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This New York police officer delivers: Helped bring a baby into world for fifth time in his career

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A police officer on Long Island recently stepped into the role of midwife — and helped safely deliver a baby for the fifth time in his career. 

Sgt. Jon-Erik Negron of the Suffolk County Police Department was one of four officers who responded to a call about a woman going into labor at home in Shirley, New York, according to a Nov. 26 press release from the department. 

“Seventh Precinct Officer Conor Diemer responded to a 911 call at 10:13 a.m. of a woman going into labor at her residence,” said the release. 

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Diemar assisted the mom, Rebecca Reyes, who told him that “she felt the baby was about to come out.” 

Along with Officers Jadin Rodriguez and Zachary Vormittag, Negron arrived at the scene shortly after Diemar did, the release noted.

Sgt. Jon-Erik Negron (second from left, above) was one of four police officers to respond to a call about a woman who went into labor at her home. It was the fifth time in his career that Negron helped deliver a baby. 

Sgt. Jon-Erik Negron (second from left, above) was one of four police officers to respond to a call about a woman who went into labor at her home. It was the fifth time in his career that Negron helped deliver a baby. 
(Suffolk County Police Department)

Reyes, 31, safely delivered a baby boy named Owen at about 10:25 a.m., said the release. 

Owen was born shortly after his father, Juan Maldonado, 46, arrived at the home — and just over 10 minutes after the officers responded to the call. 

Negron said his friends and coworkers are bewildered that regardless of his schedule and location, “the babies are just following (him) at this point.”

An ambulance crew arrived after the little boy’s birth. They cut the baby’s umbilical cord and transported mother and child to Stony Brook University Hospital in Stony Brook, the release said.

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Negron joined the police force in 2013. He delivered his first baby in 2017, he told Fox News Digital by phone. 

Since then, he’s assisted with about one delivery each year, despite changing shifts, precincts and positions. 

It was a series of "crazy coincidences" that led him to be present at the births of five different children, Sgt. Negron told Fox News Digital.

It was a series of “crazy coincidences” that led him to be present at the births of five different children, Sgt. Negron told Fox News Digital.
(iStock)

“It’s one of those crazy coincidences,” he said. “Each time I was kind of in the right place at the right time when I was working, where I was working.” 

Negron said his friends and coworkers are bewildered that regardless of his schedule and location, “the babies are just following [him] at this point.”

The first baby Negron helped deliver was born with its umbilical cord wrapped around its neck and was not breathing.

“I might have to switch careers [to midwifery] at this point,” he joked. 

Negron has no children of his own. Yet given that he has delivered five babies, he said his skills “might come in handy” in the future. 

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He said he arrived at the scene of little Owen’s birth after Diemar said over police radio that the mom didn’t think she would make it to the hospital — and that she needed to begin pushing. 

Negron is a supervisor now — so he responded to the call, as he knew Diemar was “a pretty new officer” and hadn’t delivered a baby before, he said. He credited Diemar with calming Reyes down and helping her focus on her breathing through the labor. 

At the police academy, recruits had to watch a film about delivering a newborn as part of EMT training, said Sgt. Negron (above, second from left). At the time, "I was laughing at my friends like, ‘When are we going to deliver a baby?’" he said.

At the police academy, recruits had to watch a film about delivering a newborn as part of EMT training, said Sgt. Negron (above, second from left). At the time, “I was laughing at my friends like, ‘When are we going to deliver a baby?’” he said.
(Suffolk County Police Dept./iStock)

By the time he arrived, the baby was very close to being born, he told Fox News Digital. 

“I just got down next to Conor [Diemar] and we just kind of guided her through it,” he said. “Within a few minutes … the baby was out and we had him wrapped up in a blanket, making sure he was breathing fine. Mom was doing great.” 

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While baby Owen was born safely in a “pretty straightforward living room child delivery,” not every baby Negron delivered has had such an easy start to life. 

Negron first received national attention after he saved the life of tiny Bryce Pappalardo, who was unexpectedly born at home on August 22, 2017, the Associated Press reported. 

Pappalardo, the first baby Negron helped deliver, was born with his umbilical cord wrapped around his neck and was not breathing even after the cord was removed. 

Using a syringe he found in the Pappalardo family’s kitchen, Negron cleared the baby’s airway — and he began breathing normally. 

Officer Jon-Erik Negron of Long Island, New York, is the godfather of one the babies he helped deliver, he said.

Officer Jon-Erik Negron of Long Island, New York, is the godfather of one the babies he helped deliver, he said.
(iStock)

His parents, Jane and Mike Pappalardo, asked Negron to be their son’s godfather as a gesture of thanks. 

