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  • In its bid to reshape itself for the future, Yahoo is returning to a workplace culture of the tech industry's past. The Internet giant has reportedly notified its employees they'll no longer be allowed to work from home. According to an internal memo leaked to tech site All Things D, employees who previously enjoyed teleworking will have to start showing up at an office by June.
  • Airs Monday, January 10, 2011 at 9:30 p.m. on KPBS TV
  • The battle over how to avoid the looming cuts and tax increases known as the fiscal cliff is a frustrating one for the Tea Party. The movement is still a force within the GOP, even as its popularity has fallen over the past two years.
  • Jack Doyle is a former directly elected two-term Mayor of Santee who is returning to public life because we’re all frustrated with partisan gridlock where special interest money drives shortsighted public policy decisions. He is the only “totally independent” candidate with both elected experience and a consistent record of building budget reserves.
  • A former Mexican law enforcement official pleaded guilty Tuesday in federal court in San Diego to aiding members of a violent Tijuana-based drug cartel in a case prosecutors said included helping traffickers get away with a double homicide in 2010.
  • China is forecast to become the world's leading innovator this year, overtaking the U.S. and Japan in number of patent filings. But scientific fraud scandals bedevil the country's reputation as an innovator, and many say aspects of traditional Chinese culture may be partly to blame
  • The San Diego State men's basketball rides a four-game winning streak into Utah this week as they take on nationally-ranked Brigham Young University. Joining us on Morning Edition is North County Times sports columnist Jay Paris.
  • U.S. Military Most Trusted of All American Institutions
  • As head of the Service Employees International Union, Andy Stern expanded the rolls of the nation's second-largest union. He was hailed as an innovative organizer, but he also led what many now see as an ill-advised split with the AFL-CIO. And his top-down style alienated many in the union's rank and file.
  • San Diego CityBeat, a crusading alternative weekly with its own mix of outrage, investigation, wit and in-your-face opinion on everything from politics to fashion, celebrates its 10th birthday this month.
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