Freeway Park Book Carts

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Raccoon, chased by staff with trash cans, storms pitch during soccer gam

Thanks to Bob P. (Hope this doesn’t catch on to, but it might liven up a Mariner’s game)

By Amy Woodyatt and Jacob Lev, CNN

A furry pitch invader paused Major League Soccer play on Wednesday as a rogue raccoon ran onto the field during a match between the Philadelphia Union and New York City FC.

The athletic critter ran the length of the pitch at Subaru Park in Chester, Pennsylvania, deftly evading capture while sprinting stadium staff tried to apprehend it using a trash can.

“We need to find him a ball because he’s moving very well in the center of midfield,” a commentator quipped during the kerfuffle, adding that it was “entertainment of its own kind.”

Raquinho the raccoon was eventually captured and later released.

Raquinho the raccoon was eventually captured and later released. Eric Hartline/USA TODAY Sports/Reuters

The match was paused for five minutes as crews tried and eventually succeeded in capturing the animal, dubbed “Raquinho the Raccoon” by MLS.

The Union sent out an update saying that the raccoon was “put in good hands” and was safely released.

“Unofficially, Raquinho the Raccoon spent 161 seconds on the field tonight, which was the most by a raccoon in @MLS history,” the league communications said in a post on X.

NYCFC went on to take the game 2-1 after a second-minute goal by Alonso Martínez and a Hannes Wolf free-kick in injury time in the first half.

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French post office releases scratch-and-sniff baguette stamp

Thanks to Bob P. — Agence France-Presse in Paris

‘Bakery scent’ added via microcapsules to postage stamp celebrating ‘jewel of French culture’

The French Post Office has released a scratch-and-sniff postage stamp to celebrate the baguette, once described by President Emmanuel Macron as “250 grams of magic and perfection”.

The stamp, which costs €1.96, depicts a baguette decorated with a red, white and blue ribbon. It has a print run of 594,000 copies.

According to the Parisian shop Le Carre d’encre, which sells it, the stamp has a “bakery scent”. The ink used on the stamps contains microcapsules which provide the fragrance.

It was released for sale on Friday, after a launch on Thursday, the day of Saint-Honoré, the patron saint of bakers and pastry chefs.

“The baguette, the bread of our daily lives, the symbol of our gastronomy, the jewel of our culture”, La Poste says on its website.

“This scent is encapsulated. We buy it from another manufacturer,” Damien Lavaud, printer at Philaposte, told France Bleu.

A baker holds a baguette inside a bakery in Paris, France, while wearing a facemask

“And the difficulty for us is to apply this ink without breaking the capsules, so that the smell can then be released by the customer rubbing on the stamp.”

The French baguette was given Unesco heritage status in 2022

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Stendhal Syndrome: An Art Attack?

Thanks to Ann M. – from the Daily Art Magazine Newsletter

If you’ve witnessed someone fainting in front of great masterpieces, it could have been Stendhal Syndrome—an art lover’s sickness.

Stendhal Syndrome, also known as hyperkulturemia or Florence syndrome, is a psychosomatic disorder characterized by rapid heartbeat, dizziness, fainting, confusion, and even hallucinations when an individual is exposed to a collection of artworks perceived as exceptionally beautiful, often encountered in settings like art galleries or museums.

stendhal syndrome
One of the most perpetrators of the Stendhal Syndrome

While not officially recognized in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Stendhal Syndrome profoundly affects individuals. Some sufferers experience symptoms severe enough to necessitate hospitalization and even antidepressant medication. Florence’s Santa Maria Nuova Hospital often attends to tourists who feel dizzy or disoriented after admiring renowned works like Michelangelo’s David or the masterpieces of the Uffizi Gallery.

The syndrome gained its name in 1979 from Italian psychiatrist Graziella Magherini, who documented over 100 similar cases among visitors in Florence. It pays homage to the 19th-century French author Stendhal, who recounted his own encounter with the phenomenon during his 1817 journey to Florence in his book Naples and Florence: A Journey from Milan to Reggio.

