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  • As Islamic State militants have marched across Syria and Iraq, oil smuggling has been a major part of their strategy. They have targeted oil fields and refineries and work with a range of middlemen.
  • The Islamist group has a established a new franchise in a country with 176 million Muslims. But al-Qaida could find it hard to recruit in India, according to many analysts.
  • Cygnet Theatre stages a unique twist on the holiday favorite "It's a Wonderful Life,” highlighting the Foley skills of Scott Paulson. Paulson and local actors talk shop and perform scenes from the pl
  • The Pentagon's lawyer said the deal to swap the Army sergeant for Taliban prisoners wasn't a first, citing the release of an Army pilot in Somalia. But the man who engineered that release disagrees.
  • A new study by the National Marriage Project finds that 44 percent of those with high school diplomas but no college degrees now have children without being married. That's more than triple what it was in the 1970s. And we're not just talking about teen parents, but adults living together.
  • Reporter Heather Hill explores a new exhibit at the San Diego Museum of Art highlighting the photographic art of refugee youth in San Diego.
  • Father A.J. Cote, a Dominican friar, was sued two years ago for allegedly abusing a minor. Depositions in the case reveal the Dominicans operate under a system where warning signs can go undetected and a problem priest can find refuge in new assignments for years.
  • When The New York Times removed Jill Abramson from the top editor spot at the paper — the first woman in the role — the publisher replaced her with Dean Baquet — the first black person in that job.
  • The 3-2 vote to push forward with proposed rules was a setback for advocates of "net neutrality," or equal Internet access for all. Public comments on the proposal are due by July 15.
  • Men have been at the forefront of human aggression and violence since pre-historic times, now UC San Diego and Salk Institute are bringing scientists from around the world to San Diego to examine why. A public symposium will be held May 16.
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