Archives | Sunday, Oct. 9, 2022
Results
Business
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The Dirt: Building permit under review for Millennium North Hill in the Garland District
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Survey: Analysts foresee 12% rise in stock market over next 12 months
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Michelle Singletary: A deadline is looming for Public Service Loan Forgiveness waiver
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‘Chat’ with Musk, Trump or Xi: Ex-Googlers want to give the public AI
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Heavily GOP Idaho county urges voters to use absentee ballots, gets some negative replies
Nation/World
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Huge barge backup eases on Mississippi River, freeing tons of cargo
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Streaming services want to fill family movie void
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Putin accuses Ukraine of attacking bridge linking Crimea
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‘On Herschel’s team’: Top Republicans to visit Georgia to boost Walker’s Senate bid
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Alleged Shinzo Abe shooter undergoing mental tests in Japan
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Putin to meet top security officials Monday in wake of Crimea bridge explosion
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Scientists testing unhackable quantum internet in basement closet
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Iran protests keep pressure on Raisi as death reports mount
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Julia strikes Nicaragua as hurricane with ‘life-threatening’ flooding
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Pandemic exodus left Bay Area with largest drop in household income in U.S.
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Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers seeks 10th term, possible committee chair against Democrat Natasha Hill
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Why Saudi Arabia rebuffed Biden’s pleas for more oil
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We the People: The Senate was designed for compromise and stability, but is it still playing that role?
Outdoors
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Idaho fly club meeting scheduled
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Bears aren’t as carnivorous as previously thought WSU study finds, raising questions about huckleberry harvesting
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Fat bear week is an internet phenomenon and a scientific one too
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Hibernating bears stay healthy despite being very fat and sedentary. New research from Washington State University is focusing on what humans can learn from them.