Stendhal visited the Basilica of Santa Croce, where Niccolò Machiavelli, Michelangelo, and Galileo Galilei were buried. He also saw Giotto’s frescoes for the first time and was overwhelmed with emotion. He wrote:

I was in a sort of ecstasy, from the idea of being in Florence, close to the great men whose tombs I had seen. Absorbed in the contemplation of sublime beauty… I reached the point where one encounters celestial sensations… Everything spoke so vividly to my soul. Ah, if I could only forget. I had palpitations of the heart, what in Berlin they call ‘nerves.’ Life was drained from me. I walked with the fear of falling.

Ecstasy, sublime beauty, celestial sensations… Have you ever experienced the Stendhal Syndrome?

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South Pacific music in the Performance Hall–by the Skyline Chorale

Thanks to Mel B.

The Skyline Chorale will be performing songs from “South Pacific” on Wednesday evening, May 22 at 7:30 PM in the Performance Hall.  We are encouraging people to invite family members who might enjoy the show.  It is about an hour long and should be fun.

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On the Waterfront

Thanks to Mary M. – for complete info click on this site: https://waterfrontparkseattle.org/the-park/

Friends of Waterfront Seattle logo On the Waterfront news + happenings from Friends White alliumbs bloom in the foreground at dusk with the Puget Sound in the background. Alliums bloom at sunset by Pioneer Square Habitat Beach. Photo by Land Morphology. It’s hard to say if the sun is here to stay (after all, it is only May.)  What we do know is we’ll take this over the gray any day.  So come on down to this bay, enjoy that salty Puget spray,  catch a sunset before it goes away,  in this here world class park reclaimed from a former highway.  🌥⛅️🌤☀️ Construction Update:   Waterfront Park is transforming our downtown shoreline, with 20 acres of brand new public space filled with thousands of new plants and trees, incredible feats of civil engineering and landscape design, and beautiful public art – but there is even more than meets the eye!   Waterfront Park also contains some innovative environmental improvements, many of which are not visible from the surface. Marine habitat enhancements support our marine neighbors including nearshore fish migration corridor and Green Stormwater Infrastructure (GSI) that filters and cleans stormwater before it reaches the Puget Sound.    Check out this SDOT Blog post by our city partners at Waterfront Seattle to learn more about habitat improvements, and how continuing work on landscaping and pedestrian improvements are helping to keep Elliott Bay healthy. A photo of the seawall face which includes grooves and nooks to promote algae growth, shallow water and rock beds on the bay floor for fish to hide and forage at lower risk of predation, and a light-penetrating surface in the sidewalk above to provide light for marine plant growth and guidance for young salmon during their migration. Courtesy of the City of Seattle. A photo of the seawall face which includes grooves and nooks to promote algae growth, shallow water and rock beds on the bay floor for fish to hide and forage at lower risk of predation, and a light-penetrating surface in the sidewalk above to provide light for marine plant growth and guidance for young salmon during their migration. Courtesy of the City of Seattle.


