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The Takeaway looks at the refugee crisis facing Europe, why it's so hard to say "I'm sorry," and we check in with parents on a hunger strike for better schools. (episode)
Jonathan Sacks, the UK's former chief rabbi, says Europe must organize a new Kindertransport to help refugees. During WWII, the program saved thousands of Jewish children from the Nazis.
Two more countries, the United Kingdom and Pakistan, join a small group that have killed human targets using armed drones.
On Thursday, the White House announced that the U.S. would accept at least 10,000 Syrian refugees in FY2016. But some feel it's not enough.
On Wednesday, Tea Party activists and conservative politicians held a raucous rally on the West Lawn of the Capitol to stop the Iran nuclear deal.
Parents and activists want the city to re-open Walter H. Dyett High School, the last open enrollment high school in Chicago's Bronzeville neighborhood.
From Richard Nixon to Hillary Clinton, why is it so hard for politicians—and the rest of us —to say “I’m sorry”?
A new book documents how fear and bad research swept hundreds of children into costly and unfounded investigations of child abuse in the 1980s.