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  • Demond Mullins spent a year in Iraq with the National Guard. When he came back, he felt alienated and angry at what he had seen and done in the war. Now Mullins has found a degree of peace and understanding in higher learning.
  • As federal budget problems persist, the Defense Department plans to make the armed forces "meaner and leaner." We look at what this means to the Marine Corps; what it's like covering -- and being embedded with -- the Marines; the new commandant; and the prospect of ending don't Ask, Don't Tell..
  • Black and Latino students consistently have lower test scores and attendance rates than their white counterparts. Placing struggling students in remedial classes has been a standard way to deal with the issue, but this method is coming under fire.
  • There have been advances made in speech therapy since the 1930s when Britain's King George IV worked to overcome his stammer, as well as new insights into what causes stuttering.
  • The Mexican government says it is making progress in the battle against the country's drug cartels. But despite some gains, drug-related killings continue at an alarming rate in parts of Mexico. Some critics say President Felipe Calderon's war is misguided, mismanaged and unwinnable.
  • More than 100 buildings in San Diego do not meet earthquake codes. We'll find out where some of those buildings are.
  • After last year's crash, there were loud calls to revamp financial rules to prevent another disaster. But the energy for a regulatory overhaul appears to have dissipated, even though the economy remains troubled.
  • Should the City of San Diego implement more regulations on condo conversions? Host Tom Fudge speaks to Gregg Robinson with the Affordable Housing Coalition, and Chris Christiansen from condoconversio
  • As part of Envision San Diego, we take a look at the fall out of the biggest tax revolt in California history - the passage of Prop 13 in 1978.
  • After more than two years behind bars, Genarlow Wilson is free from prison. In 2003, Wilson was sentenced to 10 years for having consensual oral sex with another teenager. The punishment was eventually denounced by Georgia's Supreme Court.
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