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Although he never knew how much he would come to need it, Negron was shown a video on childbirth while attending the police academy as part of EMT training, he said.

“I want them to realize that cops are here to help and to know that we are the good guys.”

At the time, he thought that was “never going to happen.” 

He added, “I was laughing at my friends like, ‘When are we going to deliver a baby?’” 

Negron said he wants kids to realize that

Negron said he wants kids to realize that “cops are here to help and to know that we are the good guys.” He thinks that stories like his, “whether it’s me or another cop in another city — they kind of shed light on that.”
(iStock)

He said this week he was glad he “paid attention in that class.”

Negron joined the police force as a way to give back to the community where he grew up, he said.

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“No matter how big or small the call is, you have an opportunity to interact with the public and leave a positive impression on them,” he said. 

In particular, he hopes to have a good impression on children. 

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“I want them to realize that cops are here to help and to know that we are the good guys,” he said.

“So I think that these stories, whether it’s me or another cop in another city — they kind of shed light on that.”

Source: https://www.foxnews.com/lifestyle/new-york-police-officer-delivers-helped-bring-baby-world-fifth-time

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On this day in history, June 7, 1942, Battle of Midway ends in decisive US victory

On this day in history, June 7, 1942, the Battle of Midway — regarded as one of the most decisive U.S. victories in its war against Japan — came to an end.  

The Battle of Midway was an Allied naval victory and a major turning point in World War II. 

The battle was fought between Japanese and American carrier forces near the Midway Atoll, a territory of the United States in the central Pacific, from June 4-7, 1942.

On June 4, 1942, the Battle of Midway began. 

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY, JUNE 6, 1944, US AND ALLIES INVADE NORMANDY IN GREATEST MILITARY INVASION

Midway Island is a fairly isolated atoll, so named because it is midway between North America and Asia in the North Pacific Ocean, according to National Geographic.

Midway’s importance grew for commercial and military planners, says the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). 

Battle of Midway

In this June 4, 1942, file photo provided by the U.S. Navy, the USS Astoria (CA-34) steams by USS Yorktown (CV-5), shortly after the carrier had been hit by three Japanese bombs in the Battle of Midway.  (William G. Roy/U.S. Navy via AP, File)

In the 1930s, Midway became a stopover for Pan American Airways’ “flying clippers” — seaplanes crossing the ocean on their five-day transpacific passage, the same source indicates.

Midway was an incredibly strategic location, multiple sources say. 

“The Imperial Japanese Navy planned to use it to secure their sphere of influence in the Pacific theater of the war,” according to National Geographic. 

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“The Japanese had not lost a naval battle in more than 50 years, and had nearly destroyed the American fleet just six months earlier in a surprise attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii.” 

The American success at Midway was a major victory over the Imperial Japanese Navy. 

Pearl Harbor is about 1,300 miles east of Midway, says the same source.

In preparation, American military and intelligence forces worked together to defeat the Japanese. 

Battle of Midway Island

The Battle of Midway Island, which resulted in a major victory for the U.S. fleet. The USS aircraft carrier ‘Yorktown’ received a direct hit from a Japanese plane, which got through despite the heavy barrage put up by American destroyers.  (Keystone/Getty Images)

Code breakers were able to decipher Japanese naval code, allowing American leaders to anticipate Japanese maneuvers, notes National Geographic. 

Because of this, the U.S. Navy was then able to launch a surprise attack on the larger Japanese fleet in the area and the Battle of Midway turned the tide of the war, says the same source. 

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The American success at Midway was a major victory over the Imperial Japanese Navy as all four Japanese carriers — Akagi, Hiryu, Kaga and Soryu — had participated in the attack on Pearl Harbor, says the National WWII Museum.

The Battle of Midway is often referred to as the turning point of the war in the Pacific.

“Sinking those Japanese carriers represented a resounding defeat over the enemy fleet which had wrought such destruction only six months before,” the same source says.

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The Imperial Japanese Navy would not be capable of overcoming the loss of four carriers and over 100 trained pilots — and with the loss at Midway, the Japanese offensive in the Pacific was overturned and the United States began offensive action in the Pacific, says the National WWII Museum.

The Battle of Midway is widely considered the most decisive U.S. victory of that period.

It is often referred to as the turning point of the war in the Pacific.

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Midway Atoll has since been designated as a National Memorial to the Battle of Midway, says the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

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Invisible AI’s ‘intelligent agent’ cameras can see what autoworkers and machines are doing wrong

Tesla CEO Elon Musk often refers to the automobile factory as “the machine that builds the machine,” but there are plenty of human workers involved in even the most highly automated plants.

