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Abalone nurseries arrive | Just as he brought the snails out it started to rain. Luckily these are animals that like to get wet 鈥 in fact they need it to survive. 鈥淚f they are out of water for any longer than five minutes you might want to give them a gentle dunk,鈥 said Josh Bouma, abalone program director at Puget鈥 |
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Students helping to conduct survey of border crossers | |||
Few claim 1,300 empty plots in Lynden, Greenwood cemeteries | Few people have claimed the roughly 1,300 empty plots at Lynden and Greenwood cemeteries since the entity that cares for both put out the call three years ago for possible owners to come forward. "There were not a lot of people over the three-year period," said Richard Decima, a鈥 |
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Keeping Washington's aerospace edge through state grants | Washington state's Joint Center for Aerospace Technology Innovation or JCATI has invested more than $1.36 million in some 18 aerospace research projects at the University of Washington, Washington State University and Western Washington University. |
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New port facilities could help grow Washington revenues | Washington state legislators will be meeting in a special session to deal with the growing gap between projected revenues and expenditures, a policy dilemma that has been rendered more acute by the state Supreme Court's order that the government increase educational spending by $1 billion.鈥 |
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Falling Canadian Dollar Bears Watching Says Border Expert | The Canadian dollar is dropping in value. At the close of currency trading Monday, the Canadian dollar hit its lowest point in nearly two years in comparison to the U.S. dollar. If the trend continues, it'll be cause for concern in border states. |
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'Sort of' alive: Researchers probe how kids think about robots | One way young kids learn to organize the world is by dividing it into living and non-living things. But now that robots vacuum our floors and smart phones talk back to us, do children think of technology as alive? A team of Washington researchers is exploring how kids interact with robots, and鈥 |
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Mass of debris, water roars down Nooksack River's middle fork, endangers hikers | In the early hours of May 31, a slurry of mud, trees and boulders - one at least 14 feet across - roared down the middle fork of the Nooksack River. Called a debris flow by scientists, it would have felt and sounded like a freight train as it rumbled down the river valley for more than 3鈥 |
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Multitasking Is A Don't: 12 Reasons To Stop Doing It | We all do it: Texting while walking, sending emails during meetings, chatting on the phone while cooking dinner. In today鈥檚 society, doing just one thing at a time seems downright luxurious, even wasteful. But chances are, you鈥檙e not doing yourself (or your boss, or your friends and鈥 |
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Getting to know Doug Clark |