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  • The film concerns a mother and her son who have been living apart for four years. Rosario (Kate del Castillo of the recent
  • Hundreds of soccer fans packed into Chuey's Restaurant in Barrio Logan to cheer on Mexico this afternoon. Mexico took on Angola in what ended as a scoreless tie.
  • Tens of thousands of Palestinians from the Gaza Strip poured over the border into Egypt after militants toppled huge stretches of a barricade in a divided border town. They bought supplies that have become scarce or too costly after months of a tight Israeli blockade of Hamas-controlled Gaza.
  • Today, a live action movie based on the sexed-up dolls known as the
  • A two-day truce at a Palestinian refugee camp was broken Thursday, when heavy gunfire was exchanged between the Lebanese military and Islamist militants who refuse to leave the camp in northern Lebanon. Government officials says it is only a matter of time before it orders its troops to go after the Islamist militants.
  • Robots are replacing young boys as jockeys in the ancient sport of camel racing, which is still popular among Arabs in the Persian Gulf. The change puts an end to one of the sport's most objectionable practices.
  • Nothing is more important than the potato in the highland villages of Peru. But Peru's potato culture faces its biggest threat yet: Global warming has opened the door to the disease that caused the Irish potato famine.
  • San Diego is not alone in dealing with a water shortage. We'll find out how other Western cities have been dealing with a shrinking water supply and what San Diego might learn from them.
  • The U.S. government paid at least 10 journalists in southern Florida tens of thousands of dollars for coverage that undermined Fidel Castro's communist government in Cuba. The Miami Herald has fired three journalists who received payments from the U.S. Office of Cuba Broadcasting.
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