The Latest National Appeals court allows end of protected status for migrants from 3 countries A federal appeals court on Wednesday sided with the Trump administration and halted for now a lower court's order that had kept in place temporary protections for 60,000 migrants from Central America and Nepal. The Associated Press Latin America Brazilian police say ex-President Bolsonaro had planned to flee to Argentina Bolsonaro is awaiting a Supreme Court ruling about an alleged coup attempt and learned Wednesday he might face another case as police formally accused him and one of his son of obstruction of justice The Associated Press Technology Protesters occupy Microsoft HQ, demand it cut ties with Israeli military Microsoft employees were milling about a lunchtime farmers market the company holds when about 30 masked protesters rolled in on bicycles. Monica Nickelsburg Wednesday Evening Headlines Protestors take over plaza at Microsoft’s Redmond headquarters, efforts to reintroduce grizzlies in the North Cascades go into hibernation, and Seattle gets a new contemporary arts space. Paige Browning Microsoft employees protest company’s contract with Israeli intelligence organization A group of current and former Microsoft employees briefly occupied part of the company’s Redmond campus yesterday to protest the relationship between the tech giant and Israel’s military. Hans Anderson Business WA families bid a warm-hearted farewell to the cold-blooded creatures at the Reptile Zoo They’re slithery, scaly — and soon they'll be gone for good. The Reptile Zoo in Monroe is set to close this fall, after nearly 30 years of teaching kids about exotic animals. Now, families are hurrying in to say goodbye to their favorite friends. Casey Martin Does your computer science degree still guarantee you a high-paying job? For college students, saying you majored in computer science used to be code for a six-figure salary and job stability. Now some fear those days are behind us. Maleeha Syed When a dementia patient commits a serious crime, what does justice look like? 87 year old George Innis had shown signs of dementia for years prior to the killing of his wife at their Bellevue assisted living center. His journey through the legal system highlights the questions surrounding prosecution and care of people with degenerative memory loss. Libby Denkmann Sports Read in Japanese: Why Ichiro 'was everything' to Seattle Mariners fans シアトルT-モバイル・パークにマリナーズの歴史を彩った名選手を称える新たな記念プレートが登場した。さらに来年には、銅像建立の計画も発表された。 その選手は世界が誇る鈴木イチロー氏だ。 Natalie Akane Newcomb Health A hurricane's effects on victims' health last for years after the storm, study finds A new study shows that the effects hurricanes have on people's health can last for years after a storm passes. Alejandra Borunda Prev 1010 of 1646 Next Sponsored
National Appeals court allows end of protected status for migrants from 3 countries A federal appeals court on Wednesday sided with the Trump administration and halted for now a lower court's order that had kept in place temporary protections for 60,000 migrants from Central America and Nepal. The Associated Press
Latin America Brazilian police say ex-President Bolsonaro had planned to flee to Argentina Bolsonaro is awaiting a Supreme Court ruling about an alleged coup attempt and learned Wednesday he might face another case as police formally accused him and one of his son of obstruction of justice The Associated Press
Technology Protesters occupy Microsoft HQ, demand it cut ties with Israeli military Microsoft employees were milling about a lunchtime farmers market the company holds when about 30 masked protesters rolled in on bicycles. Monica Nickelsburg
Wednesday Evening Headlines Protestors take over plaza at Microsoft’s Redmond headquarters, efforts to reintroduce grizzlies in the North Cascades go into hibernation, and Seattle gets a new contemporary arts space. Paige Browning
Microsoft employees protest company’s contract with Israeli intelligence organization A group of current and former Microsoft employees briefly occupied part of the company’s Redmond campus yesterday to protest the relationship between the tech giant and Israel’s military. Hans Anderson
Business WA families bid a warm-hearted farewell to the cold-blooded creatures at the Reptile Zoo They’re slithery, scaly — and soon they'll be gone for good. The Reptile Zoo in Monroe is set to close this fall, after nearly 30 years of teaching kids about exotic animals. Now, families are hurrying in to say goodbye to their favorite friends. Casey Martin
Does your computer science degree still guarantee you a high-paying job? For college students, saying you majored in computer science used to be code for a six-figure salary and job stability. Now some fear those days are behind us. Maleeha Syed
When a dementia patient commits a serious crime, what does justice look like? 87 year old George Innis had shown signs of dementia for years prior to the killing of his wife at their Bellevue assisted living center. His journey through the legal system highlights the questions surrounding prosecution and care of people with degenerative memory loss. Libby Denkmann
Sports Read in Japanese: Why Ichiro 'was everything' to Seattle Mariners fans シアトルT-モバイル・パークにマリナーズの歴史を彩った名選手を称える新たな記念プレートが登場した。さらに来年には、銅像建立の計画も発表された。 その選手は世界が誇る鈴木イチロー氏だ。 Natalie Akane Newcomb
Health A hurricane's effects on victims' health last for years after the storm, study finds A new study shows that the effects hurricanes have on people's health can last for years after a storm passes. Alejandra Borunda