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Contra dancing originated in English court dances way back in the 1500s and it’s still danced today in Seattle, in some ways little changed from the original idea.
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After decades of debate, local leaders hope revitalized public spaces and a restriction on non-essential vehicles will make the Market more connected.
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The Columbia Theatre in Longview, Washington, is celebrating its centennial. Theater officials say the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens saved it from demolition.
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As the Seattle Symphony’s incoming music director Xian Zhang returns to Benaroya Hall this week for "The Planets" and "Diaspora," she's hoping to expand the organization’s reach through innovation.
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Amanda Knox spent nearly four years in an Italian prison for a murder she didn't commit. After her exoneration, she reached out to the man who prosecuted her case. Knox's new memoir is Free.
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The statue depicts Billy Frank Jr. wearing jeans, a button-down shirt and a bolo tie. Below his cowboy boots, salmon are jumping out of the Nisqually River.
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Seattle’s chapter is one of the newest offshoots from global nonprofit Women in Music. The group formed to offer women in music more community and opportunity.
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Commercial fishing workforce brings sea shanties, stories, poetry and more to Astoria, Oregon every year in late February.
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Community leaders in the Chinatown-International District were happy to see streets full in a neighborhood that's struggled since the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Researching the life of a musician born in 1888 led to dead ends, deep appreciation for keepers of the past and questions about whose history is told.
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Organizations that have made it their mission to be equitable and inclusive while serving diverse populations are questioning if their work will disqualify them from federal arts grants.
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An art installation at the King County Library System's Bellevue branch shares stories from Japanese Americans who were incarcerated. It's in the form of a farmhouse that features an off-centered roof and no door.