st. giles. it s really interesting because as max is talking about, the family trying to heal potentially in making very public glue over the schisms that have arisen other the last several years, so too is the country. it is trying to also heal to come to terms. it has lost a matriarch. and i think interestingly, i have been listening to a lot of commentary from scotland, officials much better aware of the politics there, of the culture there, historians and the like, for the scottish people who will come out and line that royal mile there, as we saw yesterday, will be incredibly close to the people of the royal dynasty, to king charles and his brothers and sisters. it s sort of divided into three layers for them, i m told. first, allegiance to the queen and affection for the queen who is part of their everyday lives. she went to their farms, to their churches, to their town halls. she was in the villages. she was known up there very, very well. then comes the monarchy and t
month. yes, according to our information, we are recording war crimes in almost every village, he says. this, the body of one of two civilians killed in late february. an early victim of the invasion and evidence now of what six continuing here in eastern kharkiv, even as you saw there the fight continues and bitterly for the ukrainian forces trying to regain ground, john. melissa bell for us in kharkiv. a remarkable turn around, we ll be following that all morning. new day special coverage continues right now. good morning, everyone, to our viewers in the united states and around the world. i m don lemon in edinburgh, scotland. a so let solemn day ahead in th united kingdom as they embrace their new king. king charles iii addressing parliament a few moments ago saying he feels the weight of history. listen. as i stand before you today, i cannot help but feel the weight of history which surrounds us and which reminds us of the vital parliamentary traditions to which
the first time trump says why he was in the indictment and identified as individual one but not charged. kara scannell, a lot in here. thanks so much for being with us. new day s special coverage continues right now. good morning to our viewers in the united states and around the world. i m don lemon live in edinburgh, scotland. a day of sad nsz and reflection in the nng as the people say farewell to their queen and begin to open their arms to the new king. the royal couple arriving in edinburgh moments ago. king charles and his queen concert camilla. they d lead the procession behind elizabeth s coffin. this afternoon, there will be a service of reflection at st. giles cathedral. earlier king charles iii addressed parliament for the first time as monarch acknowledging he feels the weight of history. as i stand before you today, i cannot help but feel the weight of history which surrounds us and which reminds us of the vital parliamentary traditions to which member
political. cancer doesn t care if you re republican or a democrat. everyone can come together to fight this and he compared it to the moonshot saying you have to harness the resources of u.s. scientists and doctors and technology to be able to do this. elizabeth, in general since 1991, cancer deaths are down 31% according to the american cancer society. a lot of that is because of prostate cancer deaths down 50%, breast cancer deaths down 40% but a lot of that, i have to say, is because of screening, early screening and preventive measure, not necessarily curing the cancers itself. how feasible, how realistic is it to cut cancer deaths in half in 5 years? i reached out to a variety of experts asking that question this afternoon. i thought they d say, i don t know about that. they actually were quite positive and pointed to the statistic that you just pointed to, in 28 years they went down 32%. whatever reasons there were, we can do more of the same and they pointed to sev
that was the sound of artillery landing just next to our car. our armored car. we have come in here hoping to get to that flag. to see where it had been planting only as today. because we can see, from the sunday afternoon. and still this scene of some pretty fierce fighting. we ve been hearing the sound of outgoing artillery fire. that was the sound of incoming. the policeman tells us our car was deliberately targeted. time for us to head back to those parts of kharkiv region now fully under ukrainian control. after six long months. generally, yes. people are happy that they are feeding soldiers. they re chairing, they re celebrating. it feels like redemption. they re eager to advance. but in villages like zeleny today, ukrainian investigators know all too well what they will find after borodyanka that