I was hiking on Renton’s Cedar River trail on Memorial Day, from the Renton Public Library to the end of the trail, where the river flows into Lake Washington.
Blog: SPS superintendent shows up in the ID
Last week, a war erupted between Ingraham High School and Dr. Susan Enfield, superintendent of Seattle Public Schools, after she fired the high
Blog: Made in USA magic
“Can you buy two boxes of milk powder for me?” a Chinese woman asked me in a desperate tone last week at Costco.
Blog: No more Indian consul office
Setting up a consulate office is a bilateral agreement between the United States and India. If a country wants to have a consular office in another country
One year after protests, Thailand still divided, its people suffer most
BANGKOK (AP) — Cradling a framed portrait of her slain daughter, Payao Akkhahad approached a soldier outside a barracks in this vast Asian metropolis
Destroyed slum a consequence of India’s vast economic gap
NEW DELHI (AP) — Years later, long after their handmade shacks had been reduced to rubble, they look at the place that was once their neighborhood
Blog: Getting women’s clothes in the kids’ section
I used to be frustrated when shopping for clothes because I wear a small size and some shops don’t carry petites. Lately, I’ve discovered a new way to find clothes — cheaply.
Seattle University to award honorary degree to global landmine activist
Internationally renowned landmine activist Tun Channareth will travel from Cambodia to the United States to accept an honorary
This month, graffiti vandalism in the International District increased
During the first week of May, the Chinatown–ID area saw 64 new graffiti crimes — 20 percent of the annual average, according to the Chinatown-International District
Hospital workers sue over patient who requested only white workers
SEATTLE (AP) — Nine Western State Hospital workers who said their bosses illegally accommodated a patient’s request for white caregivers have filed a federal lawsuit