got you, but suddenly we can t hear you. nick, i apologise, we could see you. nick, i apologise, we could see you but come to you. as the russian invasion began, one photojournalist travelled from the eastern part of ukraine to the capital city of kyiv, documenting the devastation that he was seeing. and we can talk to him now, actually. i beg your pardon, thatis now, actually. i beg your pardon, that is our next guest, i do apologise. can you hear me, sir? good morning from us. i apologise. can you hear me, sir? good morning from us. apologise. can you hear me, sir? good morning from us. i can hear ou, good morning from us. i can hear you. yeah! good morning from us. i can hear you, yeah! thank good morning from us. i can hear you, yeah! thank you good morning from us. i can hear you, yeah! thank you very - good morning from us. i can hear you, yeah! thank you very much, | you, yeah! thank you very much, tell our audience you, yeah! thank you very much, tell our audience aroun
don t drop out of school, and for that matter drop out of society. reporter: deborah feyerick, cnn, trenton, new jersey. cnn s soledad o brien reports on don t fail me, education in america and examines the crisis in the american education system, and why our students are at risk if they don t succeed in math and science. this premiers sunday may 15th at 8:00 p.m. eastern only here on cnn. it is the anniversary of a tragic accident that affected so many lives. one photojournalist was able to capture the disaster with his camera, and now he tells cnn the story. [ male announcer ] when sean was looking at mba programs, he wanted a curriculum designed to meet market needs, with faculty who brought real-world perspective
accident. the area around the plant is virtually a ghost town. photojournalist paul fusco remembers the difficulty of chernobyl and hopes that the people of japan will not share the same hopelessness. i m a freelance photographer and i have been with magnum photos since 1974. i was very concerned about chernobyl and when it exploded in 1986. it was the news and everybody knew about it, but then after a year or so, it was like it disappeared and then in 1997, a friend of mine told me about children who were being accepted by families to get them away from the radiation of chernobyl. i was kind of stunned. so i thought, i want to go see why. so i was able to get permission, and then i got, i rented a car and a driver and we headed for chernobyl. it is hard to just describe it. it is nothing going on in that station anymore.