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  • The high-minded Atlanta quartet has reunited 18 years after its debut album and seven years after Cee-Lo Green's pop smash "Crazy."
  • In the post-quake rubble of a former slum in Haiti's capital, an 86-year-old man clings to a fragile claim of being an American in hopes of being rescued. Yves Malbranche says he regrets his decision to return to his homeland and wants to go back to the U.S.
  • Foreign workers were elated when the State Department allowed them to finally apply for the final stage in getting a permanent visa to seek citizenship. But the backlogged Citizenship and Immigration Services refused to accept the applications. Now both agencies face lawsuits.
  • Hillcrest Tuesday Night Out for Good Deals
  • Erin Brockovich is back in Hinkley, Calif., fighting for residents who say their water supply is still contaminated by a toxic chemical. California utility PG&E settled a lawsuit in 1996 and pledged to clean up the contamination. But the chemical is back, and Brockovich is fired up.
  • New legislation is being pushed that would require more farmers markets to accept food stamps.
  • Some people are angry at San Diego County Supervisors for continuing a legal challenge against California's medical marijuana law. Supervisors say they'll ask the State Supreme Court to review last we
  • China burns nearly as much coal as the rest of the world combined--and has 300 more coal plants in the works. But China also leads the world in solar panel exports and wind farms, and has a national climate change policy in place. Is the U.S. falling behind on climate? Ira Flatow and guests discuss how the world is tackling global warming--with or without us--and what it might take to change the climate on Capitol Hill.
  • President Obama's fiscal commission begins its final round of meetings Tuesday, which may or may not produce a plan to cut the nation's growing debt. Experts say a debt crisis could come in 18 months or 18 years. But either way, it's a frightening prospect.
  • When Americans are asked what Sept. 10, 2001, was like, many call that Monday "normal" or "ordinary." That all changed on Sept. 11. Nine individuals share their serendipitous experiences, near misses or devastating turn of events from the day before America was interrupted.
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