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  • A man attaches the Stars and Stripes to a 1955 Case tractor at the annual threshing bee and old-farm-equipment gathering in Ellensburg’s Olmstead Place State Park. (Alan Berner/The Seattle Times)
    Tractor and Stars & Stripes
  • Members of the Port of Seattle Police Tactical Services Unit rappel off a building during a family day at the Port of Seattle fire police, and operations departments.  (The Seattle Times, 1990)
    Tactical Services Unit rappel
  • (Josef Scaylea / The Seattle Times)
    Into the swing of things
  • The 108-foot Leschi, docked at Fire Station 5 on the west end of Madison Street, right between Colman Dock and the legendary Ivar’s Fish and Chips Restaurant.  (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Seattle's biggest fireboat
  • Storage units at the Chain Lake Self Storage facility in Monroe were reduced to rumble in a three-alarm fire that struck early morning. Many other storage units also were destroyed in the blaze. (Photo by Mike Siegel / The Seattle Times)
    3-alarm fire
  • A tired and hot fire fighter found a way to cool off while fighting a stubborn blaze at the Poison Building at Western Avenue and Columbia Street. This fireman filled his hat with water and dumped it on his head. (Greg Gilbert / The Seattle Times, 1974)
    Fireman keeps his cool
  • The American flag flies from the bed of "Old Yeller," a 1959 Chevy Apache pickup. In the background is the new Eastern Washington Agricultural Museum. <br />
Alan Berner / The Seattle Times
    Flag Flying from Truck
  • A diver takes a giant step with eyes locked on the horizon to keep from smacking his face into the helmet as he hits the water. (Betty Udesen / The Seattle Times, 2008)
    Vintage diving
  • On the last day before Seattle schools start, a child runs on a suspended walkway at the Seattle Center. (Ellen M. Banner / The Seattle Times)
    Summertime at the playground
  • A fireman moves away from a burst of flame atop a West Seattle house. (Matt McVay / The Seattle Times, 1979)
    Firefighter near flames
  • A 1,000-ton wooden floating drydock, purchased by the Lake Union Drydock Company as surplus equipment from the United States Maritime Commission, was shown from the Ballard Bridge as it arrived in Seattle after being towed from Scow Bay, near Port Townsend, by the tugboat Sandra Foss. The drydock was 240 feet long and 64 feet wide. (Roy Scully / The Seattle Times, 1947)
    Towing a dry dock
  • At sunset, a crowd along the shore at Seward Park watches the "Spirit of Seattle," equipped with its own tree for the Argosy Cruises Christmas Ship Festival in Seattle. (Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times)
    That's the Spirit!
  • Equipped with a new store front and completely remodeled inside, this shop at 4339 University Way became University district headquarters for Nordstrom's. Inc., Seattle shoe company. (Seattle Times file, 1935)
    A move's afoot
  • Seattle City Councilman Wing Luke, acting mayor for a week, signed his first official document in both Chinese – as Luke Wing Chung – and English. The document was a bond for a heating-equipment dealer’s license.  Luke is the first person of color on the Seattle City Council and the first Asian American elected to public office in the Pacific Northwest. (Times staff photo by Larry Dion, 1964)
    Councilman Wing Luke
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