Paris, the joy of an organist's desire
French cathedrals may be empty of all but the organist these days, but the glories of French organ music still ring out. A remarkable organist came to Seattle's St. James to prove the point.
French cathedrals may be empty of all but the organist these days, but the glories of French organ music still ring out. A remarkable organist came to Seattle's St. James to prove the point.
San Francisco voters yesterday passed a $185 million green spaces levy [http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/02/06/BADGUP126.DTL], aimed at restoring decrepit parks, adding a few new ones, and sprucing up recreation centers. Opponents grumbled about how the money would be spent, but
A reminder that Crosscut will soon launch a photo gallery [/blog/editors-note/11137/], and we're soliciting your pictures at the Crosscut Flickr group [http://www.flickr.com/groups/crosscut/]. We've already had some swell submissions, including this photo of a juicy Daly's hamburger, taken by Peter
A coyote in Seattle's Discovery Park got a reprieve from plans to kill it. That doesn't mean the animal's fate is secure. So far, the human population has heard from spokespeople and the like. Now it's the coyote's turn.
The campaign over a 1960s Ballard neighborhood diner heats up, with community meetings, media spin jobs, and telephone polling. One key part of the debate: the building's overall condition. Is it sound enough to save, or is it a graffiti-covered tear-down?