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  • New documents recently gathered by the Fronteras Desk give some new insight into what's now become a nearly two year-long hunt for the killers of U.S. Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry.
  • Customers are hoping regulators will not require them to continue to pay for the annual $1 billion cost of running the troubled San Onofre nuclear plant.
  • Immigrants rights activists headed to court in El Centro Tuesday morning. They were ticketed last month by the Sheriff for stringing safety buoys across the All American Canal to help prevent migrant drownings.
  • A Country Legend To A Robot Hedda Gabler
  • San Diego city officials approved new rules yesterday that make it easier for residents to tap into a water source they already use.
  • What are the top border-related stories of 2010? We speak to KPBS Border Reporter Amy Isackson about the discovery of two large drug tunnels along the border, and the story of alleged teenage assassin "El Ponchis." We'll also speak to Reporter Ruxandra Guidi and Social Media Editor Jose Luis Jimenez about the Fronteras project that KPBS is working on with several other public radio stations across the Southwest.
  • Troops at Fort Bliss in El Paso, Texas, share what they would tell President Obama, if given the chance. Some look forward to settling down with family, while others can't wait to redeploy -- to Afghanistan. Obama will speak at Fort Bliss on Tuesday to mark the formal end to combat operations in Iraq.
  • With immigration a hot-button issue in Washington, some version of immigration reform is likely this year. Even so, immigrant activist Sandra Sanchez concedes that the country might not be ready for an overhaul of its immigration laws.
  • With immigration a hot-button issue in Washington, some version of immigration reform is likely this year. Even so, immigrant activist Sandra Sanchez concedes that the country might not be ready for an overhaul of its immigration laws.
  • The Federal Reserve chairman delivers a much-anticipated speech Friday morning on additional steps the Fed might take to shore up the economy. Some investors are hoping for another round of quantitative easing, but others warn that a solution can ultimately only be worked out by the president and congressional Republicans.
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