between cholera and the plague. >> be sure to join us at 8:00 p.m. paris time, 2:00 p.m. eastern in the u.s. for special live coverage of the french election right here on cnn. well, there are some troubling new statistics from health officials in the u.s. according to the centers for disease control covid was the third leading cause of death in the u.s. in 2021. more than 415,000 people died from the virus. only heart disease and cancer with higher death tolls. and now residents of boston are being told they should wear masks indoors, again, that comes after a 65% increase in covid cases over the past two weeks. officials say hospitalizations have been slowly rising during that same time period. and foreign travelers wishing to visit hong kong will soon be able to after a two-year ban. beginning may 1st hong kong will allow nonresidents to enter the city. you have to be fully vaccinated and register a negative rapid antigen test before entering state managed quarantine for seven days. well, homes may be rebuilt but there are scars left by the war in ukraine that will last much longer. like in one village where russian troops held the entire town hostage. they tell their story to cnn. plus -- >> it has a be a battlefield as well and we have to fight. >> that's one of the curators for a ukrainian art team fighting to represent their culture on one of the biggest art fairs in the world. we'll have that story ahead. stay with us. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ welcome back to all of you watching us here in the united states, canada and around the world. i'm kim brunhuber. this is "cnn newsroom." officials with the city of mariupol say they will attempt another evacuation of civilians in the coming hours. russia's military now confirms its objective to take full control of ukraine's black seacoast. president zelenskyy warns if russia is successful it will only be the beginning and russia's aggression will turn to other countries. bitten's defense ministry says russia has made no major gains in the past 24 hours and continue to face heavy shelling despite russian claims the city is liberated. video from those troops shows them delivering supplies to the women and children huddled in the bomb shelter. ukraine says the discovery of more suspected mass graves near mariupol is further evidence of alleged russian war crimes. well, as our reporters meet more ukrainians, the stories of brutality at the hands of russian troops have a common thread. our ed lavandera met a group of villagers who showed them how the soldiers held them captive in the basement of a school. >> reporter: war stopped time here. bombs and artillery scorched this village in northern ukraine. russian occupation ravaged the mind of its people. the story of what happened here is just emerging, revealing how the russian army held this village hostage for more than 30 days. sophia shows us the underground bunker in her shed where she first hid from the fighting. she says she had food stored here that the russians ate. this is where she slept. sophia says russian soldiers went door-to-door rounding people up and taking them at gunpoint into the basement of the village school. sophia tells us that when the russian soldiers moved them all into the basement of a school building that they were put down there and the soldiers told them they were being put in the basement to die. a woman named natalie took us into the basement where she was trapped. i was in a stupor, natalie tells me. i was just sitting there praying, hoping it would all stop soon. residents tell us there were about 350 people held hostage in the basement of this school building, men, women and children forced to live in these horrific conditions. national, it was so strangulating, there was so little air circulation that one resident told us that 12 elderly people died here because they couldn't breathe, and their bodies were left while the fighting raged outside. these are some of the only known images captured in the school's basement. the faces say it all. she's telling me that about 35 people slept in this small room. nobody could lay down. they slept kind of sitting with their knees up against their chest. the rooms are littered with makeshift beds, schoolbooks and russian troop meal boxes, but it's the art on the walls that stops you in your tracks. this is how the children passed the time, colorful drawings on a canvas of anguish. the people who were trapped down here etched names onto this concrete wall. they marked the days with the calender, crossing out the days as they went by. everything down here has the feel of a world war two era concentration camp. above the basement russian soldiers took over the school building. residents say they were used as human shields. they knew the ukrainian military wouldn't fire at the school with civilians inside. grabbing food from a humanitarian delivery truck and takes us to her home. russian soldiers threw grenades through her windows and defecated on the house floors. she was also held hostage in the school basement with her 1-year-old daughter. did you think you were going to survive that? >> i thought my child would not survive, she tells me. i asked them to let me out so the child could breathe fresh air because she felt bad. they said let her die, we don't care. sophia, how did you feel when you got out of the basement of the school? she says one of the villagers opened the basement door and said the russians left. the trapped villagers were surprised. in the morning our guys entered the village, she said. we cried, we hugged them and cried. what will you tell your daughter about this experience? nothing, she says. her daughter will not remember it and she will tell her nothing. ed lavandera, cnn, ukraine. more than 30 people are dead and dozens injured after another deadly blast in afghanistan. the taliban say the explosion hit a mosque