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Seattle, WA

Andersson’s OT goal lifts Calgary Flames over Seatle Kraken 4-3

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Andersson’s OT goal lifts Calgary Flames over Seatle Kraken 4-3


SEATTLE (AP) — Andrew Mangiapane scored the tying goal with 4:07 left in regulation, and Rasmus Andersson scored the winner 3:28 into overtime as the Calgary Flames rallied for a 4-3 win over the Seattle Kraken on Monday night.

Calgary Flames 4, Seattle Kraken 3 (OT): Box score

Mangiapane scored on a rebound past Seattle goalie Joey Daccord to pull the Flames even late. In overtime, Andersson had a clean chance saved by Daccord in the opening moments of the extra session. After Seattle was unable to get any of its chances past Dan Vladar in Calgary’s net, Andersson cleaned up his own rebound on a wraparound attempt for the winner.

Andersson’s goal was his third of the season. Elias Lindholm scored his fourth of the season 1:16 into the game and Jonathan Huberdeau scored on the power play midway through the first period.

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Vladar made 28 saves for the Flames as Calgary won for the third time in four games with the only loss in that stretch coming in a shootout. The Flames also improved to 6-0-0 all-time against the Kraken in Seattle, including a 6-3 win earlier this month.

Jordan Eberle and Jared McCann scored 2:04 apart in the second period to give Seattle a 3-2 lead. Vince Dunn added a goal and assist, but the Kraken have yet to win three straight games this season.

Eberle scored for the second straight game and now has seven points in five games. His backhanded shot off a scrum in front of net slid past Vladar to tie the game at 2-2 at 8:21 of the second.

Barely two minutes later, McCann scored his eighth goal off a slick redirection in front of goal of Adam Larsson’s heavy slapshot. The puck caromed over Vladar’s shoulder and spun into the net to give Seattle a 3-2 lead.

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Daccord entered at the start of the second period for starter Philipp Grubauer and made 22 saves for Seattle.

Grubauer started the game and made five saves on seven shots in the period, but was on the bench when the second period started. Grubauer had a heavy collision with Calgary’s Martin Pospisil early in the first period. Pospisil scored on a breakaway after Grubauer made the initial save, but the goal was immediately waved off for goalie interference.

UP NEXT

Calgary Flames: At Nashville on Wednesday.

Seattle Kraken: Host San Jose on Wednesday.

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Seattle, WA

Seattle police respond after 4 men allegedly shoot 2 young men in legs

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Seattle police respond after 4 men allegedly shoot 2 young men in legs


SEATTLE — Seattle police responded to South Seattle after getting reports of a shooting.

According to the Seattle Police Department, around 5 p.m., two men in their teens or early 20s were shot in the legs.

The shooting happened in the 9400 block of Rainier Ave South.

Both men were taken to Harborview in serious but stable condition.

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Witnesses told police they saw four men allegedly shooting from the sunroof of a blue sedan.

After the shooting, the men fled in the sedan.

The men have not been found.





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Seattle, WA

CRIME WATCH FOLLOWUP: Guilty plea for man charged in West Seattle postal-truck thefts and other mail-related crimes

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CRIME WATCH FOLLOWUP: Guilty plea for man charged in West Seattle postal-truck thefts and other mail-related crimes


(Images from charging documents, suspect at West Seattle Target allegedly using stolen card)

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Last spring, we reported on the arrest and indictment of Johny Mixaboua, in connection with nine federal felonies including two USPS mail-truck thefts in West Seattle in one day last January (3000 block of Beach Drive SW and 3600 block of 57th SW). Evidence used against Mixayboua included home security-camera video from the neighborhood where one of the vehicles was later found, plus store security video showing him using stolen cards (including at West Seattle Target). According to today’s announcement from the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Seattle, Mixayboua pleaded guilty to “theft of government property, mail theft, illegal transactions on access devices, and illegally possessing a firearm.” (He was already a convicted felon, and a gun was found when he was arrested, authorities say.) The U.S. Attorney’s Office says the charges to which he pleaded guilty carry potential penalties of up to 15 years in prison. U.S. District Court Judge Richard Jones is scheduled to sentence him on March 8th; Mixayboua remains in the SeaTac Federal Detention Center.





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Seattle, WA

Weaving Cultural and Travel Ties into Airport Art Installation

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Weaving Cultural and Travel Ties into Airport Art Installation


Starting in 2026, travelers at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport (SEA) can experience Native artist Crystal Worl’s work both inside the airport and on the airfield.

Worl and fellow artist Fumi Amano were selected to create public art installations for SEA Airport’s C Concourse Expansion project as part of a first-of-its-kind residency partnership between the airport and two iconic glass art entities — Pilchuck Glass School and the Museum of Glass. The Pilchuck residency allows artists to brainstorm ideas; the Museum of Glass residency helps them produce these ideas into a final product for display at the airport.

