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THURSDAY, JANUARY 12, 2012 WINNER OF EIGHT PULITZER PRIZES 75¢ $1.00 outside King, Pierce, Snohomish, Kitsap counties Independent and locally owned since 1896 seattletimes.com 1.8 million readers in Western Washington, in print and online 2 ROP 7 59423 24000 4 THU BUSINESS Foreclosure filings down last year > A8 LOCAL NEWS Trial opens in killing of 12-year-old boy > B1 YOUR THURSDAY Review: “West Side Story” lives on > B5 SPORTS Gonzaga faces rival Saint Mary’s today > C1 Index ASK AMY NWTHURSDAY B11 BUSINESS, STOCKS A8-10 CLOSE-UP A3 COMICS, PUZZLES NWTHURSDAY B9-11 CROSSWORDS NWTHURSDAY B10 DEATHS, FUNERALS NWTHURSDAY B6 EDITORIALS A11 JERRY LARGE NWTHURSDAY B1 LOTTERY, CORRECTIONS A2 SPORTS ON TV, RADIO SPORTS C2 WEATHER NWTHURSDAY B12 YOUR THURSDAY NWTHURSDAY B5 Classified ads MERCHANDISE DIRECTORY B2 PETS DIRECTORY B2 PUBLIC NOTICES C5 60% of our newsprint contains recycled fiber, and inks are reused. 2012 Seattle Times Co. A.M. FOG, THEN SUNNY High, 43. Low, 31. > B12 seattletimes.com/weather ELLEN M. BANNER / THE SEATTLE TIMES With the magnificent winter face of Mount Rainier as a backdrop, birds take flight at dusk above bare trees Tuesday near Emerald Downs Thoroughbred racetrack in Auburn. The mountain is expected to receive a new coat of snow this weekend as a cold front from the Gulf of Alaska arrives. Whether there will be snow in the lowlands is still a guessing game, said National Weather Service meteorologist Dennis D’Amico. Summing up the uncertainty, he said, “There’s a possibility for lowland snow, though we don’t quite know when or where.” Mean- while, there’s always the view. The calm before the snow? BY JIM BRUNNER Seattle Times political reporter Ever since taking office in 2005, Republican Congressman Dave Reichert has felt the partisan bull’s- eye on his back. Democrats have vigorously tar- geted him in every election, believ- ing his swing 8th Congressional District was trending their way. No more. Reichert was one of the clear winners of the state’s latest con- gressional redis- tricting. In the re- drawn political map, the 8th Dis- trict sheds its Bellevue-area sub- urban core, morphing into a more rural and presumably safe Republican seat. As the election year begins, Reichert, for the first time, faces no major Democratic challenger. “Usually in January we’re al- ready being ripped apart. This is the first year we haven’t been at- tacked,” he said. Instead, Reichert faces an in- triguing new choice. He could run for U.S. Senate against Democrat THE NEW 8TH DISTRICT: ‘A BRIDGE ACROSS THE STATE’ MAP KNITS WEST, EAST SIDE Republican Reichert favored as district shifts from suburban to more rural U.S. Rep. Dave Reichert For new district map > A7 See > NEW DISTRICT, A7 freeway, trying to alert the driver that she was heading toward potential disaster. Others tried to deploy spike strips, but were initially unsuccessful “because the driver was all over the place, using all the lanes,” said Trooper Guy Gill. Cars in the southbound lanes flashed their high beams at the oncoming car, trying to warn the driver. Some narrowly avoided head-on colli- sions. Finally, after the wrong- way driver covered nearly BY CHRISTINE CLARRIDGE Seattle Times staff reporter It was a tragedy waiting to happen unless they could stop it. The State Patrol troop- ers tried their sirens, spot- lights and even the PA sys- tem on their patrol cars, but nothing seemed to capture the attention of the driver who was ca- reening north on Inter- state 5 in the wrong direc- tion early Wednesday morning. One trooper raced alongside the car, on the northbound lanes of the 18 miles at speeds up to 100 mph, troopers