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The Takeaway looks at the humanitarian crisis facing Europe, what to expect from the new James Bond book, and the Israeli mind. (episode)
Doctors Without Borders rescued 1,658 displaced refugees crossing the Mediterranean last week. An emergency coordinator for a rescue ship tells us what exactly happens on board.
Europe's population is aging at an alarming rate. An influx of migrants could help jump-start the workforce and save the E.U. from economic uncertainty.
Here you'll find a collection of voices and sounds from refugees recored over the weekend. This audio segment highlights the shared experience faced by asylum seekers throughout Europe.
The U.S. has refused to send personnel into Syria, relying instead on a program designed to empower moderate anti-government fighters. And it's become clear that the program is failing.
Pope Francis has consistently voiced more liberal opinions on social issues, but his criticism of the murky Vatican bank is a major concern for the Church's conservative wing.
The settlement "should not be interpreted as a judgment on the guilt or innocence of the officers facing trial" for Gray's death, Baltimore Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake said Tuesday.
A new James Bond book will be released this week. The author, Anthony Horowitz, is the first to be working with unpublished material from Ian Fleming—the man behind the Bond series.
For more than 100 million Americans, their dying wishes are now available online, thanks to a three-year digitization project by the genealogical research firm Ancestry.
Clinical Psychologist Alon Gratch examines the psychology of his home country in his new book, "The Israeli Mind."