The Free Waterfront Park Shuttle Returns!   What’s blue and orange, runs on a continuous loop in the downtown corridor, accessible and free for all, and back later this month? You guessed it, the Free Waterfront Park Shuttle is coming back to offer rides from Seattle Center, Belltown, Pioneer Square, the International District, and the waterfront. We’re excited to be managing the shuttle this year in partnership with the Seattle Historic Waterfront Association. Service will start on May 24 and span through September, so don’t miss out on free rides to all your favorite Seattle destinations! A photo of a group of people inside the Free Waterfront Park Shuttle sightseeing out of the windows. Last year, the Free Waterfront Park Shuttle offered over 14,000 free and accessible rides to visitors to the waterfront.   Pier Party 2024 July 26th, 5:30pm-9pm @ Pier 62   Tickets are now available for Pier Party, Friends of Waterfront Seattle’s 2nd annual fundraiser, featuring a night of inspiring art and performances, James Beard award winning food and drinks, and a look into the bright future of Seattle’s Waterfront Park! Get your tickets today and join us on July 26th for an unforgettable night! Events in the community:   Africatown’s Summer of Soul 2024 All summer long   Our friends and partners at Africatown Community Land Trust are celebrating Black excellence, resilience, and joy, all summer long! Kickoff the summer celebrations with Honoring our Black Wall Streets on May 27 with over 100 Black-owned businesses, live music, guest speakers, and more! Learn more!   Madaraka Festival  June 17th & 18th   Madaraka Festival is returning to Seattle for a Juneteenth celebration! If you attended any of One Vibe Media’s events at Pier 62 over the last couple of years you know they’re an incredible time, featuring internationally acclaimed East African musicians. Get your tickets. EBC will connect the parks along the Elliott Bay Waterfront with a new pedestrian and bicycle greenway trail and restore and revitalize Myrtle Edwards and Centennial parks.  Elliott Bay Connections    Our partners at DSA, the City of Seattle, and the Port of Seattle have launched a new website for the upcoming Elliott Bay Connections project that will connect, restore, and revitalize public parks along the Elliott Bay waterfront. Learn all about this exciting new project just north of Waterfront Park, and sign up for a live online presentation and Q&A on May 16th at 6pm!  Learn about EBC Follow us on Instagram See the latest and greatest Friends happenings and Waterfront Park news. We want to hear from you!   Take our survey to share your thoughts on our programming, public safety, and experience at Waterfront Park, and enter to win a $100 Visa gift card! Facebook icon Instagram icon LinkedIn icon View in browser Copyright (C) 2024 Friends of Waterfront Seattle. 
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Learning to Say Goodbye

Touching essay in the New England Journal of Medicine.

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Tom Lehrer on National Brotherhood Week

Thanks to Ann M. who notes, “Tom Lehrer is now age 96—this performance brings back happy memories!”

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Stellar legacy of Frank Shrontz points way to Boeing’s future

Thanks to Frank C.

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‘Superhuman feat’: Woman, 55, makes history with swim from Golden Gate Bridge to Farallon Islands

By Sam Whiting in the San Francisco Chronicle (thanks to Bob P.)

The marathon swim from the Golden Gate Bridge to the Farallon Islands is considered one of the hardest in the world, combining strong currents, fierce wind and frigid water frequented by great white sharks.

But UCSF nurse Amy Appelhans Gubser conquered it this weekend — when she got off work, took a quick nap and then swam into history.

It was early Saturday, 3:25 a.m., when Gubser jumped from a boat on the east side of the Golden Gate Bridge, and went into her freestyle stroke headed west under the span and into the open water.

When she came back out, 17 hours later, Gubser was at the Farallon Islands, 29.7 miles away. She had become the first swimmer to complete the treacherous Gulf of the Farallones swim in the outbound direction, and just the sixth swimmer to do it in either direction, according to the Marathon Swimmers Federation. 

The westbound swim is harder because it involves fighting a punishing tide and wind most of the way. 

“It was the toughest thing that I have ever set out to do,” said Gubser, 55, on Tuesday during her lunch break at UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital where she works as a nurse coordinator in the fetal cardiac unit. She is a mother of two, with two grandkids and a third on the way.

A Pacifica resident, Gubser swims at the South End Rowing Club on San Francisco Bay.

“I look out at those islands every day from Pacifica,” she said, of her motivation. “I joke with my husband all the time that I could swim there. It just draws me because it is so captivating and eerie.”  (continued)

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Worm Leaves Scathing Yelp Review of RFK Jr.’s Brain

Thanks to Pam P.

NEW YORK (The Borowitz Report) – In the latest setback for Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s presidential bid, a worm who dined in the candidate’s brain wrote a brutal Yelp review shortly before dying, the reviewing site confirmed on Monday.

The worm’s review began on a discouraging note, claiming that Kennedy’s brain was “almost impossible to find.”

“Once I managed to get there, I couldn’t believe how cramped it was,” the worm continued. “I’m all for intimate dining but this place was ridiculously tiny.”

The worm also slammed the noise level in the candidate’s brain, complaining, “I couldn’t hear myself think with all the different voices in there.”

