Tuesday, August 13, 2013

PacificNWNews Service since 1992





Mounties open cold case into 1960 disappearance

Osprey with it's Catch by Rick Price


AAA: Average price of gasoline in Washington $3.86Driver dies after car plunges into Lake Pend Oreille Washout strands day hikers northeast of Seattle - Spokane, North ... KHQ Right Now
MARBLEMOUNT, Wash. (AP) - North Cascades National Park is evacuating 65 hikers who were stranded Sunday when a gravel road washed out in northern ...
 Kathy Meader our regular Cheney Photojouralist
keeps on clicking away while she awaits the countdown to her
New Zealand trip.

Tennesee judge changes infant's name from 'Messiah' 
NEWPORT, Tenn. -- A judge in Tennessee changed a 7-month-old boy's name to Martin from Messiah, saying the religious name was earned by one person ...
Local pilots found Amber Alert suspect's campsite 
The two Spokane area pilots who spotted an Amber Alert suspect from the air returned to Felts Field on Monday. The men helped leaded authorities find James ...
 Cattails at Fish Lake by Editor
Authorities searching for missing Colville girl, 14

The Stevens County Sheriff's Office is searching for a missing
14-year-old girl who has not been seen since July 26.
Dena Fletcher be on the lookout Ferry Co! There was a possible sighting of her and the 24 year old adult male in Omak. If they are not hitch hiking then they could be in a maroon Mitsubishi mini-van.

Officers said they found Ashley Barbour on Monday in Coeur d’Alene. The 14-year-old was last seen in Colville on July 26th.
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Foofy E Clampus Vitus
Here's a good idea...
"First, two teams of virologists created more dangerous versions of the deadly H5N1 flu. Now they want to give the H7N9 virus, which has already sickened at least 134 people and killed 43 people in Asia, a few new capabilities: drug resistance, faster transmission between people and the ability to sneak past the immune system"

www.npr.org
The proposed studies would essentially create a recipe for a more contagious bird flu. Some scientists worry these viruses could escape the lab and possibly kill millions. But others think the information gleaned from the experiments is critical for keeping H7N9 from becoming a global threat.

Picture above by Bill Shannon from a boat looking East to the shores of Curlew Lake

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