And earlier this year, Alaska Airlines debuted an aircraft featuring Worl’s design, titled: Xáat Kwáani (Salmon People). It’s the first aircraft in the history of any domestic airline to be named in an Alaska Native language and to depict the ancestral importance through Northwest Coast indigenous formline art, which is characterized by curving lines and shapes and dates back thousands of years.

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This summer, Worl completed her two-week residency at Pilchuck, and will complete a second five-day residency at the Museum of Glass, likely in 2024. Her finished piece will be on display at the airport in 2026 with the opening of the new C Concourse.



Fumi Amano and Crystal Worl during their artist residencies at Pilchuck School of Glass.

Indigenous and travel connections

Worl’s connection to her Native heritage threads itself through much of her work. Worl is Athabascan, Filipino, and Tlingit from Raven moiety, Sockeye Clan, from the Raven House. She is Deg Hit’an Athabascan from Fairbanks Alaska and currently lives in Juneau, Alaska. Her work is diverse, ranging from Tlingit Northwest Coast design to contemporary multimedia pieces.



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Photo credit: Gabe Re @gabere

Worl’s plans for her C Concourse piece reflect her love for travel and the time she spent at SEA as a child on her way to visit family and looking at the art on display. As an international gateway and a gateway to Alaska, SEA is the perfect venue for Worl to express that passion.

“I travel a lot. Ever since I was a little girl, I’ve always been curious about traveling and exploring. Maybe it’s the Athabascan in me. We migrated a lot; we’re nomadic people. So maybe it’s just in my DNA to be curious. And I remember thinking from a young age, I want to be an artist, but I want to travel the world, and how do I do both? How do I take my art around the world? Or maybe my art could take me around the world?”

Worl has used art to fuel her passion for travel, building residencies where she can live abroad for months at a time. She makes the most of each trip, bringing a little portable artist studio in her suitcase and seeking out other artists in the communities she visits.

decorativeInspired by heritage

Worl also attributes her artistic inspiration to the creative community she grew up around and the blend of a traditional and modern upbringing. She participated in potlatches, ceremonies, and gatherings to connect with heritage, while attending school to study and follow her passions. Her family emphasized the importance of learning modern tools so she could become a better community member.

Her mom showed her how to bead, her grandmother taught her how to sew, and her family made their own regalia, which represents family and clan.

“Growing up with that upbringing is just normal for me, but the more I started traveling, as I got older and started going to school, the more I realized that was very special and very unique. And people are very fascinated by it. Native art can be respected and embraced, and it’s beautiful and it should be shared, but in a respectful manner. And so having this opportunity and this platform as an indigenous artist is really cool.”

Her work bridges multiple worlds — the indigenous artist community that practices formline design and the glass artist community. “It’s challenging because glass makers don’t necessarily understand what formline is unless they are a Native artist. It’s a fun challenge. It’s really making me scratch my brain.”

License to exploredecorative

During Worl’s Pilchuck residency, she found herself inspired by the passionate and boundary-pushing community of artists. This was her second time at the Pacific Northwest glass school; she first studied at Pilchuck 10 years ago.

“It’s cool to be in a small, isolated but beautiful community that’s just a bunch of artists. We’re all nerding out over creating pieces in new ways. I feel like I’m like Alice in Wonderland, and everyone’s telling me to come down this rabbit hole.”

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The residency partnership is designed to allow the artists to explore before they land on a concept for the airport commission. This gave Worl full permission to explore during her residency. With the assistance of her assistant Priscilla Lowe, she spent the first week mapping out her vision for the sculpture; she envisioned a grid of colorful gummy bear shapes formed from glass.

“This residency at Pilchuck Glass School has been really incredible and amazing because not only has it returned me to dip my toe in glass, but it’s reminded me of the expansive and talented community that works in glass.”

As a multidisciplinary artist with a goal to make the installation predominantly in glass, Worl needed an opportunity like this to help expand her understanding of glass.

“We’ve been trying to create a frog out of glass in every possible way we could come up with; I think we have five or six frogs now,” she said. “They don’t all look like frogs yet, but the idea is there. And it’s really cool to work with the gaffers (specialized glass artists) because there are so many things I can’t do with glass, but then for everything I can’t do, I learned there are a million other ways that I can do it. So it’s challenging me to think outside of the box. I’m uncomfortable and it’s good for me.”

decorativeA vision for the new C Concourse

Worl said she is also inspired by the design renderings for the C Concourse Expansion and the beautiful, light-filled space it will become.

“There’s a space for sitting and hanging out next to the wall that will have my art. The piece will have high visibility and see a lot of foot traffic. It’s a route towards the restrooms and also by the elevator. So it’s going to be seen a lot, and that’s really exciting.”

Worl is also co-owner of an Indigenous graphic design and art gift shop called Trickster Company with her brother Rico.  

 

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Top photo credit: Gabe Re @gabere





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