Tale of Two Cities: Coal, a train wreck for Burlington?
“Incredibly fragile,” is how cafe owner Brad Whaley descibes Burlington's historic downtown. Can it survive a coal train onslaught?
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“Incredibly fragile,” is how cafe owner Brad Whaley descibes Burlington's historic downtown. Can it survive a coal train onslaught?
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Commentary: If we want to safeguard democracy, we have a lot of work to do.
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The venerable Intiman Theater has a new name, a new (shorter) season and a new blueprint for success. Here's hoping it works.
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The endangered, huge-winged California condor was once a resident of the Pacific Northwest. Is it time to bring this endangered species back?
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Commentary: Attorney General Holder is tossing aside restraint that prosecutors have exercised for decades. And it seems unlikely he would have acted without presidential knowledge.
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Edward Saylor of Enumclaw is one of only four surviving members of the famous post-Pearl Harbor bombing mission.
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Seattle is growing rapidly, just not as fast as a few other Washington cities.
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The HistoryLink staff historian is consumed with the idea of time and how Piggle Wiggle creator Betty McDonald was so prolific.
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Conquering the Earth's highest peaks has been a predominantly white sport. Local heroes and a new expedition are making inroads.
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Putting a piece of Seattle history on trial, adventure-loving companies like New Century Theatre and Satori Group are making theater in unexpected places.
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As a new book documents, slavery, the underground railway and much more are part of the state's history.
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A new biography of Gov. Spellman, the last Republican governor in the state, tells how he resisted enormous economic and political pressure for an oil pipeline under Puget Sound. Plus, another threat days after his epic pipeline decision.
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A new biography details a remarkable story of how plans to put an oil pipeline under Puget Sound ran into an unlikely antagonist, a mild-mannered Republican determined to follow the law and protect the Sound.
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Seattle City Council alum and one-time mayoral candidate Phyllis Lamphere explains.
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The story of the historic ship is lost in the art's display -- at a history museum.
READ MORE | 3 COMMENTSThe latest from news outlets and blogs around the Northwest and beyond, chosen by Crosscut editors.
Writes the author, a professor at Evergreen State College: "Today, new problems have emerged in the process of resolving old ones, but the solution is not to go back to the past."
"It wasn’t as if Americans renounced worldly success (this is America!), but there were rival status hierarchies: the biblical hierarchy, the working man’s hierarchy, the artist’s hierarchy, the intellectual’s hierarchy, all of which questioned success and denounced those who climbed and sold out."
He took office 100 years ago, the first of the liberal presidents. Why has he dropped from our sights?
There are increased demands on museums around the world to return bones brought back from conquered people or colonies. Some of the bones were "exotic trinkets" or used in trading. The German Museums Association issued ethical guidelines for human remains, citing human dignity.
"In the heady days after the Revolution, a national language seemed like a natural development for a new country. Franklin’s proposal found little support, even with those to whom he was closest. He did, however, manage to convert Webster, the pioneer of spelling reform."
"Over the past half-century, society has become more individualistic. As it has become more individualistic, it has also become less morally aware, because social and moral fabrics are inextricably linked. The atomization and demoralization of society have led to certain forms of social breakdown, which government has tried to address, sometimes successfully and often impotently."
It’s only fitting to honor Mother’s Day with a spirited selection of history’s finest motherly advice, spanning nearly half a millennium of poignant and prescient counsel from notable moms.