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| One killed in Pierce County crash Sat, 28 Jun 2008 18:52 GMT A Tacoma man was killed when he crashed his motorycycle along state Route 512 in Pierce County Friday night. |
| Driver arrested for DUI in fatal head-on crash Sat, 28 Jun 2008 20:35 GMT Troopers arrested a woman for suspicion of DUI after she allegedly caused a head-on crash that left one person dead and a second in critical condition. |
| Summer makes its official debut Sat, 28 Jun 2008 04:51 GMT The National Weather Service is forecasting that the blazing orb that avoided Seattle in early June will hover unobstructed through the weekend. Temperatures will be in the 80s to 90s. |
| Council previews parks levy Sat, 28 Jun 2008 06:32 GMT With less than a month to decide whether to ask voters for a parks-dedicated tax increase, Seattle City Council members got their first look Friday morning at a proposed $140 million, six-year levy. |
| School for children with autism centers on customized learning Sat, 28 Jun 2008 06:22 GMT Launched by a group of Seattle parents in less than 10 months, the Academy for Precision Learning has wrapped up a successful first school year and is looking to double enrollment in the fall. The program aims to help struggling students. |
| No Parking Anytime: It's summer ... got money for a cause? Sat, 28 Jun 2008 04:32 GMT At this time of year, as if on cue with the profusion of map-unfolding tourists, there also are clipboard-holding canvassers. |
| No justice for former suspect in slaying, either Sat, 28 Jun 2008 06:37 GMT The man who was charged with killing Jessie Drungo two years ago is free. And he is speaking out about the investigation and putting his life back together. |
| Eugene Morgan, 1920-2008: Survived worst Navy disaster Sat, 28 Jun 2008 04:34 GMT Eugene Morgan, a West Seattle resident who survived the sinking of the USS Indianapolis during World War II, died June 18. He was 87. |
| 2 critically wounded in Kent shooting Sat, 28 Jun 2008 00:56 GMT Kent police believe a dispute over a video game may have led to a double shooting Thursday. No arrests have been made. |
| Manslaughter charge filed in fire pit death Sat, 28 Jun 2008 00:53 GMT King County prosecutors charged a Federal Way father Friday with second-degree manslaughter, saying the man's negligence caused the death of his 7-month-old son, who was found June 21 in a backyard fire pit. |
| Ex-detective gets more jail time in alcohol cases Sat, 28 Jun 2008 06:28 GMT A former Seattle police detective who set a breath-test record was sentenced to more than a year in jail and three months in home detention for a series of alcohol-related driving cases, two of which involved minor crashes. |
| That vision of history on the horizon is 'America's Tall Ship' Sat, 28 Jun 2008 06:35 GMT One of the tallest of the world's remaining tall ships, the U.S. Coast Guard cutter Eagle, will pay a surprise visit to Seattle Tuesday and Wednesday, en route to a festival of graceful sailing vessels in Tacoma. |
| Hundreds turn out to remember fallen Marine Sat, 28 Jun 2008 20:22 GMT Hundreds turn out for services for Marine Sgt. Michael Washington, killed in Afghanistan on June 14. |
| Advocates target racial disparity in foster care Sat, 28 Jun 2008 00:55 GMT Experts began to sit down this week and figure out how to reduce the disparity of African-American and Native-American children in foster care. |
| Worker injured in 40-foot fall Fri, 27 Jun 2008 21:53 GMT The Washington State Department of Labor is investigating the 40-foot fall of a construction worker from a scaffold at the Juanita Bay Pump station on Friday, authorities said. |
| Bail set in fatal hit-and-run Sat, 28 Jun 2008 02:30 GMT Bail was set at $250,000 Friday for a Tukwila man suspected of running over and killing a pedestrian and leaving the scene of the accident. |
| City light postpones planned outage for International District Sat, 28 Jun 2008 06:30 GMT Seattle City Light has postponed a planned power outage Saturday in the International District because residents were not given enough advance warning, the utility said Friday. It will take place in July. |
| Gasoline-doused man misses court date, warrant issued Sat, 28 Jun 2008 06:36 GMT A warrant has been issued for a man who was involved in a standoff with Seattle police last month in Greenwood after 911 reports that he had doused his estranged wife with gasoline. |
| Articles Of Faith: 10 qualities you'll find in a person of integrity Sat, 28 Jun 2008 00:15 GMT What are the marks of a person of integrity? Here's a Top 10 list to consider. |
| King County deaths Sat, 28 Jun 2008 01:09 GMT |
| Self-determination should be a right for dying souls Fri, 27 Jun 2008 22:31 GMT In the end, being for-or-against I-1000 isn't about causing or preventing death. Death will come to every quirky, complicated life. It's about granting self-determination to those who have lost control of their bodies and their lives. |
| A vital truth: Protecting family Fri, 27 Jun 2008 22:01 GMT P-I Editorial: Nothing is more important to children's future than their family. That's the vital truth behind an important new report on how the state takes more minority children from their families and keeps them in foster care longer. |
| Court rulings benefit Obama, embarrasses McCain Fri, 27 Jun 2008 22:02 GMT Two of Thursday's Supreme Court rulings -- both decided 5-4, and with the same alignment of justices -- concerned the Constitution's first two amendments. |
| Candidates ignore broken government Fri, 27 Jun 2008 22:03 GMT Ann McFeatters, columnist: Every day there is another example of how our government is broken. |
| Sunday Shorts Fri, 27 Jun 2008 22:02 GMT Sunday short editorial subjects from P-I opinion page writers and editors. |
| Students' success begins in the belief system Fri, 27 Jun 2008 22:04 GMT Karin Chenoweth, guest columnist: An extraordinary thing happened last weekend in Granger, a small, impoverished town in the Yakima Valley where most adults and many children work in the fields cutting asparagus, picking cherries and sorting apples. |
