Project MUSE - Pioneering Death jhu.edu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from jhu.edu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The city’s queer bars in Seattle longtime gayborhood of Capitol Hill are evolving to meet the needs of a new generation while contending with gentrification
This week, we re revisiting the Seattle Asian Art Museum, honoring saints at Saint Bread, and celebrating the Marshall Law Band and Tres Leches in-person. Check out all our top recommendations for this week below. Photos courtesy of The Stranger (Anthony Keo), Saint Bread, and Marshall Law Band (James Gerde)
ALL WEEK: LOW TIDES AT LOCAL BEACHES
A low tide in West Seattle. Getty Images
This week, and at certain times of the day, the tides will be exceptionally low for our few and usually not spectacular beaches. And why should this be of interest to you? For one, low tides (by nearly 4 feet on Friday at 12:58 pm) expose the strange-looking creatures whose niche is that area where life transitioned from the sea to land millions of years ago. Beaches at low tides are holy places, in the evolutionary rather than religious sense. But Darwin is not the only Englishman to consider during a very low tide. There is also Isaac Newton. He provided the world with the first comprehensive theor
by Matt Baume • May 25, 2021 at 3:15 pm
Mother George is among those featured in the exhibit. Washington State Historical Society
We don t know much about Mrs. Nash, a laundress who served the wife of General George Armstrong Custer. Nash was born in or near Mexico, and spoke Spanish; she worked for the United States Army, and was present for the Battle of Little Bighorn. She married three times to enlisted men. And after she passed away and her body was being prepared for burial, it was discovered that her body was not what those who knew her for years had assumed.