They remain a key part of the exceedingly complex process that is automobile assembly but need to operate as efficiently as their mechanical counterparts to keep cars and trucks coming off the line with a combination of quality and speed.

Weeding out issues and making sure everything is running smoothly has traditionally meant sending quality control personnel up and down the lines to get eyes on the action. But now there’s a way to automate that job with better results than ever before.

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Palo Alto-based Invisible AI was founded by veterans of the autonomous car industry who saw an alternative for the artificial intelligence-driven machine vision technology they were working on that could come to market long before the mass acceptance of self-driving cars.

invisible ai

Invisible AI’s cameras have two terabytes of storage, enough to capture two months of data. (Invisible AI)

The company designed a network of cameras that can monitor an assembly line in real time and spot even the smallest things going wrong.

“Productivity, safety and quality are always top of mind in manufacturing, especially auto,” Invisible AI CEO Eric Danzinger told Fox News Digital.

The self-contained units are equipped with stereoscopic vision and onboard processing that allows them to be easily set up in a factory without having to tap into the facility’s own networks.

Invisible AI workers

The cameras use stereoscopic vision that can monitor how workers are moving. (Invisible AI)

“Our AI is not just about watching one workstation but about getting that view across the line about where you’re hitting production bottlenecks, where you’re seeing deviations from how the work is supposed to be done and where you’re seeing issues like bad reaches that can cause physical issues for your workers,” Danzinger said.

The cameras don’t need to be programmed with the assembly process. They only have to scan a single, correct cycle, and then the system can determine if anything deviates from it later.

“Our AI system analyzes the video, from raw pixels, to understand the pattern of work that’s happening and then compares those patterns so we can tell if someone is following a standard,” Danzinger explained. “All of that is being done by an intelligent agent in the cameras so a person doesn’t have to.

“If you have 100 cameras on one section of an assembly, you are actually seeing in 3D the living, breathing line.”

invisible ai paint gif

The system can tell if a worker’s movements are deviating from the ideal process. (Invisible AI)

Pricing varies by application, but Danzinger said the cost is far less than bringing in a consulting team or trying to accomplish the same work manually, which really can’t be done given the scope of what the system is capable of. 

Since they’re self-contained, installing all the cameras can be done in a couple of days between shifts.

“Our system has become the place you can go to help frontline employees understand the work being done,” Danzinger said.

“There are a million things happening. People are sick, bad parts are coming from suppliers, machines are broken down. … To be able to know what’s going on, what’s the most crucial component to fix, how do I meet my numbers? That’s the most important thing.”

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Invisible AI has collected a roster of a dozen automotive parts suppliers and four original equipment manufactures as clients, including Toyota, which uses the system at a factory in Indiana.

Toyota declined to provide comment for this report, but Senior Engineer Jihad Abdul-Rahim said when the project was announced last year that “Invisible AI is not only helping us find opportunities for improvement on the assembly lines, but we’re also constantly finding new use cases for their technology, such as ergonomics analysis to proactively prevent injuries.”

Invisible AI dashboard

Users can use an app to get an overview or check the status at a specific point in the assembly process. (Invisible AI)

Danzinger said details about its other customers and how they are using the system is confidential and that Invisible AI can’t provide details on their behalf.

As far as privacy is concerned, the system doesn’t have facial recognition technology, and it can blur faces captured on video. But the point of it is to offer direct feedback, so it is not an entirely anonymized analytical tool.

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“Most of what we see is helping workers have a voice and raise their hand to say, ‘This is broken. We need help fixing it,’ and actually getting a response,” Danzinger said.

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D-Day 79 years later: How FDR’s powerful prayer united Americans

President Franklin D. Roosevelt trumpeted America’s foundation of faith to inspire the nation in its finest hour: D-Day, June 6, 1944. 

“Almighty God: Our sons, pride of our nation, this day have set upon a mighty endeavor, a struggle to preserve our republic, our religion and our civilization, and to set free a suffering humanity,” FDR said resolutely on D-Day, leading a prayer that crackled from radios coast to coast and to service members and occupied nations around the globe.

Some Americans believe that his stirring call to spiritual arms can unite the nation once again and pay tribute to the sacrifice and commitment of our military and veterans.

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“FDR’s prayer seemed to bring everybody together,” said Chris Long of Akron, Ohio, leader of the D-Day Prayer Project, which installed the prayer permanently at the National World War II Memorial in Washington, D.C. in 2022. “We hope it can speak to generations to come.”

Head of the Christian Alliance of America, Long launched the effort in 2011 to get the rousing text of Roosevelt’s prayer, all 525 words of it, engraved in perpetuity at the national memorial. 

