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  • It has become frightening clear that we are not out of the economic woods, and another recession is not out of the question. So what does this mean for San Diego? And how might San Diego be affected by the debt ceiling bill?
  • After 14 years with the San Diego Sheriff’s Department, Cpl. Ingram has eviction down to a science. First, he knocks loudly on the door. Then comes the opening statement.
  • The Sister Study, a project sponsored by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, wants to hear from 50,000 women whose sisters have been diagnosed with breast cancer. Researchers hope findings from the study will offer insight into the interaction of genetics and the environment may have in the role of harboring the disease.
  • While carbon dioxide streams into the atmosphere from tailpipes and smokestacks around the world, one man is building a machine to suck it back out. And some heavy-hitting investors are betting that it's going to work.
  • Turning waste-water into crystal clear drinking water seems like something San Diego could only dream of. The City of San Diego is in the middle of a one-year, $11.8 million pilot project to prove that this water is safe to drink.
  • February is the month to visit our local museums for half price. Culture Lust contributor Jocelyn Maggard lists some of the exhibits on view around town during Museum Month.
  • Physical therapist Stephania Bell has a unique specialty in diagnosing football injuries. But she's not working for teams or athletes. Instead, she advises average, everyday fantasy football players on which athletes to bench or start.
  • Apple will sell its newly unveiled tablet-style iPad starting at $499. The iPad resembles an iPhone, but larger.
  • American Richard Heck and Japanese researchers Ei-ichi Negishi and Akira Suzuki developed a chemical method that has allowed scientists to make medicines and better electronics.
  • Activists want to rewrite laws to recognize someone as a person from the moment a sperm fertilizes an egg. But a redefinition could threaten the use of a long list of commonly used contraceptives, including some birth control pills and the intrauterine device.
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