A three-toed footprint appeared in the rock, slightly longer than my hiking boot. The outlines weren’t crisp, but the impression was deep enough to collect sand grains and pebbles. This impression is ...
Duchess Meghan is giving back to Los Angeles. Meghan, a child of the Southern California city, paid a surprise visit to the Children's Hospital Los Angeles Thursday, March 12. ​The duchess moved back ...
Power lines and trees were knocked down across the Inland Northwest as thousands lost power following an aggressive overnight windstorm.
President Donald Trump has spent months touting his planned White House ballroom, but this week the public gets its first chance to formally offer him their thoughts. The verdict: They don’t like it.
NEW YORK - Investors in World Liberty Financial, the crypto venture co-founded by President Trump and his sons, have secured what the company described on its website as “guaranteed direct access” to ...
WASHINGTON – The Pentagon confirmed on Friday that all six crew members aboard a tanker aircraft that crashed in Iraq a day earlier had died, raising the total number of Americans killed in the war ...
A GRIP ON SPORTS • What a way to start a weekend. There was an ironic – more on that in a second – snowfall around the Spokane area overnight. Confetti fell like snow on the Idaho basketball teams.
A potential waiver to U.S. shipping restrictions and a record release of oil stockpiles by world governments might slow the pain consumers in the U.S. and elsewhere have suffered at the gasoline pumps ...
James “Bo” Gritz, a decorated Special Forces officer who helped negotiate an end to the deadly Ruby Ridge standoff 34 years ago in North Idaho, will be laid to rest on Friday. He was 87.
While most of the industry has turned its attention to the wildly entertaining World Baseball Classic, spring training is rolling along for the Mariners in the Cactus League.
I sometimes get a coffee to go from a local shop, and I stop at the little station to add sugar, cream, etc. to my cup. This station is pretty small.
Old printers, paper jams and disappearing ink have conspired to usher in a major change for Washington hunters and anglers. Starting this July, hunting and fishing licenses will no longer be printed ...