FDR, 32nd president of the U.S.

Franklin D. Roosevelt, the 32nd president of the U.S., called for the spiritual mobilization of the American people on June 6, 1944. 

The WWII Memorial Prayer Act, sponsored by Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio and Rep. Bill Johnson, R-Ohio, was passed unanimously by the Senate in 2014 and enjoyed overwhelming bipartisan support in the House two weeks later. 

President Obama signed the bill into law on June 30, 2014, but no tax dollars were allotted to the project. 

The permanent memorial features brass plates engraved with the prayer mounted on a granite base. 

Long led a group in 2019, on the 75th anniversary of D-Day, that installed a temporary tablet listing the text of the prayer as a “placeholder,” he said, for the future permanent installment within the National World War II Memorial’s Circle of Remembrance.

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Funding for the permanent installment has come in fits and starts from private sources and citizens, most notably a $2 million donation by the Lilly Endowment Inc., said Friends of the National World War II Memorial executive director Holly Rotondi. 

She called the effort “a real labor of love.” 

An artist’s rendering is shown before its opening of the FDR prayer tribute at the National World War II Memorial in Washington, D.C. (Friends of the National World War II Memorial/Oehme van Sweden & Associates)

The memorial features brass plates engraved with the prayer mounted on a granite base. 

Spiritual mobilization of Americans

Roosevelt called for the spiritual mobilization of the American people as the massive D-Day invasion force stormed by air and sea into Normandy, France. 

The U.S. and the Allies landed 160,000 troops in France on the first day alone. The effort was supported by tens thousands of other members of the multinational armed forces who manned warships and aircraft.

The young lives of every soldier, sailor and airman hung upon the outcome of the invasion. 

The nation awoke on June 6, 1944, to learn that its heroic youth crawled from the sea and fell from the sky overnight in an effort to wrest an enslaved Europe from Hitler’s clutches. 

Americans knew that the young lives of every soldier, sailor and airman, along with the fate of the free world, hung upon the outcome of the invasion. 

D-Day forces enter the water from docked war ships

Reinforcements disembark from a landing barge in Normandy during the Allied Invasion of France on D-Day. (Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

Roosevelt steeled frightened mothers and fathers, and a worried but determined nation, for the shocking human cost to come. 

“Men’s souls will be shaken with the violences of war,” the president said soberly.

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“Some will never return,” he said. “Embrace these, Father, and receive them, Thy heroic servants, into Thy kingdom … I ask that our people devote themselves into a continuance of prayer … And, O Lord, give us faith. Give us faith in Thee; faith in our sons; faith in each other; faith in our united crusade.”

“Men’s souls will be shaken with the violences of war.” — FDR 

More than 4,400 Americans were killed on D-Day alone, according to figures from the National D-Day Memorial in Bedford, Virginia. 

By the time the battle for Normandy was won in August 1944, as many as 29,000 American troops were dead and more than 100,000 were wounded or missing in action. 

The president wrote the prayer himself, with the help of his daughter Anna and her husband John Boettiger, according to the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum in Hyde Park, New York.

D-Day, June 6, 1944

U.S. assault troops are seen landing on Omaha Beach during the invasion of Normandy on June 6, 1944. (Keystone/Getty Images)

FDR could be heard shuffling the pages as he delivered the address on June 6. 

An estimated 100 million people worldwide heard Roosevelt’s plea over the airwaves, said Long of the D-Day Prayer Project, including many of those living in fear in Nazi-occupied Europe.

‘Friends and salvation’

“The best part about the invasion is that I have the feeling that friends are on the way,” young Anne Frank wrote hopefully in her diary on June 6, while secreted away amid a “huge commotion in The Annex” of an Amsterdam apartment, as BBC news of the landings crackled over the radio. 

“The thought of friends and salvation mean everything to us!” 

Anne Frank, famed for her Holocaust diary

“I have the feeling that friends are on the way,” Anne Frank wrote on June 6, 1944, after news of the D-Day invasion broke over BBC radio. (Wikimedia)

The 1959 Oscar-winning Hollywood version of the Jewish teen’s tragic story shows the Frank family and other residents of The Annex singing and dancing joyously in celebration of the D-Day landings. 

Then they huddled around a concealed radio as Roosevelt’s prayerful voice invoked “Almighty God” and delivered hope into their hidden little corner of Holland. 

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“We’ll need to be brave and endure the many fears and hardships and the suffering yet to come,” the teenager wrote that day, her entry eerily echoing the words of promise and the warnings of reality that the American president shared in his global address. 

