Who stops to smell the flowers (except Skyliners)

Thanks to Sybil Ann (make sure to scroll down!)

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Note from Doris Kearns Goodwin

Thanks to Mary M.

The HISTORY Channel’s three-night documentary event “Abraham Lincoln” will be a definitive biography of the 16th president, the man who led the country during its bloodiest war and greatest crisis. Executive produced by world-renowned presidential historian and Pulitzer Prize®-winning bestselling author Doris Kearns Goodwin, “Abraham Lincoln” is based upon Kearns Goodwin’s New York Times bestseller, “Leadership: In Turbulent Times.”
Dear Friends,
 
As we begin this Presidents’ Day Weekend, it’s with pride and excitement that I share with you news of “Abraham Lincoln,” a new documentary event series that I have executive produced with RadicalMedia for the HISTORY Channel. This 7.5-hour documentary miniseries premieres this Sunday, February 20, Monday, February 21 and Tuesday, February 22 at 8/7PM.
 
Based on my latest book, “Leadership: In Turbulent Times,” the miniseries weaves documentary interviews from a rich community of my Lincoln colleagues together with premium dramatic live-action scenes so that viewers can understand and come to absorb through Lincoln’s actions and words the essence of who he was and what he accomplished. Lincoln’s humility, empathy, resilience, ambition, political acumen, and humor are on full display as we begin with his impoverished childhood, his days as a young prairie lawyer and budding politician, through his unlikely election to the presidency, his alliance with Frederick Douglass, and his assassination only five days after the end of the Civil War. We seek to provide a contemporary understanding of the complexities of young Abraham Lincoln who grows to become President Lincoln, the man who saved the Union, won the war and secured emancipation. 
 
I hope that you will be inspired and entertained when you see the dazzling performances of Emmy Award-nominated actor Graham Sibley as Lincoln, Stefan Adegbola as Frederick Douglass and Jenny Stead as Mary Todd Lincoln, and hear from our prodigious collection of Lincoln scholars, authors and others, including President Barack Obama, Gen. Stan McChrystal, Christy Coleman, Allen Guelzo, Edna Greene Medford, Harold Holzer, Caroline Janney, Catherine Clinton, Ted Widmer, Mary Frances Berry, Richard Blackett, Clint Smith, Carey Latimore, Manisha Sinha, and more.
 
It is my decades spent with our 16th President that allow me to remain optimistic about our country’s future—because in our time of deepest crisis aroused citizens joined together and with the nation’s leaders to move us closer to our founding ideals. There are heartening signs and certainly much more work to do.
 



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Largest glacier calving ever filmed

Thanks to Mary Jane F.

https://youtube.com/watch?v=hC3VTgIPoGU%3Frel%3D0
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Happy Valentine’s Day

David B. Williams Feb 14

Thanks to Ed M.

This nifty map of Seattle originally appeared in the Seattle Star newspaper on July 5, 1907. The map “will give the reader some idea of what sooner or later will be the heart of Seattle. As soon as the Denny Hill will have been lowered to grade, great blocks will be erected on the site and that of itself will draw the city to it as well as beyond it.” The removal of Denny Hill, which forms the heart of the heart, did not occur as fast as the writer hoped. Not until 1930 was the entire hill lowered, and with the Depression, little expansion of the city’s economic base happened so no new blood for the heart.

Part of what prompted the drawing and accompanying article was concern about one of Seattle’s seven hills. In particular, the writer was annoyed that the “courthouse is too high on the hill.” The courthouse he was referring to was the old King County Courthouse, located for many years at the site of the modern Harborview Hospital, on what was, and is, known to some as Yesler Hill.

Cupola/tower on left is top of the old county courthouse.

Because of the steepness of the hill, it had another name, Profanity Hill, prompted by the utterances of the legal eagles who had to ascend it. This name so bothered some Seattleites that they regularly called for regrading the hill, simply so that no one would have to walk up it and use foul language.

Suffice it to say, it was easier to raze the courthouse than the hill, which is why the hill still is there. And, with the removal of the building, the hoards of foul-mouthed lawyers no longer had any reason to sully the ears of those pious citizens who preferred delicate discourse when ascending one of Seattle’s notorious hills.

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And choosing the gift

Slide Show: Valentine's Day Cartoons | The New Yorker
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Real Love

Cartoons: Valentine's Day
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Lincoln’s words on slavery and logic

by Heather Cox Richardson

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St. James features Pianist Adam Neiman

Thanks to Mary R.