were able to stop the white Lin- coln LS by using spike strips to flatten the tires. By then, the driver, identified as Pamela Drawsby, 60, of Olympia, had traveled from Tum- water to the freeway exit near the main gate at Joint Base Lewis- McChord. Drawsby was arrested and booked into Pierce County Jail. She was charged later in the day in Thurston County District A race to avert death on I-5 Wrong way on I-5 A woman was arrested early Wednesday after driving north for 18 miles in the southbound lanes of Interstate 5. No one was hurt. MILES 10 0 Sources: ESRI, TeleAtlas, Washington State Patrol PIERCE COUNTY THURSTON COUNTY DUPONT ROY YELM PUYALLUP SPANAWAY LACEY OLYMPIA 5 5 7 7 M. NOWLIN/THE SEATTLE TIMES M. NOWLIN/THE SEATTLE TIMES 161 JOINT BASE LEWIS-MCCHORD TUMWATER LAKEWOOD 510 Started at milepost 102 Was stopped at milepost 120 Southbound lanes Northbound lanes WRONG-WAY DRIVER SPEEDS 18 MILES BEFORE FRANTIC TROOPERS SUCCEED IN STOPPING HER See > WRONG WAY, A7 BY THOMAS ERDBRINK AND JOBY WARRICK The Washington Post TEHRAN, Iran – A scientist linked to Iran’s nuclear program was assassinated in his car by a bomb-wielding assailant Wednes- day, an attack that experts said points to a further escalation in a covert campaign targeting the country’s nuclear officials and insti- tutions. The precision strike in a northern Tehran neighborhood killed Mosta- fa Ahmadi Roshan, 32, a chemical engineer employed at Iran’s main uranium-enrichment facility. No one claimed responsibility for the slaying. Iranian officials immediately ac- cused the United States and Israel of orchestrating the attack on Rosh- an, who was killed along with his bodyguard when an assailant on a motorcycle slapped a magnetic bomb on his Peugeot 405 as he commuted to work, according to Iranian news reports. An 85-year- old passer-by also was wounded. Roshan was at least the fifth sci- entist with nuclear connections to be slain since 2007; a sixth scien- tist, Fereidoun Abbasi, survived a 2010 attack and was put in charge Another Iran nuke official is killed See > IRAN, A5 BY HAL BERNTON Seattle Times staff reporter When Haiti’s earthquake hit, Ra- chel Prusynski was visiting her friend, Molly Hightower of Port Or- chard, who was doing volunteer work with orphans and special- needs children. Hightower, 22, died, trapped by rubble. Prusynski, on a higher floor of the collapsed building, was res- cued, a survivor of the epic disaster that slammed Haiti two years ago Thursday. “I remember being buried, then I remember not being buried,” Pru- synski recalls. “It’s the in-between that was fuzzy.” Prusynski, now 24, is a graduate student in physical therapy at the University of Puget Sound. She has twice returned to the earthquake zone as a hospital volunteer with the Latin American affiliate of Friends of the Orphans, and she’s helped raise funds for the organiza- tion back in the Northwest. “I’ve had many well-intentioned people wish me closure, peace and healing,” Prusynski wrote in a blog post. “But I do hope that people don’t consider my attention and passion for Haiti as something that needs to be cured or fixed. ... “Sometimes I resent Haiti for bringing an unexpected path to my life, for taking Molly, and making it difficult for me to relate as easily to others. ... But sometimes I am also Two years ago, the Haiti earthquake killed the friend Rachel Prusynski was visiting. But the local college student returns to volunteer, and she’s grateful for the new conviction and passion in her life. Shaken, then shaped by Haiti quake FRIENDS OF THE ORPHANS / Rachel Prusynski, left, is seen with her friend Molly High- tower, who died in the Haiti quake on Jan. 12, 2010. See > HAITI, A3