Americans by the millions instinctively responded to the news of the D-Day invasion by flooding churches and synagogues.

Several sources called FDR’s faith-filled entreaties that day and the resulting response the largest mass prayer in human history. 

The text of it was reported the next day on the front page of almost every newspaper in America. 

The New York Times published the prayer, dutifully transcribed word for word, on its front page on June 7 under a dramatic scripted Gothic headline, “Let Our Hearts Be Stout.”

A sign is depicted saying: "Invasion Day: Come in and pray for allied victory - hourly intercessions on the hour."

A sign outside Trinity Church in New York City is shown inviting worshipers to “come in and pray for Allied victory” during the invasion of Normandy on D-Day on June 6, 1944. (FPG/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

Americans by the millions instinctively responded to the news of the D-Day invasion by flooding their churches and synagogues.

“The impulse to pray was overwhelming,” wrote author Stephen Ambrose in his book, “D-Day, June 6, 1944: the Climactic Battle of World War II.” 

“Across the United States and Canada church bells rang … as a solemn reminder of national unity and a call to formal prayer. Special services were held in every church and synagogue in the land. Pews were jammed with worshippers,” he wrote.

Madison Square Park on D-Day in 1944

An enormous crowd gathered in Madison Square Park on D-Day in New York City on June 6, 1944. (FSA/Interim Archives/Getty Images)

Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia of New York City hosted an impromptu prayer service on D-Day before a crowd estimated as large as 50,000 people in Madison Square Park in Manhattan. 

The bells of the historic Old North Church in Boston rang that morning, while schoolchildren “recited the Lord’s Prayer in every classroom in Massachusetts,” The Boston Herald reported that day. 

“The impulse to pray was overwhelming.” — Stephen Ambrose

The Liberty Bell in Philadelphia rang for the first time in 109 years, among countless other chimes of support across the nation. 

“Philadelphia Mayor Bernard Samuel tapped the bell … sending its voice throughout the country,” wrote Ambrose. “Then he offered a prayer.”

Churches and synagogues opened around the clock to handle the flood of Americans seeking strength, comfort and unity in the pews of their houses of worship.

Military staff listening to Roosevelt pray

Military staff at LaGuardia Field in New York gather around a radio and listen intently as President Roosevelt prays for the Allied invaders of Normandy on D-Day, June 6, 1944. LaGuardia personnel were involved in the invasion.  (Getty Images/Bettmann)

It’s notable that D-Day was a Tuesday, not a typical day of church services, and the date of the invasion was a carefully guarded secret. 

Still, Americans awoke that morning, heard the news and reflexively rallied around their faith.

“Led by President Roosevelt, the entire country joined in solemn prayer yesterday for the success of the United Nations armies of liberation,” wrote reporter Laurence Resner in a front-page story on The New York Times on June 7, 1944. 

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The newspaper’s embrace of America’s spiritual foundations wrapped around its editorial pages that day, too. 

American servicemen huddle on D-Day war ship.

U.S. servicemen attend a service aboard a landing craft before the D-Day invasion on the coast of France.​​​​​​​ (AP Photo/Pete J. Carroll)

“This nation was born in the only revolution in history made in the name of God. It was born of the conception that the rights of man … are given him by God as the inalienable birthright of the human being,” wrote The Times editorial board, led by Arthur Hays Sulzberger, great-grandfather of the outlet’s current chairman, A.G. Sulzberger, on June 7. 

The editorial appeared under the headline, “Let Us Pray.” 

D-Day prayer of FDR on June 6, 1944

Another artistic rendering of the memorial commemorating FDR’s D-Day prayer of June 6, 1944. The text of the prayer has been placed on tablets at the National World War II Memorial in Washington, D.C.  (D-Day Prayer Project)

It continued: “We pray for the boys … we pray for our country … the cause prays for itself, for it is the cause of the God who created men free and equal.”

Said Roosevelt to America, “Help us, Almighty God, to rededicate ourselves in renewed faith in Thee in this hour of great sacrifice.”

‘Need the same continuance of prayer’ 

Long of the D-Day Prayer Project said he awoke one morning more than a decade ago, turned to his wife and told her of his idea of have the president’s appeal to the faith of the American people etched for eternity at the nation’s capital.  

He said he hopes the FDR prayer memorial can help bring the nation together in faith once again. 

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As a sign of his hope, he cited the bipartisan support the bill received in 2014, allowing the project at the federal memorial to move forward. 

“I think it’s true right now that the nation is in turmoil,” said Long. 

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“This is a time when we need the same continuance of prayer that Roosevelt asked for on D-Day,” he also said. 

“Not one prayer, but a continuance of prayer.”

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