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Feb. 23, 2018: "I did not sign up to be ripped apart by a spray of bullets that came from a semi-automatic rifle. At the end of my teaching contract, it says that I will perform 'other duties to be assigned.' I do not interpret these words as 'bleeding to death on the floor of my classroom.'" Rebecca Berlin Field, an art and art history teacher in Richmond, Virginia, weighs in after the Parkland shooting. Plus, a look at the ALCU's push for debt collection reform; how South Koreans are feeling as the Winter Olympics wrap up; a look at the 21st annual New York International Children’s Film Festival; how "Black Panther" could fundamentally change Hollywood; and voices from Syria struggling amid the civil war.
By WNYC and PRX4.3
712712 ratings
Feb. 23, 2018: "I did not sign up to be ripped apart by a spray of bullets that came from a semi-automatic rifle. At the end of my teaching contract, it says that I will perform 'other duties to be assigned.' I do not interpret these words as 'bleeding to death on the floor of my classroom.'" Rebecca Berlin Field, an art and art history teacher in Richmond, Virginia, weighs in after the Parkland shooting. Plus, a look at the ALCU's push for debt collection reform; how South Koreans are feeling as the Winter Olympics wrap up; a look at the 21st annual New York International Children’s Film Festival; how "Black Panther" could fundamentally change Hollywood; and voices from Syria struggling amid the civil war.

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