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The everyday philosophers among us

14 Hilarious New Yorker Cartoons That You Have To See
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Be careful challenging smart women

Thanks to Mary Jane F.

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Japanese internment, remembered in art

Thanks to Diana C. for sending this in from Crosscut (scroll down to view)

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Be My Valentine

Making breakfast for someone you love. Thanks to Bob P.

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Birds Aren’t Real

Ed. Note: The Gen Z’ers have gathered around a crazy fake conspiracy theory. They needed to laugh and poke fun at all the “real” conspiracy theories out there. I listened to the NYT Podcast “Today” and found it remarkable that one man’s sardonic action has grown into hundreds of thousands chanting “Birds Aren’t Real” at rallies that have nothing to do with birds! Yes it is crazy–almost as crazy as the many crazy conspiracy theories out there. If Gen Z can laugh, let’s laugh along.

Peter McIndoe, the 23-year-old creator of the Birds Aren't Real movement, with his van in Fayetteville, Ark.

In Pittsburgh, Memphis and Los Angeles, massive billboards recently popped up declaring, “Birds Aren’t Real.”

On Instagram and TikTok, Birds Aren’t Real accounts have racked up hundreds of thousands of followers, and YouTube videos about it have gone viral.

Last month, Birds Aren’t Real adherents even protested outside Twitter’s headquarters in San Francisco to demand that the company change its bird logo.

The events were all connected by a Gen Z-fueled conspiracy theory, which posits that birds don’t exist and are really drone replicas installed by the U.S. government to spy on Americans. Hundreds of thousands of young people have joined the movement, wearing Birds Aren’t Real T-shirts, swarming rallies and spreading the slogan.

It might smack of QAnon, the conspiracy theory that the world is controlled by an elite cabal of child-trafficking Democrats. Except that the creator of Birds Aren’t Real and the movement’s followers are in on a joke: They know that birds are, in fact, real and that their theory is made up.

What Birds Aren’t Real truly is, they say, is a parody social movement with a purpose. In a post-truth world dominated by online conspiracy theories, young people have coalesced around the effort to thumb their nose at, fight and poke fun at misinformation. It’s Gen Z’s attempt to upend the rabbit hole with absurdism.

“It’s a way to combat troubles in the world that you don’t really have other ways of combating,” said Claire Chronis, 22, a Birds Aren’t Real organizer in Pittsburgh. “My favorite way to describe the organization is fighting lunacy with lunacy.”

Posted in Advocacy, Animals, Media, Satire | 1 Comment

The external elevator from 1 to 4

An eyesore in the making? View from waiting room on 1. Tall gray column is at right.

Looking down from 4th-floor Glacier Lounge windows. So, we are going to have a windowless four-story concrete-block “air shaft” standing offset to the west of Skyline East, with an “L” at the top into the Glacier Lounge. Ugly.

Posted in Skyline Info | 1 Comment

Building trust

Thanks to Rosemary W. 🙂

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The Vending-machine parking garage in Skyline West

Here is what you see on the West-B2 level:

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Wonderful photography

Thanks to Mary Jane F.

Click here to view the highlights of the international landscape photographer of the year

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Bye, bye Miss American Pie

A musical memoir from Don McLean. Thanks to Gordon G.

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“How Bad Is It? What the 2022 Midterms Landscape Looks Like”

You are invited to a viewing of a lecture given by David Domke in early December

February 8th at 7:30pm in the Sky Lounge of  on the 24th floor

Seating is limited to 30 and MASKS ARE REQUIRED. If there is an overflow another viewing will be scheduled. Please make reservations with Karen Knudson email: kandeknudson@comcast.net  phone 206-914-0491

Thanks.

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Memorable music

Thanks to Ed M.

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We remain behind the rest of the world (and it’s not over yet)

Thanks to Mike C.

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More Pun-ishment

Thanks to Mike C.

Hear about the new restaurant called Karma?
There’s no menu – you get what you deserve

I went to buy some camouflage trousers yesterday but couldn’t find any.

What do you call a bee that can’t make up its mind?
A maybe.

I tried to sue the airline for losing my luggage.
I lost my case.

When everything is coming your way, you’re in the wrong lane.

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Poor Vlad

Thanks to Pam P. (and the Borowitz Report)

Posted in Humor, Politics | 2 Comments

The southern skyline of Skyline

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