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  • Our local Latinx community has been hit hard by the pandemic; disproportionately hard. In today’s special episode, we share one border family’s battle with COVID-19. They explain how they’re using their story to help other Mexican-American families like theirs. It's a story about trust, and how living at the border can mean living in a place where trust sometimes requires translation.
  • The community is looking for blood donations, legal assistance and funds for victims' families.
  • Pac-Arts is holding a virtual launch party tomorrow for its upcoming Spring Showcase where it will reveal its full line up. But artistic director Brian Hu offers a sneak peek at his "Songs Our Elders Taught Me" program that he created in response to recent anti-Asian violence.
  • County public health officials have reported 193 new infections and 12 additional deaths.
  • Last Wednesday the Supreme Court heard arguments over whether or not the NCAA’S limits for student athletes violates antitrust laws. The SCOTUS is expected to rule on the case in June.
  • From the tiny Baltic nation of Estonia, some 30 nations are participating in mock cyberwar exercises. While the annual NATO-led exercise may be fiction, the threat emanating from Russia is very real.
  • The LAPD detained at least 16 journalists covering a protest in March 2021, a low point in a year of increasing mistrust and hostilities between police departments and the media.
  • Ali Nasser Abulaban, 29, is charged in the shooting deaths of 28-year- old Ana Abulaban and 29-year-old Rayburn Cardenas Barron at the Spire San Diego luxury apartment complex.
  • Loans to nonprofit and small businesses, building "sexy" streets, investing in the city's Climate Equity Fund and supporting the San Diego Convention Center are among the highlights of Mayor Todd Gloria's $4.6 billion proposed budget. Meanwhile, clinics in National City were packed with young people now eligible for a covid-19 vaccine. Plus, Pac-Arts has their spring showcase opening next week. We’ll have a preview.
  • San Diego County announced today it is pausing the use of the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine out of -quote- “an abundance of caution.” This follows guidance from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Food and Drug Administration. The agencies are reviewing reports of a “rare and severe type of blood clot” that occurred in six people in the U.S. after receiving the Johnson and Johnson vaccine.
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