Not one for the art committee

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UW seeks $13M to renovate the ‘Boys in the Boat’ shell house

The first city-sanctioned historic landmark on campus is going for a gold-medal makeover.by 

hile Seattle has struggled to save The Showbox on First Avenue, another even more storied landmark is being singled out for revival. Boosted by a bestselling book and a movie in the works, that landmark is a little-known former military structure on the shores of Lake Washington.

It is the former home of the now famous “Boys in the Boat,” the University of Washington Husky men’s rowing team that won an Olympic gold medal at the 1936 Berlin Olympics, beating two boats from then-fascist Italy and Germany. It was an event that hinted at the American prowess that would later come to bear in World War II combat, represented by a generation of young men.

The University of Washington has not always gotten it right when it comes to protecting structures of historic significance. In recent years, the university claimed to be exempt from Seattle’s landmarks ordinance (the state Supreme Court disagreed) and proceeded to demolish the More Hall Annex, aka the Nuclear Reactor Building — a building on the National Register of Historic Places — despite pleas from preservationists.

But now the UW has embraced such protections in an effort to restore the old ASUW Shell House, located in the shadow of Husky Stadium on the Montlake Cut.

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What Makes Us All Radically Equal

by David Brooks in the NYT

Around New Year’s 2017, a community organizer named Chris Lambert leased a soon-to-be-empty school building for $1 in one of Detroit’s poorer African-American neighborhoods. The plan was to pour $5 million into remodeling the building, take on the $1-million-a-year operating expenses and turn the place into a vibrant hub for the surrounding community, with nonprofits, culinary training programs, after-school programs and artists.

Lambert did not communicate this well to the people who actually lived in the community.

When neighbors learned Lambert had acquired the building for a dollar, many wondered why a white outsider, not somebody from within the community, had gotten such a deal. They assumed that he was the cutting edge of gentrification, that he was going to pour money in and push the current folks out. This kind of outsider exploitation is the lived history for many Detroiters.

That month, Lambert hosted some community meetings to mollify fears. They did not go well. People called him a colonizer. They called his black colleagues Oreos. “This white guy is going to subject us to more slavery,” somebody declared.

Lambert wanted to argue back. But his black partner, Dwan Dandridge, advised him to just listen. It’s a hazing process, Dandridge told Lambert. You feel voiceless tonight. These people have felt voiceless their whole lives. Just listen.

Agree to disagree, or disagree better? We’ll help you understand the sharpest arguments on the most pressing issues of the week, from new and familiar voices.

This fullest account of the episode can be found in Bittersweet Monthly in an article written by Anne Snyder, my wife. I visited Lambert and Dandridge in Detroit a few weeks ago, a year and a half after the grand opening.

The building, now called the Durfee Innovation Society, has children teeming the halls, a pizzeria, training programs, yoga classes. Lambert is humbled by the mistakes he made, but his center is fantastic. Some of his angriest critics have now taken part in neighborhood festivities held in the building. There is still distrust, suspicion, rage at injustice coursing through the neighborhood. But there is also life together, happening every day.

I see these messy clash-ups across the country, wherever people are trying to do racial reconciliation. You realize that coming together across race is not a neat two-step process: truth and reconciliation. It’s an emotionally complex, thousand-step process, with moments of miscommunication, resentment and embrace. This is the hard process of trying to see each other across centuries of wrong.

The somewhat comforting truth is that it’s always been like this. When you read David Blight’s brilliant biography of Frederick Douglass, for example, you see that Douglass passed through exactly these many moods in dealing with his countrymen of another race — moments of fury and harmony, despair and hope.

Sometimes he was disgusted with America. “I have no love for America, as such,” he once said. Other times he was enraptured: “I am an American citizen. In birth, in sentiment, in ideas, in hopes, in aspirations and responsibilities.”

Douglass’s genius was his ability to balance his indignation at oppression with his underlying faith in the American project. In his speeches he would praise his white audiences in one movement and thunder condemnation in the next. In an 1876 speech about Abraham Lincoln, he both condemned and complimented the man who inspired and infuriated him: “Viewed from the genuine abolition ground, Mr. Lincoln seemed tardy, cold, dull and indifferent; but measuring him from the sentiment of his country … he was swift, zealous, radical and determined.”

