MORE STORIES
-
British Army Capt. Harry Wales (a.k.a. Prince Harry) is stirring up controversy once again - this time over remarks he made about killing Taliban during his recent four-month deployment in Afghanistan.
-
The coral reef on which the USS Guardian ran aground on January 17 was misplaced by eight nautical miles on a digital chart used by the Guardian crew for navigation.
-
An Osprey based at MCAS Miramar accidentally dropped a five-pound bucket of cleaning fluid while in flight on Wednesday evening. The bucket crashed through the roof of a San Diego auto body shop that was closed at the time. No one was hurt.
-
A military spouses' club that came under fire for denying membership to the wife of a lesbian soldier is now offering her "guest" membership. But Ashley Broadway is rejecting the offer, calling it "just plain hurtful."
-
The Navy ordered the removal of the 79 Sailors who make up the crew of the USS Guardian after the ship ran aground Thursday on a coral reef off the coast of the Philippines.
-
Army Sgt. David J. Chambers, 25, was killed in Afghanistan on January 16.
-
The Pentagon won't intervene in the decision by a military spouses club to deny membership to the wife of a lesbian soldier.
-
A Marine recruit from MCRD San Diego was arrested this morning after allegedly running across the airport runway at Lindbergh Field.
-
The U.S. Navy minesweeper USS Guardian ran aground on a coral reef off the coast of the Philippines early Thursday morning. The USS Guardian is based in Sasebo, Japan.
-
An ambitious goal to reduce the use of fossil fuels looks to algae as a way to power the fleet.
Sign up for our newsletters!
Keep up with all the latest news, arts and culture, and TV highlights from KPBS.
- San Diego Unified wants to prepare more students for life after high school
- What to do if your flight is delayed or canceled during the US government shutdown
- The Famosa Slough — an inland wetland gem in urban San Diego
- Authorities charge Florida man with sparking deadly Palisades Fire in January
- Many San Diegans are putting major life decisions on hold