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  • More people are delaying retirement, or coming out of it, because of financial need or boredom. We'll look at how older Americans are finding work in the modern world.
  • Over the past 10 years, as many as 140 women in the Mexican town of Juarez -- just across the border from El Paso, Texas -- have been the victims of sexual homicides, their bodies dumped in ditches or vacant lots. The crimes remain unsolved; new allegations are surfacing that wealthy and well-connected men are behind the killings. NPR's John Burnett reports.
  • It seems like an idea any environmentalist would embrace: Build one of the world's largest solar power operations in the Southern California desert and surround it with plants that run on wind and und
  • Oceanside school students got low marks on a state-mandated physical fitness test. The findings are included in a state report about how active students are in California. KPBS Reporter Ana Tintocalis
  • Voters in the oil-rich Gulf Emirate of Kuwait go to the polls. Candidates are vying for 50 seats in Parliament. For the first time, women are allowed to vote and run for office. Female candidates have struggled to gain recognition but their efforts, and an anti-corruption movement, have shaken up the quiet country.
  • We'll explore how the community is coping with the deaths of 14-year-old Amber Dubois and 17-year-old Chelsea King.
  • That's where the story really begins. Mario wants to join his son in Miami and needs to get a visa. But he's told that since everyone wants to move to America, visas are hard to come by. Mario tries the legitimate route and is rejected. So he decides to try his luck with a more shady operator who demands $5,000 for the visa. The steep price forces Mario to consider how badly he wants to leave and what price he's willing to pay. Complicating matters are a beautiful woman named Blanca (Kate del Castillo of the upcoming
  • The high cost of health care is driving more and more people away from the healthcare system. We'll open up the phones and ask our listeners to tell us what they'd like to see changed in the health system.
  • Mexico's legacy in San Diego can be seen everywhere - from street names to cuisine to the Chicano movement. We'll talk with San Diegans who can trace their family roots back to the earliest days of San Diego's European settlement.
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