
CBS Sunday Morning, February 16, 2020
Approximately 200 survivors of genocide – many of whom were children when they were freed from the Nazis' extermination camp in the final days of World War II – revisit the site where family members were killed. Martha Teichner has their story. In an interview with Lee Cowan, Harrison Ford talks about how a respect for nature led to his role in the film of naturalist Jack London's classic novel, "The Call of the Wild" – but doesn't talk about the upcoming installment of the Indiana Jones franchise. Alina Cho takes us back to the origin of the Moulin Rouge.
CBS News Sunday Morning with Jane Pauley
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Show Notes
Approximately 200 survivors of genocide – many of whom were children when they were freed from the Nazis' extermination camp in the final days of World War II – revisit the site where family members were killed. Martha Teichner has their story. In an interview with Lee Cowan, Harrison Ford talks about how a respect for nature led to his role in the film of naturalist Jack London's classic novel, "The Call of the Wild" – but doesn't talk about the upcoming installment of the Indiana Jones franchise. Alina Cho takes us back to the origin of the Moulin Rouge.
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