Douglass could withstand all the ups and downs, all the ambivalences, because of an unchanging underlying belief: in the natural rights of all humankind.

He constantly returned to the core belief of America’s founding in 1776, that we are endowed by our creator with certain unalienable rights. Slavery and racism were not just wrong — they betrayed the divine natural order of the universe. Douglass had an underlying faith in the providence. Justice would eventually triumph. The “laws which govern the moral universe,” he said, would make it so.

And here we get to the nub of what sustained Douglass and what sustains people today as they do this work. It is the belief that all humans have souls. It is the belief that all people of all races have a piece of themselves that has no size, weight, color or shape, but which gives them infinite value and dignity.

It is the belief that our souls make us all radically equal. Our brains and bodies are not equal, but our souls are. It is the belief that the person who is infuriating you most right now still has a soul and so is still, deep down, beautiful and redeemable. It is the belief that when all is said and done all souls have a common home together, a final resting place as pieces of a larger unity.

When people hold fast to their awareness of souls, then they have a fixed center among the messiness of racial reconciliation and they give each other grace. If they lose the concept of the soul, they’ve lost everything.

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First Hill Clean Up Tomorrow, Saturday

First Hill Autumn Clean Up
Saturday, October 12th 10am – 12pm
First Hill Park

Help clean up the neighborhood and get to know some of your neighbors at FHIA’s annual Autumn Clean Up.  FHIA will be providing clean up equipment, coffee and donuts. 

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We need agreement before that big step down the aisle

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U.S. News ranks Puget Sound region’s best hospitals

The University of Washington Medical Center is the best hospital in the state and among the top in the nation for several specialty categories, according to a ranking by U.S. News & World Report.

The teaching hospital, which was founded in 1959, did not make the publication’s “honor roll” of 21 hospitals ranked by their skill in specialty, procedure and condition, but the Medical Center shines as the best in Washington.

When it comes to specialties, the hospital is ranked among the nation’s best in six categories:

  • Rehabilitation (5)
  • Diabetes and endocrinology (8)
  • Cancer (15)
  • Geriatrics (29)
  • Gynecology (37)
  • Ear, nose and throat (47)

The medical center also was deemed “high performing” — which means it does not rank in the top 50 but is significantly better than average — in aortic valve surgery, colon cancer surgery, heart bypass surgery, heart failure and lung cancer surgery.

Virginia Mason Medical Center is the only other local hospital to earn national recognition in a specialty, ranking 39th in gastroenterology and gastroenterology surgery.

The hospital was deemed high performing in nearly every category, however, scoring as such in abdominal aortic aneurysm repair, aortic valve surgery, colon cancer surgery, heart bypass surgery, heart failure, hip replacement, knee replacement and lung cancer surgery. Virginia Mason was deemed average in the remaining procedure category, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

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Encore Schedule for Metropolitan Opera HD in theaters

Encore Schedule

The 2019–20 season features ten live presentations. The live transmissions will be followed by encore screenings listed below in the United States and Canada. To check the encore schedule in other countries, please visit your participating theater’s website. The encores can be seen on Wednesday afternoons nearby.

Puccini’s Turandot
United States: October 16

Massenet’s Manon
United States: October 30

Puccini’s Madama Butterfly
United States: November 13, 16

Philip Glass’s Akhnaten  
United States: December 4

Mozart’s The Magic Flute – Special Holiday Encore
United States: December 7

Berg’s Wozzeck
United States: January 15

The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess
United States: February 5, 8

Handel’s Agrippina
United States: March 4

Wagner’s Der Fliegende Holländer
United States: March 18

Puccini’s Tosca
United States: April 15, 18

Donizetti’s Maria Stuarda
United States: May 13

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Loving NPR

 . . . and I leave my whole estate to my one true companion public radio.
“.and I leave my whole estate to my one true companion, public radio.”
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It’s time to clean out the garage isn’t it?

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The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation Unveils Janet Echelman’s Latest Work: “Impatient Optimist” in Seattle

Ed note: Art or mosquito net? Thanks to Gordon G for spotting this

A new aerial sculpture by renowned artistJanet Echelman has been installed at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation campus in Seattle. Entitled “Impatient Optimist,” the sculpture consists of a custom net structure suspended above the courtyard, resulting in an ethereal floating surface which seems to defy gravity. The award-winning artist’s piece hovers above the city as a symbol of connectivity and stands as a testament to the impact an individual can have on a broader scale.

