Monday, May 20, 2013

In the news, Sunday, May 19, 2013







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SAT 18      INDEX      MON 20
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from Daily Mail (UK)

Is our universe merely one of billions? Evidence of the existence of 'multiverse' revealed for the first time by cosmic map

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from Facecrooks

How to Keep Your Open Groups from Displaying on Your Public Timeline

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from NPR

Tesla Rides High, But Faces Formidable Foe: Car Dealers

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from The Spokesman-Review

Pentagon updates POW/MIA families
Relatives gather for news on efforts to locate loved ones

75th annual Lilac Parade a fragrant, glittering success
Apartment raided in ricin investigation
Investigators look for evidence after poisoned letters sent

Turbines: eagles’ newest threat
Federal government shielding wind farms from prosecution

CdA school board candidates highlight conservative roots

N. Korea launches missiles
Analyst says latest firing likely done as face-saving gesture

Fractured rail may have led to train crash, officials say
Investigators rule out foul play in accident

Everest’s glaciers melting, images show
Greenhouse gases suspected, but not proven, to be cause

VMM-162 MV-22 Osprey
on the tarmac in Iraq, April 1 2008
from Wikimedia Commons
Tiltrotor aircraft handles harsh area

China premier Li takes trip to India

Briton had penetrated Yemeni terror group

France enacts gay marriage into law

Assad says transition talks are internal issue

Women’s rights law blocked in Afghanistan
Conservatives say it violates Islamic law

Boston bombing response to be studied

Fatal shooting a hate crime, NYC police say
First death in a series of attacks

Bernanke predicts technology gains
Fed boss sees new industrial revolution

IRS crackdown ignored bigger, influential groups
Activists fear fallout on future investigations

Alaska volcanic eruption seems to be slowing down

Navy-trained dolphin locates Howell torpedo
Only second known Howell in existence

Buenos Aires bus tour follows Pope Francis’ path

U.S. to reconsider sea lion protection

Dead bison will be examined for disease

Groups want sheep station shut down
Grizzlies have died near site, lawsuit says

Nonlethal tactics used for goose control

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In brief:  From Wire Reports:

Former officer admits more crimes

TACOMA – A former Lakewood police officer previously convicted for stealing from a fund to benefit the families of four officers shot in 2009 has pleaded guilty to more charges related to that case.

KOMO-TV reported that 36-year-old Skeeter Manos pleaded guilty on Friday in Tacoma to identity theft and forgery charges for stealing the identity of a certified public accountant and forging documents in his name.

He was sentenced to nine more months in prison, which will be added to a 33-month federal prison sentence.

Manos has been in federal prison since last September, serving time for his prior federal conviction for wire fraud.


Washington raising stakes for drunk boating

Boaters could be sunk if caught drunk under new boating laws signed Thursday by Gov. Jay Inslee.

The legislation allows officers to require breath or blood tests when they suspect a boating-under- the-influence case. The infraction is upgraded to a gross misdemeanor; top fine is $5,000 and a year in jail.

The law changes go into effect on July 28.


REI project boosts Little Spokane trail

The Spokane REI store is trying to round up a crew of several hundred volunteers for a brief but massive effort to reroute a portion of a popular Little Spokane River trail off private land.

In cooperation with Riverside State Park, the store’s annual family-friendly Service Day project is set for 9 a.m.-noon on June 1, National Trails Day.

Helpers will redirect the Valley Trail downstream from Indian Painted Rocks onto state park land.

Individuals should preregister at the REI website, rei.com/spokane.

Larger groups contact Carol Christensen at the store, 328-9900.


Angler nailed for getting two limits

Veteran Washington Fish and Wildlife police often develop a nose for sniffing out greedy anglers.

For example, officer Mike Spurbeck was impressed to see an angler quickly catch his limit at the north end of West Medical Lake on the opening weekend of the season. But on a hunch, he didn’t approach the angler for the normal check. Instead he jotted down the angler’s vehicle license plate number.

Just 20 minutes later, the vehicle drove into the access area at the south end of the lake. The angler had changed clothes, including his hat and shoes.

Spurbeck moved to a concealed area to watch the angler, and sure enough, the man began fishing and caught a second daily limit.

Good fishing, bad luck, big fine, not to mention the $300 worth of fishing gear the officer seized.


Pend Oreille River pike netting continues

Washington fisheries officials and the Kalispel Tribe have removed around 6,000 northern pike using gillnets in the second year of a pike suppression and monitoring operation on the Box Canyon Reservoir stretch of the Pend Oreille River.

“The majority of these fish are age 3 or less,” said Jason Olson, the tribe’s fish conservation manager.

Pike suppression this season was conducted from March through the first week of May. Netting resumed last week after fish managers deployed even more nets to survey the river and found the spring netting had not reduced pike numbers to target numbers, especially in the north end of the reservoir.

The highest number of pike caught in survey nets last week were a dozen in South Everett and Tiger sloughs.

This spring’s post-suppression survey involved 197 nets that caught 410 northern pike in a week.

For the first time in 10 years of surveys and two seasons of suppression, no large pike were caught in the Box Canyon stretch survey, the tribe reports.

The suppression gillnets were removed from the river this weekend for the PikePalooza fishing derby sponsored by the tribe.


Value Village to relocate

Savers Inc., based in Bellevue, will move the current Value Village in Spokane Valley later this year into the building that once housed the Old Country Buffet.

Currently at 13112 E. Sprague Ave., the discount and vintage-item retail store will reopen after remodeling is completed at 12205 E. Sprague Ave., at the corner of Pines Road.

In January 2012 the restaurant closed its doors following a Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing.

Value Village Inc. is a subsidiary of privately held Savers Inc. The company operates more than 220 Value Village locations in the U.S., Canada and Australia.


A matter of survival: An aging population continues living with HIV

Prepayment plans surface with increased home values

BBB Tip of the Week: ZookaWare and deceptive practices

Puerto Rico struggles to revive coffee industry

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from The Star

Water over the dam











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