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  • While a Supreme Court order continues to ensure the drug is still widely available, the issue returned Wednesday to the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals as lawyers for both sides urged the court to act.
  • San Diego County's housing affordability for the first part of the year remained on a par with the last months of 2022, the California Association of Realtors announced Tuesday.
  • In recent years, social justice movements have affected U.S. newsrooms. In a 12,000-word essay, New York Times publisher A.G. Sulzberger argues journalism must be free of personal ideology.
  • For decades, the genre has had a stealth mission: promoting public health. It started with Doug E. Fresh's "Stroke Ain't No Joke."
  • A fragile cease-fire between Israeli forces and militants in the Gaza Strip appeared to be holding Sunday after a five-day clash that killed 33 Palestinians and two people in Israel.
  • Amid high inflation and looming recession indicators, the U.S. still managed to add three hundred and fifteen thousand jobs during the month of August. And while San Diego continues to boast one of the lowest overall unemployment rates in the country, its overall labor force participation is down. Then, labor unions have won some high-profile victories in the last year. Here in California, but overall union membership dropped slightly last year and some doubt these sporadic victories mark a trend. Next, since the U.S. military withdrew from Afghanistan last year, some American veterans have been scrambling to help their Afghan allies escape the collapsing country. Though some have succeeded, most have not, and the stress has taken a toll on their health. And, over the course of nearly a decade, Gina Champion-Cain swindled hundreds of millions of dollars from unsuspecting investors in what would be the largest Ponzi scheme in San Diego history. Now, more than 2 years since she pled guilty to her crimes, a new series from the San Diego Union-Tribune looks to tell the rise-and-fall story of Champion- Cain. Also, Live theater in San Diego has had its difficulties getting back up on its feet since the pandemic shutdowns. Local theater companies, large and small, have noted audiences have been slow to return. Then, California has set aside $10 million to help people afford e-bikes - and the group the state has chosen to administer that incentive program is based right here in San Diego. Finally, a new book details the oral history of Comic-Con and the relationships forged at the event.
  • A jury in Boise, Idaho, found Lori Vallow Daybell guilty of murdering two of her children and conspiring to murder a romantic rival. Vallow Daybell, 49, could face life in prison.
  • Matt McIlvane will get his first opportunity to publicly explain how he will convert his coaching success in Europe to developing players for the Anaheim Ducks when he is introduced Wednesday as coach of the San Diego Gulls, their American Hockey League affiliate.
  • Simulations of two devastating earthquakes didn't seem to damage a high-rise timber building on UC San Diego’s shake table.
  • Nearly every local government in San Diego County failed in its efforts to create enough housing for the growing population during an eight-year cycle. The city of Lemon Grove was the lone standout.
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