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VOTE for I-90 WSDOT Award

Mountains to Sound Greenway Trust News

VOTE for I-90 WSDOT Award 

WSDOT has recently been nominated for a 2019 American Transportation Award for all the work that they’ve done in Snoqualmie Pass. This is a wonderful shout out to all their hard work and as a bonus, they have offered half of their prize money ($5,000) to the Greenway Trust if they win this voter-based award. We have until October 6th to vote, so tell all your friends! You can vote once per day on each of your devices.

Vote today › 

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The Thin Edge of Dignity – life of one resident in Assisted Living

Posted in Aging Sites, happiness, Health | 1 Comment

This amazing, animated chart shows the aging of America

From the Washington Post: This is a mesmerizing little animation created by Bill McBride of Calculated Risk. It shows the distribution of the U.S. population by age over time, starting at 1900 and ending with Census Bureau forecasts between now and 2060.

A few things that struck me:

— Back in the 1900s, only a tiny percentage of Americans lived past the age of 70. Obviously we’ve made great strides in health care since then.

— As McBride points out, you can see a big “baby bust” before and during the Great Depression, right before prosperity returns and the Baby Boom strikes. (You can also see the bulge of Baby Boomers ripple through the charts in the latter half of the 20th century.)

— It’s not until the 1990s that you start to see a detectable portion of the country older than 90. And the Census projects that the share of the U.S. population older than 95 will start growing around 2020 or so.

— Obviously the share of older people in the United States will grow in the next three decades, but it’s worth noting that even in 2060, the Census projects that there will be more Americans under the age of 40 than over.

What else stands out to you?

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Is social media killing you?

New Yorker Cartoons
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The world will change for millions of Americans with hearing loss

Ed note: Perhaps by January of 2020, hearing aids will be available over the counter and available without seeing a hearing specialist — at a fraction of the current costs. This may work well for those will mild or even moderate hearing loss. Currently hearing aids cost $3000+ per unit. An exception is Costco where top brand hearing aids are about a third of the cost. Both private audiologists and Costco hearing aid technicians examine the ears, do a complete audiogram and program hearing aids to your needs. I suspect the cost of all hearing aids will drop once they become available over the counter. The industry is getting a needed shakeup.

From the NYT: At this point, over a year later, I can’t remember if I asked Senator Elizabeth Warren about the Spock ears, or what.

She had called me on the phone at my house in Maine. This was a couple of months after I had devoted one of my Times columns to hearing aids. I had lamented a number of things in that essay, especially the cultural stigma associated with the devices. Cool glasses? You’re Elton John. Hearing aids? You’re a little old lady.

It was my argument that hearing aids should be more stylish — provocative, even. If hearing aids came in the form of, say, pointy Spock ears, or lit up with crazy colors, wouldn’t you try them out? Maybe once?

But the senator didn’t want to talk about Spock ears. She wanted to talk about the Over-the-Counter Hearing Aid Act, which she had co-sponsored. After its passage in 2017, it headed over to the Food and Drug Administration for guidelines on how it should be carried out.

Agree to disagree, or disagree better? We’ll help you understand the sharpest arguments on the most pressing issues of the week, from new and familiar voices.

The F.D.A. is expected to issue those guidelines shortly, possibly as early as January. When it does, the world will change for millions of Americans with hearing loss.

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Everything about the Pacific Northwest is on display at the new Burke Museum. Even the scientists.

The museum’s new home brings its researchers out of the basement, and delivers a love letter of fossils and artifacts to our region. Click here for the full article from Crosscut.

Skulls and taxidermy on display
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Flu shot time – by the end of October

Flu season is just around the corner! Stay one step ahead of the flu by getting your flu shot. Flu viruses change quickly, and new vaccines come out each year — so it’s important to get a flu shot each year. 

The flu shot is free for people with Medicare, once per flu season, as long as you get it from a doctor or from other health care providers (like senior centers and pharmacies) that accept Medicare.

It takes about two weeks after vaccination for antibodies that protect against flu to develop in the body, so make plans to get vaccinated early in fall, before flu season begins. CDC recommends that people get a flu vaccine by the end of October.

