Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
Watch Live

Search results for

  • Around the nation today, the 10th anniversary of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks is being marked with prayers, solemn ceremonies, and pledges to never let terrorists fundamentally change the American way of life.
  • Around the nation today, the 10th anniversary of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks was marked with prayers, solemn ceremonies, vows to remember the nearly 3,000 victims and pledges to never let terrorists fundamentally change the American way of life.
  • The past ten years have been rocky for San Diego's Islamic community, we hear first-hand what they dealt with after 9/11
  • After the 2001 attacks, many declared, as Rabbi Eric Yoffie did, that "our world has irreparably changed." But even as Americans have grown accustomed to daily life in a more dangerous world, how much has really changed?
  • Carie Lemack, who lost her mother on Sept. 11, says she will never quit trying to prevent that kind of tragedy from happening again. Ten years later, Lemack is still on that mission — and she's not only founded two nonprofits, she's also made an Oscar-nominated documentary and is on a first-name basis with Sen. John Kerry.
  • San Diego is commemorating the ten year anniversary of 9/11 with events throughout the county.
  • San Diego's Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Film Festival
  • Last Saturday, just 48 hours before he was due to leave the country, American international aid expert Warren Weinstein was kidnapped in Pakistan's Punjab region. There's been no word since, not even from his abductors.
  • Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said it is time for Syrian President Bashar Assad "to get out of the way" as she outlined new U.S. sanctions against the regime and as President Obama issued his first explicit demand that Assad resign. The U.S. moves came shortly after U.N. investigators said Syria's crackdown on anti-government protesters "may amount to crimes against humanity."
  • In the Danziger Bridge case, 10 police officers gunned down civilians in the days after Katrina, then concocted an elaborate cover-up. This month's guilty verdicts give momentum to a larger effort by the federal government to reform the city's police department from top to bottom.
629 of 720