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  • An excavator helps pull away debris from tunnel-boring machine Brenda after it broke through the last few feet of the light-rail tunnel segment from Northgate to the University District Station. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Excavator breaks through light-rail ..ment
  • After being trapped underground and broken, a cutting head assembly is finally brought to the surface for repairs, temporarily stopping some workers in their tracks.<br />
<br />
Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times
    Bertha Surfaces
  • (Gabriel Campanario  / Seattle Times news artist)
    Vulcan classroom
  • (Gabriel Campanario  / Seattle Times news artist)
    The Vulcan
  • Amazon Go, the world’s first ever cashier-free store, opened to the public in Seattle. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Amazon Go: Get out fast
  • Amazon Go, the world’s first ever cashier-free store, opened to the public in Seattle. The novelty drew long lines around the Day 1 building. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Amazon Go: Long lines in
  • On this German keyboard Um-Schalter key means "shift" and Ruck-Taste is a backspace key. (Alan Berner / The Seattle Times)
    A type of machine
  • A crew member of the ship carrying Bertha, the giant boring machine, is in red (far right) dwarfed by the 57 1/2-foot cutting face of the machine. <br />
Alan Berner / The Seattle Times
    Bertha
  • Workers stand on top of the tunnel-boring machine Bertha, looking down at the ring-shaped cutter drive and bearing that has been exposed to be lifted out and repaired.<br />
<br />
Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times
    145437_bertha_02.JPG
  • Workmen with machines stay busy as work progresses on construction of the Connecticut Street Interchange of the freeway on May 16, 1965. Connecticut Street was renamed Royal Brougham Way after the beloved Seattle sports writer. In the background is the PacMed building, also known as Pacific Tower. (Johnny Closs / The Seattle Times)
    Connecticut Street Interchange cons..tion
  • Fearing the worst from the strike, the city prepared to fight radicals, even forming its own machine-gun unit. (The Seattle Times)
    Strike! Labor unites for rights
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