In response to Mike Davis' “opinion” piece ("It's time cyclists paid their own way," Oct. 26), the column states that you can’t ride to school if you don’t have a license.
As the recent dust-up over student newspapers and censorship reminds us, free speech issues can get messy.
There are some real nuggests, but you have to wait a very long time for them.
Kate Clark admits she was pretty surprised when the Seattle Schools interim Superintendent Dr. Susan Enfield called her at Ballard High School Monday.
It’s expected to be another La Nina year for the Seattle area. And for residents in Magnolia and Queen Anne, that wetter winter usually translates into a greater possibility of landslides.
If you’re like most people, you have probably spent a long time thinking about your dreams. Months. Maybe years. But dreams don’t go away. They turn into comas. Inaction becomes paralysis.
Recently I was reading a newspaper comic strip that featured a bunch of children dressed as Native Americans and Euro-Pilgrims. I looked at their costumes and thought back to my own 1950s grade-school Thanksgiving Day pageants.
As the timbre of political rhetoric grows shrill and less reasoned across the United States, in our corner of the country called Seattle, social discourse has become more bitter, partisan and foolish, too.
Last Friday, Nov. 11, Seattle Central Community College started efforts to evict Occupy Seattle protesters from its lawn, citing increasing public-safety and maintenance costs and drug use and vandalism by the campers.
In response to [Mike Davis' column from the Nov. 2, issue “Cyclists also need to obey rules of road.”]I say a loud AMEN to the author of this article.
A new P-Patch community garden is taking root in the Uptown neighborhood...