| Letters to the Editor Fri, 27 Jun 2008 21:57 GMT |
| More Letters to the Editor Fri, 27 Jun 2008 22:00 GMT |
| Snark Attack Fri, 27 Jun 2008 22:31 GMT Snarks from P-I opinion page writers. |
| Pay heed to summer's dangerous days ahead Sat, 28 Jun 2008 20:23 GMT I don't know about you all, but I just can't stop thinking about the insanely tragic story of Diego Alberto Rios-Santana, the Federal Way infant who died in a backyard fire-pit while his father, Alberto C. Rios, slept on a nearby bench. |
| Weekend VEB: Foster care, Death with Dignity and reader comments on Global Warming and Guns Fri, 27 Jun 2008 15:39 GMT Welcome to the Weekend VEB. |
| What the ...? NC offers license plate replacement RALEIGH, N.C. -- Thanks to some text message-savvy grandchildren, North Carolina drivers whose license plates have the potentially offensive "WTF" letter combination can replace the tags for free. |
| Amid cheers and tears, Gates says goodbye Bill Gates wiped the tears from his face, bowed his head to the applause -- and ended an era. Microsoft's 52-year-old icon worked his final day as a full-time executive Friday, remembering the successes and controversies of the company. |
| Musicians excel on Wagner, Mahler The Seattle Symphony concludes its subscription season with works of Wagner and Mahler this weekend. |
| Golf course closure opposed North Shore Golf Course isn't going away if SaveNETacoma, a formidable group, has its way. |
| 'SNL' to rebroadcast first episode As both a tribute and a bid for ratings, NBC is rebroadcasting the first episode of "Saturday Night Live," hosted by George Carlin. |
| N.M. court refuses obscene name change SANTA FE, N.M. -- A New Mexico appeals court on Friday ruled against a Los Alamos man who wanted to change his name to a phrase containing a popular four-letter obscenity. |
| Cook It: Grilled Lemon and Sage Chicken |
| Todd Bishop on Microsoft: Audio: Bill Gates says so long to Microsoft Bill Gates and Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer both fought back tears as they concluded a farewell event for the Microsoft co-founder on the company's Redmond campus this morning. Ballmer presented Gates with a bound scrapbook of photos and memories -- acknowledging that no mere parting gift could do justice to the moment. Then Gates addressed Microsoft's employees for the last time in his full-time role. Here's what he said. |
| Todd Bishop on Microsoft: On the scene: Microsoft's farewell to Gates Steve Ballmer and Bill Gates at the event. (Photo: Microsoft.)Microsoft is holding a town hall meeting here in Redmond this morning to send Bill Gates off into the new era of his life. It starts about 9 a.m. It's clearly a big moment for people at the company -- including Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer, who is already working the crowd with a big grin, bouncing around and snapping his fingers. More than 800 employees are here in a big conference room, and more will be watching on a webcast. |
| Mariners Notebook: Batista asked to swallow his pride SAN DIEGO -- After another bad outing dropped him to 3-10 on Wednesday, Miguel Batista blamed his control problems on continuing back spasms. |
| Devouring sEATtle: The best family restaurants in the U.S. Parents magazine just released its survey on the "healthiest, most kid-friendly" restaurants in the country. None of my own kid-friendly spots made the list, because the mag only surveyed "more than 50 of the largest full-service or buffet-style restaurant chains." That's a problem right off -- I don't like the trap of equating "kid-friendly" with "kid-oriented" -- but I'll save that flame war for another time. The magazine did a service by asking restaurants how they accommodate kids with food allergies. Friends in that boat tell me that chains, sadly, are usually far more forthright and helpful than independent restaurants when it comes to telling them what's in their food and helping them avoid allergens. (Shout-out to Danny at Impromptu for being an exception!) But I digress. Drumroll, please. |
| Judge's ruling won't end Sonics-Seattle battle When Judge Marsha Pechman rules on the Sonics' case Wednesday, it figures to set off another flurry of legal activity unless the two sides come to some sort of settlement in the interim. |
| A video game fight, but the violence is real Kent police believe a dispute over a video game was one reason for the double shooting Thursday afternoon. No arrests have been made. |
| Seattle police investigate "suspicious" death Seattle police are investigating a suspicious death from Friday night, but gave few details on what happened. |
| Sonics picks step into unknown The four gentlemen sat quietly at the podium, being introduced to a city they may never play in, excited about the opportunity to play in the NBA and yet unsure of their role with their new team. |
| Air travel to get even worse With summer barely under way, it may seem too early for travelers to start thinking about Labor Day. But that is when significant cuts in the airlines' fleets and schedules will begin taking effect, making for a particularly jarring end to summer. |
| UW's Smith leaving with degree Washington basketball player Joel Smith will graduate in four years this summer and not use his final season of eligibility, the school disclosed Friday. |
| Sonics retain options on Swift The Sonics kept open their options on Robert Swift by extending a qualifying offer to the oft-injured center, which will allow the club to match any offer he may receive from another team. |
| Reopening black farmers' suits could cost billions Sat, 28 Jun 2008 18:08 GMT WASHINGTON -- Lawmakers budgeted just $100 million for damages when they reopened the government's discrimination settlement with black farmers. They probably should have handed over a blank check. |
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