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  • Jury trials in San Diego are scheduled to begin again in October with safety measures in place. San Diego Superior Court Presiding Judge Lorna Alksne discusses how jury trials will work during the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy spoke with Israeli lawmakers about his impatience with Israel as it mediates negotiations between Russia and Ukraine.
  • Newsom disappeared for nearly two weeks, holding no public events but spending time with his kids while working at the Capitol. Neither the governor nor his office have said why they didn’t include more details before Tuesday about where Newsom was.
  • After months of speculation over whether the vaccine-skeptical star would take part in the Australian Open, Djokovic seemed set to play — then border officials revoked his visa, leaving him in limbo.
  • President Trump's comments that he will not commit to a peaceful transfer of power if he loses the election raises alarms, a man dies after contracting COVID-19 while in federal jail in downtown San Diego, and the fallout continues over San Diego's disastrous purchase of 101 Ash Street building.
  • California Democrats appear to have come away with the advantage in a recasting of the state’s congressional districts.
  • The news is relentlessly bleak and scary: Record heat and wildfires in California and the West; a parade of deadly, destructive storms in the Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico; 100 degree temperatures in the Arctic; massive ice sheets breaking up in Antarctica and Greenland. All happening amid a pandemic. Yet in the Washington Post comes a headline of hope … “Stopping Climate Change Could Cost Less than Fighting Covid-19.”
  • From George Washington's warning against "foreign entanglements" to Donald Trump's "America First," the pledge to keep the focus close to home has been almost as constant as the oath of office itself.
  • In Kansas City, the Moral Injury Association of America sponsors a writing group that’s worked with thousands of veterans and family members since 2014.
  • Governor Gavin Newsom signed a bill on Thursday that makes California the first state in the nation to study the issue of reparations for the descendents of enslaved people. Also, As many as 5,000 childcare providers have already closed statewide after the onset of the pandemic. Child care workers are calling it a crisis for the industry.. Plus,as elections heat up, we have fact checks on campaign ads. Also, will California voters decide to bring back affirmative action in public schools and government jobs?
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