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| Questioning of Jewish charity shooting suspect in dispute Mon, 31 Mar 2008 20:51 GMT The man accused of opening fire at a Seattle Jewish charity in July 2006 told police he has bipolar disorder, is usually not a bad guy and that he stopped shooting "so quickly" because it appeared all the people there that day were women. |
| New anti-smoking campaign launched Mon, 31 Mar 2008 23:33 GMT Washington State Health Secretary Mary Selecky joined other national health leaders in Washington, D.C., Monday to launch a new stop-smoking campaign. |
| Alaska Ranger crewman says he smelled booze after sinking Mon, 31 Mar 2008 17:12 GMT DUTCH HARBOR, Alaska -- A crewman aboard the doomed Alaska Ranger told U.S. Coast Guard investigators Sunday that he smelled alcohol on the chief engineer's breath after abandoning ship and that he'd been concerned about crewmembers drinking onboard. |
| Parents indicted in child's death after alleged faith-healing Mon, 31 Mar 2008 18:02 GMT OREGON CITY -- The parents of an Oregon City toddler have been indicted on charges of manslaughter and criminal mistreatment, after their daughter died of what officials are calling medical neglect. |
| Deformed beaks mean slow starvation for region's birds; cause a mystery Mon, 31 Mar 2008 21:37 GMT Researchers are struggling to pinpoint a cause for an increase in misshapen and overgrown beaks in the Pacific Northwest's bird population. |
| Six empty boxcars derail near Tacoma Mon, 31 Mar 2008 05:52 GMT TACOMA -- Six empty boxcars of a 124-car, 10-locomotive Burlington Northern Santa Fe train derailed on the BNSF main line eight miles south of Tacoma. |
| Metro buses are fuller -- and later Mon, 31 Mar 2008 03:44 GMT Ridership on King County Metro buses is surging, and politicians and managers are quick to point that out. But what gets less attention is an unwanted byproduct of the buses' popularity: worsening on-time performance. |
| Washington begins to revise science education standards Mon, 31 Mar 2008 04:42 GMT Changing the way Washington teaches math has led to one of the most contentious education debates in recent memory. |
| Spelling bee champ wins with 'waveson' Mon, 31 Mar 2008 05:52 GMT Elizabeth Zhang, 13, repeated her 2006 win as Regional Spelling Bee champ, besting 52 competitors. |
| State promises help with college costs for low-income students Mon, 31 Mar 2008 05:24 GMT A new scholarship for low-income middle school students comes with a promise that if grades are kept up through high school the state will pay for college. |
| Under The Needle: West Seattle man's war-dead tally gains following on Web Mon, 31 Mar 2008 06:04 GMT A West Seattle man keeps a sign in his front yard marking the U.S. servicemen and women killed in Iraq. |
| Stadium Lofts may start residential move near Safeco, Qwest Mon, 31 Mar 2008 04:54 GMT A new developer has taken charge of a prominent project expected to start bringing new residents to the area around Safeco and Qwest fields. |
| I-1000 campaign seeks to sell voters on death Mon, 31 Mar 2008 05:50 GMT If you're selling assisted suicide, first change the name. |
| Expect heavy Opening Day traffic around Safeco Field Mon, 31 Mar 2008 05:50 GMT Before the sold-out crowd of 46,000 fans sees the Seattle Mariners play ball Opening Day, they'll have to get to Safeco Field first. |
| I-90 eastbound reopened Sun, 30 Mar 2008 22:20 GMT Highway crews have reopened Interstate 90 eastbound after closing it Sunday afternoon for avalanche control on Snoqualmie Pass. |
| Family of 8 flees house fire in Kent Mon, 31 Mar 2008 04:52 GMT A family of eight managed to escape an early morning house fire in Kent on Sunday |
| Man arrested twice in a day for drunken driving Mon, 31 Mar 2008 04:24 GMT BREMERTON -- A 48-year- old Kitsap County man was arrested twice in the same day by State Patrol troopers for drunken driving. |
