Network Search

Search results

Your search for articles by Sarah Stuteville returned 36 results.

Search
Row number Title link and text description Topic category
1 Recipe for Ethiopian flatbread remains a treasured secret Local News
“Only me and my husband make the dough,” she told me over the phone when I asked her if I could tag along on a batch of what some call the best injera in Seattle.
8/22/2013 | seattletimes.com | find similar results
2 Geocaching creates community of travelers Local News
He nods toward a gray-haired couple walking past with yoga mats before explaining, “we have to wait for the ‘muggles’ to be out of sight.”
8/15/2013 | seattletimes.com | find similar results
3 Local soccer tournament brings the world together Local News
His questions rise above the rhythmic thwack of a neon-yellow soccer ball being kicked down the field behind him. “Well, they all play for us,” he said. By “us,” Hassan means the All Nations Cup .
7/18/2013 | seattletimes.com | find similar results
4 Environmental skills learned here travel far Local News
“What do you call these? Needles?” asks Ana Yoko of Brazil, running her fingers along the lightly prickled stem of a salmon­berry bush. It’s late morning in Ravenna Park and a canopy of big-leaf maples rustles high above her.
6/13/2013 | seattletimes.com | find similar results
5 In Seattle, a produce business sprouts from an unlikely patch Local News
A hazy sun glows through tender new lettuce leaves and bright green peapods at the New Holly Rockery Market Garden. It’s rush hour and the clanging of the light rail on Rainier Avenue South occasionally drowns out birds chirping in shade of a cluster of fruit trees.
6/6/2013 | seattletimes.com | find similar results
6 U.S.-international-food aid now faces its own conflict Local News
At a time when American involvement abroad is often resented, and almost always controversial, U.S. food aid should be an easy thing to support right? Well ... it’s complicated.
5/30/2013 | seattletimes.com | find similar results
7 Seattle’s fight against fistulas around the world Local News
When Heidi Breeze-Harris realized she was going to be laid up for most of a very complicated pregnancy, she worried about how she would pass the time. But the answer arrived in the first month.
5/9/2013 | seattletimes.com | find similar results
8 A warm New Light shines on kids from a very tough area in India Local News
I was pretty nervous when I first visited Kalighat, a red-light district in Kolkata, India, seven years ago. Women in red saris looked me up and down and whispered to each other as I crawled out of the taxi and made my way down the crowded lane toward a chipped-paint archway.
5/2/2013 | seattletimes.com | find similar results
9 ‘End Death Traps’ tour puts face on garment work in Bangladesh Local News
Bangladesh is the second-leading exporter of garments, after China, but the industry has an abysmal fire-safety record. Labor activists in the country estimate that more than 600 workers have died in factory fires since 2006.
4/26/2013 | seattletimes.com | find similar results
10 Traveler disconnects, kicks up fuss Local News
A week ago a young woman from Whidbey Island, Alec Zimmerman, went missing somewhere between Buenos Aires and Peru. When I read the news release, sent by one of my former students who is close friends with Zimmerman, my heart sank.
4/18/2013 | seattletimes.com | find similar results
11 Now beauty surrounds Iraqi immigrant, not fear Local News
“I don’t look to faces. My experience, my training, tells me to look to hands.” Muthanna Al-Nidawi is sitting in his living room, decorated with two large American flags pinned tightly to the clean white walls.
4/11/2013 | seattletimes.com | find similar results
12 We Day: A party with a purpose softens skeptic Local News
Growing up I was too young for Live Aid concerts and anti-apartheid movements. Sally Struthers and her teary infomercials were probably the most regular reminder of international causes I had in my life. But that’s not the case for the students of Federal Way High School. At 6 a.m.
3/28/2013 | seattletimes.com | find similar results
13 Global water problems get a fresh approach at local school Local News
As if high school isn’t awkward enough, I’m sitting among tittering teenagers in Chief Sealth’s auditorium listening to a man yell about poop.
3/22/2013 | seattletimes.com | find similar results
14 An evangelical pitch for immigration reform Local News
I’ve reported on sensitive subjects — the Iraq war, Russian politics and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict to name a few — but the topic I know will always light up my inbox with heated responses is immigration.
3/14/2013 | seattletimes.com | find similar results
15 ‘Lifestyle’ diseases a growing worldwide risk Local News
My heels echo on the blond floor as I skitter past blown up photos of smiling people from places like Nicaragua and Brooklyn. The Gates Foundation headquarters, with its curved glass and massive TV monitors, always makes me feel a little like I’m in a spy novel or a political thriller.
3/7/2013 | seattletimes.com | find similar results
16 Ethical chocolate is particularly sweet Local News
I love chocolate. I’m just as likely to polish off a bag of Cadbury mini eggs (yes, I know it’s still a month before Easter) as I am to pose as a tourist to scam free samples at Fran’s Chocolates downtown. But I also want my favorite indulgence to be ethical.
2/28/2013 | seattletimes.com | find similar results
17 Immigrant issue close to home | Sarah Stuteville Local News
The empty highway was lit up with floodlights. I slowed to a stop and rolled down the window. A young man with a twangy accent leaned into the air-conditioning and beamed his flashlight over my fast-food wrappers. “You a citizen, ma’am?
2/14/2013 | seattletimes.com | find similar results
18 Peace Corps job in Afghanistan gave architect an appreciation of mud Local News
It was 1968. Hull, who grew up in Moses Lake, had just graduated with a degree in architecture from Washington State University and was looking to see the world — as well as stay out of the Vietnam War. So he joined the Peace Corps.
2/7/2013 | seattletimes.com | find similar results
19 Taking the indigenous-rights protest global Local News
Lane Stevens lives up a steep, potholed alleyway in a house perched above the gray expanse of Tulalip Bay. It’s a far cry from the big-city music studios he once knew. But it’s where he feels at home — where he says he can breathe freely.
1/31/2013 | seattletimes.com | find similar results
20 Cross-cultural ties examined in documentary | Sarah Stuteville Local News
She’s trying to gauge the authenticity of the Korean dish in question. This version doesn’t come in the traditional heated stone pot (dolsot), but she goes for it anyway — calling the rice bowl a favorite “comfort food.”
1/24/2013 | seattletimes.com | find similar results