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Coming soon

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Is it “complete”, “finished” or “completely finished”?


No English dictionary has been able to adequately explain the difference between these two words – “Complete” or “Finished”.

In a recent linguistic competition held in London and attended by, supposedly, the best in the world, Samdar Balgobin, a Guyanese man, was the clear winner with a standing ovation which lasted over 5 minutes.

The final question was: ‘How do you explain the difference between COMPLETE and FINISHED in a way that is easy to understand?  Some people say there is no difference between COMPLETE and FINISHED.’

Here is his astute answer:

“When you marry the right woman, you are COMPLETE.  When you marry the wrong woman, you are FINISHED.   And when the right one catches you with the wrong one, you are COMPLETELY FINISHED!”

He won a trip around the world and a case of 25 year old Scotch !

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Medicare’s plan F is not going away for us

From a reliable Insurance agent of a Skyline resident

As we approach the Annual Open Enrollment, I thought it necessary to answer  some questions and clear up some misinformation that I have been hearing.  As you may have heard, there are changes to the Medicare Supplement Plans that will be available after 1/1/2020.  Plan F is going away and the best plan available will be G.  HOWEVER…Plan F is not going away for any of you, only for people eligible for Medicare after 1/1/2020.  You do not need to make any changes and you will not lose your current coverage.  If you are not currently enrolled in Plan F, you will always have the option of changing to it in the future should you want to.  I have also heard from clients that received phone calls stating that the rates for F are going to increase dramatically.  As far as I can tell, this a marketing tactic to get you to switch and has no basis in anything that I have seen or been told by the carriers I represent.  The Open Enrollment Period runs from 10/15/2019 – 12/7/2019 and is for Medicare Prescription Plans and Medicare Advantage Plans only.  If you have a Medicare Supplement, there is nothing you need to do.  It automatically continues and can be changed at any time of the year.

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Reconstructing ancient faces

Thanks to Gordon G for finding this.

The reconstruction of likenesses of long-dead humans has made remarkable progress. With detailed computer programs, DNA studies, and advanced technologies like 3D printing — the margin of error in scientifically reconstructed faces has shrunk. The result is stunning, lifelike portraits of ancient people who left this earth thousands of years ago. (Too bad it’s accompanied by annoying ads.) Click the link below!

https://allthatsinteresting.com/reconstructed-faces-of-ancient-people#13

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Amazon Care is a new app-based health service for its employees

Thanks to Sandy J for sending this. As companies like Amazon move into health care, it may truly shake up the industry.

Amazon has unveiled Amazon Care, a new health service that offers employees virtual consultations with in-home follow-ups. According to the website, the services include an “in-app video visit with a doctor, nurse practioner or registered nurse… for advice, answers, diagnosis, treatment or referrals.” Amazon Care can also send a nurse to visit the patient if any follow-up is required.

Amazon Care will also prescribe medications within a few hours and deliver them to patients, or let them pick them up at designated pharmacies. According to CNBC, it’s contracting with a company called Oasis Medical, possibly to ensure that it will stay at arm’s length from its employees’ confidential medical records.

Amazon Care eliminates travel and wait time, connecting employees and their family members to a physician or nurse practitioner through live chat or video, with the option for in-person follow up services from a registered nurse ranging from immunizations to instant strep throat detection.

“We’re currently piloting a healthcare benefit designed to help Amazon employees get fast access to healthcare without an appointment, at the convenience of their schedules, at their preferred location (home, office, or virtual),” Amazon told CNBC in a statement. “Amazon Care eliminates travel and wait time, connecting employees and their family members to a physician or nurse practitioner through live chat or video, with the option for in-person follow up services from a registered nurse ranging from immunizations to instant strep throat detection.”

Amazon is gradually entering the US healthcare sector that’s worth as much as $3.5 trillion. Together with Warren Buffet’s Berkshire Hathaway and J.P. Morgan, it recently created Haven in an effort to reduce employee health care costs.

Like Apple, Amazon has opened its own health clinics, but it seems most interested in telemedicine, touted as a way to bring down healthcare costs. The company often tests new services with employees, so the new app-based service could point to similar, future offerings for the general public.

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Futuristic technology

Thanks to Donna D for sending this.

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What’s your weekend experience?

New Yorker Cartoons
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Nutrition takeaway proposal cited as dangerous

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