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  • Democratic presidential candidates Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton last night met for their final debate before four primaries on March 4. They battled it out on topics including NAFTA, health care and Iraq. Clinton faces pressure to win big in Texas and Ohio in order to keep her presidential hopes alive.
  • A group of San Diegans who belong to churches, synagogues and mosques around the region are working together on a project they believe will inspire more cross cultural understanding. The Abraham's Pat
  • Sanders Changes Mind: Tells the Press First; When Does City Council Find Out?
  • We continue our special coverage of San Diego in a post-9/11 world. We speak with local religious leaders about their diverse perspectives on the way religion has been affected in the past six years.
  • It is hard to image a world without metal.Journey to the Copper Age: Archaeology in the Holy Land is a new exhibit at the San Diego Museum of Man that tells the story of the profound changes that meta
  • The Dead Sea Scrolls exhibit opens at San Diego's Museum of Natural History on June 29th. The exhibit's curator and the museum's president reveal what it took to put together the most comprehensive ex
  • The Israeli victory launched a contentious, ongoing struggle over East Jerusalem and the Old City of Jerusalem — and marked the start of Israel's 40-year military occupation of the West Bank.
  • Titanic director James Cameron says he has found the remains of Jesus Christ, Mary Magdalene and a son named Judah. Scholars are skeptical. A documentary, The Lost Tomb of Jesus, will debut March 4 on the Discovery Channel.
  • When the Pope spoke of jihad, and when Danish cartoonists published caricatures of a violent prophet Muhammad, Karen Armstrong blamed "Islamophobia." The author talks about her second biography on the prophet, entitled Muhammad: A Prophet for Our Time and warns against what she calls the "myth of Islam as a chronically violent religion."
  • Shanghai was once home to thousands of Jews, serving as a refuge during World War II. Now a new Jewish center has opened, the first in China in 50 years, amid efforts to preserve the city's Jewish history.
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