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  • Just like humans, researchers say animals also have to adapt to climate change. The shifts for some warm-blooded animals are occurring over a far shorter time period than would usually happen.
  • The social media giant said it will again begin verifying certain accounts after putting the process on hold for more than three years.
  • The shooting victim is 25-year-old San Diego resident Leonardo Hurtado Ibarra who officers recognized from a wanted poster, according to a police statement. He is in a local hospital with life-threatening injuries. Also on KPBS’ San Diego News Matters podcast: Antibodies aren’t the body's only weapons against the coronavirus, the San Diego VA is removing suicidal veterans from a life-saving drug and transitioning them to a controversial nasal spray and more local news you need.
  • KPBS' Summer Music Series is back to heat up the summer.
  • Qin Gang brought a tougher style to China's foreign ministry pulpit. Now he is Beijing's man in Washington, inheriting a hard post amid the most fraught relations in years between China and the U.S.
  • There was no March Madness for the SDSU Aztecs, no NBA finals for the Golden State Warriors. Major League Baseball says it will play fewer than half the games of a normal season starting in late July. Football season is increasingly doubtful, as is the season for that other contact sport, hockey. The reason is, of course, COVID-19, and the fallout from the lack of sports — professional, collegiate and prep — extends far and wide.
  • The company has reached out to a number of researchers in recent months, though those same researchers are skeptical about the company's motivations.
  • Packed and peaceful demonstrations, marches and other events to protest racism and inequality in the justice system and police brutality against people of color happened across the county over the weekend. Also on KPBS’ San Diego News Matters Podcast: While the rest of the country begins to open up, the Navy continues to update its own response to the coronavirus and more local news you need.
  • Members of the public helped identify Benjamin Eugene Dagley of Ohio, according to police in Gulfport, Mississippi.
  • Today on San Diego News Matters: Protesters gathered outside of One America News Network on Saturday. A new study shows asymptomatic coronavirus patients can still face organ damage. Also, cities across California are on track to lose an estimated $7 billion in tax revenues because of the COVID-19 pandemic. But while no city is immune to the economic crisis, some are in a much better position than others.
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