| Renton school sets service wheels in motion Mon, 31 Mar 2008 05:53 GMT A Renton middle school has raised thousands of dollars to help send wheelchairs to disabled people in the Third World. |
| Crewman testifies about Alaska Ranger sinking Mon, 31 Mar 2008 04:44 GMT DUTCH HARBOR, Alaska -- Crewman Julio Morales had been working on the Alaska Ranger for less than a month when the alarm sounded, he said Sunday. |
| 'Wait till next year,' state Legislature says Mon, 31 Mar 2008 05:53 GMT OLYMPIA -- A small airplane buzzed the state Capitol just before lawmakers adjourned, trailing behind a long banner that implored: "Save our Sonics -- Next year is too late!" |
| Oregon welcome center not so welcome Mon, 31 Mar 2008 04:32 GMT ASHLAND -- The state of Oregon hopes to welcome visitors to its southwestern portal with a $6.5 million center at Ashland. But some Oregonians say it violates land-use rules, could jeopardize drivers and may be noisy and attract criminals. |
| Ex-University of Oregon officials still get paid as consultants Mon, 31 Mar 2008 05:53 GMT EUGENE -- John Moseley, Lorraine Davis and Dan Williams all retired as vice presidents at the University of Oregon in the past four years, but they're still working as consultants, drawing benefits and large salaries. |
| Jacob DeShazer, 1912-2008: One of last Doolittle's Raiders dies at age 95 Mon, 31 Mar 2008 05:53 GMT SALEM, Ore. -- Jacob DeShazer won fame as one of nearly 80 flyers on Lt. Col. "Jimmy" Doolittle's air raid on Japan in 1942, America's first strike against that country after Pearl Harbor. |
| Calif. steps back from zero-emission goal Fri, 28 Mar 2008 06:12 GMT SACRAMENTO, Calif. -- California air regulators on Thursday gutted rules seeking to place tens of thousands of zero-emission vehicles on the road, instead ordering automakers to produce a fleet of cleaner-burning hybrids. |
| Farm Bill: Making it worse Mon, 31 Mar 2008 22:58 GMT P-I Editorial: Congress could make a poor farm bill even worse. Two powerful Democratic senators would achieve that by cutting into the bill's redeeming points and raising its already over-the-top spending on farm payments. |
| Builders Group: Bizarre assertions Mon, 31 Mar 2008 22:59 GMT P-I Editorial: The Building Industry Association of Washington is influential. It's also looking bizarre in its nasty talk about environmentalism. |
| Buses: Be patient, prepared Mon, 31 Mar 2008 22:59 GMT P-I Editorial: There's something beautiful about 110 million passengers taking a bus (as they did in 2007) rather than piling into cars and clogging up the road. |
| Bush rearranges org charts and deck chairs Mon, 31 Mar 2008 22:59 GMT The financial events of the past seven months, and especially the past few weeks, have convinced all but a few diehards that the U.S. financial system needs major reform. Otherwise, we'll lurch from crisis to crisis -- and the crises will get bigger and bigger. |
| Clinton won't let reality get in her way Mon, 31 Mar 2008 23:00 GMT Marsha Mercer: How far is Hillary Clinton willing to go to press her claim? She's willing to forget that change is in the air. Clinton risks being tagged as an old-style politician from an era when the moneyed elite ran the table. |
| Inoculated against vaccine facts Mon, 31 Mar 2008 23:02 GMT Paul A. Offit: Health officials at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and at the American Academy of Pediatrics steadfastly have assured the public that vaccines do not cause autism. Now, in a special vaccine claims court, the federal government appeared to have said exactly the opposite. What happened? |
| Bill won't improve safety of toys and other children's products Mon, 31 Mar 2008 23:03 GMT Rick Locker: Instead of improving safety for kids, the Children's Safe Products Act would ban the sale of life-saving products in the state of Washington. |
| Balancing, protecting the playing field Mon, 31 Mar 2008 23:04 GMT Ken Meidell and Thomas O'Keefe: Our 19th century mining law is out of synch with a West whose population is booming due in large part to the quality of life public lands provide. |
