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Recyclin' for bicyclin'
Discarded bikes have a new life
DALTON GARDENS - The tiny sign jutted out of Jim Watson's lawn contains a simple, tidily scrawled promise: "Bikes for Sale."
Eurozone leaders seek better coordination
No concrete economic proposals offered so far
BRUSSELS - Germany and France pressed weaker eurozone countries to make their economies stronger to help pull the currency union out of its financial morass and gave their approval to strengthening the bailout fund that remains the bloc's first line of defense against the crisis.
Cd'A brings the crowds
Three festivals in downtown run through Sunday
Downtown Coeur d’Alene boomed on Friday with locals and people from all over the U.S attending three festivals that will run through Sunday.
Trump's focus on his base complicates path to reelection
In times of war and national strife, presidents typically try to unite a broken country and see their approval ratings soar
Trump's focus on his base complicates path to reelection
In times of war and national strife, presidents typically try to unite a broken country and see their approval ratings soar
Fed may take boldest steps in a decade to ease virus impact
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Federal Reserve is all but sure to take its most drastic steps Wednesday since the depths of the 2008 financial crisis to try to counter the coronavirus' growing damage to the U.S. economy and the financial markets.
STEVE CAMERON BLOG Shop, breed, grow
Still here.
Rethinking New Year's resolutions
Lori Biancofiori has been looking forward to 2011 for a long time. That's when she hopes to leave 2009 behind for good.
Mom, kids grieving loss of husband, father
This mom and kids are going to be spending Christmas feeling the loss of their husband and father.
Spending showdowns will test new Congress
WASHINGTON - Two early showdowns on spending and debt will signal whether the new Congress can find common ground despite its partisan divisions or whether it's destined for gridlock and brinkmanship that could threaten the nation's economic health.
End of an era on Main Street
Tom Burnett was a newspaperman. There are many people who earn a living in the newspaper business in a variety of capacities, but in my decades-long experience there's only a handful I'd describe as a newspaperman, the kind of person who bleeds ink and considers the 4th Estate a noble calling. If you don't get a little misty-eyed when the printing presses are rolling and another edition is put to bed, forget it.
Jean Lucille Wilhelm, 90
Jean Lucille Wilhelm, 90, of Post Falls, Idaho, left her earthly home May 31, 2014, excited to join her husband in the heavenly home that was prepared for her long before she was born. Jesus welcomed her into his loving arms where her pain is gone and has been replaced with peace beyond comprehension.
What $1,500 gets renters here, there, everywhere
A brand new, ranch-style rental home on Nixon Loop in Rathdrum is going for $1,595 a month.
The Exhausted Dad: Music makes the parade
The only parade I ever remember enjoying was the one inserted in the Sunday newspaper.
Mass event will let hackers test limits of AI technology
The idea of a mass hack caught the attention of U.S. government officials in March at the South by Southwest festival in Austin, Texas
THE CHEAP SEATS with STEVE CAMERON: Best bet this weekend, no money to be spent in Idaho
According to a survey done by the American Gaming Association survey, a record 50.4 million Americans plan to bet an estimated $16 BILLION on the Super Bowl — a 61 percent and 110 percent increase from 2022, respectively.
Steven Joseph Bilte, 94
Steven Joseph Bilte passed away on Memorial Day, May 30, 2022.
Goodbye to 'Dr. Fox's House'
Some lament the loss of another historic structure
Historian Steve Shepperd said the Fox family occupied the house from April 1947 of that year until 2005.
Mom, daughter need help
Christmas for All enters home stretch
They have no money, but this mom is grateful she and her daughter are together this holiday season.
Decision time
States to decide whether to run their own health care exchanges
WASHINGTON - Nineteen states have turned down the Obama administration's invitation to run the new health insurance markets that will begin serving millions of uninsured Americans less than a year from now. That puts a huge task on the feds, a defining challenge for President Barack Obama's second term.