With one star, Kennedy’s brain ranks last in Yelp’s “Worm Dining” category, tied with Kristi Noem’s brain.

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If the aches are gone, then ….

Thanks to Janet M.

Screenshot
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Three Bob Night: Two more Bob Fergusons running for WA governor

Thanks to Mike and Diana C.

By Claire Withycombe Seattle Times staff reporter

OLYMPIA — Bob Ferguson could face Bob Ferguson and Bob Ferguson in the August primary.

That’s Bob Ferguson, the state attorney general; Bob Ferguson, a retired state employee in Yakima; and Bob Ferguson, a military veteran in Graham.

All three are running for Washington governor.

Conservative activist Glen Morgan recruited two people who share a name with the Democratic front-runner for governor to also seek the state’s highest office. They officially filed to run Friday, at the close of Washington’s candidate filing week.

“If I had started a little bit earlier, I would have been able to have six Bob Fergusons,” Morgan said. “I contacted about 12. I just ran out of time.”

Morgan, who answered calls Friday to the numbers listed for the two campaigns, declined to provide The Seattle Times with the contact information for either of the two Bob Fergusons who filed.

This year, the governor’s seat is open for the first time since 2012. Gov. Jay Inslee, a Democrat who has led the state for more than a decade, is not running for a fourth term. Attorney General Ferguson has amassed a campaign war chest of nearly $7 million, according to campaign finance reports.

Morgan says he thinks “a lot of people” are upset about the attorney general “trying to pretend that he cares about public safety when he’s done everything to look the other way and avoid solving any of the problems and almost every activity he’s done as the attorney general has actually made it a lot worse.”

“These guys want to clear their name,” Morgan said of the other two Bob Fergusons. All three Bobs are running as Democrats, according to voter filing data.

On Friday, the campaign of Bob Ferguson (the attorney general), tapped former Gov. Christine Gregoire to make a statement on behalf of the campaign.

“There’s only one Bob Ferguson who is qualified to be Governor — one who has a long and distinguished career standing up for Washingtonians,” Gregoire said. “There’s no doubt this last-minute filing by two unknown candidates is an effort to deliberately confuse Washington voters. It’s nothing less than an attack on our democracy. Washington voters are smart and will see through this highly deceiving — and potentially illegal — effort to mislead them.”

State statutes say that it is a felony for a person to file a declaration of candidacy with a “surname similar to one who has already filed for the same office, and whose political reputation is widely known, with intent to confuse and mislead the electors by capitalizing on the public reputation of the candidate who had previously filed.”

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Benjamin Smith Lyman – pioneer vegetarian

by Christine M.E. Guth in the Harvard Magazine (thanks to Ann M.)

BENJAMIN SMITH Lyman was living proof of the benefits to health and well-being of the lifestyle he advocated in his Vegetarian Diet and Dishes, self-published in 1917, when he was 82 years old. A graduate of the Harvard class of 1855 that included scientist Alexander Agassiz, Phillips Brooks, Rector of Boston’s Trinity Church, and journalist and abolitionist Franklin Benjamin Sanborn, Lyman was an eminent mining geologist and published more than 150 articles on the topic. During his nine years as a mining engineer under contract to the Japanese government between 1872 and 1881, he also mastered that language. A linguistic rule involving the pronunciation of the initial consonant in compound words is still known as “Lyman’s Law.”

After becoming ill, possibly from poorly canned meats, while conducting a survey of mercury mines in California, Lyman became a vegetarian in 1864. His abstinence from meat was regarded as highly unusual at the time and shaped his work and relationships both at home and abroad: in India, where he carried out surveys in the Punjab for the British colonial government between 1869-70; in Northampton, Massachusetts, where he grew up and lived following his return from Japan; and in Philadelphia, the birthplace of American vegetarianism, where he lived from 1887 until his death in 1920. (continued)

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Mother’s Day and women’s rights

by Heather Cox Richardson

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Having trouble getting noticed?

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What Does a Lonely Brain Look Like?

Feeling chronically disconnected from others can affect the brain’s structure and function, and it raises the risk for neurodegenerative diseases.