A.M. FOG, THEN SUNNY High, 43. Low, 31. seattletimes.com ... · ing his swing 8th Congressional District was trending their way. No more. Reichert was one of the clear winners of

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Page 1: A.M. FOG, THEN SUNNY High, 43. Low, 31. seattletimes.com ... · ing his swing 8th Congressional District was trending their way. No more. Reichert was one of the clear winners of

THURSDAY, JANUARY 12, 2012

WINNER OF EIGHT PULITZER PRIZES

75¢ $1.00 outside King, Pierce,Snohomish, Kitsap counties

Independent and locally owned since 1896 seattletimes.com1.8 million readers in Western Washington, in print and online

2 ROP

7 59423 24000 4

THU

BUSINESSForeclosure filingsdown last year > A8

LOCAL NEWSTrial opens in killingof 12-year-old boy > B1

YOUR THURSDAYReview: “West SideStory” lives on > B5

SPORTSGonzaga faces rivalSaint Mary’s today > C1

IndexASK AMY NWTHURSDAY B11

BUSINESS, STOCKS A8-10

CLOSE-UP A3

COMICS, PUZZLES NWTHURSDAY B9-11

CROSSWORDS NWTHURSDAY B10

DEATHS, FUNERALS NWTHURSDAY B6

EDITORIALS A11

JERRY LARGE NWTHURSDAY B1

LOTTERY, CORRECTIONS A2

SPORTS ON TV, RADIO SPORTS C2

WEATHER NWTHURSDAY B12

YOUR THURSDAY NWTHURSDAY B5

Classified adsMERCHANDISE DIRECTORY B2

PETS DIRECTORY B2

PUBLIC NOTICES C5

60% of our newsprint containsrecycled fiber, and inks are reused.

� 2012 Seattle Times Co.

A.M. FOG, THEN SUNNYHigh, 43. Low, 31. > B12

seattletimes.com/weather

E L L E N M . B A N N E R / T H E S E A T T L E T I M E S

With the magnificent winter face of Mount Rainier as a backdrop, birds take flight at dusk above bare trees Tuesday near Emerald DownsThoroughbred racetrack in Auburn. The mountain is expected to receive a new coat of snow this weekend as a cold front from the Gulf ofAlaska arrives. Whether there will be snow in the lowlands is still a guessing game, said National Weather Service meteorologist DennisD’Amico. Summing up the uncertainty, he said, “There’s a possibility for lowland snow, though we don’t quite know when or where.” Mean-while, there’s always the view.

The calm before the snow?

BY JIM BRUNNERSeattle Times political reporter

Ever since taking office in 2005,Republican Congressman DaveReichert has felt the partisan bull’s-eye on his back.

Democrats have vigorously tar-geted him in every election, believ-ing his swing 8th CongressionalDistrict was trending their way.

No more.Reichert was one of the clear

winners of thestate’s latest con-gressional redis-tricting. In the re-drawn politicalmap, the 8th Dis-trict sheds itsBellevue-area sub-urban core,morphing into amore rural andpresumably safeRepublican seat.As the electionyear begins,Reichert, for the first time, faces nomajor Democratic challenger.

“Usually in January we’re al-ready being ripped apart. This isthe first year we haven’t been at-tacked,” he said.

Instead, Reichert faces an in-triguing new choice. He could runfor U.S. Senate against Democrat

THE NEW8TH DISTRICT:‘A BRIDGEACROSSTHE STATE’MAP KNITS WEST, EAST SIDE

Republican Reichert favoredas district shifts from

suburban to more rural

U.S. Rep.DaveReichert

For new district map > A7

See > NEW DISTRICT, A7

freeway, trying to alertthe driver that she washeading toward potentialdisaster. Others tried todeploy spike strips, butwere initially unsuccessful“because the driver wasall over the place, using allthe lanes,” said TrooperGuy Gill.

Cars in the southboundlanes flashed their highbeams at the oncomingcar, trying to warn thedriver. Some narrowlyavoided head-on colli-sions.

Finally, after the wrong-way driver covered nearly

BY CHRISTINE CLARRIDGESeattle Times staff reporter

It was a tragedy waitingto happen unless theycould stop it.

The State Patrol troop-ers tried their sirens, spot-lights and even the PA sys-tem on their patrol cars,but nothing seemed tocapture the attention ofthe driver who was ca-reening north on Inter-state 5 in the wrong direc-tion early Wednesdaymorning.