| Biography isn't enough Mon, 31 Mar 2008 18:42 GMT But here's something for the McCain campaign to remember: Democracies don't always elect the man who has done the most for his country. |
| Democrats' nightmare Mon, 31 Mar 2008 18:52 GMT Scot Lehigh: Given their need to coalesce around a candidate as soon as practically possible, a June superdelegate declaration may offer Democrats their best way out of a difficult spot. |
| Hillary's St. Patrick's Day massacre Mon, 31 Mar 2008 18:13 GMT Politically and culturally we're not in the 1980s -- or pre-YouTube 2004 -- anymore. An unending war abroad is upstaging the old domestic racial ghosts. A new bottom-up media culture is challenging any candidate's control of a message. |
| On race, Clinton misses the call Mon, 31 Mar 2008 18:21 GMT Derrick Z. Jackson: If she does not cut some slack, Hillary Clinton's campaign remains on course to betray the chances of the Democrats to regain the White House. |
| Surrender already, Dorothy Mon, 31 Mar 2008 18:21 GMT While Clinton's saying it was "a bunch of bull" that his wife should drop out, Dems are trying to sneak up on Hillary, throw a sack over her head, carry her off the field and stick her in a Saddam spider hole until after the convention. |
| Letters to the Editor Mon, 31 Mar 2008 22:58 GMT |
| More Letters to the Editor Mon, 31 Mar 2008 22:07 GMT |
| Mental Illness: Facing the reality Sun, 30 Mar 2008 23:06 GMT P-I Editorial: Nearly a half-century after the beginning of a grand experiment in better treatment of the mentally ill, the law and institutions are a long way from knowing exactly how to protect the public from the occasional dangerous individual. |
| Iraq War: A failure to govern Sun, 30 Mar 2008 23:07 GMT P-I Editorial: Since Iraqi forces decided crack down on Shiite groups (now with the help of U.S. troops), a Shiite faction splintered off, and the ceasefire appears to be unofficially over. That's not good. |
| UW students shouldn't have to live in fear Sun, 30 Mar 2008 23:08 GMT Anderw Swanson: The threatening environment one UW freshman has encountered on campus certainly isn't what the university wants for its young, impressionable students. |
| Metro, farm bill and weekend comments Mon, 31 Mar 2008 16:05 GMT Welcome to the Seattle P-I's virtual editorial board blog. |
| Even in somber mood, the Boss still rocks Like a man possessed by an indomitable musical spirit, Bruce Springsteen and his famous E Street Band raised the roof Saturday night at KeyArena, where a devoted crowd spanning several generations filled the arena to capacity. |
| The wait's over -- it's Opening Day The Sea Dog, a new twist on a ballpark classic, is scheduled to make its Safeco Field debut Monday afternoon when the Mariners open the 2008 Major League Baseball season against the Texas Rangers. |
| Software Notebook: Microsoft seeks to broaden its mobile business Microsoft has revamped the management of its Windows Mobile unit as it tries to expand the business into the consumer market for mobile phones. |
| Idle rail cars reflect slowing economy CRAIG, Mont. -- BNSF Railway Co., the nation's top hauler of container rail freight, is parking miles of rail cars in Montana and elsewhere because there isn't enough freight to keep them rolling. |
| Young Artists Program interprets operas in a study of musical contrasts Ravel's "L'Enfant et les sortileges" and Puccini's "Gianni Schicchi" were composed within a few years of each other, but they couldn't be more different. Their production by Seattle Opera's Young Artists Program emphasizes the contrast. |
| Workplace Coach: To thrive, embrace change Is your organization adaptable, nimble and resilient in today's reality of constant change? The Workplace Coach discusses how to get there. |
| Mariners take on different look in their quest for AL West title Seattle has almost one-third of its roster, seven of 25 players, making their first appearance on an Opening Day roster. |
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