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  • The nation's veterans cemeteries are running out of space. In many areas, there's no longer enough land to offer burials to veterans and their spouses. So in several cities, the VA is putting up buildings to inter veterans' cremated remains above ground. Plus, San Diego Catholic leaders received a grim picture last week on climate change from a prominent San Diego Scripps Institution of Oceanography researcher. Also in today’s podcast, hopefully you enjoyed that extra hour of sleep as we went off daylight saving time. But how much longer will the clock keep changing, since California approved Prop 7?
  • Back when school was in person, eighth-grader Josh Secrett was always tired. Now, away from the bias he sometimes encountered in classrooms, he says, "I'm more energized. I want to do more things."
  • The costume, created by an Oceanside woman who was born without an arm, has inspired children and people with limb differences.
  • The $325 million dollar plan is funded by private companies and is expected to result in renovations to 16,000 homes on seven Army posts.
  • A new book by journalist and author James Verini chronicles the long and complicated history of America's presence in Iraq.
  • San Diego Unified School District outperformed state and national averages on math and reading tests. Hear from superintendent Cindy Marten about how the district has become an academic outlier. Plus, flu season comes around every year and it can send a sudden surge of people to the hospital. Find out how the county is working with hospitals to prevent the next "flu-mageddon." And, a new report looks at how local law enforcement is complying with California's "sanctuary state" law, two years after its passage.
  • "Joker" arrives in theaters after nabbing the Golden Lion for Best Film at the Venice Film Festival. This standalone DC origin film stars Joaquin Phoenix as the iconic villain.
  • Back when school was in person, eighth-grader Josh Secrett was always tired. Now, away from the bias he sometimes encountered in classrooms, he says, "I'm more energized. I want to do more things."
  • Many local businesses will be forced to reduce capacity as San Diego slides into the state's most restrictive COVID-19 operating tier, women running for political office in San Diego County tell their stories about confronting receiving threats and harassment on social media, and artists go to court to preserve murals slated for demolition at a middle school in Logan Heights.
  • San Diego County has released a new fire season disaster plan for residents. Also, Governor Newsom's plan to fix the state's housing crisis is facing big challenges, how scientists are helping the Navy keep their ship hulls clean. SoCal Edison to start dismantling San Onofre power plant, and an Oceanside museum unveils fingernail art on "tiny canvases."
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