Current and Furbish (3210 1/2 W. McGraw St.) celebrated its grand opening on Saturday, June 1, with samples, special and drawing giveaways.
Over the last half-century — starting with the fishing treaty conflicts of the 1960s — a bit of Native American history has been redressed. But old attitudes die hard. Which brings us to Indian Heritage School and the Daybreak Star Cultural Center.
In the wake of the May 23 collapse of the Interstate 5 bridge over the Skagit River, the subject of bridges is the new conversation starter.
Last week’s front-page story, written by incoming McClure PTSA co-president Chris Karam, detailed McClure Middle School’s recent successes. The story ran long, but so is McClure’s list of accomplishments.
So much of what is going on in my community has its roots in slavery, and if you don’t know the roots, you can’t know the plant.
The 39th Seattle International Film Festival was a success, with the highest attendance and more visiting filmmakers than ever before.
Mayor Mike McGinn will lead a panel discussion with professor Dan Jaffee on the impacts of coal trains on local neighborhoods on Saturday, May 18.
Members of the Picture Perfect Queen Anne group and other volunteers will have a work party on Sunday, May 19, at 8 a.m.
Our Lady of Fatima (OLF) celebrates its 29th year of student musicals with “Into the Woods,” directed by Seattle Children’s Theatre’s Ariel Bradler.
A Seattle-based author, historian and lifelong beer lover (some use the term “cerevisaphile”), Kurt Stream grew up in Wisconsin and started his favorite obsession there. In Wisconsin, “it’s pretty much the [Green Bay] Packers, beer and Friday-night fish fries as far culture,” he recalls.
Christian poet Luci Shaw, recipient of Image journal’s 10th-annual Denise Levertov Award, will read from her work Thursday, May 16, at 7 p.m. at 415 Westlake Ave.The event is free and open to the public.