in the northern part of the province during friday prayers. this is the latest in a wave of explosions to strike afghanistan this week. most of the attacks were claimed by isis affiliate and taliban rival but we haven't heard a claim of responsibility in this latest mosque blast. u.s. house minority leader doing damage control with republicans after leaked audio reveals critical comments in the days after the january 6th attack on the u.s. capitol. and a georgia republican may not be able to seek re-election because of her alleged actions before and during the riot. we'll have that story after the break. stay with us. to make it easy for you. custom ink has hundreds of products to helelp you feel connected. uploload your logo or start your design today at customink.com do you have a life insurance policy you no longer need? now you can sell your policy - even a term policy - for an immediate cash payment. we thought we had planned carefully for our retirement. but we quickly realized we needed a way to supplement our income. if you have $100,000 or more of life insurance, you may qualify to sell your policy. don't cancel or let your policy lapse without finding out what it's worth. visit coventrydirect.com to find out if your policy qualifies. or call the number on your screen. coventry direct, redefining insurance. former president donald trump told "the wall street journal" that his relationship with house minority leader kevin mckacarthy remains good. this after audio recordings of mccarthy criticizing trump. here's mccarthy just days after the insurrection. listen to this. >> let me be very clear tof you, and i've been very clear to the president. he bears responsibilities for his words and actions. no if, ands and buts. i asked him today does he feel bad about what happened, and he told me does have some responsibility for what happened, and he needs to acknowledge that. i've had it with this guy. what he did was unacceptable. nobody can defend that and nobody should defend it. >> now, those tapes emerged after the release of another reported call that showed mccarthy lied when denying reports he considered telling trump to rezin. >> is there any chance -- are you hearing he might resign? is there any reason to think that might happen? >> i've had a few discussions. my gut tells me no. i'm seriously thinking of having a conversation with him tonight. i haven't talked to him in a couple days. from what i know of him, i mean you guys all know him, too. do you think he'd ever back away? the only discussion i would have with him is that i think this would pass and it would be my recommendation he should resign. i mean that would be my take, but i don't think he would take it. but i don't know. >> republican sources tell cnn mccarthy has been maneuvering behind the scenes to contain the fall out. he spoke with trump by phone thursday with key republicans throughout the day friday. georgia republican representative marjorie taylor greene was confronted with evidence of her past violent statements friday. it happened during a hearing to determine whether she should be barred from running for re-election due to her alleged role in the january 6th insurrection. here's amara walker. >> reporter: an extraordinary day in court as georgia representative marjorie taylor greene took the stand. in a hearing to determine if the republican lawmaker is constitutionally disqualified from running for re-election because of any role she may have played in the january 6th insurrection, greene still pushing the big lie. >> you believe that joe biden had lost the election to mr. trump, right? >> well, yes. we saw tremendous amount of voter fraud. >> reporter: but continuing to deny prior knowledge of what would happen on january 6th. >> you were aware that people were going to make noise outside the capitol as a means to disrupt the proceedings inside the capitol. is that fair? >> no, you have no idea what you're talking about? >> prior to january 6, 2021, and you heard people were planning to enter the capitol building illegally in order to disrupt the electoral count process. >> no, absolutely not. >> reporter: greene, also unable to recall her conversations with other lawmakers. >> you didn't talk to anybody in government about the fact there were going to be large protests in washington on january 6th. >> i don't remember. >> reporter: you spoke to representative biggs and his staff about that fact, didn't you? >> sorry, i don't remember. >> reporter: using the same response when asked about her social media posts. >> did you like the post that said it's quicker to put a bullet to the head of nancy pelosi -- >> i have no idea who liked that. >> reporter: greene objected to the line of questioning but maintained her objections on january 6th were a political free speech not advocating violence. >> you use the term 1776 to describe -- in response to a question from the news max broadcasting, right? >> i was speaking about objecting. >> well, he asked you what is your plan, what are you prepared to have go down tomorrow on january 6th, and your response was tomorrow is our 1776 moment. >> i was talking about the courage to object. >> greene's attorneys focusing on her own fears that day. >> were you a victim of the attack? >> yes, i was. i was in the house chamber when it happened. >> reporter: even though greene still defended some of those charged in connection with the insurrection as patriots. >> some of them are veterans, yes. some of them definitely are patriots. >> reporter: at the core of the case barring americans from future office if found aiding or engaging in an insurrection. >> this is not politics, not theater. this is a serious case. >> reporter: the outcome in georgia could set a precedent for serious officials for their roles in the insurrection including against former president donald trump if he runs again in 2024. the judge