By Dana G. Smith in the NYT (Thanks to Joan H.)

Everyone feels lonely from time to time — after, say, a move to a new school or city, when a child leaves for college, or following the loss of a spouse.

Some people, though, experience loneliness not just transiently but chronically. It becomes “a personality trait, something that’s pretty sticky,” said Dr. Ellen Lee, an associate professor of psychiatry at the University of California, San Diego. These individuals seem to have “this persistent emotion that then shapes their behavior.”

Research is mounting that this type of entrenched loneliness is bad for our health and can even change our brains, raising the risk for neurodegenerative diseases. Here’s what experts know about how chronic loneliness affects the brain, and some strategies to address it.

Humans evolved to be social creatures probably because, for our ancient ancestors, being alone could be dangerous and reduce the odds of survival. Experts think loneliness may have emerged as a unique type of stress signal to prompt us to seek companionship.

With chronic loneliness, that stress response gets stuck and becomes disadvantageous — similar to the way in which anxiety can shift a helpful fear response to a maladaptive mental illness.

“Small, transient episodes of loneliness really motivate people to then seek out social connection,” said Anna Finley, a postdoctoral research fellow at the Institute on Aging at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. “But in chronic episodes of loneliness, that seems to kind of backfire” because people become especially attuned to social threats or signals of exclusion, which can then make it scary or unpleasant for them to interact with others. (continued)

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Lassie in New York

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The 320 million dollar pier – a question?

By Suzanne Nuyen on NPY – Thanks to Pam P.

A vessel carrying aid set sail from Cyprus yesterday toward an American-built floating pier off the coast of Gaza. U.S. officials say the pier will help address the worsening humanitarian crisis in the besieged enclave. But aid groups say there are significant unanswered questions — including what difference it would make if Israel keeps land borders closed.
A U.S. Navy ship docks off the coast of the Gaza Valley area in the central Gaza Strip on April 29, 2024.
🎧 Aid workers say that what’s lacking isn’t resources or aid but “the political will to get it” into Gaza, NPR’s Jane Arraf reports on Up First. One official called the pier “a joke.” Pediatrician John Kahler, co-Founder of MedGlobal, said what they needed was opening the gates to let food into what he described as a “lab of malnutrition,” not “silly piers or silly airdrops.” Another medical aid official noted that the pier will cost $320 million, which could instead be used to buy a large number of truckloads of aid.
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Who’s first?

Thanks to Pam P.

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Avoid Being Misled by Misinformation

Thanks to Mary M.

Protect Yourself
concerned senior woman at a computer
Fact-Checking in the AI Age
We‍dnesd‍ay, Ma‍y 22 a‍t 2 p‍.m. E‍T
What is misinformation? How can we spot it and avoid it? How has the emergence of artificial intelligence technology complicated how we evaluate information? 
In this webinar, hosted by Senior Planet and the News Literacy Project, we’ll explore current trends in misinformation and identify types of misleading, inaccurate and false information, whether AI-generated or human-made. We’ll also discuss the fundamentals of fact-checking, including how to debunk false images and videos. 
Save my seat
Dan Evon, the News Literacy Project’s senior manager of education design, will lead this one-hour session. Dan writes for the organization’s RumorGuardTM platform, which uses examples of viral misinformation to teach news literacy skills and identify and track misinformation tropes. He previously wrote for Snopes, the internet’s oldest fact-checking website. 
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A new compass?

Thanks to Pam P.

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The lovely campus nearby

The beauty of the Seattle University Campus offers the delight of rhodys in full bloom today. Also on campus are the wildlife sanctuary and themed gardens which can be found here – https://www.seattleu.edu/cejs/campus-sustainability/landscape–urban-gardening/. After a walk, there’s space for peaceful meditation at the Chapel of St. Ignatius.

Architect Steven Holl chose “A Gathering of Different Lights” as the guiding concept for the design of the Chapel of St. Ignatius.

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Above the law?

Thanks to Pam P.

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Dogs in action

Thanks to Bob P. (no pun intended)

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