One trooper racedalongside the car, on thenorthbound lanes of the

18 miles at speeds up to100 mph, troopers wereable to stop the white Lin-coln LS by using spikestrips to flatten the tires.

By then, the driver,identified as PamelaDrawsby, 60, of Olympia,had traveled from Tum-water to the freeway exitnear the main gate atJoint Base Lewis-McChord.

Drawsby was arrestedand booked into PierceCounty Jail. She wascharged later in the day inThurston County District

A race to avert death on I-5Wrong way on I-5

A woman was arrested early Wednesday after driving north for 18 miles in the southbound lanes of Interstate 5. No one was hurt.

MILES

100

Sources: ESRI, TeleAtlas, Washington State Patrol

PIERCECOUNTY

THURSTON COUNTY

DUPONT

ROY

YELM

PUYALLUP

SPANAWAY

LACEY

OLYMPIA

5

5

7

7

M. NOWLIN/THE SEATTLE TIMESM. NOWLIN/THE SEATTLE TIMES

161

JOINT BASE LEWIS-MCCHORD

TUMWATER

LAKEWOOD

510

Started atmilepost 102

Was stopped atmilepost 120

Southbound lanes Northbound lanes

WRONG-WAY DRIVER SPEEDS 18 MILES BEFORE FRANTIC TROOPERS SUCCEED IN STOPPING HER

See > WRONG WAY, A7

BY THOMAS ERDBRINKAND JOBY WARRICKThe Washington Post

TEHRAN, Iran – A scientistlinked to Iran’s nuclear programwas assassinated in his car by abomb-wielding assailant Wednes-day, an attack that experts saidpoints to a further escalation in acovert campaign targeting thecountry’s nuclear officials and insti-tutions.

The precision strike in a northernTehran neighborhood killed Mosta-fa Ahmadi Roshan, 32, a chemicalengineer employed at Iran’s mainuranium-enrichment facility. Noone claimed responsibility for theslaying.

Iranian officials immediately ac-cused the United States and Israelof orchestrating the attack on Rosh-an, who was killed along with hisbodyguard when an assailant on amotorcycle slapped a magneticbomb on his Peugeot 405 as hecommuted to work, according toIranian news reports. An 85-year-old passer-by also was wounded.

Roshan was at least the fifth sci-entist with nuclear connections tobe slain since 2007; a sixth scien-tist, Fereidoun Abbasi, survived a2010 attack and was put in charge

AnotherIran nukeofficialis killed

See > IRAN, A5

BY HAL BERNTONSeattle Times staff reporter

When Haiti’s earthquake hit, Ra-chel Prusynski was visiting herfriend, Molly Hightower of Port Or-chard, who was doing volunteerwork with orphans and special-needs children.

Hightower, 22, died, trapped byrubble. Prusynski, on a higher floorof the collapsed building, was res-cued, a survivor of the epic disasterthat slammed Haiti two years agoThursday.

“I remember being buried, then Iremember not being buried,” Pru-synski recalls. “It’s the in-betweenthat was fuzzy.”

Prusynski, now 24, is a graduatestudent in physical therapy at the

University of Puget Sound. She hastwice returned to the earthquakezone as a hospital volunteer withthe Latin American affiliate ofFriends of the Orphans, and she’shelped raise funds for the organiza-tion back in the Northwest.

“I’ve had many well-intentionedpeople wish me closure, peace andhealing,” Prusynski wrote in a blogpost. “But I do hope that peopledon’t consider my attention andpassion for Haiti as something thatneeds to be cured or fixed. ...

“Sometimes I resent Haiti forbringing an unexpected path to mylife, for taking Molly, and making itdifficult for me to relate as easily toothers. ... But sometimes I am also

Two years ago, the Haiti earthquake killed the friend Rachel Prusynski was visiting. But the localcollege student returns to volunteer, and she’s grateful for the new conviction and passion in her life.

Shaken, then shaped by Haiti quake

F R I E N D S O F T H E O R P H A N S /

Rachel Prusynski, left, is seen with her friend Molly High-tower, who died in the Haiti quake on Jan. 12, 2010.See > HAITI, A3