is expected to make a decision some time early next month on whether or not marjorie taylor greene should be disqualified from seeking re-election. he'll then make a recommendation to the georgia secretary of state who will make a final determination. keep in mind this insurrection disqualification clause of the 14th amendment is from the civil war era. that means it has never been tested in modern history before, so this will be an uphill battle for the challengers. amara walker, cnn, atlanta. ukrainian artists are fighting to represent their culture to the world. we'll follow one team's journey as they escape war and present their work. that story ahead. stay with us. we got the house! you did! pods handles the driving. pack at your pace. store your t things until you're ready. then we deliliver to your new home - across town or across the country. pods, your persosonal moving and storage team. -fixed. -that's my son. he always takes care of his mama. ooh, what's up with granny's casserole? 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(soft music) ♪ well, the kyiv symphony orchestra is back for the first time since the war in eucaine. they kicked off a european tour at the warsaw fphilharmonic on thursday. the male members got special permission from the government to leave ukraine to perform. for many in the orchestra this tour is also a political protest against vladimir putin and the war. as russia tries to carve up ukraine destroying the very idea of an independent ukrainian state it's never been more important to present ukrainian culture and artwork to the world. rosy tompkins has more on ukrainian art team that escaped the fighting showing their work. >> every war has a cultural background. >> ukrainian art has been overshadowed for a very long time by russia. the cultural field has to be a battlefield as well and we have to fight. >> reporter: in the wake of russia's invasion of ukraine a small team led by three ukrainian curators and one artist fought to present their work at one of the world's most p prestigious art fairs, the venice biennale. >> definitely you don't think about the projects in venice. it was quite a serious decision because at that time i realized it would be important for ukraine to be represented in the cultural scene. even deep and huge problems but still you can survive. but if you don't have culture, there is no nation, there is no country. >> reporter: as ukraine was thrown into crisis the team behind the art had to prioritize personal safety as well as their mission. eventually they'd plan routes to venice mostly driving across with their families, belongings and parts of the artwork, fountain of exhaustion. >> in the first day of the war my world literally shifted. i didn't have anybody to care about besides myself perhaps and our project. and needed to head west. roads were jammed. six days to reach the border with romania. >> reporter: meanwhile having spent six days in a shelter evacuated from kharkiv to vienna. >> i said, mom, i'm 63, the oldest mom in the family. let's go to the car place and we have to leave. >> reporter: she was heavily pregnant. >> we didn't want to move though it was pretty scary. we heard explosions and gunshots almost every day. >> reporter: finally arriving in venice only a few days before the launch. >> every man in ukraine will go to battlefield, but we have many roles in this war. i got the letter from minister of culture to represent ukraine. for me it's not easy to be here, but i will come back in three weeks to ukraine. >> reporter: they found a company to rebuild part of the installation that had been left behind of the original design team in kyiv. >> and we finally reached our destination in venice. it's good to be together. >> yeah. >> we're excited. >> we're excited. and no one believes we're excited. >> one of the most interesting and important artists from kharkiv. >> he belongs to first kind of post-soviet and independent ukrainian generation of artists. this artwork was made in the local context of the city of kharkiv. >> after the collapse of the soviet union the city infrastructure grandeur started to deteriorate. the city of exhaustion of the big city that exhausted itself on many, many levels was obvious problem. there is no life, just going down, down, down. >> the concept inspired over a dozen works of art but none had functioned with flowing water. >> when we approached him asking if he'd like to produce it finally in venice, for him it was the beginning of a completely new story. for us and the whole team, for the artists it was extremely important to produce it the way it was without any mind changes, without any damage, without any adjustments just to show that the artwork is there no matter what. >> well, this new attention we're getting now is a little painful because we do understand this is paid by victims in our country. russia is saying now ukraine is not a country, it has no culture, it doesn't exist. you know, culture is a national security question. culture is how we can live together, how all these different individuals can find room as a society. i don't feel myself in an office here. i much feel myself as a citizen who has a duty to represent his country and that's it, as well as all the curators, we have the same idea. >> of course it's not always simple but in the end the very presence of it in venice i think will give hope to show ukraine is capable of doing things, not just hiding in the shelter and surviving but doing things, building the future. >> art won't stop the war right now, but it might stop the next one. >> well, that wraps this hour of "cnn newsroom." i'm kim brunhuber and i'll be back in just moments with more news. please stay with us. ♪ this is vuity™, the first and only fda approved eye-drop that improves age-related blurry near vision. waitwhat? 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