you re in the cnn newsroom. well, in the next few days, inspectors from the united nations nuclear watchdog could go into the massive russian-held nuclear power plant in southern ukraine. this is a critical safety mission at a time when fighting between russian and ukrainian forces is intensifying in the area around the plant. one city nearby reporting 200 attacks in just a matter of hours this weekend. and if that plant was hit, a radiation cloud could cover parts of southern ukraine and russia. sam kiley is there this evening. reporter: pam, the international atomic energy agency has said that over the last few days, they ve been able to confirm that a building inside the zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant has been hit by shelling, either from artillery or a rocket. now, this is the first proof positive from an independent source that we know that shelling is going on there apart from our own analysis of satellite images. but this raises again the specter of a nuclear d
migrants are concerned considered got-aways. what is it going to take for your administration to wake up. broken. protest over climate policy held inside senate majority leader chuck schumer s office. it s a battle between the left, the far left, and the complete interplanetary left. ground ball. this should do it. toro over to first. there is the ballgame. and win it 4-3 to end a four game losing streak and they beat texas boom, snap pound in my heart and the beat goes on, and on boom, snap make me feel good come on to me boom, snap. ainsley: good morning. look at that gorgeous sky, beautiful is that a sunrise? is it considered a sunrise? see the sun trying to peak. brian: cameraman felt it was back. ainsley: 82 trees can there today. that s the capital of pennsylvania. it s named harrisburg after john harris because the site was settled by john harris the at a time they are not sure 1715 to 1718, somewhere in that time frame. brian: i love to b
a two-year college all the way up to $38,000 a year for a private four-year education. and we re not each talking about room and board and textbooks. studying in england can be a lot cheaper. student there can pay the equivalent of just upped $10,900 a year, and there are some countries like germany, iceland and norway where tuition is usually free for residents and international students, but here in the u.s. when it comes time to pay back those loans, according to the institute for college access and success, the average graduate from the class of 2019 left with 28,950 in debt on average. imagine how much more you would owe if you went to medical school or law school for that matter. $10,000 or $20,000 in student loan relief may sound like a lot of money and no one has fixed the problem though of making college more affordable. for the record, with so little accountability, universities
really can in the sense that we want students who are dedicated to the intellectual life who want to know the truths that make life most human but also in addition to that we want them to have a real dedication to the trades. we can t build up our country again if we don t have people who actually know how to build. and so we want people to have this dual dedication truly incarnate life where the head and hands are not divorced from one another but truly integrated. ainsley: mike, it s wonderful, when you look at student debt, the outstanding student loan debt is $1.7 trillion. that s per person on average. $28,950. what are the students saying, the ones you talked, to the ones that have applied for next fall? what are they saying about this? i m sure they are very grateful because they don t have the money to pay for college but this seems fairly reasonable. the response has been overwhelming, not just from students and from parents and from other parents. we have had so many re
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